different between overpot vs overpost
overpot
English
Etymology
over- +? pot
Verb
overpot (third-person singular simple present overpots, present participle overpotting, simple past and past participle overpotted)
- (transitive) To place (a plant) in too large a pot.
Anagrams
- overtop
overpot From the web:
- what overpotential mean
- what is overpotential in electrochemistry
- what is overpotential class 12
- what is overpotential of oxygen
- what is overpotential in battery
- what does overpotting mean
- what does overpotential mean
- what is overpotential in chemistry
overpost
English
Etymology
over- +? post
Verb
overpost (third-person singular simple present overposts, present participle overposting, simple past and past participle overposted)
- To post too much or too often.
- To pass over swiftly, as if by post.
- (cartography) To print a text label or other graphic feature on top of another symbol.
- To place a poster so that it covers all or part of another poster.
- (computing) To breach security by overwriting data that is not intended for user input.
Noun
overpost (plural overposts)
- (accounting) An entry that has been posted more than once to a journal.
- (cartography) An overlap of two graphic elements.
Anagrams
- overpots, overtops, proovest, stop over, stop-over, stopover
overpost From the web:
- what is overposting attacks
- what means over post
- what does overpost
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- overpot vs overpost
- overshone vs overshine
- overbook vs overboot
- pantofle vs pantoffle
- ancient vs pantoffle
- rubbers vs elastomers
- ribbers vs rubbers
- drubbers vs rubbers
- dubbers vs rubbers
- rubbers vs robbers
- rubbers vs grubbers
- kiss vs galosh
- galosh vs hornet
- golosh vs galosh
- galosh vs galoshed
- galosh vs mobile
- galoche vs galosh
- rainboot vs galosh
- muddy vs galosh
- cartridge vs buckshot