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Recess vs Rebate - What's the difference?

recess | rebate |

As nouns the difference between recess and rebate

is that recess is a break, pause or vacation while rebate is a deduction from an amount to be paid; an abatement.

As verbs the difference between recess and rebate

is that recess is to inset into something, or to recede while rebate is to deduct or return an amount from a bill or payment.

As an adjective recess

is remote, distant (in time or place).

recess

English

Noun

(es)
  • (countable, or, uncountable) A break, pause or vacation.
  • Spring recess offers a good chance to travel.
  • * Macaulay
  • The recess of Parliament lasted six weeks.
  • An inset, hole, space or opening.
  • Put a generous recess behind the handle for finger space.
  • * Washington Irving
  • a bed which stood in a deep recess
  • (US) A time of play, usually, on a playground.
  • Students who do not listen in class will not play outside during recess .
  • A decree of the imperial diet of the old German empire.
  • (archaic) A withdrawing or retiring; a moving back; retreat.
  • the recess of the tides
  • * South
  • every degree of ignorance being so far a recess and degradation from rationality
  • * Eikon Basilike
  • My recess hath given them confidence that I may be conquered.
  • (archaic) The state of being withdrawn; seclusion; privacy.
  • * Sir M. Hale
  • In the recess of the jury they are to consider the evidence.
  • * Dryden
  • Good verse recess and solitude requires.
  • (archaic) A place of retirement, retreat, secrecy, or seclusion.
  • * Milton
  • Departure from his happy place, our sweet / Recess , and only consolation left.
  • A secret or abstruse part.
  • the difficulties and recesses of science
  • (botany, zoology) A sinus.
  • Synonyms

    * (a break) break, day off, pause, vacation

    Derived terms

    * recess appointment * recession * recessive

    Verb

    (es)
  • To inset into something, or to recede.
  • Wow, look at how that gargoyle recesses into the rest of architecture.
    Recess the screw so it does not stick out.
  • To take or declare a break.
  • This court shall recess for its normal two hour lunch now.
    Class will recess for 20 minutes.
  • (informal) To appoint, with a recess appointment.
  • * 2013 , Michael Grunwald, "Cliff Dweller", in , ISSN 0040-781X, volume 181, number 1, 2013 January 14, page 27:
  • To the National Rifle Association's delight, the Senate has hobbled the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives by failing to confirm a director since 2006, but Obama hasn't made a recess appointment. "The President's view of his own power is a constrained one," says White House counsel Kathryn Ruemmler. "Many of his nominees have languished, but he's only recessed the ones that were critical to keep agencies functioning."
  • To make a recess in.
  • to recess a wall

    Adjective

    (head)
  • (obsolete, rare) Remote, distant (in time or place).
  • Thomas Salusbury: Galileo's Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems:''''' ''I should think it best in the subsequent discourses to begin to examine whether the Earth be esteemed immoveable, as it hath been till now believed by most men, or else moveable, as some ancient Philosophers held, and others of not very '''recesse times were of opinion;

    Anagrams

    * ----

    rebate

    English

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • A deduction from an amount to be paid; an abatement.
  • The return of part of an amount already paid.
  • (photography) The edge of a roll of film, from which no image can be developed.
  • A rectangular groove made to hold two pieces (of wood etc) together; a rabbet.
  • * '>citation
  • A piece of wood hafted into a long stick, and serving to beat out mortar.
  • An iron tool sharpened something like a chisel, and used for dressing and polishing wood.
  • A kind of hard freestone used in making pavements.
  • Verb

    (rebat)
  • To deduct or return an amount from a bill or payment
  • To diminish or lessen something
  • To beat to obtuseness; to deprive of keenness; to blunt; to turn back the point of, as a lance used for exercise.
  • * Shakespeare
  • But doth rebate and blunt his natural edge.
  • To cut a rebate (or rabbet) in something
  • To abate; to withdraw.
  • (Foxe)

    Anagrams

    * * * English transitive verbs ----