different between ridge vs klingon

ridge

English

Alternative forms

  • rig (dialectal)

Etymology

From Middle English rigge, rygge, (also rig, ryg, rug), from Old English hry?? (back, spine, ridge, elevated surface), from Proto-Germanic *hrugjaz (back), from Proto-Indo-European *(s)kreuk-, *(s)ker- (to turn, bend). Cognate with Scots rig (back, spine, ridge), North Frisian reg (back), West Frisian rêch (back), Dutch rug (back, ridge), German Rücken (back, ridge), Swedish rygg (back, spine, ridge), Icelandic hryggur (spine). Cognate to Albanian kërrus (to bend one's back) and kurriz (back).

Pronunciation

  • (UK, US) enPR: r?j, IPA(key): /??d?/
  • Rhymes: -?d?

Noun

ridge (plural ridges)

  1. (anatomy) The back of any animal; especially the upper or projecting part of the back of a quadruped.
    • 1663–1678, Samuel Butler, Hudibras, part III, canto I, pages 91–92:
      He though it was no time to ?tay, / And let the Night too ?teal away, / But in a trice advanced the Knight, / Upon the Bare Ridge, Bolt upright, / And groping out for Ralpho’s Jade, / He found the Saddle too was ?traid []
  2. Any extended protuberance; a projecting line or strip.
    Antonym: groove
  3. The line along which two sloping surfaces meet which diverge towards the ground.
  4. The highest point on a roof, represented by a horizontal line where two roof areas intersect, running the length of the area.
  5. (fortifications) The highest portion of the glacis proceeding from the salient angle of the covered way.
    • 1853-1855, Joachim Hayward Stocqueler , The Life of Field-Marshal the Duke of Wellington
      the British Guards lie down behind a ridge to avoid the shot and shell from the opposite heights
  6. A chain of mountains.
    • c. 1595, William Shakespeare, Richard II, [Act I, scene i], lines 62–66:
      [] Which to maintaine, I would allow him oddes, / And meete him, were I tide to runne afoote, / Euen to the frozen ridges of the Alpes, / Or any other ground inhabitable, / Where euer Engli?hman dur?t ?et his foote.
  7. A chain of hills.
  8. (oceanography) A long narrow elevation on an ocean bottom.
  9. (meteorology) An elongated region of high atmospheric pressure.
    • Antonym: trough

Derived terms

Translations

Verb

ridge (third-person singular simple present ridges, present participle ridging, simple past and past participle ridged)

  1. (transitive) To form into a ridge
  2. (intransitive) To extend in ridges

Related terms

  • Rhodesian Ridgeback

See also

  • crest

Anagrams

  • derig, dirge, gride, redig

ridge From the web:

  • wheat ridge
  • what ridges in your fingernails mean
  • what ridge is ryzen 5 3600
  • what ridge means
  • wheat ridge cyclery
  • wheat ridge animal hospital
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klingon

Esperanto

Noun

klingon

  1. accusative singular of klingo

Finnish

Etymology

From the TV series Star Trek

Noun

klingon

  1. Klingon, Klingonese (fictional language)
  2. A Klingon (fictional character)

Declension


French

Etymology

From the TV series Star Trek

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /kli?.??n/

Noun

klingon m (uncountable)

  1. the Klingon language

Adjective

klingon (feminine singular klingonne, masculine plural klingons, feminine plural klingonnes)

  1. Klingon

Further reading

  • “klingon” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).

Portuguese

Noun

klingon m (uncountable)

  1. Klingon (artificial language from the Star Trek franchise)

Spanish

Adjective

klingon (invariable)

  1. Klingon

Noun

klingon m (plural Klingon)

  1. (science fiction) Klingon (a member of the Klingon species in Star Trek)
  2. (science fiction) Klingon (artificial language from the Star Trek franchise)

klingon From the web:

  • what klingon language
  • what klingon become a borg
  • what klingon officer is kang's wife
  • what klingon became borg
  • what klingon turned borg
  • what's klingon translator
  • what's klingon mean
  • klingon what do you want
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