different between vegetable vs pulse

vegetable

English

Etymology

From Middle English vegetable, from Old French vegetable, from Latin veget?bilis (able to live and grow), derived from veget?re (to enliven). Displaced Old English wyrt (herb, vegetable, plant, crop, root).

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?v?d??t?b?l/, /?v?d???t?b?l/
  • (US, Canada) IPA(key): /?v?d???t?b?l/, /?v?d??t?b?l/, /?v?t??t?b?l/

Noun

vegetable (plural vegetables)

  1. Any plant.
    • 1837, The Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal (volume 23, page 222)
      That he might ascertain whether any of the cloths of ancient Egypt were made of hemp, M. Dutrochet has examined with the microscope the weavable filaments of this last vegetable.
  2. A plant raised for some edible part of it, such as the leaves, roots, fruit or flowers, but excluding any plant considered to be a fruit, grain, herb, or spice in the culinary sense.
    Synonyms: veg, veggie
  3. The edible part of such a plant.
    Synonyms: veg, veggie
  4. (figuratively, derogatory) A person whose brain (or, infrequently, body) has been damaged so that they cannot interact with the surrounding environment; a person in a persistent vegetative state.
    Synonym: cabbage

Derived terms

Related terms

Translations

Adjective

vegetable (not comparable)

  1. Of or relating to plants.
  2. Of or relating to vegetables.

Translations

Further reading

  • vegetable on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
  • vegetable (disambiguation) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

vegetable From the web:

  • what vegetables can dogs eat
  • what vegetables are in season
  • what vegetables have protein
  • what vegetables can rabbits eat
  • what vegetables can guinea pigs eat
  • what vegetables are keto friendly
  • what vegetables can bearded dragons eat
  • what vegetables grow in shade


pulse

English

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /p?ls/
  • (General American) IPA(key): /p?ls/, [p?ls]
  • (Canada) IPA(key): /p?ls/, /p?ls/

Etymology 1

From Late Middle English pulse, Middle English pous, pouse (regular beat of arteries, pulse; heartbeat; place on the body where a pulse is detectable; beat (of a musical instrument); energy, vitality) [and other forms], from Anglo-Norman puls, pous, pus, and Middle French pouls, poulz, pous [and other forms], Old French pous, pulz (regular beat of arteries; place on the body where a pulse is detectable) (modern French pouls), and from their etymon Latin pulsus (beat, impulse, pulse, stroke; regular beat of arteries or the heart), from pell? (to drive, impel, propel, push; to banish, eject, expel; to set in motion; to strike) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *pel- (to beat, strike; to drive; to push, thrust)) + -sus (a variant of -tus (suffix forming action nouns from verbs)).

Noun

pulse (plural pulses)

  1. (physiology)
    1. A normally regular beat felt when arteries near the skin (for example, at the neck or wrist) are depressed, caused by the heart pumping blood through them.
    2. The nature or rate of this beat as an indication of a person's health.
  2. (figuratively) A beat or throb; also, a repeated sequence of such beats or throbs.
  3. (figuratively) The focus of energy or vigour of an activity, place, or thing; also, the feeling of bustle, busyness, or energy in a place; the heartbeat.
  4. (chiefly biology, chemistry) An (increased) amount of a substance (such as a drug or an isotopic label) given over a short time.
  5. (cooking, chiefly attributively) A setting on a food processor which causes it to work in a series of short bursts rather than continuously, in order to break up ingredients without liquidizing them; also, a use of this setting.
  6. (music, prosody) The beat or tactus of a piece of music or verse; also, a repeated sequence of such beats.
  7. (physics)
    1. A brief burst of electromagnetic energy, such as light, radio waves, etc.
    2. Synonym of autosoliton (a stable solitary localized structure that arises in nonlinear spatially extended dissipative systems due to mechanisms of self-organization)
    3. (also electronics) A brief increase in the strength of an electrical signal; an impulse.
Derived terms
Related terms
  • impulse
  • repulse
  • pulsion
  • pulsive
Translations
See also
  • (physiology): arrhythmia, blood pressure, heartbeat
  • (music, prosody): meter, tempo

Etymology 2

From Late Middle English pulse, Middle English pulsen (to pulse, throb), from Latin puls?re, the present active infinitive of puls? (to push; to beat, batter, hammer, strike; to knock on; to pulsate; (figuratively) to drive or urge on, impel; to move; to agitate, disquiet, disturb), the frequentative of pell? (to drive, impel, propel, push; to banish, eject, expel; to set in motion; to strike); see further at etymology 1.

