different between retrude vs retruse
retrude
English
Etymology
From Latin retrudere; re- + trudere (“to thrust”).
Verb
retrude (third-person singular simple present retrudes, present participle retruding, simple past and past participle retruded)
- To thrust back.
- (Can we find and add a quotation of Dr. H. More to this entry?)
Latin
Verb
retr?de
- second-person singular present active imperative of retr?d?
retrude From the web:
- what is retruded contact position
- what muscle protrudes the mandible
- what is retruded axis position
- what does retruded contact position
- what is a retruded chin
- what is the retruded arc of closure
- recording retruded contact position
retruse
English
Etymology
From Latin retrusus (“concealed”), past participle of retrudere.
Adjective
retruse (comparative more retruse, superlative most retruse)
- Thrust backward; retruding.
- (obsolete) abstruse
- 1662, Henry More, Preface to A Collection of Several Philosophical Writings
- I have a sense of something in me while I thus speak, which I must confess is of so retruse a nature that I want a name for it, unless I should adventure to term it
- 1662, Henry More, Preface to A Collection of Several Philosophical Writings
Anagrams
- Reuters, Rueters, ureters
Latin
Participle
retr?se
- vocative masculine singular of retr?sus
retruse From the web:
- retrousse meaning
- what does retrousse mean
- what is retrousse nose
- what does retrousse
- what does retrousse meaning in english
- what does retrousse mean in french
- what is retrousser in france
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- retrude vs retruse
- abstruse vs retruse
- retube vs retubed
- retune vs retube
- tube vs retube
- terms vs reule
- reule vs reuse
- regle vs reule
- reule vs rewle
- rule vs reule
- reule vs reume
- reclused vs secluded
- reclused vs recluses
- reclused vs reclosed
- reclused vs recluded
- reclused vs recluse
- recurses vs recuses
- recuses vs recluses
- rebuses vs recuses
- reuses vs recuses