Tractor vs Plough - What's the difference?
tractor | plough |
(label) A vehicle used in farms e.g. for pulling farm equipment and preparing the fields.
(label) A truck (or lorry) for pulling a semi-trailer or trailer.
Any piece of machinery, any thing that pulls something.
(label) (aircraft configuration) An airplane where the propeller is located in front of the fuselage
A locomotive.
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(label) A metal rod used in tractoration, or Perkinism.
A device pulled through the ground in order to break it open into furrows for planting.
An alternative name for Ursa Major or the Great Bear.
A carucate of land; a ploughland.
* Tale of Gamelyn
A joiner's plane for making grooves.
A bookbinder's implement for trimming or shaving off the edges of books.
To use a plough on to prepare for planting.
To use a plough.
(vulgar) To have sex with.
To move with force.
* {{quote-news
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To furrow; to make furrows, grooves, or ridges in; to run through, as in sailing.
* Shakespeare
* Alexander Pope
(bookbinding) To trim, or shave off the edges of, as a book or paper, with a plough.
(joinery) To cut a groove in, as in a plank, or the edge of a board; especially, a rectangular groove to receive the end of a shelf or tread, the edge of a panel, a tongue, etc.
As nouns the difference between tractor and plough
is that tractor is a vehicle used in farms e.g. for pulling farm equipment and preparing the fields while plough is a device pulled through the ground in order to break it open into furrows for planting.As a verb plough is
to use a plough on to prepare for planting.As a proper noun Plough is
the common name for the brightest seven stars of the constellation Ursa Major.tractor
English
(wikipedia tractor)Noun
(en noun)See also
* (aviation) pusher * (agriculture) traction engineplough
English
(wikipedia plough)Alternative forms
* (US) plowNoun
(en noun)- The horse-drawn plough had a tremendous impact on agriculture.
- Johan, mine eldest son, shall have plowes five.
Usage notes
The spelling (m) is usual in the United States, but the spelling plough may be found in literary or historical contexts there.Derived terms
* moldboard plow * ploughman * ploughshare * snowplough * sodbuster ploughVerb
(en verb)- I've still got to plough that field.
- Some days I have to plough from sunrise to sunset.
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- Let patient Octavia plough thy visage up / With her prepared nails.
- With speed we plough the watery way.