Vault vs Cabinet - What's the difference?
vault | cabinet |
An arched structure of masonry, forming a ceiling or canopy.
* Gray
A structure resembling a vault, especially (poetic) that formed by the sky.
* Shakespeare
* 1985', God said, ‘Let there be a ' vault through the middle of the waters to divide the waters in two.’ — Genesis 1:6 (New Jerusalem Bible)
A secure, enclosed area, especially an underground room used for burial, or to store valuables, wine etc.
* Sandys
* Jonathan Swift
To build as, or cover with a vault.
* Sir Walter Scott
(ambitransitive) To jump or leap over.
An act of vaulting; a leap or jump.
(gymnastics) An event in gymanstics performed on a vaulting horse.
A storage closet either separate from, or built into, a wall.
(New England) cupboard
* {{quote-book, year=1963, author=(Margery Allingham)
, title=(The China Governess)
, chapter=3 (historical) A size of photograph, specifically one measuring 3?" by 5½".
* 1891 , , A Scandal In Bohemia , Norton (2005), p. 19,
A group of advisors to a government or business entity.
(politics, often, capitalized) In parliamentary and some other systems of government, the group of ministers responsible for creating government policy and for overseeing the departments comprising the executive branch.
(archaic) A small chamber or private room.
* Prescott
(often capitalized) A collection of art or ethnographic objects.
(dialectal, Rhode Island) Milkshake.
(obsolete) A hut; a cottage; a small house.
* Spenser
As nouns the difference between vault and cabinet
is that vault is an arched structure of masonry, forming a ceiling or canopy or vault can be an act of vaulting; a leap or jump while cabinet is a storage closet either separate from, or built into, a wall.As a verb vault
is to build as, or cover with a vault or vault can be (ambitransitive) to jump or leap over.vault
English
(wikipedia vault)Etymology 1
From (etyl) volte (modern .Noun
(en noun)- the long-drawn aisle and fretted vault
- that heaven's vault should crack
- The bank kept their money safe in a large vault .
- Family members had been buried in the vault for centuries.
- the silent vaults of death
- to banish rats that haunt our vault
Derived terms
* barrel vault * cloister vault * compound vault * cross vault * decapartite vault * dodecapartite vault * domical vault * groin vault * oblique vault * octopartite vault * panel vault * polygonal vault * quadripartite vault * quinquepartite vault * ribbed vault * segmental vault * septempartite vault * sexpartite vault * star vault * stilted vault * tripartite vault * Welsh vaultVerb
(en verb)- The shady arch that vaulted the broad green alley.
Etymology 2
From (etyl) frequentative form of (etyl) volvere; later assimilated to Etymology 1, above.Verb
(en verb)- The fugitive vaulted over the fence to escape.
Derived terms
* vaulter * vaultingNoun
(en noun)See also
* pole vault * vaulting horsecabinet
English
Noun
(en noun)citation, passage=‘[…] There's every Staffordshire crime-piece ever made in this cabinet , and that's unique. The Van Hoyer Museum in New York hasn't that very rare second version of Maria Marten's Red Barn over there, nor the little Frederick George Manning—he was the criminal Dickens saw hanged on the roof of the gaol in Horsemonger Lane, by the way—’}}
- Holmes took a note of it. “One other question,” said he. “Was the photograph a cabinet ?”
- Philip passed some hours every day in his father's cabinet.
- Hearken a while from thy green cabinet , / The rural song of careful Colinet.