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Spout vs Beak - What's the difference?

spout | beak |

As nouns the difference between spout and beak

is that spout is a tube or lip through which liquid is poured or discharged while beak is Anatomical uses.

As verbs the difference between spout and beak

is that spout is to gush forth in a jet or stream while beak is strike with the beak.

spout

English

Noun

(en noun)
  • a tube or lip through which liquid is poured or discharged
  • I dropped my china teapot, and its spout has broken.
  • a stream of liquid
  • the mixture of air and water thrown up from the blowhole of a whale
  • Verb

    (en verb)
  • To gush forth in a jet or stream
  • Water spouts from a hole.
  • (ambitransitive) To eject water or liquid in a jet.
  • The whale spouted .
  • * Creech
  • The mighty whale spouts the tide.
  • To speak tediously or pompously.
  • To utter magniloquently; to recite in an oratorical or pompous manner.
  • * Beaumont and Fletcher
  • Pray, spout some French, son.
  • (slang, dated) To pawn; to pledge.
  • to spout a watch

    Anagrams

    * * * * * *

    beak

    English

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • Anatomical uses .
  • # A rigid structure projecting from the front of a bird's face, used for pecking, grooming and for eating food.
  • # A similar structure forming the jaws of an octopus, turtle, etc.
  • # The long projecting sucking mouth of some insects and other invertebrates, as in the Hemiptera.
  • # The upper or projecting part of the shell, near the hinge of a bivalve.
  • # The prolongation of certain univalve shells containing the canal.
  • # (botany) Any process somewhat like the beak of a bird, terminating the fruit or other parts of a plant.
  • Figurative uses .
  • # Anything projecting or ending in a point like a beak, such as a promontory of land.
  • (Carew)
  • # (architecture) A continuous slight projection ending in an arris or narrow fillet; that part of a drip from which the water is thrown off.
  • # (farriery) A toe clip.
  • # (nautical) That part of a ship, before the forecastle, which is fastened to the stem, and supported by the main knee.
  • # (nautical) A beam, shod or at the end with a metal head or point, and projecting from the prow of an ancient galley, used as a ram to pierce the vessel of an enemy; a beakhead.
  • Colloquial uses .
  • # (slang) The human nose, especially one that is large and pointed.
  • # (slang, British) A justice of the peace, magistrate, headmaster or other person of authority.
  • He's up before the beak again tomorrow.
  • I clapp'd my peepers full of tears, and so the old beak set me free (I began to weep, and the judge set me free)
  • #* '>citation
  • #* '>citation
  • Synonyms

    * (sense, rigid structure projecting from a bird's face) bill * (human nose) honker, schnozzle

    Derived terms

    * beakish * wet one's beak

    Verb

    (en verb)
  • strike with the beak.
  • seize with the beak.
  • Anagrams

    *

    References

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