Starred vs Staired - What's the difference?
starred | staired |
(star)
Having a star or stars.
* (Mary Shelley)
Having (a specified kind or number of) stairs.
* 1961 , Canadian Patent Office record (volume 89, page 7750)
* 1968 , William David Thornbury, Principles of geomorphology (page 358)
* 2010 , Lynn A. Levine, Frommer's Istanbul (page 147)
As adjectives the difference between starred and staired
is that starred is having a star or stars while staired is having (a specified kind or number of) stairs.As a verb starred
is (star).starred
English
Verb
(head)Adjective
(-)- a Michelin-starred restaurant
- She became sad, and looked up to the many-starred sky; her soul uttered silently the bitter complaint of its own misery.
Anagrams
*staired
English
Adjective
(-)- In a device of the kind described, a plurality of platforms normally horizontally disposed in staired arrangement, each of said platforms comprising a pair of elongated platform elements
- They are variously described as simple, compound, hanging, tandem or two-staired , intersecting and nivation cirques.
- There is also speculation that the name Galata comes from the Italian word for descent (calata ), an appropriate description of the steep and staired streets that slope down the hill from Beyoglu to the Golden Horn.
