different between trakes vs trapes

trakes

English

Noun

trakes

  1. plural of trake

Anagrams

  • Akters, Kaster, KrastĂ«, Skater, Staker, Starke, Tasker, retask, sakret, skater, staker, strake, streak, takers, tasker

trakes From the web:



trapes

English

Etymology 1

Obscure, as is common among colloquialisms. OED mentions possible association with Dutch trappen, to tread or stamp the foot, but objects that the connection is unconvincing.(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

Verb

trapes (third-person singular simple present trapeses, present participle trapesing, simple past and past participle trapesed)

  1. Alternative spelling of traipse in reduced usage since about WWI

Noun

trapes (plural trapeses)

  1. Alternative spelling of traipse in reduced usage since about WWI

Etymology 2

See trape.

Noun

trapes

  1. (seldom in use since about WWII, colloquial) A slattern; an idle, sluttish, or untidy woman.
    • He found the sullen trapes / Possest with th' devil, worms, and claps.
    • 1715, John Gay, The What D'ye Call It
      From door to door I'd sooner whine and beg, / Than marry such a trapes.
    • 1728, Edward Young, The Love of Fame
      Since full each other station of renown, / Who would not be the greatest trapes in town?

Anagrams

  • Paster, Pearts, paster, paters, petars, prates, pretas, repast, repats, retaps, tapers, treaps

trapes From the web:

  • what traps heat in the atmosphere
  • what traps pathogens
  • what traps heat
  • what traps pollen
  • what traps pathogens in the back of the throat
  • what traps energy from the sun
  • what traps heat in our atmosphere
  • what traps sunlight for photosynthesis
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