Whin vs Whing - What's the difference?
whin | whing |
Gorse; furze.
* 1790 , '', 1828, Thomas Park (editor), ''Works of the British Poets , Volume XX: The Poems of Robert Burns,
* 1932 , (Lewis Grassic Gibbon), , 1995, Canongate Books,
The plant woad-waxen.
Whinstone.
A high-pitched ringing sound
* 1855: Charles Kingsley, Westward Ho! The Voyages and Adventures of Sir Amyas Leigh
* 1578: Henry Lyte (tr.), A Niewe herball or historie of plantes
* 1791: letter from Colonel Darke to George Washington, quoted in Theodore Roosevelt, The Winning of the West , vol. 4 (1896)
* 1869: James Jennings, The Dialect of the West of England, particularly Somersetshire, with a glossary of words now in use there; also with poems and other pieces exemplifying the dialect
*:: An’ shakin ther whings , thâ vleed vooäth an’ awâ.
As nouns the difference between whin and whing
is that whin is gorse; furze while whing is a high-pitched ringing sound or whing can be .As a verb whing is
to move with great force or speed.whin
English
Noun
(en noun)page 65,
- By this time he was cross the ford, / Whare in the snaw the chapman smoor'd; / And past the birks and meikle stane, / Whare drunken Charlie brak's neck-bane; / And through the whins , and by the cairn, / Whare hunters fand the murder'd bairn; / And near the thorn, aboon the well, / Whare Mungo's mither hang'd hersel.
page 38,
- And sometimes they clambered down […] and saw the whin bushes climb black the white hills beside them and far and away the blink of lights across the moors where folk lay happed and warm.
- (Gray)
Derived terms
* moor whin * petty whin * whin bruiser * whin sparrow * whin thrush (Webster 1913)whing
English
Etymology 1
Onomatopoeic.Noun
(en noun)- " Whing', ' whing ," went the Spaniard's shot, like so many humming-tops, through the rigging far above their heads. . .
Etymology 2
See .Noun
(en noun)- The fruite is long, flat, and thinne, almost lyke to a feather of a small birde, or lyke the whing of a grashopper.
- we incamped in two Lines about 60 yards apart the Right whing in frunt Commanded by General Butler, the Left in the Rear which I commanded
- When tha dumbledores hummin, craup out o’ tha cobwâll