different between clapper vs clamper

clapper

English

Pronunciation

  • (General American) IPA(key): /?klæp?/
  • Rhymes: -æp?(r)

Etymology 1

clap +? -er

Noun

clapper (plural clappers)

  1. One who claps; a person who applauds by clapping the hands.
  2. An object so suspended inside a bell that it may hit the bell and cause it to ring; a clanger or tongue.
  3. A wooden mechanical device used as a scarecrow; bird-scaring rattle, a wind-rattle or a wind-clapper.
    • 1896, Sabine Baring-Gould, Arminell, a social romance, Ch. 37:
      "Sir, sir! folks' tongues go like the clappers in the fields to drive away the blackbirds. A very little wind makes 'em rattle wonderfully."
  4. A clapstick (musical instrument).
  5. (sewing) A pounding block.
  6. The chattering damsel of a mill.
  7. (ice hockey) A slapshot
  8. (cinematography) The hinged part of a clapperboard, used to synchronise images and soundtrack, or the clapperboard itself.
  9. (slang, obsolete) A person's tongue, as a source of chatter or nagging.
    • 1683, S. P., The Dutch Rogue, Or, Gusman of Amsterdam (page 238)
      Emilia 'tis true could use her clapper with great Dexterity, but he had the same advantages against her, which this had against him; Olimpia 's Tongue was also well hung but she ever had reason on her side, which he with reason could never either blame or oppose, and by both these came his Fortune: []
Synonyms
  • (musical instrument): clapstick, musicstick
Derived terms
  • clapperboard
  • clapperboy
  • clapperclaw
  • clapperless
  • clapper-loader
  • clapper talk
  • clapper-valve
  • handclapper
  • like the clappers
Translations

Verb

clapper (third-person singular simple present clappers, present participle clappering, simple past and past participle clappered)

  1. (transitive) To ring a bell by pulling a rope attached to the clapper.
  2. To make a repetitive clapping sound; to clatter.
  3. Of birds, to repeatedly strike the mandibles together.

Etymology 2

Borrowed from French clapier.

Noun

clapper (plural clappers)

  1. (obsolete) A rabbit burrow.

Anagrams

  • crapple

French

Verb

clapper

  1. to click (the tongue)

Conjugation

Derived terms

  • clappement

Further reading

  • “clapper” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).

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clamper

English

Etymology

clamp +? -er

Noun

clamper (plural clampers)

  1. One who, or that which, clamps.
    If you park your car in a no-parking zone, watch out for clampers.
  2. An attachment with sharp metal prongs, attached to a boot or shoe to enable the wearer to walk securely upon ice.
    • 1853-1855, Elisha Kane, Arctic Explorations: the Second Grinnell Expedition in Search of Sir John Franklin
      Both divisions are provided with clampers, to steady them and their sledges on the irregular ice-surfaces []
  3. (electronics) A circuit that restricts the amplitude of a waveform.

Synonyms

  • (attachment to boot or shoe): crampon, creeper

Verb

clamper (third-person singular simple present clampers, present participle clampering, simple past and past participle clampered)

  1. To crimp.
  2. (obsolete) To join in an unsystematic or haphazard fashion.
  3. To move in a noisy and clumsy manner.
  4. To complain in an irritating manner.

Anagrams

  • reclamp

clamper From the web:

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