different between obdure vs obduce

obdure

English

Verb

obdure (third-person singular simple present obdures, present participle obduring, simple past and past participle obdured)

  1. (obsolete) To harden.
    • 1626, Joseph Hall, Saint Paul's Combat. Part II
      [] this spiritual edge shall either turn again, or, through our weak wieldance, not enter the stubborn and thick hide of obdured hearts []

Anagrams

  • rubedo

obdure From the web:

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obduce

English

Etymology

From Latin obducere, obductum; ob (see ob-) + ducere (to lead).

Verb

obduce (third-person singular simple present obduces, present participle obducing, simple past and past participle obduced)

  1. (obsolete) To draw over, as a covering.
    • 1677, Sir Matthew Hale, The Primitive Origination of Mankind.
      Animal exhibits its Face in the native colour of its Skin but Man; all others are covered with Feathers, or Hair, or a Cortex that is obduced over the Cutis as in Elephants and some sort of Indian Dogs.

Latin

Verb

obd?ce

  1. second-person singular present active imperative of obd?c?

obduce From the web:

  • what does induced mean
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