different between channel vs rut

channel

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?t?æn?l/
  • Hyphenation: chan?nel
  • Rhymes: -æn?l

Etymology 1

From Middle English chanel (also as canel, cannel, kanel), a borrowing from Old French chanel, canel, from Latin can?lis (groove; canal; channel). Doublet of canal.

Noun

channel (plural channels)

  1. The physical confine of a river or slough, consisting of a bed and banks.
    The water coming out of the waterwheel created a standing wave in the channel.
  2. The natural or man-made deeper course through a reef, bar, bay, or any shallow body of water.
    A channel was dredged to allow ocean-going vessels to reach the city.
  3. The navigable part of a river.
    We were careful to keep our boat in the channel.
  4. A narrow body of water between two land masses.
    The English Channel lies between France and England.
  5. Something through which another thing passes; a means of conveying or transmitting.
    The news was conveyed to us by different channels.
    • 1859, John Call Dalton, A Treatise on Human Physiology
      The veins are converging channels.
    • 1790, Edmund Burke, Reflections on the Revolution in France
      At best, he is but a channel to convey to the National Assembly such matter as may import that body to know.
  6. A gutter; a groove, as in a fluted column.
  7. (electronics) A connection between initiating and terminating nodes of a circuit.
    The guard-rail provided the channel between the downed wire and the tree.
  8. (electronics) The narrow conducting portion of a MOSFET transistor.
  9. (communication) The part that connects a data source to a data sink.
    A channel stretches between them.
  10. (communication) A path for conveying electrical or electromagnetic signals, usually distinguished from other parallel paths.
    We are using one of the 24 channels.
  11. (communication) A single path provided by a transmission medium via physical separation, such as by multipair cable.
    The channel is created by bonding the signals from these four pairs.
  12. (communication) A single path provided by a transmission medium via spectral or protocol separation, such as by frequency or time-division multiplexing.
    Their call is being carried on channel 6 of the T-1 line.
  13. (broadcasting) A specific radio frequency or band of frequencies, usually in conjunction with a predetermined letter, number, or codeword, and allocated by international agreement.
    KNDD is the channel at 107.7 MHz in Seattle.
  14. (broadcasting) A specific radio frequency or band of frequencies used for transmitting television.
    NBC is on channel 11 in San Jose.
    • 2008, Lou Schuler, "Foreward", in Nate Green, Built for Show, page xi
      TV back then was five channels (three networks, PBS, and an independent station that ran I Love Lucy reruns), []
  15. (storage) The portion of a storage medium, such as a track or a band, that is accessible to a given reading or writing station or head.
    This chip in this disk drive is the channel device.
  16. (technic) The way in a turbine pump where the pressure is built up.
    The liquid is pressurized in the lateral channel.
  17. (business, marketing) A distribution channel
  18. (Internet) A particular area for conversations on an IRC network, analogous to a chat room and often dedicated to a specific topic.
  19. (Internet, historical) A means of delivering up-to-date Internet content.
    • 1999, Jeffrey S Rule, Dynamic HTML: The HTML Developer's Guide
      Netcaster is the "receiver" for channels that are built into Netscape 4.01 and later releases.
  20. A psychic or medium who temporarily takes on the personality of somebody else.
Synonyms
  • (narrow body of water between two land masses) passage, sound, strait
  • (for television) side (dated British, from when there were only two channels), station (US)
  • (groove, as in a fluted column) groove, gutter
Derived terms
Related terms
  • canal
Descendants
  • ? Japanese: ????? (channeru)
  • ? Korean: ?? (chaeneol)
  • ? Welsh: sianel
Translations

Etymology 2

From Middle English chanelen, from the noun (see above).

