different between caf vs restrict

caf

English

Etymology

Clippings.

Pronunciation

  • enPR: k?f, IPA(key): /kæf/
  • Rhymes: -æf

Noun

caf (plural cafs)

  1. (informal) A café.
    • 2008, Carlos Frías, Take Me with You: A Memoir:
      Fourth on the list of the businesses my father and his brothers had owned was a caf on the corner of San Ignacio and Lamparilla in Old Havana.
  2. (informal) A cafeteria.
    • 2005, Amy Davis, Adam Burns, Michigan State University, page 49:
      There are plenty of restaurants to choose from when you're sick of the ol’ caf food.
    • 2009, Lili St. Crow, Betrayals:
      Locked, empty classrooms on either side, other halls opening up to go down to the caf, two janitors' closets. Janitors' closets. Great. One was locked.
  3. A caffeinated coffee.

Related terms

  • (caffeinated coffee): decaf, half-caf

Translations

Anagrams

  • ACF, AFC, CFA, FAC, FCA, fac

Middle English

Noun

caf

  1. Alternative form of chaf

Old English

Etymology

From Proto-Germanic *kaibaz (strong, lively, brave).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /k??f/

Adjective

c?f

  1. quick, sharp, prompt, nimble, swift
  2. bold, brave

Declension

Descendants

  • Middle English: kafe, cave, cof, cove
    • Scots: caif, kaif

Volapük

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /t?af/

Noun

caf (nominative plural cafs)

  1. kettle

Declension


Welsh

Alternative forms

  • ca (colloquial)

Pronunciation

  • (North Wales) (standard) IPA(key): /ka?v/
    • (North Wales) (colloquial) IPA(key): /ka?/
  • (South Wales) (standard) (colloquial) IPA(key): /ka?v/
    • (South Wales) (colloquial) IPA(key): /ka?/

Verb

caf

  1. (literary) first-person singular present indicative/future of cael

Mutation

caf From the web:

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restrict

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin restrictus, perfect passive participle of restring? (draw back tightly; restrain, restrict), from re- (back, again) + string? (press, tighten, compress). Doublet of ristretto as an adjective.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /???st??kt/
  • Rhymes: -?kt

Verb

restrict (third-person singular simple present restricts, present participle restricting, simple past and past participle restricted)

  1. To restrain within boundaries; to limit; to confine
  2. (specifically, mathematics) To consider (a function) as defined on a subset of its original domain.
    If we restrict sine to [ ? ? 2 , ? 2 ] {\displaystyle [-{\frac {\pi }{2}},{\frac {\pi }{2}}]} , we can define its inverse.

Synonyms

  • (to restrain within bounds): limit, bound, circumscribe, withstrain, restrain, repress, curb, coerce

Related terms

  • restriction
  • restraint
  • restrain

Translations

Adjective

restrict (comparative more restrict, superlative most restrict)

  1. (obsolete) Restricted.

Anagrams

  • critters, stricter

restrict From the web:

  • what restrictions apply to provisional licenses
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  • what restrictions are being lifted in pa
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  • what restrictions are in place in california
  • what restrictions are being lifted in va
  • what restrictions are being lifted in ct
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