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Punctuate vs Penetrate - What's the difference?

punctuate | penetrate |

As verbs the difference between punctuate and penetrate

is that punctuate is to add punctuation to while penetrate is to enter into; to make way into the interior of; to pierce.

punctuate

English

Verb

(punctuat)
  • to add punctuation to
  • That occurrence of "its" needs to be punctuated .
  • to add or to interrupt at regular intervals
  • The pristine lawn was punctuated only by the single apple tree in the centre.
  • to emphasize, to stress
  • penetrate

    English

    (Penetration)

    Verb

    (penetrat)
  • To enter into; to make way into the interior of; to pierce.
  • Light penetrates darkness.
  • * {{quote-book, year=1879, title=The Telephone, the Microphone and the Phonograph
  • , author=Th Du Moncel, page=166, publisher=Harper , passage=He takes the prepared charcoal used by artists, brings it to a white heat, and suddenly plunges it in a bath of mercury, of which the globules instantly penetrate the pores of charcoal, and may be said to metallize it.}}
  • (figuratively) To achieve understanding of, despite some obstacle; to comprehend; to understand.
  • I could not penetrate Burke's opaque rhetoric.
  • * Ray
  • things which here were too subtile for us to penetrate
  • To affect profoundly through the senses or feelings; to move deeply.
  • to penetrate one's heart with pity
  • * M. Arnold
  • The translator of Homer should penetrate himself with a sense of the plainness and directness of Homer's style.
    (Shakespeare)
  • To infiltrate an enemy to gather intelligence.
  • To insert the penis into an opening, such as a vagina or anus. (rfex)
  • Derived terms

    * penetration * penetrable