different between steep vs waterlog

steep

English

Pronunciation

  • enPR: st?p, IPA(key): /sti?p/
  • Rhymes: -i?p

Etymology 1

From Middle English steep, from Old English st?ap (high), from Proto-Germanic *staupaz. Compare Old Frisian st?p, Dutch stoop (grand; proud), Middle High German stouf (towering cliff, precipice), Middle High German stief (steep)), from Proto-Indo-European *(s)tewb- (to push, stick). The Proto-Indo-European root (and related) has many and varied descendants, including English stub; compare also Scots stap (to strike, to forcibly insert).

The sense of “sharp slope” is attested circa 1200; the sense “expensive” is attested US 1856.

Adjective

steep (comparative steeper, superlative steepest)

  1. Of a near-vertical gradient; of a slope, surface, curve, etc. that proceeds upward at an angle near vertical.
  2. (informal) expensive
  3. (obsolete) Difficult to access; not easy reached; lofty; elevated; high.
    • 1596, George Chapman, De Guiana, carmen Epicum
      Her ears and thoughts in steep amaze erected
  4. (of the rake of a ship's mast, or a car's windshield) resulting in a mast or windshield angle that strongly diverges from the perpendicular

Derived terms

  • steepen

Synonyms

  • (dialectal) brant
Translations

Noun

steep (plural steeps)

  1. The steep side of a mountain etc.; a slope or acclivity.
    • 1833, Banjamin Disraeli, The Wondrous Tale of Alroy
      It ended precipitously in a dark and narrow ravine, formed on the other side by an opposite mountain, the lofty steep of which was crested by a city gently rising on a gradual slope

Etymology 2

From Middle English stepen, from Old Norse steypa (to make stoop, cast down, pour out, cast (metal)), from Proto-Germanic *staupijan? (to tumble, make tumble, plunge), from Proto-Indo-European *(s)tewb- (to push, hit). Cognate with Danish støbe (cast (metal)), Norwegian støpe, støype, Swedish stöpa (to found, cast (metal)), Old English st?pian (to stoop, bend the back, slope). Doublet of stoop.

Verb

steep (third-person singular simple present steeps, present participle steeping, simple past and past participle steeped)

  1. (transitive, middle) To soak or wet thoroughly.
    • 1820, William Wordsworth, Composed at Cora Linn, in sight of Wallace's Tower
      In refreshing dews to steep / The little, trembling flowers.
  2. (intransitive, figuratively) To imbue with something; to be deeply immersed in.
    • 1871, John Earle, The Philology of the English Tongue
    The learned of the nation were steeped in Latin.
    • 1989, Black 47, Big Fellah:
      We fought against each other, two brothers steeped in blood / But I never doubted that your heart was broken in the flood / And though we had to shoot you down in golden Béal na mBláth / I always knew that Ireland lost her greatest son of all.
Derived terms
  • insteep
Translations

Noun

steep (countable and uncountable, plural steeps)

  1. A liquid used in a steeping process
    Corn steep has many industrial uses.
  2. A rennet bag.
Translations

References

Anagrams

  • Estep, Tepes, speet, teeps, tepes

steep From the web:

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waterlog

English

Etymology

water +? log

Verb

waterlog (third-person singular simple present waterlogs, present participle waterlogging, simple past and past participle waterlogged)

  1. (transitive) To saturate with water.
  2. (transitive, nautical) To make (a boat) heavy and in danger of sinking by flooding it with water.

Translations

waterlog From the web:

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