S vs Sleuth - What's the difference?
s | sleuth |
The nineteenth letter of the .
voiceless alveolar fricative
Symbol for second , an SI unit of measurement of time.
Image:Latin S.png, Capital and lowercase versions of S , in normal and italic type
Image:Fraktur letter S.png, Uppercase and lowercase S in Fraktur
Symbols for SI units
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(obsolete) An animal’s trail or track.
(archaic) A sleuth-hound; a bloodhound.
A detective.
* 1908 , (Frank L. Baum), Aunt Jane’s Nieces at Millville
(transitive) To act as a detective; to try to discover who committed a crime.
* 1922 , , The Secret Adversary
(obsolete, uncountable) Slowness; laziness, sloth.
(rare) A collective term for a group of bears.
* 1961 , , A Passport Secretly Green , p.89
* 1995 , , The Girl Sleuth , p.13
* 2007 , , The Lightkeepers’ Menagerie: Stories of Animals at Lighthouses , p.200
As a letter s
is the letter s with a.As a noun sleuth is
(obsolete) an animal’s trail or track or sleuth can be (obsolete|uncountable) slowness; laziness, sloth.As a verb sleuth is
(transitive) to act as a detective; to try to discover who committed a crime.s
Translingual
{{Basic Latin character info, previous=r, next=t, image= (wikipedia s)Letter
Symbol
(wikipedia) (mul-symbol)See also
(Latn-script) * * (esh) * (dze) * {{Letter , page=S , NATO=Sierra , Morse=··· , Character=S , Braille=? }}sleuth
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl) (Norwegian slo).Noun
(en noun)- Do ye want me to become a sleuth , or engage detectives to track the objects of your erroneous philanthropy?
Synonyms
* (detective) detectiveVerb
(en verb)- We must discover where he lives, what he does — sleuth him, in fact!
Synonyms
* shadowEtymology 2
From (etyl) , corresponding to (slow) + (-th).Noun
(en noun)- As quietly as if I were practicing to join a sleuth of bears , I crept out the door and went on home, eventually winding up in the garage…
- If these dainty adventurers weren’t being chased by a sleuth of bears or bogeys, they were being captured by Gypsies or thieves.
- From the darkness came the howls of routs of wolves and bands of coyotes, the rumbling growls of a sleuth of bears or the bugles of a gang of elk.
