different between fust vs funt
fust
English
Etymology 1
Borrowed from Old French fust (“wood; bole, tree trunk”) (modern French fût), from Latin f?stis (“knobbed stick, cudgel, club”), possibly from Proto-Indo-European *b?ew- (“to hit”) or *g??en- (“to strike; to kill, slay”).
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation, General American) IPA(key): /f?st/
- Rhymes: -?st
Noun
fust (plural fusts)
- A strong musty smell; mustiness.
- (architecture) The shaft (main body) of a column.
Derived terms
- fusted (adjective)
- fustily
- fustiness
- fusty
Related terms
- fuster
- fustian
- fustigate
- fustigation
Verb
fust (third-person singular simple present fusts, present participle fusting, simple past and past participle fusted)
- (intransitive, obsolete) To turn mouldy, to decay.
- (intransitive) Of wine: to acquire an undesirable musty or woody taste from the cask in which it is stored.
Etymology 2
Possibly from Portuguese fusta (“fust”), from Latin fusta (“beam (of wood)”), from f?stis (“knobbed stick, cudgel, club”); compare Middle French fuste.
Noun
fust (plural fusts)
- (nautical, historical) A type of small galley.
Translations
Etymology 3
Adjective
fust (not comparable)
- Nonstandard form of first.
Adverb
fust (not comparable)
- Nonstandard form of first.
- 1876, Evening Hours (page 629)
- She'd drink the gin fust and give him her ten commandments artervards, when she'd aggerawated him to try it on.
- 1876, Evening Hours (page 629)
Anagrams
- STFU, UTFs
Dutch
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -?st
Noun
fust n (plural fusten, diminutive fustje n)
- cask (e.g. containing beer)
Middle French
Alternative forms
- fut
Verb
fust
- third-person singular past historic of estre
Norwegian Bokmål
Adjective
fust
- neuter of fus
Norwegian Nynorsk
Adjective
fust
- neuter of fus
Old French
Etymology 1
see estre.
Alternative forms
- fu
- fut
- fud (early Old French)
Verb
fust
- third-person singular past historic of estre
Descendants
- French: fut
Etymology 2
From Latin fustis.
Noun
fust m (oblique plural fuz or futz, nominative singular fuz or futz, nominative plural fust)
- wood (material from a plant)
- wooden beam or plank
- bole (part of a tree trunk)
- club (weapon)
Old High German
Etymology
From Proto-West Germanic *f?sti.
Noun
f?st f
- fist
Declension
Descendants
- Middle High German: f?st, v?st, voust
- Cimbrian: bòista
- German: Faust
- Hunsrik: Faust
- Luxembourgish: Fauscht
- Yiddish: ??????? (foyst)
fust From the web:
- what frustrates you
- what frustrated means
- what frustrates siddhartha
- what frustrates you the most in a classroom
- what frustrates you in the workplace
- what frustrates death about his appearance
- what frustrates you the most
- what frustrates you examples
funt
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Russian ???? (funt). Doublet of pound.
Noun
funt (plural funts)
- (historical) An old Russian unit of weight, approximately 410 grams.
Alternative forms
- foont
Polish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /funt/
Noun
funt m anim
- pound (unit of currency)
Declension
Noun
funt m inan
- pound (unit of weight)
Declension
Slovene
Etymology
From Old High German pfunt (possibly via a later stage), from Latin pondus.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /fú?nt/
Noun
f?nt m inan
- pound (unit of mass)
- pound (currency)
Inflection
Tatar
Noun
funt
- A unit of weight: 1 funt = 1 qadaq = 32 lot = 96 m?sqal = 409.5 g = 1 pound (archaic)
Declension
Synonyms
- qadaq
- göränkä
Vilamovian
Pronunciation
Noun
funt n (plural funt)
- pound (unit of either weight or currency)
funt From the web:
- what function do chloroplasts perform
- what functions as a symbol in this excerpt
- what function does the retina serve
- what function does the gallbladder serve
- what function does the spleen have
- what function is graphed below y=cot(x-pi/4)
- what funtime animatronic are you
- what funtime freddy looks like
you may also like
- fust vs funt
- fust vs fuss
- fusty vs fust
- furst vs fust
- cust vs fust
- fuet vs fust
- fust vs fusa
- natalist vs union
- navalist vs natalist
- natalism vs natalist
- terms vs destinist
- destinest vs destinist
- destiny vs destinist
- believer vs destinist
- faded vs fader
- fade vs fader
- farer vs fader
- cader vs fader
- facer vs fader
- faker vs fader