Iris
What's the difference between the verbs "protect" and "defend"? In Russian they have the same meaning "защищать".
2013年8月20日 18:00
回答 · 12
1
They are very similar in meaning, and used interchangeably, however to defend can go a step further, in that when you defend, for example a country, you may take measures to counterattack. Protect usually means just to keep from harm but not so much by counterattacking.
2013年8月20日
1
Italian language makes also a distinction (proteggere = to protect ; difendere = to defend) /to defend/ is mostly used when an enemy is defined (aggressive intention); /to protect/ does not need an enemy, in the sense that natural adversities don't have an 'intention' or a 'will', so for instance: /protecting from the chilling wind/. Obviously, in figurative or metaphorical language, Nature can impersonate an enemy, so /to defend/ might also be used. Example: this paint protects the metal of the gate from corrosion.
2013年8月20日
Yes, you can use that in a verbal sense as well. For example, when you are in university and you submit your thesis (It is a paper which explains all your studies and contains your conclusions from your studies), a committee of professors will make any possible objections to your thesis proposal. You then give a defense. It is called a thesis defense. In your defense you reply with any arguments you can give to back up your thesis. The way I picture it... Let's say there is a family. A burglar breaks in. The mother runs to the children and covers them with her body. She is protecting them. The father goes after the burglar with a stick to fight him back and make him leave, and so he will not go closer to the children and his wife. He is defending them.
2013年8月20日
I'm trying to find a situation where one works and the other doesn't, but I am having trouble coming up with any where they aren't interchangeable.
2013年8月20日
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