Learn English – the difference between a catch and a handle

differencesmeaning

What is the difference between a catch and a handle? Ain't they the same thing?

But here it said they got no handle but a catch:

It was very dark and dusty and
draughty and they stepped from rafter
to rafter without a word except when
they whispered to one another, "We're
opposite your attic now" or "this must
be halfway through our house". And
neither of them stumbled and the
candles didn't go out, and at last
they came where they could see a
little door in the brick wall on their
right. There was no bolt or handle on
this side of it, of course, for the
door had been made for getting in, not
for getting out; but there was a catch
(as there often is on the inside of a
cupboard door) which they felt sure
they would be able to turn.

Best Answer

This diagram may help:

Door catch diagram

Some might argue that the catch is actually the piece that the part labeled "catch" goes into, but I'd call that a "stop."

The catch that is described probably would look something like this:

Another catch

which is similar to an old fashioned cupboard catch, and would be fairly simply to push open if one were inside the cupboard. (Edited image to one with a turncatch.)

Here is a (hopefully) clearer example. The shaft of this knob would be put through the door, and the blade (catch) at the end would keep the door from opening unless you turned it. We called these "grandfather locks" when I was a kid, but I don't know if that's common usage, or just my family.

Picture of a turncatch