different between carpet vs yellow

carpet

English

Etymology

From late Middle English carpete, from Old French carpite, from Medieval Latin carpita/Italian carpita, the past participle of Latin carpere (to pluck).

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /?k??(?)p?t/
  • (US) IPA(key): /?k??p?t/
  • Rhymes: -??(r)p?t

Noun

carpet (countable and uncountable, plural carpets)

  1. A fabric used as a complete floor covering.
    • A great bargain also had been the excellent Axminster carpet which covered the floor; as, again, the arm-chair in which Bunting now sat forward, staring into the dull, small fire.
  2. (figuratively) Any surface or cover resembling a carpet or fulfilling its function.
    • 2009, Loren Long, ?Phil Bildner, Magic in the Outfield (page 47)
      Way deep in left field, where the carpet of green sloped upward to a terrace and greeted the thick line of trees, he reached out his glove.
  3. Any of a number of moths in the geometrid subfamily Larentiinae
  4. (obsolete) A wrought cover for tables.
    • Tables and beds covered with copes instead of carpets and coverlets.
  5. (slang, vulgar) A woman's pubic hair.

Usage notes

The terms carpet and rug are often used interchangeably, but various distinctions are drawn. Most often, a rug is loose and covers part of a floor, while a carpet covers most or all of the floor, and may be loose or attached, while a fitted carpet runs wall-to-wall.

Initially carpet referred primarily to table and wall coverings, today called tablecloth or tapestry – the use of the term for floor coverings dates to the 18th century, following trade with Persia.

Derived terms

Descendants

  • ? Japanese: ????? (k?petto)

Translations

Further reading

  • carpet on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Verb

carpet (third-person singular simple present carpets, present participle carpeting, simple past and past participle carpeted)

  1. To lay carpet, or to have carpet installed, in an area.
  2. (transitive) To substantially cover something, as a carpet does; to blanket something.
    • 2017, Jennifer S. Holland, For These Monkeys, It’s a Fight for Survival., National Geographic (March 2017)[2]
      The town of Tompasobaru, a six-hour drive from Tangkoko, is known for the fragrant cloves that carpet the front yards of homes, drying on tarps in the sun. But in the town’s open market, the air hung heavy with the metallic smell of the butcher’s wares.
  3. (Britain) To reprimand.
    • 1990, Peter Hopkirk, The Great Game, Folio Society 2010, p. 428:
      Even Colonel Yakov, so recently carpeted by St Petersburg, was reported to be back in the Pamirs.
    • 1992 June 24, Edwina Currie, Diary:
      At 4pm, the phone went. It was The Sun: 'We hear your daughter's been expelled for cheating at her school exams...'

      She'd made a remark to a friend at the end of the German exam and had been pulled up for talking.

      As they left the exam room, she muttered that the teacher was a 'twat'. He heard and flipped—a pretty stupid thing to do, knowing the kids were tired and tense after exams. Instead of dropping it, the teacher complained to the Head and Deb was carpeted.

Translations

Anagrams

  • cet. par., peract, preact

Latin

Verb

carpet

  1. third-person singular future active indicative of carp?

carpet From the web:

  • what carpet is best
  • what carpet is in style 2020
  • what carpet cleaner is the best
  • what carpet pile is best
  • what carpet goes with grey walls
  • what carpet is best for stairs
  • what carpet is best for pets
  • what carpet pad should i get


yellow

English

Alternative forms

  • yeallow (obsolete), yeller (dialect)

Etymology

From Middle English yelwe, yelou, from Old English ?eolwe, oblique form of of Old English ?eolu, from Proto-West Germanic *gelu, from Proto-Germanic *gelwaz, from Proto-Indo-European *??elh?wos, from *??elh?- (gleam, yellow)

Compare Welsh gwelw (pale), Latin helvus (dull yellow)), Irish geal (white, bright), Lithuanian žalias (green), Ancient Greek ?????? (khl?rós, light green), Persian ???? (zard, yellow), Sanskrit ??? (hari, greenish-yellow)). Cognate with German gelb (yellow), Dutch geel (yellow).

The verb is from Old English ?eolwian, from the adjective.

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?j?l.??/
  • (General American) enPR: y?l??, IPA(key): /?j?l.o?/
  • (dialect) IPA(key): /?j?l.?/
  • (dated, Southern US folk speech) IPA(key): /j?l?/, /?jæl?/, /?j?l?/, /?j?l?/, /?j?l?/
  • Rhymes: -?l??

