different between trapping vs occlusion

trapping

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?t?æp??/
  • Rhymes: -æp??

Etymology 1

From trap.

Verb

trapping

  1. present participle of trap

Noun

trapping (plural trappings)

  1. An instance of ensnaring something or someone.

Etymology 2

From Middle English trap, trappe (personal belongings, owndom, household goods) (compare Middle English trappen (to deck, caparison)), of uncertain origin. Possibly from Anglo-Norman, from Medieval Latin trapus (cloth), from Frankish *traba, *trapa (cloth, thread, rag), from Proto-Germanic *trab?, *traf?, *tr?b (fringe, rags), from Proto-Indo-European *dr?p-, *dr?b- (rag). Akin to Old High German traba (fringe, tatters, thread), Old Norse traf (headscarf). Compare Spanish trapo (rag).

Noun

trapping (plural trappings)

  1. An ornamental covering or harness for a horse; caparison.

See also

  • trappings

trapping From the web:

  • what trapping mean
  • what's trapping in slang
  • what trappings of religion do jack
  • what trappings of power
  • trapping what is the word
  • what is trapping in printing
  • what is trapping in soccer
  • what does trapping furbearers help to control


occlusion

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Late Latin occl?si?, occl?si?nis (occluding, obstruction), from the Classical Latin occl?d? (I shut up or close up; I restrain), from ob + claud? (I shut or close).

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -u???n

Noun

occlusion (countable and uncountable, plural occlusions)

  1. The process of occluding, or something that occludes.
  2. (medicine) Anything that obstructs or closes a vessel or canal.
  3. (medicine, dentistry) The alignment of the teeth when upper and lower jaws are brought together.
  4. (meteorology) An occluded front.
  5. (phonology) A closure within the vocal tract that produces an oral stop or nasal stop.
  6. (physics) The absorption of a gas or liquid by a substance such as a metal.
  7. (computing) The blocking of the view of part of an image by another.

Derived terms


French

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin occl?si?, occl?si?nem (occluding", "obstruction), from the Classical Latin occl?d? (I shut up or close up”, “I restrain), from ob + claud? (I shut or close).

Pronunciation

Noun

occlusion f (plural occlusions)

  1. occlusion

Derived terms

  • rectocclusion

Related terms

  • occlure

Further reading

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

occlusion From the web:

  • what occlusion is known as mesioclusion
  • what occlusion is associated with a retrognathic profile
  • what occlusion means
  • what occlusion training
  • occlusion what does this mean
  • what is occlusion in chemistry
  • what is occlusion in dentistry
  • what do occlusion bands do
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