different between hammered vs incuse

hammered

English

Pronunciation

Adjective

hammered (comparative more hammered, superlative most hammered)

  1. Having been hit with a hammer or hammer-like object.
  2. (Britain, slang) very drunk; inebriated.

Synonyms

  • See also Thesaurus:drunk

Derived terms

  • hammered dulcimer

Translations

Verb

hammered

  1. simple past tense and past participle of hammer

hammered From the web:

  • what hammered mean
  • what's hammered paint
  • what's hammered in spanish
  • what hammered home
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  • what is hammered copper
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  • what is hammered steel


incuse

English

Etymology

From Latin incusus, past participle of incudere, from in- + cudere.

Adjective

incuse (not comparable)

  1. hammered or pressed in (usually on a coin)
    The back of the coin bears an incuse coat of arms.

Noun

incuse (plural incuses)

  1. an impression hammered or pressed (onto a coin)
    This coin's incuse is of a most curious design.

Translations

Verb

incuse (third-person singular simple present incuses, present participle incusing, simple past and past participle incused)

  1. (transitive) To hammer or press (usually onto a coin)
    There is a long tradition of monarchs having their own figure incused in their kingdom's coins.

Translations

Anagrams

  • Unices, cunies

incuse From the web:

  • what incuse mean
  • what does induce mean
  • what does incuse coin mean
  • what is incuse coin
  • what does incised mean
  • what does induce mean in english
  • what is a incused 50 cent coin
  • what does double incuse mean
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