different between slaught vs laught
slaught
English
Etymology
From Middle English slaught, slagt, sla?t, from Old English slæht, sleaht, sleht, slieht (“a stroke, a striking, a flash of lightning, slaughter, murder, death by violence, the deadly stroke of disease, battle, what is to be killed, animals for slaughter”), from Proto-Germanic *slaht?, *slahtiz (“beating, hitting, killing, murder”), from Proto-Indo-European *slek- (“to beat, pound”).
Cognate with Dutch slacht (“slaughter”), German Schlacht (“killing, battle”), Swedish slakt (“slaughter”), Icelandic slátta (“slaughter”). Related to English slay.
Noun
slaught (plural slaughts)
- Killing; slaughter.
Derived terms
- manslaught (whence manslaughter)
- onslaught
slaught From the web:
- what slaughter means
- what's slaughterhouse five about
- slaughterhouse
- what slaughtered cattle
- slaught meaning
- what slaughter of the innocents
- slaughterhouse meaning
- what slaughter for livestock
laught
English
Verb
laught
- (obsolete) simple past tense and past participle of laugh
- (obsolete) simple past tense and past participle of latch
References
- Douglas Harper (2001–2021) , “caught”, in Online Etymology Dictionary
laught From the web:
- what laughter does to the body
- what laughter means
- what laughter does to the brain
- what laughter serves as best
- what laughter
- what's laughter yoga
- what laughter sounds like
- what's laughter in french
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- slaught vs laught
- massacrest vs massacres
- massacrers vs massacres
- massacred vs massacres
- massacrer vs massacres
- mustelid vs ursid
- ursoid vs ursid
- ursid vs bursid
- ureid vs ursid
- bear vs ursid
- family vs ursid
- ursid vs whelp
- bear vs ursoid
- mammal vs ursoid
- oath vs logres
- knight vs logres
- camelot vs logres
- code vs logres
- chivalric vs logres
- legend vs logres