Pond vs Yond - What's the difference?
pond | yond |
An inland body of standing water, either natural or man-made, that is smaller than a lake.
*
*:But when the moon rose and the breeze awakened, and the sedges stirred, and the cat's-paws raced across the moonlit ponds , and the far surf off Wonder Head intoned the hymn of the four winds, the trinity, earth and sky and water, became one thunderous symphony—a harmony of sound and colour silvered to a monochrome by the moon.
(lb) The Atlantic Ocean. Especially in across the pond.
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To block the flow of water so that it can escape only through evaporation or seepage; to dam.
* 2004 , Calvin W. Rose, An Introduction to the Environmental Physics of Soil, Water and Watersheds [http://books.google.com/books?id=TxCQ-DaSIwUC], ISBN 0521536790, page 201:
To make into a pond; to collect, as water, in a pond by damming.
(obsolete) To ponder.
* Spenser
further; more distant
yonder
* William Shakespeare, Hamlet , Lines 46-48:
yonder
(obsolete) Furious; mad; angry; fierce.
* Spenser
In obsolete terms the difference between pond and yond
is that pond is to ponder while yond is furious; mad; angry; fierce.As a noun pond
is an inland body of standing water, either natural or man-made, that is smaller than a lake.As a verb pond
is to block the flow of water so that it can escape only through evaporation or seepage; to dam.As a proper noun Pond
is {{surname|lang=en}.As an adjective yond is
further; more distant.As an adverb yond is
yonder.pond
English
(wikipedia pond)Noun
(en noun)Derived terms
* across the pond * ducks on the pond * Leftpondia * pondian * RightpondiaVerb
(en verb)- The rate of fall of the surface of water ponded over the soil within the ring gives a measure of the infiltration rate for the particular enclosed area.
- Pleaseth you, pond your suppliant's plaint.
Anagrams
* ----yond
English
Etymology 1
From Middle English, equivalent to yon (from (etyl) ).Adjective
(-)- Last night of all, / When yond same star that’s westward from the pole / Had made his course t' illume that part of heaven.
Adverb
(-)Etymology 2
From Old English onda, anda envy, jealousy; hatred, angerAdjective
(head)- Then wexeth wood and yond .