different between fringe vs limit
fringe
English
Etymology
From Middle English frenge, from Old French frenge, from Vulgar Latin *frimbia, metathesis of Latin fimbriae (“fibers, threads, fringe”, plural). (Cognates include German Franse and Danish frynse.) Doublet of fimbria.
Pronunciation
- (General American, Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /f??nd?/
- Rhymes: -?nd?
Noun
fringe (plural fringes)
- A decorative border.
- the fringe of a picture
- A marginal or peripheral part.
- 1673, Jeremy Taylor, Heniaytos: A Course of Sermons for All the Sundays of the Year […]
- the confines of grace and the fringes of repentance
- 1673, Jeremy Taylor, Heniaytos: A Course of Sermons for All the Sundays of the Year […]
- Those members of a political party, or any social group, holding unorthodox views.
- The periphery of a town or city (or other area).
- (Britain) Synonym of bangs: hair hanging over the forehead, especially a hairstyle where it is cut straight across.
- Her fringe is so long it covers her eyes.
- 1915, W. Somerset Maugham, Of Human Bondage
- In a few minutes Mrs. Athelny appeared. She had taken her hair out of the curling pins and now wore an elaborate fringe.
- “No.” Astrid?s tone dismissed Sophie and the fringe as she galloped off to a new topic.
- 2009, Geraldine Biddle-Perry, Sarah Cheang, Hair: Styling, Culture and Fashion, page 231,
- Set against the seductive visual and textual imagery of these soft-focus fantasy worlds, the stock list details offer the reader a very real solution to achieving the look themselves, ‘Hair, including coloured fringes (obtainable from Joseph, £3.50) by Paul Nix’ (Baker 1972a: 68).
- (physics) A light or dark band formed by the diffraction of light.
- interference fringe
- Non-mainstream theatre.
- The Fringe; Edinburgh Fringe; Adelaide Fringe
- (botany) The peristome or fringe-like appendage of the capsules of most mosses.
- (golf) The area around the green
- (Australia) Used attributively with reference to Aboriginal people living on the edge of towns etc.
- 2006, Alexis Wright, Carpentaria, Giramondo 2012, p. 20:
- All the fringe people thought it was such a good house, ingenious in fact, and erected similar makeshift housing for themselves.
- 2006, Alexis Wright, Carpentaria, Giramondo 2012, p. 20:
- (television, radio) A daypart that precedes or follows prime time.
Synonyms
- (members of a political party, or any social group, holding unorthodox views): fringe group
- (periphery of a town or city): outskirts
Derived terms
Translations
Adjective
fringe (not comparable)
- Outside the mainstream.
Synonyms
- alternative
- nonmainstream
Translations
Verb
fringe (third-person singular simple present fringes, present participle fringing, simple past and past participle fringed)
- (transitive) To decorate with fringe.
- (transitive) To serve as a fringe.
Translations
Anagrams
- Finger, finger
fringe From the web:
- what fringe benefits
- what fringe benefits are taxable
- what fringe means
- what fringe benefits increase taxable wages
limit
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?l?m?t/
- (India) IPA(key): /?l?m?t/, /?l?mt/
- Rhymes: -?m?t
Etymology 1
From Middle English limit, from Old French limit, from Latin l?mes (“a cross-path or balk between fields, hence a boundary, boundary line or wall, any path or road, border, limit”).
Noun
limit (plural limits)
- A restriction; a bound beyond which one may not go.
- There are several existing limits to executive power.
- Two drinks is my limit tonight.
- 1839, Charles Dickens, Nicholas Nickleby, chapter 21:
- It is the conductor which communicates to the inhabitants of regions beyond its limit […]
- 1922, James Joyce, Ulysses, episode 17:
- Ever he would wander, selfcompelled, to the extreme limit of his cometary orbit, beyond the fixed stars and variable suns and telescopic planets, astronomical waifs and strays, to the extreme boundary of space […]
- 2012 March 6, Dan McCrum, Nicole Bullock and Guy Chazan, Financial Times, “Utility buyout loses power in shale gas revolution”:
- At the time, there seemed to be no limit to the size of ever-larger private equity deals, with banks falling over each other to arrange financing on generous terms and to invest money from their own private equity arms.
- (mathematics) A value to which a sequence converges. Equivalently, the common value of the upper limit and the lower limit of a sequence: if the upper and lower limits are different, then the sequence has no limit (i.e., does not converge).
- The sequence of reciprocals has zero as its limit.
- (mathematics) Any of several abstractions of this concept of limit.
- Category theory defines a very general concept of limit.
- (category theory) The cone of a diagram through which any other cone of that same diagram can factor uniquely.
- Synonyms: inverse limit, projective limit
- Hyponyms: terminal object, categorical product, pullback, equalizer, identity morphism
- (poker) Fixed limit.
- The final, utmost, or furthest point; the border or edge.
- the limit of a walk, of a town, or of a country
- (obsolete) The space or thing defined by limits.
- (obsolete) That which terminates a period of time; hence, the period itself; the full time or extent.
- (obsolete) A restriction; a check or curb; a hindrance.
- (logic, metaphysics) A determining feature; a distinguishing characteristic.
- (cycling) The first group of riders to depart in a handicap race.
- (colloquial, as "the limit") A person who is exasperating, intolerable, astounding, etc.
Synonyms
- (restriction): bound, boundary, limitation, restriction
Derived terms
Descendants
- German: Limit
Translations
Adjective
limit (not comparable)
- (poker) Being a fixed limit game.
See also
- bound
- function
Etymology 2
From Middle English limiten, from Old French limiter, from Latin l?mit? (“to bound, limit, fix, determine”), from l?mes; see noun.
Verb
limit (third-person singular simple present limits, present participle limiting, simple past and past participle limited)
- (transitive) To restrict; not to allow to go beyond a certain bound, to set boundaries.
- [The Chinese government] has jailed environmental activists and is planning to limit the power of judicial oversight by handing a state-approved body a monopoly over bringing environmental lawsuits.
- (mathematics, intransitive) To have a limit in a particular set.
- (obsolete) To beg, or to exercise functions, within a certain limited region.
Synonyms
- (restrict): See Thesaurus:hinder
Translations
Further reading
- limit in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
- limit in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.
- limit at OneLook Dictionary Search
Anagrams
- milit.
Czech
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [?l?m?t]
Noun
limit m
- limit
Related terms
- limita
- limitní
- limitovat
Further reading
- limit in P?íru?ní slovník jazyka ?eského, 1935–1957
- limit in Slovník spisovného jazyka ?eského, 1960–1971, 1989
Hungarian
Etymology
From English limit.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [?limit]
- Hyphenation: li?mit
- Rhymes: -it
Noun
limit (plural limitek)
- limit (the final, utmost, or furthest point)
Declension
References
Serbo-Croatian
Etymology
From German Limit.
Noun
lìmit m (Cyrillic spelling ?????)
- boundary
- boundary that cannot be surpassed
Declension
Tagalog
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?li.mit/
Noun
limit
- frequency
- closeness; compactness; density
Synonyms
- kalimitan
Derived terms
- malimit
limit From the web:
- what limits the maximum size of a cell
- what limits the size of a cell
- what limits the growth of phytoplankton
- what limits population growth
- what limits should there be on the government
- what limits cell division
- what limits the power of the government
- what limits specialization in the global economy
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