What's the difference between strung and strunt?

Strung


Definition:

  • (imp.) of String
  • (p. p.) of String
  • () imp. & p. p. of String.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Her own debut album, 12 Stories (released on 22 October), displays the full range of her emotional acuity and wit in dissecting the strung-out, pill-addicted, adulterous heart of small-town America.
  • (2) 45 min: Cameroon haven't strung more than two passes together all half.
  • (3) The fight was like a tightly-strung bow, but neither archer was releasing the arrow.
  • (4) But that’s only because the £50m price tag that the club have strung around his neck is so heavy that he physically cannot move.
  • (5) Around this mere handful of works by its hero – which do at least include his sumptuous The Garden of Love (c 1635) and his vulnerable, shivering nude the Venus Frigida (1614) – the curators have strung together a fragile daisy chain of prints, copies and daubs of dubious relevance, and sometimes very poor quality.
  • (6) The second study proves a new betablocking agent to have sociotropic effects: in a long-term trial socially high-strung subjects showed an improved interaction behavior (compared to placebo and socially easy-going persons) in their everyday life.
  • (7) For generations, these winter winds have been a trial for the crofting and fishing communities which are strung along the coastline.
  • (8) Balloons are strung up around the lawns and youngsters can have guided tours of the seat of power.
  • (9) Last summer, his team strung a 700-metre-long cable between two cliffs at a geological park in central China and the Prince, seeking a new challenge, decided to cross it backwards and blindfolded.
  • (10) Partly as a response to that image of strung-out adolescent boys, products aimed more at women and at an older market have tended not to call themselves games at all.
  • (11) No one can relax when the food is too highly strung.
  • (12) "Africans who refused to take the Mau Mau oath have had ropes tied around their necks and been strung up from rafters until unconscious.
  • (13) It’s possible Mary Berry is in fact a trojan behemoth, and viewers might wonder what dark secrets she’s hiding as a highly strung web administrator from Kettering furiously puts the finishing touches to a multi-tiered woodland-themed Genoese sponge.
  • (14) Equally, in every situation, Mason was the defender of Ophuls, a high-strung, stylistic perfectionist who was having a hard time in Hollywood.
  • (15) Tulsa remains Clark's most visceral book, an insider's view of a period in the mid-1960s when he was a teenager living what he calls, without irony, "the outlaw life" – shooting up speed, having sex with his strung-out girlfriends and hanging out with his gun-toting junkie friends.
  • (16) Then, as now, the mood was dominated by a crucial question: how do you a balance a need for jobs with the demand for a good quality of life for residents strung out kilometres away from Sydney’s CBD?
  • (17) His original masterplan included two championship golf courses, with a five-star hotel, tower blocks of timeshare apartments, luxury villas, equestrian and tennis complexes, a golfing academy, and shopping village strung along a sweeping avenue called Trump Boulevard.
  • (18) Like a few cushions piled up with a pearl string strung around the bottom.
  • (19) I was so highly strung and so stressed out and of course I would have answered the door because it might have been the police,” he said.
  • (20) Abu Jamal [his Islamic nom de guerre] is fighting in Syria, with a bushy beard covering his face and bullets strung across his chest.

Strunt


Definition:

  • (n.) Spirituous liquor.

Example Sentences:

Words possibly related to "strung"

Words possibly related to "strunt"