different between laft vs laff
laft
Middle English
Verb
laft
- past participle of leave
- (Can we find and add a quotation of Chaucer to this entry?)
laft From the web:
- what left
- what left netflix
- what left netflix december 2020
- what left netflix november 2020
- what left netflix january 2021
- what leftist are you
- what left netflix this month
- what left side of brain controls
laff
English
Noun
laff (plural laffs)
- (chiefly humorous) Alternative spelling of laugh
Verb
laff (third-person singular simple present laffs, present participle laffing, simple past and past participle laffed)
- (chiefly humorous) Alternative spelling of laugh
German
Etymology
From German Low German [Term?], in which it is either inherited from Middle Low German [Term?] (seemingly not attested), or borrowed from Middle Dutch laf (early 15th century). Compare modern Dutch laf (“cowardly”). Cognate with German labberig (“slack; not crisp”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /laf/
Adjective
laff (comparative laffer, superlative am laffsten)
- (regional, chiefly northern and central Germany) lethargic; weak; slack
- (regional, chiefly northern and central Germany) tasteless
Declension
Synonyms
- (lethargic): schlapp
- (tasteless): fad
Related terms
- labberig
- labern
laff From the web:
- what laffy taffy made of
- what's laffy taffy
- laffy taffy meaning
- what laffin mean
- laff meaning
- what laffed mean
- what laffy means
- affable means
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