different between batt vs baft

batt

English

Etymology

Late Middle English in the sense "piece, lump," of uncertain origin, but possibly related to the noun bat with the sense of "beaten" fabric.

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -æt

Noun

batt (plural batts)

  1. Pieces of fabric or fibre used for stuffing; as for batting or insulation
  2. (Polari, usually in the plural) A shoe.

Translations

References

Anagrams

  • TTAB, attB

Middle English

Noun

batt

  1. Alternative form of bat

Old Norse

Verb

batt

  1. first/third-person singular past indicative active of binda

batt From the web:

  • what battle ended the revolutionary war
  • what battery do i need
  • what battle started the civil war
  • what battery for my car
  • what battle ended the civil war
  • what battle was the turning point of the war
  • what batteries does tesla use
  • what battery terminal to connect first


baft

English

Etymology 1

Preposition

baft

  1. Alternative form of abaft

Adverb

baft (comparative more baft, superlative most baft)

  1. Alternative form of abaft

Etymology 2

Noun

baft (countable and uncountable, plural bafts)

  1. Alternative form of bafta (type of material)

Anagrams

  • BATF

baft From the web:

  • what bafta stands for
  • what baftas did 1917 win
  • what bafta means
  • what bafta did taskmaster win
  • what baftas did chernobyl win
  • what bafta did rebel wilson win
  • what bafta did bait win
  • bafta what does it stand for
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