Brindle vs Dapple - What's the difference?
brindle | dapple |
A streaky colouration in animals.
An animal so coloured.
A mottled marking, usually in clusters.
An animal with a mottled or spotted skin or coat.
* 1800, Samuel Taylor Coleridge tr., Friedrich von Schiller, The Death of Wallenstein, [http://books.google.com/books?ie=UTF-8&hl=en&vid=ISBN1419158775&id=bXOEL5RL6DsC&pg=PA64&lpg=PA64&sig=9x8UPZTbcIMkCOkMCSHT1YEwX9M] 2004
* 1996, L E Modesitt, The Order War [http://books.google.com/books?ie=UTF-8&hl=en&vid=ISBN0812534042&id=K4n7-n83mkoC&pg=PA141&lpg=PA141&sig=6jDsciCT-04_Oi5gjrhFItbDCt0]
* 2004, D Caroline Coile, [http://books.google.com/books?ie=UTF-8&hl=en&vid=ISBN0764126733&id=vmTgPakg8nUC&pg=PA21&lpg=PA21&sig=5r0UWTYWxGcZayQlGiP4v3b1ajU]
Having a mottled or spotted skin or coat, dappled.
* Sir Walter Scott
To mark or become marked with mottling or spots.
* 2006, Ace Edmonds, Bands, Part 2 [http://www.deviantart.com/deviation/26085436/]
As nouns the difference between brindle and dapple
is that brindle is a streaky colouration in animals while dapple is a mottled marking, usually in clusters.As adjectives the difference between brindle and dapple
is that brindle is having such a colouration; brindled while dapple is having a mottled or spotted skin or coat, dappled.As a verb dapple is
to mark or become marked with mottling or spots.brindle
English
(wikipedia brindle)Noun
(en-noun)Synonyms
* tabby (in cats)Anagrams
*dapple
English
Noun
(en noun)- “My brother,” said he, “do not ride to–day / The dapple , as you’re wont; but mount the horse / Which I have chosen for thee.
- A Sarronnese officer whom he did not know was leading a riderless horse, a dapple .
- Some well-intentioned breeders inadvertently breed two dapples' together because occasionally a ' dapple will have so few patches of mottled coloration it appears undappled.
Adjective
(en adjective)- a dapple horse
- Some dapple mists still floated along the peaks.
Verb
(dappl)- Kris awoke with a start. Sweat dappled his forehead, and he brushed it away.
