The difference between Rich and Vanilla

When used as adjectives, rich means wealthy: having a lot of money and possessions, whereas vanilla means of vanilla.


Rich is also verb with the meaning: to enrich.

Vanilla is also noun with the meaning: any tropical, climbing orchid of the genus vanilla (especially ), bearing podlike fruit yielding an extract used in flavoring food or in perfumes.

check bellow for the other definitions of Rich and Vanilla

  1. Rich as an adjective:

    Wealthy: having a lot of money and possessions.

  2. Rich as an adjective:

    Having an intense fatty or sugary flavour.

    Examples:

    "a rich dish; rich cream or soup; rich pastry"

  3. Rich as an adjective:

    Plentiful, abounding, abundant, fulfilling.

    Examples:

    "a rich treasury; a rich entertainment; a rich crop"

  4. Rich as an adjective:

    Yielding large returns; productive or fertile; fruitful.

    Examples:

    "rich soil or land; a rich mine"

  5. Rich as an adjective:

    Composed of valuable or costly materials or ingredients; procured at great outlay; highly valued; precious; sumptuous; costly.

    Examples:

    "a rich dress; rich silk or fur; rich presents"

  6. Rich as an adjective:

    Not faint or delicate; vivid.

    Examples:

    "a rich red colour"

  7. Rich as an adjective (informal, dated):

    Very amusing.

    Examples:

    "The scene was a rich one."

    "a rich incident or character"

    "rfquotek Thackeray"

  8. Rich as an adjective (informal):

    Ridiculous, absurd.

  9. Rich as an adjective (computing):

    Elaborate, having complex formatting, multimedia, or depth of interaction.

  10. Rich as an adjective:

    Of a fuel-air mixture, having less air than is necessary to burn all of the fuel; less air- or oxygen- rich than necessary for a stoichiometric reaction.

  1. Rich as a verb (obsolete, transitive):

    To enrich.

    Examples:

    "rfquotek Gower"

    "rfquotek Shakespeare"

  2. Rich as a verb (obsolete, intransitive):

    To become rich.

  1. Vanilla as a noun (countable):

    Any tropical, climbing orchid of the genus Vanilla (especially ), bearing podlike fruit yielding an extract used in flavoring food or in perfumes.

  2. Vanilla as a noun (countable):

    The fruit or bean of the vanilla plant.

    Examples:

    "synonyms: vanilla bean"

  3. Vanilla as a noun (uncountable):

    The extract of the fruit of the vanilla plant.

    Examples:

    "synonyms: vanilla extract"

  4. Vanilla as a noun (uncountable):

    The distinctive fragrant flavour/flavor characteristic of vanilla extract.

    Examples:

    "You can tell that the secret [[ingredient]] missing from New Coke<sup><small>TM</small></sup> was vanilla, because certain South American economies collapsed when it was introduced, and miraculously revived when the old [[formula]] was used again."

  5. Vanilla as a noun (uncountable):

    Any artificially produced homologue of vanilla extract, principally vanillin produced from lignin from the paper industry or from petrochemicals.

    Examples:

    "synonyms: imitation vanilla"

  6. Vanilla as a noun (countable, sexuality, slang):

    Someone who is not into fetishism; a normophile

  7. Vanilla as a noun:

    A yellowish-white colour, like that of vanilla ice cream.

    Examples:

    "color paneF3E5AB"

  1. Vanilla as an adjective (of flavor, etc.):

    Of vanilla.

  2. Vanilla as an adjective (colloquial, mostly, computing):

    Standard, plain, default, unmodified, basic.

    Examples:

    "'vanilla JavaScript"

  3. Vanilla as an adjective (sexuality):

    Not kinky, not involving BDSM.

  4. Vanilla as an adjective:

    Plain; conventional; unimaginative.