different between accompanying vs flatulate
accompanying
English
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /??k?m.p(?.)ni.??/
Adjective
accompanying (comparative more accompanying, superlative most accompanying)
- Present together.
- (1848) Hints towards the formation of a more comprehensive theory of life, Preface:
- The accompanying pages contain the unfinished Sketch of a Theory of Life by S. T. Coleridge.
- (1848) Hints towards the formation of a more comprehensive theory of life, Preface:
Translations
References
- “accompanying” in Merriam-Webster Thesaurus
Verb
accompanying
- present participle of accompany
Noun
accompanying (plural accompanyings)
- That which accompanies; accompaniment.
- 1839, William Thompson Bacon, Poems (page 46)
- He was seated / Among his equals; and a holiday / With its accompanyings — loud laughs, and jests, / And boisterous mirth — sped merrily […]
- 1839, William Thompson Bacon, Poems (page 46)
accompanying From the web:
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flatulate
English
Etymology
Back-formation from flatulence, attested since the 19th century; ultimately of Latin origin.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?flætj?le?t/, /?flæt??le?t/
Verb
flatulate (third-person singular simple present flatulates, present participle flatulating, simple past and past participle flatulated)
- To emit digestive gases from the anus, especially with accompanying sound and smell.
- 1985, James L. Framo, “Rationale and Techniques of Intensive Family Therapy,” in Intensive Family Therapy, Ivan Boszormenyi-Nagy and James L. Framo eds. [1],
- Where else but in his own castle, with his own family, can a person pick his nose, flatulate, lose his temper with impunity, whine, let the child in him emerge—in short, regress and “be himself”?
- 1985, James L. Framo, “Rationale and Techniques of Intensive Family Therapy,” in Intensive Family Therapy, Ivan Boszormenyi-Nagy and James L. Framo eds. [1],
Usage notes
Garner's Modern English Usage (4th ed) has an entry for flatulate, discussing the attestation history and lexicographic coverage of this verb and some of its synonyms. As with the other main bodily functions (such as urination, defecation, and vomiting), register governs the choice of synonym in a given context; flatulate serves formal registers well (such as in medical publications), whereas fart, although it is easily English's dominant synonym of the semantic field for this concept, is usually considered a casualism suited only to informal registers. Thus flatulate is to fart as urinate is to piss and as defecate is to shit.
Synonyms
- See fart § Synonyms
- See also Thesaurus:flatulate
Coordinate terms
- queef
Derived terms
- flatulation
Translations
flatulate From the web:
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