Tint vs Stint - What's the difference?
tint | stint |
A slight coloring.
A pale or faint tinge of any color; especially, a variation of a color obtained by adding white (contrast shade)
A color considered with reference to other very similar colors.
A shaded effect in engraving, produced by the juxtaposition of many fine parallel lines.
(intransitive) To shade, to color.
* {{quote-book, year=1963, author=(Margery Allingham)
, title=(The China Governess)
, chapter=1 A period of time spent doing or being something. A spell.
* {{quote-news
, year=2012
, date=May 13
, author=Andrew Benson
, title=Williams's Pastor Maldonado takes landmark Spanish Grand Prix win
, work=BBC Sport
limit; bound; restraint; extent
* South
Quantity or task assigned; proportion allotted.
* Cowper
(archaic) To stop (an action); cease, desist.
* 1590 , Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene , III.iii:
* Shakespeare
* Sir Walter Scott
(obsolete) To stop speaking or talking (of a subject).
* Late 14th century , :
To be sparing or mean.
To restrain within certain limits; to bound; to restrict to a scant allowance.
* Woodward
* Law
To assign a certain task to (a person), upon the performance of which he/she is excused from further labour for that day or period; to stent.
To impregnate successfully; to get with foal; said of mares.
* J. H. Walsh
Any of several very small wading birds in the genus Calidris . Types of sandpiper, such as the dunlin or the sanderling.
As verbs the difference between tint and stint
is that tint is while stint is (archaic|intransitive) to stop (an action); cease, desist.As a noun stint is
a period of time spent doing or being something a spell or stint can be any of several very small wading birds in the genus calidris types of sandpiper, such as the dunlin or the sanderling or stint can be (medical device).tint
English
Etymology 1
Alteration of earlier tinct, from (etyl) .Noun
(en noun)- Red and blue are different colors, but two shades of scarlet are different tints.
Verb
citation, passage=The half-dozen pieces […] were painted white and carved with festoons of flowers, birds and cupids. To display them the walls had been tinted a vivid blue which had now faded, but the carpet, which had evidently been stored and recently relaid, retained its original turquoise.}}
See also
* tinterEtymology 2
Unknown(?)Alternative forms
* intstint
English
Etymology 1
(etyl) .Noun
(en noun)- He had a stint in jail.
citation, page= , passage=That left Maldonado with a 6.2-second lead. Alonso closed in throughout their third stints , getting the gap down to 4.2secs before Maldonado stopped for the final time on lap 41.}}
- God has wrote upon no created thing the utmost stint of his power.
- His old stint — three thousand pounds a year.
Verb
(en verb)- O do thy cruell wrath and spightfull wrong / At length allay, and stint thy stormy strife
- And stint thou too, I pray thee.
- The damsel stinted in her song.
- Now wol I stynten of this Arveragus, / And speken I wole of Dorigen his wyf
- The next party you throw, don't stint on the beer.
- I shall not go about to extenuate the latitude of the curse upon the earth, or stint it only to the production of weeds.
- She stints them in their meals.
- The majority of maiden mares will become stinted while at work.