Queried vs Querned - What's the difference?
queried | querned |
(query)
A question or inquiry.
A question mark.
* Oliver Sacks, Awakenings
* 2006 , "Pip", Re: Royal Enfield motorbike - why would anyone buy one?'' (on newsgroup ''rec.motorcycles )
(computing, databases) A set of instructions passed to a database.
To ask, inquire.
To ask a question.
To question or call into doubt.
* {{quote-book, year=1963, author=(Margery Allingham), title=(The China Governess)
, chapter=20 (computing, databases) To pass a query to a database to retrieve information.
*
(internet) To send a private message to (a user on IRC).
* 2000 , "Phantom", Re: Uhm.. hi... I guess...'' (on newsgroup ''alt.support.boy-lovers )
* 2000 , "Robert Erdec", Re: Help; mIRC32; unable to resolve server arnes.si'' (on newsgroup ''alt.irc.mirc )
(quern)
A mill for grinding corn, especially a hand-mill made of two circular stones
* 1978 , Robert Nye, Merlin ,
* 2005 , Anne Crone, Ewan Campbell, A Crannog of the First Millennium, AD: Excavations by Jack Scott at Loch Gloshan, Argyll, 1960 ,
* 2009 , Charles D. Hockensmith, The Millstone Industry ,
To grind; to use a quern .
* 1979 , , 2011,
* 2000 , Tina Tuohy, 9: Long Handled Weaving Combs: Problems Determining the Gender of Tool-Maker and Tool-User'', Moira Donald, Linda Hurcombe (editors), ''Gender and Material Culture in Archaeological Perspective ,
* 2009 , , Unleaving'', ''Cloud & Ashes: Three Winter's Tales ,
* 2011 , Rachel Pope, Ian Ralston, 17: Approaching Sex and Status in Iron Age Britain with Reference to the Nearer Continent'', Tom Moore, Thomas Hugh Moore, X. L. Armada (editors), ''Atlantic Europe in the First Millennium BC: Crossing the Divide ,
As verbs the difference between queried and querned
is that queried is (query) while querned is (quern).queried
English
Verb
(head)query
English
Alternative forms
* (archaic)Noun
(queries)- The teacher answered the student's query concerning biosynthesis.
- She had written in her diary: "I don't think I am in a concentration-camp??????", the queries growing larger and more numerous till they covered the entire page
- I refer you to your line above, where you use a query and a bang together.
- The database admin switched on query logging for debugging purposes.
Derived terms
* query language * subqueryVerb
citation, passage=The story struck the depressingly familiar note with which true stories ring in the tried ears of experienced policemen. No one queried it. It was in the classic pattern of human weakness, mean and embarrassing and sad.}}
- He parted the channel saying "SHUTUP!"... so I queried him, asking if there was something I could do.. maybe talk...
- if you know someone who is in the channel, you can query them and ask for the key.
querned
English
Verb
(head)quern
English
Alternative forms
* (l) * (l)Noun
(en noun)- She is shaking in ingredients from various small bottles and querns produced from the pockets of her robes, and from the drawer in the wooden table.
page 100,
- MacKie has noted that querns that were in use in Scotland up to the present day were about 450mm—600mm in diameter and that the lower stone was completely perforated to make it adjustable (MacKie 1987, 5).
page 212,
- Not surprisingly, different cultures discovered the suitability of various rock types for manufacturing querns and millstones.
Verb
(en verb)unnumbered page,
- He could almost set aside the longing for Eyjan that ever querned within him—almost—in this place so utterly sundered from everything of hers.
page 141,
- For women he thought these should include combing, spinning, querning , leather and fur-working and be associated with finds of beads, bracelets and perforated teeth.
page 262,
- Beyond this now lay only chaos and a querning sea. Time's millstones, grinding bones for bread.
page 401,
- From the osteology, a supposed link between squatting facets and prehistoric women—and by extension the interpretation that women were engaged in querning activity—is not demonstrated for the Iron Age: of the thirteen with the complaint in Deal, Kent, 62 per cent were male (Anderson 1995: table 29).