Ravel vs Wound - What's the difference?
ravel | wound |
a snarl, complication
:* {{quote-book
, year=1927
, year_published=2009
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, author=DH Lawrence
, title=Mornings in Mexico
, chapter=
To tangle; entangle; entwine confusedly, become snarled; thus to involve; perplex; confuse.
* Waller
* Jeremy Taylor
:* {{quote-book
, year=1871
, year_published=2011
, edition=Digitized
, editor=
, author=
, title=Popular Science News, Volumes 5-7
, chapter=
:* {{quote-web
, date=2011-09-10
, year=
, first=
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, author=Martha T. Moore
, authorlink=
, title=After 9/11, dinner gang raises funds to honor those lost
, site=USA Today
To undo the intricacies of; to disentangle or clarify.
To pull apart (especially cloth or a seam); unravel.
(computing, programming) In the APL language, to reshape (a variable) into a vector.
* 1975 , Tse-yun Feng, Parallel processing: proceedings of the Sagamore Computer Conference
* 1980 , Gijsbert van der Linden, APL 80: International Conference on APL, June 24-26, 1980
An injury, such as a cut, stab, or tear, to a (usually external) part of the body.
* 2013 , Phil McNulty, "[http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/23830980]", BBC Sport , 1 September 2013:
* Shakespeare
* 1883:
(figuratively) A hurt to a person's feelings, reputation, etc.
An injury to a person by which the skin is divided or its continuity broken.
To hurt or injure (someone) by cutting, piercing, or tearing the skin.
To hurt (a person's feelings).
(wind)
* {{quote-book, year=1905, author=
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As nouns the difference between ravel and wound
is that ravel is a snarl, complication while wound is an injury, such as a cut, stab, or tear, to a (usually external) part of the body.As verbs the difference between ravel and wound
is that ravel is to tangle; entangle; entwine confusedly, become snarled; thus to involve; perplex; confuse while wound is to hurt or injure (someone) by cutting, piercing, or tearing the skin.ravel
English
Noun
(en noun)citation, genre= , publisher=Project Gutenberg Australia , isbn= , page= , passage=The savannah valley is shadeless, spotted only with the thorny ravel of mesquite bushes. }}
Verb
- What glory's due to him that could divide / Such ravelled interests?
- The faith of very many men seems a duty so weak and indifferent, is so often untwisted by violence, or ravelled and entangled in weak discourses!
citation, genre= , publisher= , isbn= , page=61 , passage=… and in them are minute glands , which resemble ravelled tubes … }}
citation, archiveorg= , accessdate=2012-08-24 , passage=But the real work of the First Thursday Foundation is remembering, and its biggest gift is knitting back together lives raveled by loss. }}
- LOAD.S loads a sequence of scalars from the ravelled form of a matrix into successive AM elements.
- Ravelling is necessary because the execute function in the IBM implementation only accepts charactervectors as argument.
Usage notes
* The spellings ravelling and ravelled are more common in the UK than in the US.References
* Century Dictionary, Vol. VI, Page 4976, ravel * Century Dictionary Supplement, Vol. XII, Page 1114, ravel * Online Etymology,ravel
Anagrams
* * * English contranymswound
English
Etymology 1
Noun from (etyl) wund, from (etyl) .Noun
(en noun)- The visitors were without Wayne Rooney after he suffered a head wound in training, which also keeps him out of England's World Cup qualifiers against Moldova and Ukraine.
- Showers of blood / Rained from the wounds of slaughtered Englishmen.
- I went below, and did what I could for my wound ; it pained me a good deal, and still bled freely; but it was neither deep nor dangerous, nor did it greatly gall me when I used my arm.
- It took a long time to get over the wound of that insult.
Synonyms
* (injury) injury, lesion * (sense, something that offends a person's feelings) slight, slur, insult * See alsoDerived terms
* dirty wound * entry wound * exit wound * flesh wound * rub salt in the wound * suck one's wounds * time heals all woundsVerb
(en verb)- The police officer wounded the suspect during the fight that ensued.
- The actor's pride was wounded when the leading role went to his rival.
Synonyms
* (injure) hurt, injure * offendEtymology 2
See (Etymology 2)Verb
(head)citation, passage=“[…] Captain Markam had been found lying half-insensible, gagged and bound, on the floor of the sitting-room, his hands and feet tightly pinioned, and a woollen comforter wound closely round his mouth and neck?; whilst Mrs. Markham's jewel-case, containing valuable jewellery and the secret plans of Port Arthur, had disappeared. […]”}} English heteronyms English irregular past participles English irregular simple past forms