Difference between Sculpt and Grave

What is the difference between Sculpt and Grave?

Sculpt as a verb is to be a sculptor while Grave as a verb is to dig. chaucer.

Sculpt

Part of speech: verb

Definition: To be a sculptor

Example sentence: All the scars on my body, all the bumps and bruises, all the muscles - that is a story of everything I have done. And it's not just my story. My ancestors who came before me gave me this vessel to sculpt and mold.

Grave

Part of speech: noun

Definition: An accent used in French, Italian and other languages. è is an e with a grave accent.An excavation in the earth as a place of burial; also, any place of interment; a tomb; a sepulcher. Hence: death; destruction.

Part of speech: adjective

Definition: Of great weight; heavy; ponderous.Of importance; momentous; weighty; influential; sedate; serious; said of character, relations, etc.; as, grave deportment, character, influence, etc.Not light or gay; solemn; sober; plain; as, a grave color; a grave face.Not acute or sharp; low; deep; -- said of sound; as, a grave note or key.Slow and solemn in movement.

Part of speech: verb

Definition: To dig. Chaucer.To carve or cut, as letters or figures, on some hard substance; to engrave.To carve out or give shape to, by cutting with a chisel; to sculpture; as, to grave an image.To impress deeply (on the mind); to fix indelibly.To entomb; to bury. —Chaucer.To clean, as a vessel's bottom, of barnacles, grass, etc., and pay it over with pitch — so called because graves or greaves was formerly used for this purpose.To write or delineate on hard substances, by means of incised lines; to practice engraving.

Example sentence: Time is the king of all men, he is their parent and their grave, and gives them what he will and not what they crave.

We hope you now know whether to use Sculpt or Grave in your sentence.

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