different between poot vs ploot
poot
English
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -u?t
Verb
poot (third-person singular simple present poots, present participle pooting, simple past and past participle pooted)
- (childish, slang) To fart.
Noun
poot (plural poots)
- (childish, slang) A fart, perhaps a relatively quiet one.
Usage notes
Much less vulgar than fart; accepted in some circles (speaking with children) where fart would not be.
Synonyms
- fart
- toot
Translations
Anagrams
- Toop, opto-, topo, topo-
Afrikaans
Etymology
From Dutch poot, from Middle Dutch pôte.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /p???t/
Noun
poot (plural pote)
- paw
Dutch
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /po?t/
- Hyphenation: poot
- Rhymes: -o?t
Etymology 1
From Middle Dutch pôte (“limb, claw”), further etymology unclear. The only known Germanic cognate is Middle Low German pote. Outside Germanic, Old French pote and Catalan pota may be related.
Noun
poot m (plural poten, diminutive pootje n)
- limb (arm or leg) of an animal (sometimes human)
- (informal) leg or foot
- (informal) hand
- leg of an object, e.g. furniture
- (derogatory) homosexual man, fag, poof (shortened form of ruigpoot)
Usage notes
Although using poot to denote limbs of humans in normally considered rude, there are some exceptions in case of idioms like Op zijn achterste poten staan. (“To get up on one's hind legs.”)
Derived terms
Descendants
- Afrikaans: poot
Etymology 2
Shortened from ruigpoot.
Noun
poot m (plural poten, diminutive pootje n)
- (vulgar, derogatory) homosexual man
Derived terms
- broodpoot
- potenrammen
- potenrammer
Etymology 3
See the etymology of the main entry.
Verb
poot
- first-, second- and third-person singular present indicative of poten
- imperative of poten
Karao
Noun
poot
- consciousness
Middle English
Noun
poot
- Alternative form of pot
Tagalog
Noun
poót
- wrath; intense anger; rage; indignation
- hate; hatred
Synonyms
- (wrath): ngitngit, muhi, pagkamuhi
- (hate): suklam, pagksuklam
Tapachultec
Etymology
See po.
Noun
poot
- moon
Usage notes
- This is the form given in Johnston's vocabulary; Lehmann says the form in the Sapper-Ricke wordlists is po.
References
- Walter Lehmann, Über die Stellung und Verwandtschaft der Subtiaba-Sprache der pazifischen Küste Nicaraguas und über die Sprache von Tapachula in Südchiapas (1915), Zeitschrift für Ethnologie 47, presenting the wordlists of Karl Sapper, Ricke, and Amado Johnston.
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ploot
English
Etymology 1
See plout (“action of plunging or submerging”, “heavy fall of rain”, “a splash”).
Noun
ploot (plural ploots)
- (Scotland) Obsolete spelling of plout [18th C.]
- (Northern Ireland) Alternative spelling of plout [20th C. onward]
References
- OED (3rd ed., September 2006), “plout, n.”
Etymology 2
See plute (“plutocrat”).
Noun
ploot (plural ploots)
- Alternative spelling of plute [20th C. onward]
References
- OED (3rd ed., September 2006), “plute, n.²”
ploot From the web:
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