Satin vs Velvet - What's the difference?
satin | velvet |
-glossy. Particularly describing a type of paint.
A cloth woven from silk, nylon or polyester with a glossy surface and a dull back. (The same weaving technique applied to cotton produces cloth termed sateen).
A closely woven fabric (originally of silk, now also of cotton or man-made fibres) with a thick short pile on one side.
* , title=The Mirror and the Lamp
, chapter=2 Very fine fur, including the skin and fur on a deer's antlers.
(rare ): A female chinchilla; a sow.
Made of velvet.
Soft and delicate, like velvet; velvety.
* Milton
(label) peaceful, carried out without violence; especially as pertaining to the peaceful breakup of Czechoslovakia.
* 1995 , Amin Saikal, William Maley, Russia in Search of Its Future , page 214
* 2006 , The Analyst: Central and Eastern European Review
* 2011 , David Gillies, Elections in Dangerous Places: Democracy and the Paradoxes of Peacebuilding , page 248:
* 2011 , Javad Etaat quoted in Hooman Majd, The Ayatollahs' Democracy: An Iranian Challenge , page 39:
* 2014 , Dana H. Allin, NATO's Balkan Interventions , page 97
As adjectives the difference between satin and velvet
is that satin is semi-glossy. Particularly describing a type of paint while velvet is made of velvet.As nouns the difference between satin and velvet
is that satin is a cloth woven from silk, nylon or polyester with a glossy surface and a dull back. (The same weaving technique applied to cotton produces cloth termed sateen) while velvet is a closely woven fabric (originally of silk, now also of cotton or man-made fibres) with a thick short pile on one side.As a verb velvet is
to coat raw meat in starch, then in oil, preparatory to frying.satin
English
Adjective
(-)Noun
(wikipedia satin) (en noun)References
Anagrams
* ----velvet
English
(wikipedia velvet)Noun
citation, passage=She was a fat, round little woman, richly apparelled in velvet and lace, […]; and the way she laughed, cackling like a hen, the way she talked to the waiters and the maid, […]—all these unexpected phenomena impelled one to hysterical mirth, and made one class her with such immortally ludicrous types as Ally Sloper, the Widow Twankey, or Miss Moucher.}}
Derived terms
* black velvet * Velvet Revolution * velvety (adjective)Adjective
(en adjective)- The cowslip's velvet head.
- What at the time of the initial agreement of Yeltsin, Shushkevich and Kravchuk to join together in a new 'Commonwealth of Independent States' had seemed like a reconstitution of the lands of ancient Rus, quickly turned out to be, in the words of the leading Russian-Ukrainian reformer Aleksandr Tsipko, merely a 'velvet disintegration'.
- The disintegration always took place within internal borders, whether it was velvet , as in the case of the Czech Republic and Slovakia, or bloody, like Yugoslavia&
- 39;s still unfinished break-up.
- If the Sudanese can resolve the final steps in a velvet divorce and move in a more democratic direction, that will serve as a heartening "ideal model of change"
- “I was once invited to give a speech about the attempt to topple Iran's political system through a ‘velvet' revolution,’ ” says Etaat in the debate, “but we all know that ‘' velvet revolutions’ always occur in dictatorships.”
- There is such a thing as a velvet divorce: if Canada or Belgium were to split apart, the consequences would be unfortunate but manageable.