Assle vs Hassle - What's the difference?
assle | hassle |
To sit, move, or scoot about on one's ass; loaf; wander idly around; waste time.
*1951 , Constance Noyes Robertson, The Golden Circle :
*1969 , Kentucky Folklore Society, Kentucky folklore record :
*1992 , Vance Randolph, G. Legman, Blow the Candle Out :
*2009 , Nicoline Van Der Sijs, Cookies, Coleslaw, and Stoops :
*2010 , Julian D. Hayden, Bill Broyles, Diane E. Boyer, Field man: life as a desert archaeologist :
Trouble, bother, unwanted annoyances or problems.
A fight or argument.
An action which is not worth the difficulty involved.
To trouble, to bother, to annoy.
To pick a fight or start an argument.
As verbs the difference between assle and hassle
is that assle is to sit, move, or scoot about on one's ass; loaf; wander idly around; waste time while hassle is to trouble, to bother, to annoy.As a noun hassle is
trouble, bother, unwanted annoyances or problems.assle
English
Alternative forms
*Verb
(assl)- "May all her public servants arsle around like buss-eyed catawumpuses ! That's what I say. Just like they'll do tomorrow, while we set here and laugh at 'em."
- You're always assling around.
- "Them boys don't do no work, they just assle around town all day."
- He doesn't have anything to do so he's just assling around [...]
- I assled over into a packrat nest without thinking, so the next scene on that damn camera recorder was me leaning over while the ladies in the party pulled cholla out of my tight Levis. I took that with great dignity and aplomb, I assure you.
Usage notes
* Often used with around .hassle
English
Noun
(en noun)- I went through a lot of hassle to be the first to get a ticket.
Verb
(hassl)- The unlucky boy was hassled by a gang of troublemakers on his way home.