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Sam Lin
what's the difference between corrode, rot and decay?
what's the difference between corrode, rot and decay?
Corrode means from outside to inside, and decay means from inside to outside.
Rot refers to food.
Am i correct?
Dec 26, 2014 4:02 PM
Answers · 2
2
That sounds like a good way of understanding it to me. Metals corrode, wood roots, plants and animals decay. But some things like builings can rot and decay. Rot can refer to any organic material. We also use all three words to refer to a decline in quality of immaterial things like values, morals or thinking.
December 26, 2014
1
I think which one we would use would depend on the speed of the action.
Rot: quick
Food
Decay: slower
Teeth, Cities
Corrode: much slower
Metal, Infrastructure
Corrode also feels very "clinical". "Rot" feels common and unpleasant. "Decay" is somewhere in-between.
December 26, 2014
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Sam Lin
Language Skills
Chinese (Mandarin), English
Learning Language
English
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