different between tatch vs thatch
tatch
English
Etymology
From French tache (“spot”). See techy.
Noun
tatch (plural tatches)
- (obsolete) A spot or stain.
- (obsolete) A trick.
- (obsolete) A quality.
tatch From the web:
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- what tatcha products are good for oily skin
- thatch mean
- tachy mean
- what is tatcha water cream
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thatch
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?æt?/
- Rhymes: -æt?
Etymology 1
Variant of thack, from Middle English thache, thach, from Old English þæc (“roof-covering”), from Proto-West Germanic *þak, from Proto-Germanic *þak? (“covering”), from (o-grade of) Proto-Indo-European *(s)teg- (“cover”).
Cognate with Icelandic þak, Dutch dak, German Dach, Norwegian tak, Swedish tak, Danish tag; and with Latin toga, Albanian thak (“awn, beard, pin, peg, tassel, fringe”), Lithuanian stogas (“roof”). Related to Ancient Greek ????? (tégos, “roof”) and ????? (stég?, “roof”). See also English deech, deck.
Noun
thatch (countable and uncountable, plural thatches)
- Straw, rushes, or similar, used for making or covering the roofs of buildings, or of stacks of hay or grain.
- (Caribbean) Any of several kinds of palm, the leaves of which are used for thatching.
- A buildup of cut grass, stolons or other material on the soil in a lawn.
- (by extension) Any straw-like material, such as a person's hair.
- 2008, Wallace Madding, The Country Club Killings: A Montana Story (page 21)
- An outgoing, story-telling Irishman from Butte, Montana, with his thatch of red hair and sandpapered face, Matt was the quintessential imp.
- 2008, Wallace Madding, The Country Club Killings: A Montana Story (page 21)
Synonyms
- (straw for covering roofs or stacks): haulm
Derived terms
Translations
Etymology 2
From Middle English thacchen, from Old English þe??an, þe??ean (“to cover”), from Proto-West Germanic *þakkjan, from Proto-Germanic *þakjan? (“to cover”), from Proto-Germanic *þak? (“cover, covering”, noun) (see above).
Cognate with West Frisian dekke, Dutch dekken, German decken, Danish tække, Swedish täcka. Alteration of vowel after Middle English perhaps due to the above noun.
Verb
thatch (third-person singular simple present thatches, present participle thatching, simple past and past participle thatched)
- To cover the roof with straw, reed, leaves, etc.
Derived terms
Translations
Derived terms
Anagrams
- hatcht
thatch From the web:
- what thatch means
- what thatcham category is my car
- what thatcher did
- what thatcher did to scotland
- what's thatch in grass
- what's thatcham device
- what thatcher did to liverpool
- what thatched house
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