Curtail vs Stanch - What's the difference?
curtail | stanch |
(obsolete) To cut short the tail of an animal
To shorten or abridge the duration of something; to truncate.
(figuratively) To limit or restrict, keep in check.
* Macaulay
To stop the flow of.
* Francis Bacon
To cease, as the flowing of blood.
* Bible, Luke viii. 44
To prop; to make stanch, or strong.
* Emerson
To extinguish; to quench, as fire or thirst.
That which stanches or checks.
A floodgate by which water is accumulated, for floating a boat over a shallow part of a stream by its release.
Strong and tight; sound; firm.
* Evelyn
Firm in principle; constant and zealous; loyal; hearty; steadfast.
* Prior
Close; secret; private.
* John Locke
In lang=en terms the difference between curtail and stanch
is that curtail is to shorten or abridge the duration of something; to truncate while stanch is to prop; to make stanch, or strong.As verbs the difference between curtail and stanch
is that curtail is (obsolete) to cut short the tail of an animal while stanch is to stop the flow of.As nouns the difference between curtail and stanch
is that curtail is (architecture) a scroll termination, as of a step, etc while stanch is that which stanches or checks.As an adjective stanch is
strong and tight; sound; firm.curtail
English
Verb
(en verb)- ''Curtailing horses procured long horse-hair.
- When the audience grew restless, the speaker curtailed her speech.
- Their efforts to curtail spending didn't quite succeed.
- Our incomes have been curtailed ; his salary has been doubled.
Synonyms
* (animal's tail) crop, dock * shorten * behedge, control, limit, restrainDerived terms
* curtailer * curtailmentAnagrams
*stanch
English
Alternative forms
* staunchVerb
(es)- A small amount of cotton can be stuffed into the nose to stanch the flow of blood if necessary.
- Iron or a stone laid to the neck doth stanch the bleeding of the nose.
- Immediately her issue of blood stanched .
- His gathered sticks to stanch the wall / Of the snow tower when snow should fall.
Noun
(es)- (Knight)
Adjective
(er)- a stanch ship
- One of the closets is parqueted with plain deal, set in diamond, exceeding stanch and pretty.
- a stanch''' churchman; a '''stanch friend or adherent
- In politics I hear you're stanch .
- this to be kept stanch
