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Clanger vs Langer - What's the difference?

clanger | langer |

As nouns the difference between clanger and langer

is that clanger is a very noticeable mistake; an attention-getting faux pas while langer is fool; idiot; annoying or contemptible person (usually male).

As a proper noun Langer is

{{surname|from=German}.

clanger

English

Noun

(en noun)
  • (chiefly, UK) A very noticeable mistake; an attention-getting faux pas.
  • He dropped a real clanger when he criticized the paraplegic for not standing.
  • * 1965 , Anthony Howard, Richard West, The Road to Number 10 , page 215,
  • When a woman heckler at Rayleigh shouted, “No more clangers!” Brown proudly rejoined: “Now listen, dear. My latest clanger was to say that people should be allowed to buy houses at lower rates of interest than you can get them for at the moment. I stand by that.”
  • * 1976 , Musical Opinion , Volume 100, page 244,
  • Furthermore if a person drops even a little clanger not only will he know but the others will know and the offender will certainly know that they know!
  • * 2006 , , 2009, unnumbered page,
  • ‘I say,’ he added, changing the subject completely and leaning closer, ‘sorry to hear about that Riding-Hood debacle. Don?t let it get you down, eh? We all drop a serious clanger sooner or later.’
  • (Australia, Australian rules football) A mistake made by a player; counted in the game statistics in the category "errors including frees against".
  • * 2006 , Jim Main, Rohan Connolly, More Than a Century of AFL Grand Finals , page 202,
  • Geelong could not get their running game going and lapsed into clanger' after ' clanger .
  • Something that clangs; an alarm bell (also figuratively ).
  • * 1972 , The Saturday review , Volume 55, Part 2, page 21,
  • The front and patio doors are bugged. When you open one a contact breaks and off goes the clanger .
  • * 2005 , '', unnumbered page,
  • The conversation was hard-going; we didn't click at all, but then he dropped the clanger : Beazley has done a lunch with Maxine McKew and ‘It will be read as he wants to come back. Our people want to go big with it.’
  • * 2007 , Stephen H. Foreman, Toehold , page 195,
  • Anyway, this clanger sounds. We put out our smokes, shoulder our packs, put on our helmets. The drill was that you turned around and handed your rifle to the guy behind you who then attached it to your pack while you attached the rifle of the guy in front of you to his pack.
  • The clapper of a bell, anything that strikes a bell or other metal object to make a ringing sound.
  • * 1994 , Courtway Jones, Witch of the North , page 254,
  • I dismounted and walked over to Pelleas. “You may remember me, my Lord,” I said. “You once made me a knife from a bell clanger . I am Morgan, Queen of Galloway.”
  • * 1998 , Dick Hyson, The Calling , page 100,
  • The clanger' was made out of the same material, and attached to a chain at one end. The idea was to stick the ' clanger in the opening of the triangle and start circulating, whacking the triangle on all three sides as fast as you could.
  • * 2011 , Jerry Spinelli, Milkweed , unnumbered page,
  • He showed me where to pull the clanger , and I pulled and pulled and the clanging joined the music of the bombardment.
  • An early hi-hat consisting of cymbals mounted on the rim of a bass drum and struck with an arm on the drum's pedal.
  • Usage notes

    * (noticeable error) Usually appears with the verb drop.

    Synonyms

    * (noticeable error) blooper, blunder, boo-boo, faux pas, gaffe, pratfall

    See also

    * Bedfordshire clanger

    langer

    English

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • (slang, Ireland, pejorative) Fool; idiot; annoying or contemptible person (usually male).
  • * 1996 , Enda Walsh, Disco Pigs , ISBN 1854593986, p. 8:
  • "Give it up will ya! get a job, ja langer !"
  • * 2006 , September 3, Brendan O'Connor Roy: the discreet object of our desire, Irish Independent :
  • And central to it all is wind-up, making a langer out of people, to use that now unfortunate word that can still only be used correctly and said correctly by Cork people, even though the rest of the country has taken to it with gusto, embarrassing themselves like white people trying to talk black slang to be "street".
  • * 2006 November 22, Hurling abuse when there’s no team in sight, Irish Independent :
  • "Langers boy, every wan of ‘em. Golfers are only langers. They’re only golfing cos they can’t hurl. Anyone that golfs in Cork is only a failed hurler and a langer, boy. "
  • (slang, Ireland, vulgar) Penis.
  • * , "Taking on PJ" in Dublin Noir: The Celtic Tiger Vs. the Ugly American , ed. Ken Bruen, p.23, ISBN 1888451920:
  • Mike opened his knees wide, so that his langer would be framed by the gap between his legs. For first impressions a boner would have been good, but not likely.
  • * , All of These People: A Memoir , p.88, ISBN 0007176929:
  • He showed me a photograph. There was a woman and a man doing something, but I wasn't sure what. The man was standing over the woman holding his langer (the Cork word) and she was looking up at him smiling. I felt ill and started to walk backwards.

    Usage notes

    * Originally and mainly restricted to

    Synonyms

    * (annoying or contemptible person) dickhead, knob, asshole, shithead, wanker * (penis) See also

    Derived terms

    * langers, langered, acting the langer, langerload