Wight vs Zombie - What's the difference?
wight | zombie |
(archaic) A living creature, especially a human being.
* circa 1602 , , act 1, scene 3:
* 1626 , , verse vi
(paganism) A being of one of the Nine Worlds of heathen belief, especially a nature spirit, elf or ancestor.
(poetic) A ghost or other supernatural entity.
* 1789 , , lines 14-15-16
(fantasy) A wraith-like creature.
(archaic except in dialects ) Brave, valorous, strong.
*:
*:I haue two sones that were but late made knyghtes / and the eldest hyghte sir Tirre // and my yongest sone hyght Lauayne / and yf hit please yow / he shalle ryde with yow vnto that Iustes / and he is of his age x stronge and wyght
Strong; stout; active.
*
English terms with homophones
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A snake god or fetish in religions of West Africa and elsewhere.
(voodoo, superstition) A person, usually undead, animated by unnatural forces (such as magic), with no soul or will of his/her own.
(fiction) A deceased person who becomes reanimate to attack the living.
(figuratively) An apathetic person.
(figuratively) A human being in a state of extreme mental exhaustion.
An information worker who has signed a nondisclosure agreement.
(computing) A process or task which has terminated but was not removed from the list of processes, typically because it has child processes that have not yet terminated.
(computing) A computer affected by malware which causes it to do whatever the attacker wants it to do without the user's knowledge.
A cocktail of rum and fruit juices.
* 1976 , CX:ii, pages
(Canada, historical, derogatory) A conscripted member of the Canadian military during World War II who was assigned to home defence rather than to combat in Europe.The Canadian Encyclopedia , 2nd edition, Hurtig Publishers, Edmonton Canada, 1988. See "National Resources Mobilization Act," p. 1433.
* 1944 , "
(philosophy) A hypothetical person who lacks self awareness.
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As nouns the difference between wight and zombie
is that wight is a living creature, especially a human being while zombie is a snake god or fetish in religions of West Africa and elsewhere.As an adjective wight
is (archaic except in dialects) Brave, valorous, strong.wight
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl), from (etyl) . See also (l). The meaning of the wraith-like creature is from barrow-wights in world.Noun
(en noun)- O base Hungarian wight ! wilt thou the spigot wield?
- Oh say me true if thou wert mortal wight
And why from us so quickly thou didst take thy flight.
- But I saw a glow-worm near,
Who replied: ‘What wailing wight
Calls the watchman of the night?
Etymology 2
From (etyl), from (etyl) Merriam-Webster, 1974..Adjective
(head)See also
* Isle of WightReferences
zombie
English
(wikipedia zombie)Noun
(zombies)- I shot a zombie'''. He was a '''zombie , Kenneth. The pilot was bitten before he picked us up!
- After working for 18 hours on the computer, I was a zombie .
EE Times , "Beware 'zombie' clauses," 2 Aug., 2004
8] and [http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=8LpWAAAAMAAJ&q=%22drank+zombies%22&dq=%22drank+zombies%22&hl=en&sa=X&ei=uflUT6fRCIuY0QWBptCoCQ&redir_esc=y 380:
- The maitre d’ introduced us and I had a zombie' with him. Those ' zombies are wicked.
- I watched Mario and drank zombies out of a thermos.
Time for Decision," Time (US edition), 6 Nov.,
- Had the time come to order Canada's home defense draftees—some 70,000 zombies idling at home—to battle overseas?