different between fountain vs cantharus

fountain

English

Etymology

From Middle English [Term?]; from Old French fontaine (whence modern fontaine); from Late Latin fontana, from Latin fontanus, fontaneus, adjectives from fons (source, spring).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?fa?n.tn?/
    • (US) IPA(key): [?fa?n.?n?]

Noun

fountain (plural fountains)

  1. (originally) A natural source of water; a spring.
  2. An artificial, usually ornamental, water feature (usually in a garden or public place) consisting of one or more streams of water originating from a statue or other structure.
  3. The structure from which an artificial fountain can issue.
  4. A reservoir from which liquid can be drawn.
  5. A source or origin of a flow (e.g., of favors or knowledge).
    • 1700, Tom Brown, Amusements Serious and Comical, calculated for the Meridian of London, page 5:
      Nothing will plea?e ?ome Men, but Books ?tuff’d with Antiquity, groaning under the weight of Learned Quotations drawn from the Fountains: And what is all this but Pilfering.
  6. (heraldry) A roundel barry wavy argent and azure.
  7. (juggling) A juggling pattern typically done with an even number of props where each prop is caught by the same hand that throws it.
  8. (US) A soda fountain.
    • 2014, Danielle Sarver Coombs, ?Bob Batchelor, We Are What We Sell: How Advertising Shapes American Life... and Always Has (page 222)
      He takes out a soup bowl, fills it with Pepsi from the fountain, and places it carefully on the counter in front of the boy. “That'll be a quarter,” he says professionally.
  9. (US) A drink poured from a soda fountain, or the cup it is poured into.
  10. A ground-based firework that projects sparks similar to a water fountain.
  11. (figurative) Anything that resembles a fountain in operation.

Synonyms

  • fount
  • wellspring
  • (heraldry) syke

Derived terms

Related terms

  • font

Translations

Verb

fountain (third-person singular simple present fountains, present participle fountaining, simple past and past participle fountained)

  1. (intransitive) To flow or gush as if from a fountain.
    • 1978, Tom Reamy, Blind Voices
      The fireflies swept toward him from all directions, in streams and rivers and currents of light, a vortex a hundred yards across, spiraling into the brighter center. They met over his supine body like ocean breakers, cascading, fountaining into the air.

Translations

References

Further reading

  • fountain on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Anagrams

  • infonaut

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cantharus

English

Etymology

From Latin cantharus, from Ancient Greek ???????? (kántharos).

Noun

cantharus (plural canthari)

  1. A large drinking cup with two handles.
  2. A fountain or basin in the courtyard of an ancient church for worshippers to wash before entering.

Synonyms

  • (drinking cup): kantharos, kotyle, kotylos

Latin

Alternative forms

  • cantarus

Etymology

From Ancient Greek ???????? (kántharos).

Pronunciation

  • (Classical) IPA(key): /?kan.t?a.rus/, [?kän?t??ä??s?]
  • (Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): /?kan.ta.rus/, [?k?n?t???us]

Noun

cantharus m (genitive canthar?); second declension

  1. a large drinking vessel with handles hanging down, tankard
  2. a kind of sea-fish, possibly the black seabream (Spondyliosoma cantharus)
  3. a lug of a water-pipe in the form of a tankard
    • a. 224, Dig. 30, 1, 41, § 11 Ulpianus libro vicesimo primo ad Sabinum

Declension

Second-declension noun.

Descendants

  • Italian: cantero
  • ? Catalan: càntar
  • ? English: cantharus
  • ? French: canthare
  • ? Galician: cântaro
  • ? Italian: cantaro
  • ? Portuguese: cântaro
  • ? Serbo-Croatian:
    Cyrillic: ????????
    Latin: k?nt?r
  • ? Spanish: cántaro
  • Translingual: Cantharus

References

  • cantharus in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
  • cantharus in Charles du Fresne du Cange’s Glossarium Mediæ et Infimæ Latinitatis (augmented edition, 1883–1887)
  • cantharus in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré Latin-Français, Hachette

cantharus From the web:

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