Difference between Wait and Weight
Wait And Weight are homonyms; this means they are pronounced exactly the same way but spelt differently.
Wait can be a verb or a noun. As a verb it means stay where one is, or delay action until a particular time or event. Wait is usually followed by a preposition such as for, at, on, in, or near. Wait on is to act as an attendant, or as a waiter or waitress in a restaurant. As a noun, wait signifies a period of inaction. Below are some examples of wait as a verb:
- Wait for me; I will be with you in a minute.
- Please wait at the corner of the street; I will pick you up from there.
- Peter waited in the restaurant for two hours but Mary did not come.
- If you wait near the station, a taxi will eventually come by.
- The train was still waiting at the station when James arrived.
- I can no longer wait to tell you that I am getting married next month.
- Don’t wait up for me; I will be back very late.
- Mary has been waiting a long time for a proposal from Simon, but she won’t break with him.
- We waited endlessly for the rain to stop; eventually we were forced to cancel our picnic.
- Lara was appointed as a maid to wait upon the Queen.
- Tom’s job was to wait on customers at the restaurant.
- He had a long wait at the doctor’s clinic.
- The wait for news of their missing child was agonising.
- The flight was delayed and the wait for announcement of the new departure time left us angry and hungry.
- We had a long wait to get a table at the new restaurant.
Weight is a noun and refers to the heaviness of a person or thing; a body’s relative mass or the quantity of matter contained by it. It signifies the quality of being heavy, or it is a unit or system of units, used for expressing how much an object or quantity of matter weighs (weights and measures). Here are some examples: He was at least fifteen stone in weight. She misjudged the weight of the book and dropped it. Mastiffs can reach a weight of 52 kg. More examples:
- He gained weight after being fed with carbohydrates and fatty food.
- His weight has risen massively and his body has ballooned.
- The burglar crept around the apartment but the boards creaked loudly under his weight.
- It is very important that farmers selling livestock and other products start to think in terms of the metric system of weights and measures such as kilos and litres.
- The homeopath spooned the powder on to scales with tiny brass weights.
- The prisoners were forced to march 8 kms. overnight carrying weights of 35 kgs.
Weight can also mean the ability of someone or something to influence decisions or actions and be of importance.
- His proposals to increase production carried weight with the committee members.
- If you recommend me for the job, it will carry great weight with the selectors.
- Individuals differ in the weight they attach to different aspects of a job.
- Your arguments had better carry weight with the jury, or the accused will be given a jail term of 10 years.
- The weight of grieving over his wife’s untimely death, has affected his health.
- The reasons given for banning the consumption of beef did not carry weight with the government.
- The new employee, who was related to the boss, threw his weight around the office making him unpopular.
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[0]http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/english/