different between thrack vs thrutch

thrack

English

Etymology

From Middle English *threkken, thrucchen, from Old English þryccan (to press, oppress, afflict). More at thrutch.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /??æk/

Verb

thrack (third-person singular simple present thracks, present participle thracking, simple past and past participle thracked)

  1. (obsolete, transitive) To load or burden.
    to thrack a man with property
    • But certainly we shall one day find , that the strait gate is too narrow for any man to come bustling in , thrack'd with great possessions, and greater corruptions

Anagrams

  • Kracht

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thrutch

English

Etymology

From Middle English thrucchen (to push, rush), from Old English þry??an (to push, press, trample on, crush), from Proto-Germanic *þrukkijan? (to press).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /???t?/
  • Rhymes: -?t?

Verb

thrutch (third-person singular simple present thrutches, present participle thrutching, simple past and past participle thrutched)

  1. (rare or dialectal) To push; press.
  2. To crowd; throng; squeeze.
  3. (figuratively) To trouble; oppress.
  4. To thrust.
  5. (caving, climbing (sport)) To push, press, or squeeze into a place; move sideways or vertically in an upright position by wriggling the body against opposing rock surfaces. Compare chimney.
    I thrutched up the final crack to a small pinnacle.
Synonyms
  • (crowd, throng): mass, press; see also Thesaurus:assemble
  • (squeeze): compress, condense; see also Thesaurus:compress

Noun

thrutch (plural thrutches)

  1. (caving, climbing (sport)) An obstacle overcome by thrutching; an act of thrutching (See verb #5)
  2. (Britain dialectal, Northern England) A narrow gorge or ravine.

Related terms

  • thrack
  • thruchins

References

Oxford Dictionaries. April 2010. Oxford Dictionaries. April 2010. Oxford University Press, thrutch. 11 September 2011. Article.

thrutch From the web:

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