different between earthworm vs maddock

earthworm

English

Etymology

From Middle English erthe-worm, erþe-worm, erþe worm (also as worm of þe erthe, worm of þe erþe), equivalent to earth +? worm. Compare Saterland Frisian Äidwurm (earthworm), West Frisian ierdwjirm (earthworm), Dutch aardworm (earthworm), less common German Erdwurm (earthworm).

Pronunciation

Noun

earthworm (plural earthworms)

  1. A worm that lives in the ground.
  2. A worm of the family Lumbricidae, or, more generally, of the suborder Lumbricina.
  3. (figuratively) A contemptible person; a groveller.

Synonyms

  • (a ground-living worm): rainworm, groundworm; wiggler, red worm, red wiggler (Southern US); nightwalker (New England); nightcrawler (Northern US, Western US); dew worm (US Great Lakes region, Canada)

Hyponyms

  • (a ground-living worm): baitworm; fishworm (Northern US, Central US); angleworm (Northern US); fishing worm (Southern US) - fish bait

Translations

References

  • earthworm in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.
  • earthworm at OneLook Dictionary Search
  • Earthworm on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Anagrams

  • heartworm

earthworm From the web:

  • what earthworms eat
  • what earthworms do
  • what earthworms are native to north america
  • what earthworms are called farmer's friend
  • what earthworms do to help soil
  • what earthworms need to survive
  • what's earthworm sally


maddock

English

Etymology

From Middle English maddok, from an unrecorded Old English form corresponding to Old Norse maðkr (whence dialectal English mawk, Danish madike, Swedish mask), originally a diminutive of the Proto-Germanic *maþô (worm) (whence Old English maþa), equivalent to made (maggot) +? -ock.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?mæd?k/

Noun

maddock (plural maddocks)

  1. (obsolete) an earthworm, a maggot

maddock From the web:

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