Verb

pulse (third-person singular simple present pulses, present participle pulsing, simple past and past participle pulsed)

  1. (transitive, also figuratively) To emit or impel (something) in pulses or waves.
  2. (transitive, chiefly biology, chemistry) To give to (something, especially a cell culture) an (increased) amount of a substance, such as a drug or an isotopic label, over a short time.
  3. (transitive, cooking) To operate a food processor on (some ingredient) in short bursts, to break it up without liquidizing it.
  4. (transitive, electronics, physics)
    1. To apply an electric current or signal that varies in strength to (something).
    2. To manipulate (an electric current, electromagnetic wave, etc.) so that it is emitted in pulses.
  5. (intransitive, chiefly figuratively and literary) To expand and contract repeatedly, like an artery when blood is flowing though it, or the heart; to beat, to throb, to vibrate, to pulsate.
    Synonym: undulate
  6. (intransitive, figuratively) Of an activity, place, or thing: to bustle with energy and liveliness; to pulsate.
Conjugation
Derived terms
  • pulsed (adjective)
  • pulser
  • pulsing (adjective, noun)
Related terms
Translations

Etymology 3

From Middle English puls ((collectively) seeds of a leguminous plant used as food; leguminous plants collectively; a species of leguminous plant), Early Middle English pols (in compounds), possibly from Anglo-Norman pus, puz, Middle French pouls, pols, pous, and Old French pous, pou (gruel, mash, porridge) (perhaps in the sense of a gruel made from pulses), or directly from their etymon Latin puls (meal (coarse-ground edible part of various grains); porridge), probably from Ancient Greek ?????? (póltos, porridge made from flour), from Proto-Indo-European *pel- (dust; flour) (perhaps by extension from *pel- (to beat, strike; to drive; to push, thrust), in the sense of something beaten).

Noun

pulse (countable and uncountable, plural pulses)

  1. (uncountable) Annual leguminous plants (such as beans, lentils, and peas) yielding grains or seeds used as food for humans or animals; (countable) such a plant; a legume.
  2. (uncountable) Edible grains or seeds from leguminous plants, especially in a mature, dry condition; (countable) a specific kind of such a grain or seed.
Translations

References

Further reading

  • pulse on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
  • pulse (physics) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
  • pulse (signal processing) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
  • pulse (disambiguation) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
  • legume on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
  • pulse in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.
  • pulse in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
  • Richard DeLone [et al.] (1975) , Gary E. Wittlich, editor, Aspects of Twentieth-century Music, Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, ?ISBN

Anagrams

  • Lepus, Plues, pules, pusle

Dutch

Verb

pulse

  1. (archaic) singular present subjunctive of pulsen

Latin

Participle

pulse

  1. vocative masculine singular of pulsus

Portuguese

Verb

pulse

  1. first-person singular present subjunctive of pulsar
  2. third-person singular present subjunctive of pulsar
  3. first-person singular imperative of pulsar
  4. third-person singular imperative of pulsar

Spanish

Verb

pulse

  1. Formal second-person singular (usted) imperative form of pulsar.
  2. First-person singular (yo) present subjunctive form of pulsar.
  3. Formal second-person singular (usted) present subjunctive form of pulsar.
  4. Third-person singular (él, ella, also used with usted?) present subjunctive form of pulsar.

pulse From the web:

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  • what pulse is too low
  • what pulse is too high
  • what pulse rate is too high
  • what pulse rate is too low
  • what pulse is normal
  • what pulse rate is normal
  • what pulse rate is dangerous
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