different between inset vs insee
inset
English
Etymology
From Middle English insetten, from Old English insettan (“to set in, institute, appoint”), equivalent to in- +? set. Cognate with Dutch inzetten (“to insert, set in”), Low German insetten (“to set in”), German einsetzen (“to insert, employ”), Danish indsætte (“to insert”), Swedish insätta (“to inset, induct, institute”), Icelandic innsetja (“to install”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /??ns?t/
Verb
inset (third-person singular simple present insets, present participle insetting, simple past and past participle inset or insetted)
- (transitive) To set in; infix or implant.
- (transitive) To insert something.
- (transitive) To add an inset to something.
Noun
inset (plural insets)
- A smaller thing set into a larger thing, such as a small picture inside a larger one.
- Anything inserted.
- A small piece of material used to strengthen a garment.
Translations
See also
- INSET day
Anagrams
- Stein, Tiens, neist, nites, senti, set in, sient, snite, stein, tines, tsine
Indonesian
Etymology
From Dutch inzet (“inset”)
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ins?t/
- Hyphenation: in?sèt
Noun
inset
- inset
Alternative forms
- inzet
Further reading
- “inset” in Kamus Besar Bahasa Indonesia (KBBI) Daring, Jakarta: Badan Pengembangan dan Pembinaan Bahasa, Kementerian Pendidikan dan Kebudayaan Republik Indonesia, 2016.
inset From the web:
- what insect symbolizes death and rebirth
- what insects eat grass
- what insect has the shortest lifespan
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insee
English
Etymology
From in- +? see, or taken as a back-formation of inseeing, itself a loan-translation of German Einsehen (“recognition, observation”). Compare Old English ons?on (“to look on, observe, regard, take notice of”). More at insight.
Verb
insee (third-person singular simple present insees, present participle inseeing, simple past insaw, past participle inseen)
- To see into; to observe acutely.
- 1992, Victoria Harris, The incorporative consciousness of Robert Bly:
- First, moving from his internal region outwards to other internal regions, the speaker insees the "tear inside the stone."
- 1992, Victoria Harris, The incorporative consciousness of Robert Bly:
- To have or gain insight into; to empathise with or come to fully understand one's point of view.
- 1990, Sandra Gilbert, Acts of attention: the poems of D.H. Lawrence:
- This process of intuitional knowledge is strikingly analogous to the process of inseeing (Einsehen) Rilke described in his letters. I love inseeing. Can you imagine with me how glorious it is to insee...
- 1990, Sandra Gilbert, Acts of attention: the poems of D.H. Lawrence:
- To inspect.
Anagrams
- Eisen, Niese, Seine, see in, seein, seein', seine, senie
insee From the web:
- what inseam
- what inseam means
- what inseam for 5'4
- what inseam for 5'2
- what inseam for 5'5
- what inseam is petite
- what inseam for 6'2
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