different between share vs hunk
share
English
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /???/
- (General American) IPA(key): /????/
- Rhymes: -??(?)
Etymology 1
From Middle English schare, schere, from Old English scearu (“a cutting, shaving, a shearing, tonsure, part, division, share”), from Proto-Germanic *skar? (“a division, detachment”), from Proto-Indo-European *(s)?ar-, *skar- (“to divide”). Cognate with Saterland Frisian skar, sker (“a share in a communal pasture”), Dutch schare (“share in property”), German Schar (“band, troop, party, company”), Icelandic skor (“department”). Compare shard, shear.
Noun
share (plural shares)
- A portion of something, especially a portion given or allotted to someone.
- (finance) A financial instrument that shows that one owns a part of a company that provides the benefit of limited liability.
- (computing) A configuration enabling a resource to be shared over a network.
- (social media) The action of sharing something with other people via social media.
- (anatomy) The sharebone or pubis.
Derived terms
Translations
Verb
share (third-person singular simple present shares, present participle sharing, simple past and past participle shared)
- To give part of what one has to somebody else to use or consume.
- To have or use in common.
- Thanks to that penny he had just spent so recklessly [on a newspaper] he would pass a happy hour, taken, for once, out of his anxious, despondent, miserable self. It irritated him shrewdly to know that these moments of respite from carking care would not be shared with his poor wife, with careworn, troubled Ellen.
- To divide and distribute.
- To tell to another.
Derived terms
Translations
Etymology 2
From Middle English share, schare, shaar, from Old English scear, scær (“ploughshare”), from Proto-Germanic *skaraz (“ploughshare”), from Proto-Indo-European *(s)ker- (“to cut”). Cognate with Dutch schaar (“ploughshare”), dialectal German Schar (“ploughshare”), Danish (plov)skær (“ploughshare”). More at shear.
Noun
share (plural shares)
- (agriculture) The cutting blade of an agricultural machine like a plough, a cultivator or a seeding-machine.
Derived terms
- ploughshare
- plowshare
- sharebeam
Translations
Verb
share (third-person singular simple present shares, present participle sharing, simple past and past participle shared)
- (transitive, obsolete) To cut; to shear; to cleave; to divide.
- The shar'd visage hangs on equal sides.
Anagrams
- Asher, Rahes, Shear, asher, earsh, hares, harse, hears, heras, rheas, sehar, sehra, shear
Japanese
Romanization
share
- R?maji transcription of ???
- R?maji transcription of ???
Manx
Etymology
From Old Irish is ferr (“it’s better”), from Proto-Celtic *werros, from Proto-Indo-European *wers- (“peak”). Akin to Latin verr?ca (“steep place, height”), Lithuanian viršùs (“top, head”) and Old Church Slavonic ????? (vr?x?, “top, peak”). Compare Irish fearr.
Adjective
share
- comparative degree of mie
Middle English
Alternative forms
- sharre, shzar, sher
Etymology
From Old English scear (“plowshare”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?ar/, /?a?r/
Noun
share (plural shares)
- plowshare
Descendants
- English: share
- Yola: shor
References
- “sh??r(e, n.(1).”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007.
Spanish
Etymology
Borrowed from English share.
Noun
share m (plural shares)
- (television) share of the audience
share From the web:
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- what shares electrons
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- what shares the most dna with humans
hunk
English
Pronunciation
- (UK, US) IPA(key): /h??k/
- Rhymes: -??k
Etymology 1
Probably borrowed from West Flemish hunke (“hunk; chunk”), of obscure origin. Probably from an earlier *humke, *humpke, a diminutive related to Dutch homp (“hunk; lump”), English hump, equivalent to hump +? -kin. The sense of an attractive man is recorded in Australian slang in 1941, in jive talk in 1945.
Noun
hunk (plural hunks)
- A large or dense piece of something.
- a hunk of metal
- 1884: Mark Twain, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Chapter IX
- "Jim, this is nice," I says. "I wouldn't want to be nowhere else but here. Pass me along another hunk of fish and some hot corn-bread."
- (informal) A sexually attractive man, especially one who is muscular.
- (computing) A record of differences between almost contiguous portions of two files (or other sources of information). Differences that are widely separated by areas which are identical in both files would not be part of a single hunk. Differences that are separated by small regions which are identical in both files may comprise a single hunk. Patches are made up of hunks.
- (US, slang) A honyock.
Synonyms
- (large or dense piece): chunk, lump, piece
- (sexually attractive boy): beefcake
Derived terms
- hunky
Translations
See also
- bohunk
Etymology 2
Dutch honk (“the base in a game”)
Noun
hunk
- (US) A goal or base in children's games.
References
- “hunk” in the Canadian Oxford Dictionary, Second Edition, Oxford University Press, 2004.
- Douglas Harper (2001–2021) , “hunk”, in Online Etymology Dictionary
hunk From the web:
- what hunker down means
- what hunk means
- what hunky dory means
- what hunky means
- what's hunky-dory
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- what's hunker down
- what hunk means in spanish
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