different between clabber vs clubber

clabber

English

Alternative forms

  • clauber

Etymology

From Irish clábar (mud) or a Scots Gaelic cognate thereof.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?klæb.?(?)/
    Rhymes: -æb?(?)

Noun

clabber (uncountable)

  1. Sour or curdled milk.
  2. Wet clay or mud.

Related terms

  • bonnyclabber

Translations

Verb

clabber (third-person singular simple present clabbers, present participle clabbering, simple past and past participle clabbered)

  1. To sour or curdle.
    • 2013, Philipp Meyer, The Son (Simon & Schuster 2014), page 148:
      They always had more milk than they needed and often entire buckets would clabber and one of her brothers would carry it out to the bunkhouse for the vaqueros.

Anagrams

  • cabbler, crabble

clabber From the web:

  • what's clabber girl
  • what clabbered mean
  • clabber what does it mean
  • what is clabbered milk
  • what does clabber girl mean
  • what is clabber used for
  • what does clabbered milk mean
  • what is clabbered cream


clubber

English

Etymology

club +? -er

Noun

clubber (plural clubbers)

  1. One who partakes in clubbing, who frequents nightclubs.
  2. One who clubs, who hits objects with a club.

Synonyms

  • clubgoer

Middle English

Alternative forms

  • clober, clobbere, clubbere

Etymology

From clubbe +? -er.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?klub?r/

Noun

clubber

  1. (rare) Somebody who makes clubs; a club-maker.

References

  • “clubber, n.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 2018-05-05.

clubber From the web:

  • clubber meaning
  • what's clubber lang
  • clubber what is your prediction for the fight
  • clubbercise what to wear
  • what does clubbed mean
  • what is clubbercise classes
  • what does clubber lang say to rocky
  • what is clubbercise good for
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like