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Spring: resorte or muelle?An idiom is an expression whose meaning is not readily apparent based on the individual words in the expression. This forum is dedicated to discussing idioms and other sayings. |
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#1
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Spring: resorte or muelle?
I keep hearing both. Is el resorte the spring that resists a push (such as a bed spring or a spring clamp) and el muelle the one that resists a pull (such as a spring that returns a door or gate to its closed position)?
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#2
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If you look up muelle in the dictionary, you will find two definitions that seem at odds with one another, or so I first thought.
I have always heard and used resorte for the coiled wire used in mattresses, chairs and doors. If you search for muelle in Google images, you'll see a whole bunch of piers. When you think about it, the most important use of a pier is to stop an advancing watercraft. The pier absorbs the shock of the impact so the craft isn't damaged. After all is said and done, a pier acts just like a spring does. By the way, somewhere in the middle of all those images of piers, you'll find images of springs (coiled wire). Also have a look here. It seems the two terms are both used, but I still believe resorte is more commonly used for the coiled wire. To support that belief, have a look here and here. Both searches return similar images, but 'de resortes' has more hits. Last edited by Rusty; December 30, 2014 at 11:00 PM. |
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