different between faugh vs waugh
faugh
English
Alternative forms
- faw
- fough (obsolete)
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /f??/
- Rhymes: -??
Interjection
faugh
- (dated) An exclamation of contempt, or of disgust, especially for a smell.
- 1900 Mary Harriott Norris (editor), 1823 Walter Scott (author), Quentin Durward, American Book Company, page 24:
- The very scent of the carrion—faugh—reached my nostrils at the distance where we stood.
- 1900 Mary Harriott Norris (editor), 1823 Walter Scott (author), Quentin Durward, American Book Company, page 24:
Synonyms
- (disgust): bleah, eww, ick, pooh, uck; see also Thesaurus:yuck
- (contempt): feh, pfaugh, pish, pshaw, pooh; see also Thesaurus:bah
faugh From the web:
- what faught mean
- faug means
- daughter mean
- what does fraught mean
- faugh what does it mean
- what does faugh a ballagh mean
- what countries fought in ww1
- what does daughter mean
waugh
English
Etymology 1
Adjective
waugh (comparative more waugh, superlative most waugh)
- (dialect, Scotland and Northern England) Insipid; tasteless.
Etymology 2
Verb
waugh (third-person singular simple present waughs, present participle waughing, simple past and past participle waughed)
- Alternative form of waff (“to bark”)
waugh From the web:
- waugh what does it mean
- what is waugh and norman model of memory
- what is waugh's complaint in the beginning of the essay
- what does waught mean
- weight means
- what does waught mean in english
- what does waft mean
- what does waught mean in scottish
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- faugh vs waugh
- wough vs waugh
- waugh vs haugh
- laugh vs waugh
- tasteless vs waugh
- caught vs waught
- taught vs saught
- sought vs saught
- caught vs saught
- agreed vs saught
- reconcile vs saught
- peace vs saught
- praught vs fraught
- draught vs praught
- preached vs praught
- praught vs preach
- draught vs raught
- taught vs raught
- caught vs raught
- joltiest vs jolliest