Carouses vs Carousel - What's the difference?
carouses | carousel |
(carouse)
To engage in a noisy or drunken social gathering.
To drink to excess.
A large draught of liquor.
* Sir J. Davies
* Shakespeare
A drinking match; a carousal.
* Alexander Pope
a merry-go-round
a continuously revolving device for item delivery
the rotating glass plate in a microwave oven
A visual component that displays a series of images one at a time.
As a verb carouses
is third-person singular of carouse.As a noun carousel is
a merry-go-round.carouses
English
Verb
(head)carouse
English
Verb
(carous)- We are all going to carouse at Brian's tonight.
- If I survive this headache, I promise no more carousing at Brian's.
Derived terms
* carousal * carousel * carrouselNoun
(en noun)- a full carouse of sack
- Drink carouses to the next day's fate.
- The early feast and late carouse .
Anagrams
*carousel
English
(wikipedia carousel)Noun
(en noun)- After collecting his suitcase at the baggage carousel , he left the airport.