different between nep vs neap
nep
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /n?p/
- Rhymes: -?p
Etymology 1
From Middle English neppe, nepe, nepte, nept, from Old English nepte, nefte, from Latin nepeta. Compare Dutch neppe, nippe (“catnip”).
Alternative forms
- nip (dialectal)
Noun
nep (usually uncountable, plural neps)
- Catmint, catnip; Nepeta cataria.
- 1653, Nicholas Culpeper, The English Physician Enlarged, Folio 2007, p. 201:
- Nep is generally used for women to procure their courses, being taken inwardly or outwardly, either alone or with other convenient herbs in a decoction to bathe them, of sit over the hot fumes thereof.
- 1653, Nicholas Culpeper, The English Physician Enlarged, Folio 2007, p. 201:
Etymology 2
Perhaps a variant of nap for knap, from Middle English knep, kneppe, knappe, a conflation of Old English cnep, cnæp, cnæpp (“top, knop, summit”) and Old Norse knappr (“knob”), both from Proto-Germanic *knappaz, *knappô (“knob”), from Proto-Indo-European *gneb?- (“to press, tighten”), from Proto-Indo-European *gen- (“to pinch, squeeze, bend, press together, ball”). Compare also Old Norse hnappr (“button”). Related to knob.
Noun
nep (plural neps)
- (Britain, dialect) A knot in a fibre of cotton.
Anagrams
- PEN, PNe, Pen, pen
Ainu
Etymology
From ne (“interrogatory root”) +? p (“thing”). See nekon, nen.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [ne?p]
Pronoun
nep (Kana spelling ???)
- (interrogative) what
Usage notes
Less common in spoken language than hemanta.
Synonyms
- hemanta
See also
Dutch
Etymology
From German Nepp.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /n?p/
- Hyphenation: nep
- Rhymes: -?p
Noun
nep m (uncountable)
- imitation, fake
Adjective
nep (comparative nepper, superlative nepst)
- fake, not real
- artificial, not natural
Inflection
Some Dutch speakers may consider attributive use of this adjective informal. Thus, the inflected form neppe is not very commonly used in more formal language. In such language, the word is used more often in compounds formed by prefixing with nep-. The predicative and partitive forms are used normally.
Synonyms
- namaak
Antonyms
- authentiek
- echt
- natuurlijk
Derived terms
- nepneutraliteit
- nepnieuws
- nepperd
- nepvlees
Anagrams
- pen
Middle English
Noun
nep
- Alternative form of nap (“drinking bowl”)
nep From the web:
- what neptune made of
- what nepotism means
- what neptune looks like
- what nephew
- what nepotism
- what nephew means
- what nephrology
- what nephrologist do
neap
English
Pronunciation
- enPR: n?p, IPA(key): /ni?p/
- Rhymes: -i?p
Etymology 1
Perhaps of Scandinavian origin: compare dialectal Norwegian neip (“forked pole”).
Noun
neap (plural neaps)
- The tongue or pole of a cart or other vehicle drawn by two animals.
Etymology 2
From Middle English neep, from Old English n?p (“scant, lacking”), possibly from Proto-Germanic *n?piz (“narrow”). Found especially in Old English n?pfl?d (“neap tide”, literally “low tide”). Compare Norwegian dialectal nøpen (“scarce, scant, barely enough”).
Adjective
neap (not comparable)
- (of a tide) Low; lowest; the ebb or lowest point of a tide.
- Designating a tide which occurs just after the first and third quarters of the moon, when there is the least difference between high tide and low tide.
Translations
Verb
neap (third-person singular simple present neaps, present participle neaping, simple past and past participle neaped)
- To trap a ship (or ship and crew) in water too shallow to move, due to the smaller tidal range occurring in a period of neap tides.
- to ooze, to sink, to subside, to tail
Noun
neap (plural neaps)
- A neap tide.
Etymology 3
Noun
neap (plural neaps)
- Alternative form of neep
References
Anagrams
- -pnea, NAPE, Pena, nape, pane, pané, pean