different between acrobat vs tightrope

acrobat

English

Etymology

From French acrobate, from Ancient Greek ????????? (akrobát?s, walking on tiptoe, climbing aloft), from ????????? (akrobaté?, I walk on tiptoe), from ????? (ákron, highest or farthest point, mountain top, peak) + ????? (baín?, I walk, step).

Pronunciation

  • (US) IPA(key): /?æk.??.bæt/

Noun

acrobat (plural acrobats)

  1. An athlete who performs acts requiring skill, agility and coordination.

Derived terms

  • acrobatess
  • acrobatic
  • acrobatics

Related terms

  • Acrobates (taxonomic genus)
  • Acrobatidae (taxonomic family)
  • acro-

Translations

Anagrams

  • CATOBAR, abactor

Romanian

Etymology

From French acrobate.

Noun

acrobat m (plural acroba?i, feminine equivalent acrobat?)

  1. acrobat

Declension

acrobat From the web:

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  • what acrobats hang from


tightrope

English

Etymology

tight +? rope

Alternative forms

  • tight-rope
  • tight rope

Noun

tightrope (plural tightropes)

  1. A tightly stretched rope or cable on which acrobats perform high above the ground.
  2. (figuratively) a difficult or desperate situation.

Hyponyms

  • high wire / highwire
  • low-wire / low wire

Derived terms

  • tightrope walking
  • tightrope walker
  • walk a tightrope

Coordinate terms

  • slackline

Translations

tightrope From the web:

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