different between pinole vs pinhole
pinole
English
Etymology
From Mexican Spanish pinole, from Classical Nahuatl pinolli (“flour, ground maize or chia”).
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /pi??n??le?/
- (US) IPA(key): /pi.?no?le?/
Noun
pinole (countable and uncountable, plural pinoles)
- A coarse flour made from ground toasted maize kernels, often mixed with herbs, which may be eaten by itself or incorporated into drinks.
Anagrams
- Leipon, Pelion, pile on, pile-on
Spanish
Alternative forms
- pinol (Costa Rica, Cuba, Ecuador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua)
Etymology
From Classical Nahuatl pinolli (“flour, ground maize or chia”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /pi?nole/, [pi?no.le]
Noun
pinole m (uncountable)
- (Latin America) pinole
Derived terms
- pinolillo
Further reading
- “pinole” in Diccionario de la lengua española, Vigésima tercera edición, Real Academia Española, 2014.
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pinhole
English
Alternative forms
- pin-hole
Etymology
pin +? hole
Noun
pinhole (plural pinholes)
- A small hole, of a size that could have been made by a pin
Derived terms
- pinhole camera
- pinhole chert
- pinhole detector
- pinhole glasses
- pinhole pupil
Verb
pinhole (third-person singular simple present pinholes, present participle pinholing, simple past and past participle pinholed)
- (transitive) To form one or more pinholes in.
Anagrams
- lophine
pinhole From the web:
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