different between clicker vs clinker

clicker

English

Etymology

From click +? -er.

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?kl?k?/
  • (General American) IPA(key): /?kl?k?/
  • Rhymes: -?k?(?)

Noun

clicker (plural clickers)

  1. (slang) The remote-control device used to change settings on a television set, VCR, or other electronic equipment.
    We have a clicker for the TV, one for the VCR, one for the DVD player and another one that does it all.
  2. An electronic device used by individual students in the classroom to respond to multiple-choice questions, etc.
  3. A person who cuts out the uppers of shoes from pieces of leather using a flexible knife that clicks as it changes direction.
  4. A machine that cuts materials using a steel rule die. The name comes from the sound (click) when the material is cut. May be hand, pneumatic, or hydraulic powered.
  5. A signalling device used by military forces. Pressed between thumb and fingers, it makes a small but distinctive click understood by other members of a unit.
  6. A small mechanical device that produces a clicking sound, used in dog training.
  7. Someone who clicks, for example using a computer mouse.
  8. (Britain, obsolete) One who stands before a shop door to invite people to buy.
  9. (printing, obsolete) One who has charge of the work of a companionship.
  10. (printing, historical) An employee who locks the type in the form to make it ready for printing.

Derived terms

  • clicker game

Anagrams

  • clerick

clicker From the web:

  • what clicker does zak george use
  • what's clicker training
  • what clicker does apple use
  • what clicker means
  • what clicker does mean
  • what clicker does
  • what is clicker training for cats
  • what are clickers in the last of us


clinker

English

Alternative forms

  • (brick): klinker

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /kl??k?/
  • (General American) IPA(key): /kl??k?/
  • Rhymes: -??k?(r)
  • Hyphenation: clink?er

Etymology 1

From Dutch klinkaerd, later klinker, from klinken (to ring, resound).

Noun

clinker (countable and uncountable, plural clinkers)

  1. A very hard brick used for paving customarily made in the Netherlands. [from 17th c.]
    • 1938, Xavier Herbert, Capricornia, New York: D. Appleton-Century, 1943, Chapter XXXII, p. 581, [1]
      She left the road at the little shed where he whom she still regarded as her father used to keep his tricycle, and walked up the clinker path towards the house.
  2. A mass of bricks fused together by intense heat. [from 17th c.]
  3. Slag or ash produced by intense heat in a furnace, kiln or boiler that forms a hard residue upon cooling. [from 18th c.]
    • 1944, Emily Carr, The House of All Sorts, "Dew and Alarm Clocks," [2]
      Cold and grim sat that malevolent brute the furnace, greedy, bottomless—its grate bars clenched over clinkers which no shaker could dislodge.
  4. An intermediate product in the manufacture of Portland cement, obtained by sintering limestone and alumino-silicate materials such as clay into nodules in a cement kiln.
  5. Hardened volcanic lava. [from 19th c.]
    • 2004, Richard Fortey, The Earth, Folio Society 2011, p. 10:
      Nobody could pretend that a huge slope of clinker is aesthetically pleasing.
  6. A scum of oxide of iron formed in forging. [from 19th c.]
Derived terms
  • clinker block
Translations

Verb

clinker (third-person singular simple present clinkers, present participle clinkering, simple past and past participle clinkered)

  1. (transitive, intransitive) To convert or be converted into clinker.
    • 1923, United States Geological Survey, Bulletin 748 (page 125)
      This burning has baked and clinkered the adjacent strata, producing a very resistant formation, which rises with conspicuous abruptness from the flat terrace underlain by the soft Lebo shale member.
    • 1981, David W. Schultz, Municipal solid waste, resource recovery: Proceedings of the seventh annual research symposium at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, March 16-18
      The use of coal with a low ash fusion temperature (1204°C, or 2200°F) caused frequent clinkering on the grate during initial tests. The clinkering stopped when the coal was replaced with one having a higher fusion temperature []

Etymology 2

From clink +? -er.

Noun

clinker (plural clinkers)

  1. Someone or something that clinks.
  2. (in the plural) Fetters.
Translations

Etymology 3

From clincher

Noun

clinker (uncountable)

  1. (nautical, chiefly attributive) A style of boatbuilding using overlapping planks.
    clinker planking; a clinker dinghy
Synonyms
  • lapstrake
Derived terms
  • clinker-built
  • clinkerwise
Translations

Anagrams

  • crinkle

French

Noun

clinker m (plural clinkers)

  1. clinker

clinker From the web:

  • what clinker means
  • what's clinker built
  • clinkers what does it mean
  • what is clinker in cement
  • what is clinker brick
  • what is clinker used for
  • what is clinker factor
  • what are clinkers candy
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like