Pore vs. Pone — What's the Difference?
Difference Between Pore and Pone
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Compare with Definitions
Pore
To read, study, or examine something carefully and attentively
Pored over the documents in search of evidence.
Pone
See johnnycake.
Pore
To meditate deeply; ponder
Pored on the matter.
Pone
A writ in law used by the superior courts to remove cases from inferior courts.
Pore
(Archaic) To gaze intently; stare.
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Pone
A writ to enforce appearance in court by attaching goods or requiring securities.
Pore
A minute opening in tissue, as in the skin of an animal, serving as an outlet for perspiration, or in a plant leaf or stem, serving as a means of absorption and transpiration.
Pone
(Southern US) A baked or fried cornbread (bread made of cornmeal), often made without milk or eggs.
Pore
A space in rock, soil, or unconsolidated sediment that is not occupied by mineral matter and that allows the passage or absorption of fluids
Water seeped into the pores of the rock.
Pone
The last player to bet or play in turn.
Pore
A tiny opening in the skin.
I could sense the sweat dripping out of all my pores.
Pone
A pony.
Pore
By extension any small opening or interstice, especially one of many, or one allowing the passage of a fluid.
The pores of a rock.
Pone
A kind of johnnycake.
Pore
To study meticulously; to go over again and again.
Pone
An original writ, now superseded by the writ of certiorari, for removing a case from an inferior court into the Court of Exchequer.
Pore
To meditate or reflect in a steady way.
Pone
The player who cuts the cards, being usually the player on the dealer's right.
Pore
One of the minute orifices in an animal or vegetable membrane, for transpiration, absorption, etc.
Pone
Cornbread often made without milk or eggs and baked or fried (Southern)
Pore
A minute opening or passageway; an interstice between the constituent particles or molecules of a body; as, the pores of stones.
Pore
To look or gaze steadily in reading or studying; to fix the attention; to be absorbed; - often with on or upon, and now usually with over.
The eye grows weary with poring perpetually on the same thing.
Pore
Any tiny hole admitting passage of a liquid (fluid or gas)
Pore
Any small opening in the skin or outer surface of an animal
Pore
A minute epidermal pore in a leaf or stem through which gases and water vapor can pass
Pore
Direct one's attention on something;
Please focus on your studies and not on your hobbies
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