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Rowel vs Rowed - What's the difference?

rowel | rowed |

As verbs the difference between rowel and rowed

is that rowel is to use a rowel on something, especially to drain fluid while rowed is (row).

As a noun rowel

is the small spiked wheel on the end of a spur.

As an adjective rowed is

formed into a row, or rows; having a specified number of rows.

rowel

English

Noun

(en noun)
  • The small spiked wheel on the end of a spur.
  • * 1819', '', '''1833 , ''The Complete Works of Sir Walter Scott , Volume 3, page 121,
  • The deep and sharp rowels with which Ivanhoe’s heels were now armed, began to make the worthy Prior repent of his courtesy,.
  • * 1939 , , The Cosmological Eye , page 246,
  • The dry desert of my native land, her men grey and gaunt, their spines twisted, their feet shod with rowel and spur.
  • * 1973 , , page 892,
  • The Lone Ranger will storm in at the head of a posse, rowels tearing blood from the stallion’s white hide, to find his young friend, innocent Dan, swinging from a tree limb by a broken neck.
  • * 1992 , , page 62,
  • He nodded at the Americans. Buena suerte, he said. He put the long rowels of his spurs to the horse and they moved on.
  • A little flat ring or wheel on a horse's bit.
  • * 1590', '', Book 1: ''Knight of the Red Cross'', '''1850 , ''Edmund Spenser's Knight of the Red Cross; or Holiness , page 74,
  • The iron rowels into frothy foam he bit.
  • A roll of hair, silk, etc., passed through the flesh of a horse in the manner of a seton in human surgery.
  • Verb

  • To use a rowel on something, especially to drain fluid.
  • To incite, to goad.
  • * 1941 , , page 240,
  • He would have been completely ignorant of what was going on if Frank, periodically roweled by the viciously anti-labor stand of the Pittsburgh newspapers, hadn't felt the need of an audience.

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    rowed

    English

    Etymology 1

    See (row) (verb)

    Verb

    (head)
  • (row)
  • Etymology 2

    Adjective

    (-)
  • Formed into a row, or rows; having a specified number of rows.
  • a twelve-rowed ear of corn

    Anagrams

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