Adjective

yellow (comparative yellower or more yellow, superlative yellowest or most yellow)

  1. Having yellow as its color.
    • 1667, John Milton, Paradise Lost (1667) - Book X, line 434
      A sweaty reaper from his tillage brought / First fruits, the green ear and the yellow sheaf.
    • 1911, J. Milton Hayes, "The green eye of the little yellow god,"
      There's a one-eyed yellow idol / To the north of Kathmandu; / There's a little marble cross below the town; / And a brokenhearted woman / Tends the grave of 'Mad' Carew, / While the yellow god for ever gazes down.
    • 1962 (quoting c. 1398 text), Hans Kurath & Sherman M. Kuhn, editors, Middle English Dictionary, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan Press, ISBN 978-0-472-01044-8, page 1242:
      dorr??, d?r? adj. & n. [] Golden or reddish-yellow [] (a. 1398) *Trev. Barth. 59b/a: ?elou? colour [of urine] [] tokeneþ febleness of hete [] dorrey & citrine & li?t red tokeneþ mene.
    Antonyms: nonyellow, unyellow
  2. (informal) Lacking courage.
    • 1951, J.D. Salinger, The Catcher in the Rye, Chapter 13:
      What you should be is not yellow at all. If you're supposed to sock somebody in the jaw, and you sort of feel like doing it, you should do it.
    • 1975, Monty Python, Monty Python and the Holy Grail
      You yellow bastards! Come back here and take what's coming to you!
    Synonym: cowardly
  3. (publishing, journalism) Characterized by sensationalism, lurid content, and doubtful accuracy.
    • 2004, Doreen Carvajal, "Photo edict muffles gossipy press," International Herald Tribune, 4 Oct. (retrieved 29 July 2008),
      The denizens of the gossipy world of the pink press, purple prose and yellow tabloids are shivering over disputed photographs of Princess Caroline of Monaco.
  4. (chiefly derogatory, offensive, racist) Of the skin, having the colour traditionally attributed to Far East Asians, especially Chinese.
  5. (chiefly derogatory, offensive, ethnic slur) Far East Asian (relating to Asian people).
    • 1913, Sax Rohmer, The Insidious Dr. Fu-Manchu
      Imagine that awful being, and you have a mental picture of Dr. Fu-Manchu, the yellow peril incarnate in one man.
  6. (dated, Australia, offensive) Of mixed Aboriginal and Caucasian ancestry.
    • 1938, Xavier Herbert, Capricornia, Chapter VI, p. 64, [2]
      "Eh, Oscar—you hear about your yeller nephew?".
  7. (dated, US) Synonym of high yellow
    • 1933 September 9, James Thurber, “My Life and Hard Times—VI. A Sequence of Servants”, in The New Yorker
      Charley threw her over for a yellow gal named Nancy: he never forgave Vashti for the vanishing from his life of a menace that had come to mean more to him than Vashti herself.
  8. (Britain, politics) Related to the Liberal Democrats.
    • 2012 March 2, Andrew Grice, "Yellow rebels take on Clegg over NHS 'betrayal'", The Independent
  9. (politics) Related to the Free Democratic Party of Germany.

Derived terms

Translations

Noun

yellow (plural yellows)

  1. The colour of gold, butter, or a lemon; the colour obtained by mixing green and red light, or by subtracting blue from white light.
  2. (US) The intermediate light in a set of three traffic lights, the illumination of which indicates that drivers should stop short of the intersection if it is safe to do so.
  3. (snooker) One of the colour balls used in snooker, with a value of 2 points.
  4. (pocket billiards) One of two groups of object balls, or a ball from that group, as used in the principally British version of pool that makes use of unnumbered balls (the (yellow(s) and red(s)); contrast stripes and solids in the originally American version with numbered balls).
  5. (sports) A yellow card.
  6. Any of various pierid butterflies of the subfamily Coliadinae, especially the yellow coloured species. Compare sulphur.

Synonyms

  • (intermediate light in a set of three traffic lights): amber (British)

Antonyms

  • (intermediate light in a set of three traffic lights): red, green

Hyponyms

  • (color): bronze yellow, cadmium yellow, fast yellow AB, quinoline yellow, school bus yellow, sulfur yellow, sulphur yellow, taxi yellow, yellow-green, yellow 2G

Derived terms

  • beyellowed
  • see yellow

Translations

Verb

yellow (third-person singular simple present yellows, present participle yellowing, simple past and past participle yellowed)

  1. (intransitive) To become yellow or more yellow.
    • 1977, Alistair Horne, A Savage War of Peace, New York Review Books 2006, page 47:
      Then suddenly, with the least warning, the sky yellows and the Chergui blows in from the Sahara, stinging the eyes and choking with its sandy, sticky breath.
    • 2013, Robert Miraldi, Seymour Hersh, Potomac Books, Inc. (?ISBN), page 187:
      Interviews, clippings, yellowing stories from foreign newspapers, notebooks with old scribblings. Salisbury called it the debris of a reporter always too much on the run to sort out the paper, but there it was, an investigator's dream, []
  2. (transitive) To make (something) yellow or more yellow.

Translations

See also

  • All pages with yellow as a prefix

References

Anagrams

  • Yowell

yellow From the web:

  • what yellow heart means
  • what yellow roses mean
  • what yellow means
  • what yellow and blue make
  • what yellow discharge means
  • what yellow and green make
  • what yellowfin is marketed as crossword
  • what yellow flowers mean
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like