Runt vs Miniature - What's the difference?
runt | miniature | Related terms |
The smallest animal of a litter, or,
The smallest child in the family, as in "the runt of the family."
Undersized or stunted plant, animal or person.
(computing) An Ethernet packet that does not meet the medium's minimum packet size of 64 bytes.
(typography) A single word (or portion of a hyphenated word) that appears as the last line of a paragraph.
A breed of pigeon related to the carrier pigeon.
(obsolete, UK, dialect) A hardened stem or stalk of a plant.
Greatly diminished size or form; reduced scale.
A small version of something; a model of reduced scale.
A small, highly detailed painting, a portrait miniature.
The art of painting such highly detailed miniature works.
An illustration in an illuminated manuscript.
A musical composition which is short in duration.
(gaming) A token in a game representing a unit or character.
Lettering in red; rubric distinction.
A particular feature or trait.
Smaller than normal.
* {{quote-magazine, date=2013-09-06, author=
, volume=189, issue=13, page=39, magazine=(The Guardian Weekly)
, title= To make smaller than normal; to reproduce in miniature.
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As nouns the difference between runt and miniature
is that runt is the smallest animal of a litter, or while miniature is greatly diminished size or form; reduced scale.As an adjective miniature is
smaller than normal.As a verb miniature is
to make smaller than normal; to reproduce in miniature.runt
English
Noun
(en noun)- (Halliwell)
- Neither young poles nor old runts are durable. — Holland.
Anagrams
* turn ----miniature
English
("miniature on Wikiquote")Noun
(en noun)- There was a miniature of a whaling ship in a glass bottle over the mantlepiece.
- Sacha composed a miniature for strings as a final project at the conservatory.
- Jack had dozens of miniatures of Napoleonic footsoldiers painted in detailed period regalia for his wargames.
- (Massinger)
Derived terms
* miniaturistAdjective
(en adjective)Alok Jha
Miniature brains grown in lab, passage=Scientists have grown miniature human brains in test tubes, creating a "tool" that will allow them to watch how the organs develop in the womb and, they hope, increase their understanding of neurological and mental problems. ¶ Just a few millimetres across, the "cerebral organoids" are built up of layers of brain cells with defined regions that resemble those seen in immature, embryonic brains.}}