different between gauffre vs gauffer
gauffre
English
Etymology
See gopher.
Noun
gauffre (plural gauffres)
- A gopher, especially the pocket gopher.
Anagrams
- gauffer, ruffage
gauffre From the web:
- french gaufre
gauffer
English
Etymology
From French gaufrer (“to figure cloth, velvet, and other stuffs”), from gaufre (“honeycomb, waffle”); of German origin. See waffle, wafer, and compare goffer, gopher (“an animal”).
Verb
gauffer (third-person singular simple present gauffers, present participle gauffering, simple past and past participle gauffered)
- (transitive) To plait, crimp, or flute; to goffer, as lace.
- (transitive) In fine bookbinding, to decorate the edges of a text block with a heated iron.
Anagrams
- gauffre, ruffage
gauffer From the web:
- what gaffer means
- what's gaffer tape
- what's gaffers tape used for
- what's gaffer in french
- what does gaffer mean
- what does gaffer mean in british slang
- what a gaffer on movie sets
- what does gaffer do
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- gauffre vs gauffer
- gauffer vs guffer
- terms vs guffer
- guffer vs duffer
- suffer vs guffer
- guffer vs luffer
- guffer vs gruffer
- guffer vs ruffer
- guffer vs goffer
- puffer vs guffer
- guffed vs guffer
- zaffer vs laffer
- laffer vs naffer
- laffed vs laffer
- luffer vs laffer
- caffer vs laffer
- comedy vs laffer
- naffer vs zaffer
- caffer vs naffer
- naffer vs naifer