Difference between Guide and Head

What is the difference between Guide and Head?

Guide as a noun is someone who guides, especially someone hired to show people around a place or an institution and offer information and explanation. while Head as a noun is the part of the body of an animal or human which contains the brain, mouth and main sense organs.

Guide

Part of speech: noun

Definition: Someone who guides, especially someone hired to show people around a place or an institution and offer information and explanation. A document or book that offers information or instruction; guidebook. A sign that guides people; guidepost. Any marking or object that catches the eye to provide quick reference. A device that guides part of a machine, or guides motion or action. A spirit believed to speak through a medium. A member of a group marching in formation who sets the pattern of movement or alignment for the rest.

Part of speech: verb

Definition: to serve as a guide for someone or something. to steer or navigate, especially a ship or as a pilot. to exert control or influence over someone or something. to supervise the education or training of someone. to act as a guide.

Example sentence: Sometimes we let life guide us, and other times we take life by the horns. But one thing is for sure: no matter how organized we are, or how well we plan, we can always expect the unexpected.

Head

Part of speech: verb

Definition: To be in command of. - see also head upTo strike with the head; as in soccer, to head the ballTo move in a specified direction. heading towards somethingTo remove the head from a fish.

Part of speech: noun

Definition: The part of the body of an animal or human which contains the brain, mouth and main sense organs.Mental or emotional aptitude or skill.Mind; one's own thoughts.The topmost, foremost, or leading part.The end of a rectangular table furthest from the entrance; traditionally considered a seat of honor.The end of a pool table opposite the end where the balls have been racked.The principal operative part of a machine.The end of a hammer, axe, or similar implement used for striking other objects.The end of a nail, screw, bolt or similar fastener which is opposite the point; usually blunt and relatively wide.The sharp end of an arrow, spear, or pointer.The source of a river; the end of a lake where a river flows into it.The front, as of a queue.Headway; progress.The foam that forms on top of beer or other carbonated beverages.The top part of a lacrosse stick that holds the ball.Leader; chief; mastermind.A headmaster or headmistress.A headache; especially one resulting from intoxication.A clump of leaves or flowers; a capitulum.The rounded part of a bone fitting into a depression in another bone to form a ball-and-socket joint.An individual person.A single animal.the population of gameTopic; subject.A morpheme that determines the category of a compound or the word that determines the syntactic type of the phrase of which it is a member.The principal melody or theme of a piece.Deposits near the top of a geological succession.The end of an abscess where pus collects.denouement; crisisA machine element which reads or writes electromagnetic signals to or from a storage medium.The headstock of a guitar.A drum head, the membrane which is hit to produce sound.The end cap of a cylindrically-shaped pressure vessel.The cylinder head, a platform above the cylinders in an internal combustion engine, containing the valves and spark plugs.A buildup of fluid pressure, often quantified as pressure head.The difference in elevation between two points in a column of fluid, and the resulting pressure of the fluid at the lower point.More generally, energy in a mass of fluid divided by its weight.The top of a sail.The bow of a nautical vessel.The toilet of a ship.Fellatio or cunnilingus; oral sexThe glans penis.A heavy or habitual user of illicit drugs.a headland.

Part of speech: adjective

Definition: Of, relating to, or intended for the head.Foremost in rank or importance.Placed at the top or the front.Coming from in front.

Example sentence: What we need to do is always lean into the future; when the world changes around you and when it changes against you - what used to be a tail wind is now a head wind - you have to lean into that and figure out what to do because complaining isn't a strategy.

We hope you now know whether to use Guide or Head in your sentence.

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