The difference between Cab and Homer

When used as nouns, cab means a taxi, whereas homer means a former hebrew unit of dry volume, about equal to 230l or 6½bushels.

When used as verbs, cab means to travel by taxicab, whereas homer means to hit a homer.


check bellow for the other definitions of Cab and Homer

  1. Cab as a noun:

    A taxi; a taxicab.

  2. Cab as a noun:

    Compartment at the front of a truck or train for the driver

  3. Cab as a noun:

    Shelter at the top of an air traffic control tower or fire lookout tower

  4. Cab as a noun:

    Any of several four-wheeled carriages; a cabriolet

  1. Cab as a verb:

    To travel by taxicab.

  1. Cab as a noun (historical, _, units of measure):

    A former Hebrew unit of volume, about equal to 1.3L as a dry measure or 1¼L as a liquid measure.

  1. Cab as a noun (video games, informal):

    An arcade cabinet, the unit in which a video game is housed in a gaming arcade.

  1. Homer as a noun (historical, _, units of measure):

    A former Hebrew unit of dry volume, about equal to 230L or 6½bushels.

  2. Homer as a noun (historical, _, units of measure):

    approximately the same volume as a liquid measure.

  1. Homer as a noun (baseball):

    A four-base hit; a home run

    Examples:

    "The first baseman hit a homer to lead off the ninth."

  2. Homer as a noun:

    A homing pigeon

    Examples:

    "Each of the pigeon fanciers released a homer at the same time."

  3. Homer as a noun (sports):

    A person who is extremely devoted to his favorite team.

    Examples:

    "Joe is such a homer that he would never boo the Hometown Hobos, even if they are in last place in the league."

  1. Homer as a verb (baseball):

    To hit a homer; to hit a home run.

    Examples:

    "The Sultan of Swat homered 714 times."