Verb

channel (third-person singular simple present channels, present participle channeling or channelling, simple past and past participle channelled or channeled)

  1. (transitive) To make or cut a channel or groove in.
  2. (transitive) To direct or guide along a desired course.
    We will channel the traffic to the left with these cones.
  3. (transitive, of a spirit, as of a dead person) To serve as a medium for.
    She was channeling the spirit of her late husband, Seth.
  4. (transitive) To follow as a model, especially in a performance.
    He was trying to channel President Reagan, but the audience wasn't buying it.
    When it is my turn to sing karaoke, I am going to channel Ray Charles.
Derived terms
  • backchannel
Translations

Etymology 3

From a corruption of chainwale.

Noun

channel (plural channels)

  1. (nautical) The wale of a sailing ship which projects beyond the gunwale and to which the shrouds attach via the chains. One of the flat ledges of heavy plank bolted edgewise to the outside of a vessel, to increase the spread of the shrouds and carry them clear of the bulwarks.

References

  • channel at OneLook Dictionary Search

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rut

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /??t/

Etymology 1

Borrowed from Old French rut (noise, roar, bellowing), from Latin rug?tus, from rug?re (to roar).

Noun

rut (plural ruts)

  1. (zoology) Sexual desire or oestrus of cattle, and various other mammals. [from early 15th c.]
  2. The noise made by deer during sexual excitement.
  3. Roaring, as of waves breaking upon the shore; rote.
Translations

Verb

rut (third-person singular simple present ruts, present participle rutting, simple past and past participle rutted)

  1. (intransitive) To be in the annual rut or mating season.
  2. (intransitive) To have sexual intercourse.
  3. (transitive, rare) To have sexual intercourse with.
    • What piety forbids the lusty ram
      Or more salacious goat to rut their dam
Synonyms
  • (be in mating season): blissom, brim, bull, oestruate
  • (have sexual intercourse): do it, get some, have sex; see also Thesaurus:copulate
  • (have sexual intercourse with): coitize, go to bed with, sleep with; see also Thesaurus:copulate with
Translations

Etymology 2

Probably from Middle English route, from Middle French route (road), from Old French route. See also rutter.

Noun

rut (plural ruts)

  1. A furrow, groove, or track worn in the ground, as from the passage of many wheels along a road. [from 16th c.]
    Synonyms: groove, furrow
  2. (figuratively) A fixed routine, procedure, line of conduct, thought or feeling. [from 19th c.]
    Synonym: routine
  3. (figuratively) A dull routine.
Translations

Verb

rut (third-person singular simple present ruts, present participle rutting, simple past and past participle rutted)

  1. (transitive) To make a furrow.
Translations

Further reading

  • Rut on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Anagrams

  • RTU, URT, UTR, tur

Central Franconian

Alternative forms

  • rot (southern Moselle Franconian and Siegerland)

Etymology

From Old High German r?t.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?u?t/

Adjective

rut (masculine rude or ruhe, feminine rut or ruh, comparative ruder or ruher, superlative et rutste)

  1. (Ripuarian, northern Moselle Franconian) red

Usage notes

  • The inflections with loss of -d- are restricted to westernmost Ripuarian.

French

Etymology

From Old French rut, ruit, inherited from Latin rug?tus. Doublet of rugi, past participle of rugir.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?yt/

Noun

rut m (plural ruts)

  1. rut (sexual excitement)

Derived terms

  • en rut

Further reading

  • “rut” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).

Hungarian

Alternative forms

  • rút

Etymology

An onomatopoeia.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [?rut]
  • Hyphenation: rut
  • Rhymes: -ut

Interjection

rut

  1. gobble (representation of the sound of a turkey; can be used repetitively)

Vilamovian

Etymology

From Middle High German r?t (red, red-haired), from Old High German r?t (red, scarlet, purple-red, brown-red, yellow-red), from Proto-West Germanic *raud, from Proto-Germanic *raudaz, from Proto-Indo-European *h?rewd?-.

Akin to German rot, Old Saxon r?d, Old Dutch r?d (modern Dutch rood)

Adjective

r?t

  1. red

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