Snowblade vs. Blade — What's the Difference?
Difference Between Snowblade and Blade
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Compare with Definitions
Snowblade
A short version of a ski, offering more control than skis.
Blade
A blade is the portion of a tool, weapon, or machine with an edge that is designed to puncture, chop, slice or scrape surfaces or materials. Blades are typically made from materials that are harder than those they are to be used on.
Snowblade
To travel by snowblade.
Blade
The flat cutting part of a sharpened weapon or tool.
Blade
A sword.
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Blade
A swordsman.
Blade
(Archaeology) A slender, sharp-edged flake that is at least twice as long as it is wide.
Blade
A dashing youth.
Blade
A flat thin part or section, especially one that makes contact to perform a desired action
The blade of an oar.
The blade of a hockey stick.
Blade
An arm of a rotating mechanism
The blade of a propeller.
The blade of a food processor.
Blade
A long, thin, often curved piece, as of metal or rubber, used for plowing, clearing, or wiping.
Blade
The metal runner of an ice skate.
Blade
A wide flat bone or bony part.
Blade
The flat upper surface of the tongue just behind the tip.
Blade
The expanded part of a leaf or petal.
Blade
The leaf of grasses or similar plants.
Blade
To skate on in-line skates.
Blade
The (typically sharp-edged) part of a knife, sword, razor, or other tool with which it cuts.
Blade
(metonymy) A sword or knife.
Blade
The flat functional end or piece of a propeller, oar, hockey stick, chisel, screwdriver, skate, etc.
Blade
The narrow leaf of a grass or cereal.
Blade
(botany) The thin, flat part of a plant leaf, attached to a stem (petiole). The lamina.
Blade
A flat bone, especially the shoulder blade.
Blade
A cut of beef from near the shoulder blade (part of the chuck).
Blade
The part of the tongue just behind the tip, used to make laminal consonants. Body parts
Blade
(archaeology) A piece of prepared, sharp-edged stone, often flint, at least twice as long as it is wide; a long flake of ground-edge stone or knapped vitreous stone.
Blade
(ultimate frisbee) A throw characterized by a tight parabolic trajectory due to a steep lateral attitude.
Blade
(sailing) The rudder, daggerboard, or centerboard of a vessel.
Blade
A bulldozer or surface-grading machine with mechanically adjustable blade that is nominally perpendicular to the forward motion of the vehicle.
Blade
(dated) A dashing young man.
Blade
A homosexual, usually male.
Blade
Thin plate, foil.
Blade
(photography) One of a series of small plates that make up the aperture or the shutter of a camera.
Blade
The principal rafters of a roof.
Blade
(biology) The four large shell plates on the sides, and the five large ones of the middle, of the carapace of the sea turtle, which yield the best tortoise shell.
Blade
(computing) A blade server.
Blade
(climbing) knifeblade
Blade
(mathematics) An exterior product of vectors. (The product may have more than two factors. Also, a scalar counts as a 0-blade, a vector as a 1-blade; an exterior product of k vectors may be called a k-blade.)
Blade
The part of a key that is inserted into the lock.
Blade
An artificial foot used by amputee athletes, shaped like an upside-down interrogation mark.
Blade
(informal) To skate on rollerblades.
Blade
(transitive) To furnish with a blade.
Blade
To put forth or have a blade.
Blade
(transitive) To stab with a blade
Blade
To cut (a person) so as to provoke bleeding.
Blade
Properly, the leaf, or flat part of the leaf, of any plant, especially of gramineous plants. The term is sometimes applied to the spire of grasses.
The crimson dulse . . . with its waving blade.
First the blade, then ear, after that the full corn in the ear.
Blade
The cutting part of an instrument; as, the blade of a knife or a sword.
Blade
The broad part of an oar; also, one of the projecting arms of a screw propeller.
Blade
The scapula or shoulder blade.
Blade
The principal rafters of a roof.
Blade
The four large shell plates on the sides, and the five large ones of the middle, of the carapace of the sea turtle, which yield the best tortoise shell.
Blade
A sharp-witted, dashing, wild, or reckless, fellow; - a word of somewhat indefinite meaning.
He saw a turnkey in a triceFetter a troublesome blade.
Blade
The flat part of the tongue immediately behind the tip, or point.
"Lower blade" implies, of course, the lower instead of the upper surface of the tongue.
Blade
To furnish with a blade.
Blade
To put forth or have a blade.
As sweet a plant, as fair a flower, is fadedAs ever in the Muses' garden bladed.
Blade
Especially a leaf of grass or the broad portion of a leaf as distinct from the petiole
Blade
A dashing young man;
Gay young blades bragged of their amorous adventures
Blade
Something long and thin resembling a blade of grass;
A blade of lint on his suit
Blade
A cutting or thrusting weapon with a long blade
Blade
A cut of beef from the shoulder blade
Blade
A broad flat body part (as of the shoulder or tongue)
Blade
The part of the skate that slides on the ice
Blade
Flat surface that rotates and pushes against air or water
Blade
The flat part of a tool or weapon that (usually) has a cutting edge
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