Thorn vs Thoron - What's the difference?
thorn | thoron |
A sharp protective spine of a plant.
Any shrub or small tree that bears thorns.
(figurative) That which pricks or annoys; anything troublesome.
* Bible, 2 Corinthians xii. 7
* South
A letter of the Latin alphabet (capital:'' Þ''', ''small:'' '''þ'''), borrowed by Old English from the futhark to represent a dental fricative, then not distinguished from eth, but in modern use (in Icelandic and other languages, but no longer in English) used only for the voiceless dental fricative found in English '' '''th igh
* See also Etymology of ye (definite article).
To pierce with, or as if with, a
* {{quote-book, year=1869, author=, title=Old Town Folks
, passage=
* {{quote-book, year=2003, author=Scott D. Zachary, title=Scorn This, pageurl=http://books.google.com/books?id=HELSK5JtSbMC&pg=PA175, page=175
, passage=Even Judge Bradley's callused sentiments were thorned by the narration of Jaclyn's journals.}}
As nouns the difference between thorn and thoron
is that thorn is a sharp protective spine of a plant while thoron is the isotope of radon {{nuclide|220|86|Ra}.As a verb thorn
is to pierce with, or as if with, a thorn.As a proper noun Thorn
is {{surname|topographic|from=Middle English}} for someone living near a thorn bush.thorn
English
(wikipedia thorn)Noun
(en noun)- the white thorn'''; the cockspur '''thorn
- There was given to me a thorn in the flesh, the messenger of Satan to buffet me.
- The guilt of empire, all its thorns and cares, / Be only mine.
Derived terms
* thorn apple * thorn broom * thornbush * thorn devil * thorn hopper * thorn in one's side * Thornton * thornyVerb
(en verb)citation