different between begone vs thot
begone
English
Etymology 1
Univerbation of be +? gone.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /bi????n/, /b????n/
Interjection
begone
- (archaic) Expressing a desire or a command for someone or something to go away.
Derived terms
- bego (verb)
Etymology 2
Inflected forms.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /b????n/
Verb
begone
- past participle of bego
Translations
Derived terms
- woe-begone, woebegone
Anagrams
- engobe
begone From the web:
thot
English
Etymology 1
From Scots thoucht, thocht, thoth, from Middle English thought, thou?th, þau?t, þau?th, a variant (probably through combination with that, as in though that) of though, thogh (“though”). More at though.
Adverb
thot (not comparable)
- (Scotland, obsolete) Alternative form of though.
- 1568, Christis Kirk on Grene, 266:
- Thot he wes wicht he wes not wyss.
- 1568, Christis Kirk on Grene, 266:
Conjunction
thot
- (Scotland, obsolete) Alternative form of though.
- c. 1560, Alexander Scott, Poems, "Ffollowis the Justing and Debait...", line 147:
- ...Ffor, wer ?e foursum in a flok,
I compt ?ow not a leik,
Thot I had rycht not bot a rok
To gar ?our rumpill reik
Behynd;...
- ...Ffor, wer ?e foursum in a flok,
- c. 1560, Alexander Scott, Poems, "Ffollowis the Justing and Debait...", line 147:
Etymology 2
Variant of thought (q.v.) first attested in Scots c. 16th century but since spread through all English dialects.
Noun
thot (plural thots)
- Nonstandard form of thought.
- 1611, William Mure, Miscellaneous Poems, ii, line 13:
- Perceauing me in thot perplex'd.
- 1742 Edmund S. Morgan, The Gentle Puritan: A Life of Ezra Stiles, 1727-1795
- much beset with wicked thots saturday night
- 1611, William Mure, Miscellaneous Poems, ii, line 13:
Verb
thot
- Nonstandard form of thought, simple past tense and past participle of think
Etymology 3
Supposedly an acronym of that ho over there or acronym of thirsty hoes over there, popularized by rappers in Chicago in 2012.(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium. Particularly: “Additional sources please: these sound like fake folk etymologies.”)
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /??t/
- (General American) IPA(key): /??t/
- Rhymes: -?t
- Homophone: thought (accents with the cot–caught merger)
Alternative forms
- thotty
Noun
thot (plural thots)
- (US, derogatory slang) A slut, a woman who is sexually promiscuous.
- 2014 June 23, Amanda Marcotte, "Let's Put an End to 'THOT': The Misogynistic Phrase That's Sweeping the Nation", The Daily Beast:
- ...the appearance of the word “thot” in the whole mess shows how much it’s morphed into the same kind of word as “slut”—a catch-all way to put any woman in her place by suggesting that she’s somehow too sexual. But, of course, it’s a game women can’t win, because if you’re not obviously sexual enough to be called a “thot,” then you’re simply going to be disparaged for failing to be sexy enough.
- 2017 May 8, Roy Wood Jr., "State of Black Shit", The Daily Show:
- That's why we're counting on you, Black Twitter, to continue the innovations in the field of slang. Never has black slang been appropriated so quickly. The other day, I heard two middle-aged white dudes calling each other thots. That word is gone.
- 2018 May 25, Samantha Cole, "Pewdiepie Is Teaching His Audience that Women Are Asking For It", Motherboard
- While Kjellberg struggled to keep his eyes off their chests, he "jokingly" called women in the video “stupid Twitch thots,” a derogatory term for women that stands for “that ho [whore] over there.”
- 2014 June 23, Amanda Marcotte, "Let's Put an End to 'THOT': The Misogynistic Phrase That's Sweeping the Nation", The Daily Beast:
Synonyms
- See Thesaurus:promiscuous woman
Derived terms
- thottery
- tradthot
References
- “thot” in Dictionary.com Unabridged, Dictionary.com, LLC, 1995–present.
- “think, v².”, in OED Online ?, Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, September 2009
- “though, adv., conj., & n.”, in OED Online ?, Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, 1912
- “thought, n.”, in OED Online ?, Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, September 2009
Anagrams
- Toth, hott
thot From the web:
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- begone vs thot
- terms vs begone
- begone vs begore
- begone vs bygone
- detune vs retune
- detuned vs detune
- detuner vs detune
- capacitance vs detune
- instrument vs detune
- musical vs detune
- pitch vs detune
- bothid vs bothie
- bothie vs bothy
- terms vs reneye
- renege vs reneye
- laggiest vs waggiest
- slaggiest vs laggiest
- laggiest vs faggiest
- laggiest vs naggiest
- wag vs tawpie