different between rackle vs ruckle
rackle
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /??æ.k?l/
Etymology 1
From Middle English rakyl (“chain”), apparently related to Old Frisian rakels (“chain”), French racle ("the iron ring of a door") (from a Germanic source), and also Middle English rakente, from Old English racente (“chain, fetter”). More at rackan.
Alternative forms
- rakkill (Scotland)
Noun
rackle (countable and uncountable, plural rackles)
- (countable, Britain dialectal, Northern England, Scotland) A chain.
- (uncountable, Britain dialectal, Northern England, Scotland) Noisy talk.
Verb
rackle (third-person singular simple present rackles, present participle rackling, simple past and past participle rackled)
- (Britain dialectal, Northern England, Scotland) To talk noisily; rattle on.
Etymology 2
Origin uncertain. Probably from rack (“to drive; move; go forward rapidly”), alteration of Middle English reken (“to drive; move; tend”), from Old Norse reka, vreka (“to drive; drift; toss”) +? -le (“tending or prone to”). Related to Icelandic reka, Swedish vräka, Danish vrage, English wrack.
Adjective
rackle (comparative more rackle, superlative most rackle)
- Of a person: rash, impetuous, reckless
- Rough, crude
- Sturdy in old age
Anagrams
- Clarke, calker, lacker, recalk
rackle From the web:
- what tackle to use for bass
- what tackle to use for trout
- what tackle means
- what tackle to use for catfish
- what tackle to use for pier fishing
- what tackle for bass fishing
- what tackle to use for walleye
- what tackle box to buy
ruckle
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /???k?l/
- Rhymes: -?k?l
Etymology 1
Variant of ruck.
Verb
ruckle (third-person singular simple present ruckles, present participle ruckling, simple past and past participle ruckled)
- To crease or wrinkle.
Noun
ruckle (plural ruckles)
- A disordered collection.
- A wrinkle.
Etymology 2
Probably cognate with Dutch rogchelen (“to hawk”).
Noun
ruckle (plural ruckles)
- (Scotland) A rattling noise in the throat, as from suffocation.
Verb
ruckle (third-person singular simple present ruckles, present participle ruckling, simple past and past participle ruckled)
- (Scotland, intransitive) To make a rattling noise in the throat.
Anagrams
- lucker
German
Pronunciation
Verb
ruckle
- inflection of ruckeln:
- first-person singular present
- singular imperative
- first/third-person singular subjunctive I
ruckle From the web:
- what ruckle means
- what does buckled mean
- what does ruckle
- what does buckle mean
- what does a ruckle do
- ruckle definition