different between hoodie vs hoddie
hoodie
English
Alternative forms
- hoody
Etymology
From hood +? -ie (diminutive suffix). In sense “person wearing a hoodie”, influenced by sense -ie (“person associated with suffixed noun, often derogatory”); compare townie.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?h?di/
- Rhymes: -?di
Noun
hoodie (plural hoodies)
- A sweatshirt with an integral hood and, sometimes, a large kangaroo pocket at the front.
- Synonyms: kangaroo, kangaroo jacket, bunny hug
- (Britain, slang, often derogatory) A young person wearing such a sweatshirt, usually a male.
- Coordinate terms: chav, yob
- (slang) foreskin
- The hooded crow, Corvus cornix.
Descendants
- ? German: Hoodie
Translations
Further reading
- hoodie on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Spanish
Noun
hoodie f (plural hoodies)
- hoodie
hoodie From the web:
- what hoodie size am i
- what hoodie is trevor noah wearing
- what hoodies does supreme use
- what hoodies do the kardashians wear
- what hoodies does kanye wear
- what hoodie does nf wear
- what hoodies do supreme use
- what hoodie was rory wearing
hoddie
English
Etymology
hod +? -ie
Noun
hoddie (plural hoddies)
- A bricklayer's or mason's laborer who carries bricks, mortar, cement and the like in a hod.
Synonyms
- hod carrier
- hodman
hoddie From the web:
- what hoodie
- what hoodie size am i
- what hoodies does trevor noah wear
- what hoodies does kanye wear
- what hoodies does supreme use
- what hoodie does $not wear
- what hoodie does karl jacobs wear
- what hoodies does emma chamberlain wear
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- hoodie vs hoddie
- taborer vs laborer
- taborets vs taborers
- exoskeleton vs exuviae
- anapodeictic vs taxonomy
- sayonara vs goodbye
- cubes vs cubies
- light vs diaheliotropism
- sunlight vs apheliotropism
- spiritual vs pneumatology
- pneumatic vs spiritual
- parallelogram vs rhombus
- customs vs declare
- declare vs order
- neurosurgeon vs taxonomy
- nonfissionable vs taxonomy
- profit vs hypercommercialism
- isocosts vs isoquants
- isoquants vs isocost
- lawfulness vs legitimacy