different between marmite vs vomit
marmite
English
Etymology
From French marmite.
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?m???ma?t/
- (General American) IPA(key): /?m???ma?t/
Noun
marmite (plural marmites)
- A rounded earthenware cooking pot.
Anagrams
- metiram
French
Etymology
From Old French marmite (“hypocritical”), referencing the hidden contents of the pot, from marmotter (“to mutter”) + mite (“cat”) (from the onomatopoeic base mar- ‘murmur, meow’).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ma?.mit/
Noun
marmite f (plural marmites)
- pot, cooking pot, marmite
- (military, slang) (heavy) shell
Further reading
- “marmite” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
marmite From the web:
- what marmite taste like
- what marmite good for
- what marmite made of
- what marmite mean
- what's marmite made out of
- what's marmite on toast
- what marmite is vegan
- what's marmite in french
vomit
English
Etymology
From Middle English vomiten, from Latin vomit?re, present active infinitive of vomit? (“vomit repeatedly”), frequentative form of vom? (“be sick, vomit”), from Proto-Indo-European *wemh?- (“to spew, vomit”). Cognate with Old Norse váma (“nausea, malaise”), Old English wemman (“to defile”). More at wem.
Pronunciation
- (UK) enPR: v?m'it, IPA(key): /?v?m?t/
- Rhymes: -?m?t
- (US) enPR: v?m'it, IPA(key): /?v?m?t/
Verb
vomit (third-person singular simple present vomits, present participle vomiting, simple past and past participle vomited)
- (intransitive) To regurgitate or eject the contents of the stomach through the mouth; puke.
- The fish […] vomited out Jonah upon the dry land.
- (transitive) To regurgitate and discharge (something swallowed); to spew.
- 1988, Angela Carter, ‘Peter Carey: Oscar and Lucinda’, in Shaking a Leg, Vintage 2013, p. 713:
- It is the illicit Christmas pudding an incorrigible servant cooks for the little boy one Christmas Day that sparks Oscar's first crisis of belief, for his father, opposed to Christmas pudding on theological grounds, makes the child vomit his helping.
- 1988, Angela Carter, ‘Peter Carey: Oscar and Lucinda’, in Shaking a Leg, Vintage 2013, p. 713:
- To eject from any hollow place; to belch forth; to emit.
- 1907, E.M. Forster, The Longest Journey, Part I, III [Uniform ed., p. 45-46]:
- "Hullo!" said the athlete, and vomited with this greeting a cloud of tobacco-smoke. It must have been imprisoned in his mouth some time, for no pipe was visible.
- After about a minute, the creek bed vomited the debris into a gently sloped meadow. Saugstad felt the snow slow and tried to keep her hands in front of her.
- 1907, E.M. Forster, The Longest Journey, Part I, III [Uniform ed., p. 45-46]:
Synonyms
Derived terms
- vomitable
Translations
Noun
vomit (usually uncountable, plural vomits)
- The regurgitated former contents of a stomach; vomitus.
- The act of regurgitating.
- (obsolete) That which causes vomiting; an emetic.
Synonyms
- See also Thesaurus:vomit.
Translations
Derived terms
- vomit comet
See also
- emetic
French
Verb
vomit
- third-person singular present indicative of vomir
- third-person singular past historic of vomir
Latin
Verb
vomit
- third-person singular present active indicative of vom?
Romanian
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [vo?mit]
Verb
vomit
- first-person singular present indicative/subjunctive of vomita
vomit From the web:
- what vomiting means
- what vomiting does to your body
- what vomiting feels like
- what vomit colors mean
- what vomiting and diarrhea symptoms of
- what vomiting bugs are going around
- what's vomit fruit
- what's vomit made of
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