pound |
contuse |
Related terms |
In transitive terms the difference between pound and contuse
is that
pound is to crush to pieces; to pulverize while
contuse is to injure without breaking the skin; to bruise.
As verbs the difference between pound and contuse
is that
pound is to confine in, or as in, a pound; to impound while
contuse is to injure without breaking the skin; to bruise.
As a noun pound
is short for pound-force, a unit of force/weight.
triturate |
contuse |
Related terms |
As verbs the difference between triturate and contuse
is that
triturate is to grind to a fine powder, to pulverize while
contuse is to injure without breaking the skin; to bruise.
pulverize |
contuse |
Related terms |
As verbs the difference between pulverize and contuse
is that
pulverize is an alternative spelling of lang=en while
contuse is to injure without breaking the skin; to bruise.
bray |
contuse |
Related terms |
In transitive terms the difference between bray and contuse
is that
bray is to make or utter with a loud, discordant, or harsh and grating sound while
contuse is to injure without breaking the skin; to bruise.
As verbs the difference between bray and contuse
is that
bray is of a donkey, to make its cry while
contuse is to injure without breaking the skin; to bruise.
As a noun bray
is the cry of an ass or donkey.
As a proper noun Bray
is {{surname|lang=en}.
contuse |
contused |
As verbs the difference between contuse and contused
is that
contuse is to injure without breaking the skin; to bruise while
contused is past tense of contuse.
contuse |
confuse |
As verbs the difference between contuse and confuse
is that
contuse is to injure without breaking the skin; to bruise while
confuse is to thoroughly mix; to confound; to disorder.