different between chast vs chaat
chast
English
Verb
chast (third-person singular simple present chasts, present participle chasting, simple past and past participle chasted)
- (obsolete) to chasten
Adjective
chast (comparative more chast, superlative most chast)
- Obsolete form of chaste.
Derived terms
- chastness
References
- chast in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
Anagrams
- Chats, Satch, Stach, caths, chats, scath, tachs
Middle English
Noun
chast
- Alternative form of chest (“discord”)
chast From the web:
- what chastise mean
- what chaste means
- chastening meaning
- chastise means
- what chaste life
- chastity what are the limits lds.org
- chasteberry what does it do
- chastisement what does it mean
chaat
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Hindi ??? (c??) (tasting, a delicacy), from ????? (c??n?, “to lick”), from Prakrit ?????? (ca??ei) (to devour with relish, eat noisily).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /t????t/
- Rhymes: -??t
- Homophone: chart (non-rhotic)
Noun
chaat (plural chaats)
- any savory snack, sold from a roadside stall in India, or served as a starter in an Indian restaurant
Translations
Anagrams
- atcha
chaat From the web:
- what chaat masala
- what chaat in english
- chaat what does it mean
- chaat what to eat
- chaat what means
- what is chaat masala made of
- what is chaat masala in malayalam
- what is chaat masala in tamil
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