different between rustling vs sough

rustling

English

Etymology 1

From Middle English *rustlynge, rustland, from Old English hr?stlende, *hr?stlende, present participle of Old English *hr?stlan (to rustle), equivalent to rustle +? -ing.

Verb

rustling

  1. present participle of rustle

Etymology 2

From Middle English rusteling, roustlyge, equivalent to rustle +? -ing.

Noun

rustling (plural rustlings)

  1. A series of rustles.
    • 2006 March 29, Richard Daughty, 321gold[1]
      I hear a rustling in the bushes off to my right, and my trigger finger spasms.

Anagrams

  • lustring

rustling From the web:

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sough

English

Etymology 1

From Middle English *sough, swough, swogh, from Middle English swo?en, swowen, from Old English sw?gan (to make a sound; move with noise; rush; roar), from Proto-Germanic *sw?gan? from Proto-Indo-European *(s)weh?g?-, same source as Latin v?gi?. Cognate with Scots souch (sough), Icelandic súgur (a rushing sound, rustle). Noun replaced Middle English swei, swe? from Old English sw?g. More at swoon.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /sa?/, /s?f/
  • Rhymes: -a?, -?f

Verb

sough (third-person singular simple present soughs, present participle soughing, simple past and past participle soughed)

  1. To make a soft rustling or murmuring sound.
Synonyms
  • See also Thesaurus:sough
Translations

Noun

sough (plural soughs)

  1. A murmuring sound; rushing, rustling, or whistling sound.
  2. A gentle breeze; a waft; a breath.
  3. A (deep) sigh.
  4. (Scotland, obsolete) A vague rumour.
  5. (Scotland, obsolete) A cant or whining mode of speaking, especially in preaching or praying.
Derived terms
  • death-sough
Translations

See also

  • susurrus

Etymology 2

From Middle English sough (whence also Scots sheuch (ditch)), from Old English *s?h; compare dialectal Dutch zoeg (ditch).

Noun

sough (plural soughs)

  1. A small drain; an adit.

Verb

sough (third-person singular simple present soughs, present participle soughing, simple past and past participle soughed)

  1. To drain.
Derived terms
  • soughing-tile

Anagrams

  • Hugos

sough From the web:

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