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Rover vs Robot - What's the difference?

rover | robot |

As nouns the difference between rover and robot

is that rover is a randomly selected target while robot is a machine built to carry out some complex task or group of tasks, especially one which can be programmed.

As a proper noun Rover

is a stereotypical name for a dog.

rover

English

Etymology 1

(etyl)

Noun

(en noun)
  • (archery, usually plural) A randomly selected target.
  • 1890' ''"By my hilt! no. There was little Robby Withstaff, and Andrew Salblaster, and Wat Alspaye, who broke the neck of the German. Mon Dieu! what men they were! Take them how you would, at long butts or short, hoyles, rounds, or '''rovers , better bowmen never twirled a shaft over their thumb-nails." '' — Arthur Conan Doyle, ''The White Company , Chapter 22.
  • One who roves, a wanderer, a nomad.
  • 1846' ''But these islands, undisturbed for years, relapsed into their previous obscurity; and it is only recently that anything has been known concerning them. Once in the course of a half century, to be sure, some adventurous '''rover would break in upon their peaceful repose. and astonished at the unusual scene, would be almost tempted to claim the merit of a new discovery.'' — Herman Melville, ''Typee , Chapter 1.
  • A vagabond, a tramp, an unsteady, restless person, one who by habit doesn't settle down or marry.
  • She is a rover and dislikes any sort of ties, physical or emotional.
    1954' ''Give him the word, that I'm not a '''rover , and tell him that his lonely days are over.
  • A vehicle for exploring extraterrestrial bodies.
  • The Mars Exploration Rovers will act as robot geologists while they are on the surface of Mars. NASA site.
  • Position in Australian Rules football, one of three of a team's followers, who follow the ball around the ground. Formerly a position for short players, rovers in professional leagues are frequently over 183 cm (6').
  • (croquet) A ball which has passed through all the hoops and would go out if it hit the stake but is continued in play; also, the player of such a ball.
  • (obsolete) A sort of arrow.
  • * Ben Jonson
  • All sorts, flights, rovers , and butt shafts.

    Etymology 2

    From (etyl), roven , to rob. Cognate with Danish and Norwegian

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • A pirate or pirate ship.
  • 1719' ''The first was this: our ship making her course towards the Canary Islands, or rather between those islands and the African shore, was surprised in the grey of the morning by a Turkish '''rover of Sallee, who gave chase to us with all the sail she could make.'' — Daniel Defoe, ''Robinnson Crusoe , Chapter 2.
  • * Holland
  • Yet Pompey the Great deserveth honour more justly for scouring the seas, and taking from the rovers 846 sail of ships.
    ----

    robot

    English

    (wikipedia robot)

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • A machine built to carry out some complex task or group of tasks, especially one which can be programmed.
  • * 2010 , Tim Webb, The Guardian , 16 May 2010:
  • It's painfully slow and complex work which has never been attempted before in these conditions: the small box-shaped robots , equipped with two claws, are operating in almost freezing water 5,000ft below the surface, in pitch black and strong currents.
  • (chiefly, science fiction) An intelligent mechanical being designed to look like a human or other creature, and usually made from metal.
  • * 2010 , Tom Chivers and Iain McDiarmid, The Telegraph , 26 Jan 2010:
  • The robots in Dick's novel, loosely adapted by Ridley Scott into the film Blade Runner, were so similar to humans that when they went rogue, trained bounty hunters were called in to perform psychological tests to see whether suspected androids lacked human empathy.
  • (figuratively) A person who does not seem to have any emotions.
  • * Murray N. Rothbard, Making Economic Sense (page xiv)
  • Yet surely he was a humorless robot of a man, spewing forth lonely and bitter critiques of all those lesser mortals with whom he could not identify.
  • (South Africa) A traffic light (from earlier robot policeman ).
  • (surveying) A theodolite which follows the movements of a prism and can be used by a one-man crew.
  • A style of dance popular in disco whereby the dancer impersonates the movement of a robot
  • Synonyms

    * See

    Hypernyms

    * automaton

    Hyponyms

    * android

    Derived terms

    * bot * -bot * robotic * robotics * robo-

    See also

    * artificial intelligence * computer * cyborg * domotics * pedipulator * robot revolution South African English English terms derived from fiction ----