different between tufa vs stufa

tufa

English

Etymology

From Italian tufo, from Latin t?fus or t?phus. Doublet of tuff.

Noun

tufa (countable and uncountable, plural tufas)

  1. Calcareous lime deposited by precipitation from a body of water, such as a hot spring.
    • 1993, George V. Benson, Meeting Highlights, George V. Benson (editor), Proceedings of the Workshop "Ongoing Paleoclimatic Studies in the Northern Great Basin", Geological Survey Circular, US Geological Survey, page 1
      B.J. Szabo presented the results of a survey of the tufa mounds that border Pyramid Lake indicating that uranium-series methods can be used to approximate the ages of such tufa deposits. In the Pyramid Lake Basin, tufas less than 50,000 years old contain large quantities of excess thorium, and the error in age estimates made using uranium-series methods is not small enough to confirm results from 14C determinations.
    • 2003, Martyn Pedley, Ian Hill, The recognition of barrage and paludal tufa systems by GPR: case studies of the geometry and correlation of Quaternary freshwater carbonates, C. S. Bristow, Harry M. Jol (editors), Ground Penetrating Radar in Sediments, page 208,
      Resedimented tufas also contribute where erosion has washed detritus from other hillside tufa deposits.
    • 2011, Chuxing Huang, 9: Characteristics and Formation Mechanism of the Tufa Landscape in Tianshengqiao in Zhongdian County, Tadej Slabe (editor), South China Karst II, page 95,
      The tufas at Tianshengqiao have different shapes in different development stages and in different structural sections.
  2. (petrology) A variety of volcanic rock, tuff.
    Synonym: tuff
    • 1825, "Oliver Oldschool" (Joseph Dennie), John Elihu Hall (editors), The Port Folio, page 426,
      This again is followed by a bed of stony tufa of a reddish colour, containing fragments of a spongy lava, amphigone, pyroxene, mica, and common lava; and, like the former, traversed by argillaceous veins.

Hypernyms

  • (calcareous deposit): calcite, limestone

Translations

See also

  • travertine

Further reading

  • tufa on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Anagrams

  • FUTA, UFTA, futa

Latin

Etymology

Related to Medieval Greek ????? (to?fa), but the ultimate source is unclear.

Noun

t?fa f (genitive t?fae); first declension

  1. a kind of helmet crest or plume
  2. a kind of military standard

Declension

First-declension noun.

Descendants

  • Albanian: tufë
  • Aromanian: tufã
  • Romanian: tuf?

References

  • tufa in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
  • tufa in Charles du Fresne du Cange’s Glossarium Mediæ et Infimæ Latinitatis (augmented edition, 1883–1887)
  • tufa in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré Latin-Français, Hachette

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stufa

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Italian stufa (stove). Doublet of stove.

Noun

stufa (plural stufae)

  1. A jet of steam issuing from a fissure in the earth.

Anagrams

  • Faust, futas, tufas

Italian

Etymology

From the verb stufare.

Adjective

stufa

  1. feminine singular of stufo

Noun

stufa f (plural stufe)

  1. stove

Related terms

  • stufa a legna
  • stufetta

Verb

stufa

  1. third-person singular present of stufare
  2. second-person singular imperative of stufare

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