Sour vs Stinging - What's the difference?
sour | stinging | Related terms |
Having an acidic, sharp or tangy taste.
* Francis Bacon
Made rancid by fermentation, etc.
Tasting or smelling rancid.
Peevish or bad-tempered.
* Shakespeare
(of soil) Excessively acidic and thus infertile.
(of petroleum) Containing excess sulfur.
Unfortunate or unfavorable.
* Shakespeare
* {{quote-news
, year=2011
, date=October 1
, author=Phil Dawkes
, title=Sunderland 2 - 2 West Brom
, work=BBC Sport
The sensation of a sour taste.
A drink made with whiskey, lemon or lime juice and sugar.
(label) Any cocktail containing lemon or lime juice.
A sour or acid substance; whatever produces a painful effect.
(label) To make sour.
(label) To become sour.
* Jonathan Swift
(label) To make disenchanted.
* Shakespeare
(label) To become disenchanted.
(label) To make (soil) cold and unproductive.
To macerate (lime) and render it fit for plaster or mortar.
*{{quote-book, year=1892, author=(James Yoxall)
, chapter=5, title= The act by which someone receives a sting.
Sour is a related term of stinging.
As adjectives the difference between sour and stinging
is that sour is having an acidic, sharp or tangy taste while stinging is having the capacity to sting.As nouns the difference between sour and stinging
is that sour is the sensation of a sour taste while stinging is the act by which someone receives a sting.As verbs the difference between sour and stinging
is that sour is (label) to make sour while stinging is .sour
English
Alternative forms
* (obsolete) sowrAdjective
(er)- All sour things, as vinegar, provoke appetite.
- (rfex)
- (rfex)
- He was a scholar / Lofty and sour to them that loved him not, / But to those men that sought him sweet as summer.
- (rfex)
- sour adversity
citation, page= , passage=The result may not quite give the Wearsiders a sweet ending to what has been a sour week, following allegations of sexual assault and drug possession against defender Titus Bramble, but it does at least demonstrate that their spirit remains strong in the face of adversity.}}
Noun
- (rfex)
- (rfex)
- (Edmund Spenser)
Derived terms
* laundry sourVerb
- So the sun's heat, with different powers, / Ripens the grape, the liquor sours .
- To sour your happiness I must report, / The queen is dead.
- (Mortimer)
Anagrams
* ----stinging
English
Verb
(head)The Lonely Pyramid, passage=The desert storm was riding in its strength; the travellers lay beneath the mastery of the fell simoom.
Noun
(en noun)- the stingings of scorpions
- stingings of remorse
