Coot vs Coom - What's the difference?
coot | coom |
Any of various aquatic birds of the genus Fulica that are mainly black with a prominent frontal shield on the forehead.
(colloquial) A stupid fellow; a simpleton
* An old coot
* A rich coot
* {{quote-book
, year=1960
, author=
, title=(Jeeves in the Offing)
, section=chapter VII
, passage=“You'll be able now to give it as your considered opinion that [Wilbert Cream] is as loony as a coot', Sir Roderick.” A pause ensued during which [the psychiatrist] appeared to be weighing this, possibly thinking back to ' coots he had met in the course of his professional career and trying to estimate their dippiness as compared with that of W. Cream.}}
A success; something excellent.
* Man that song's the coot .
* Would be the coot if we could go this weekend!
(slang) Body louse.
soot, smut
dust
grease
* 1838–1839 , , Chapman and Hall (1839), chapter XLII,
As nouns the difference between coot and coom
is that coot is any of various aquatic birds of the genus fulica that are mainly black with a prominent frontal shield on the forehead while coom is soot, smut.As a verb coom is
.coot
English
(wikipedia coot) (Fulica)Noun
(en noun)- A silly coot .
Derived terms
(bird species) * American coot, Fulica americana * Andean coot, Fulica ardesiaca * Caribbean coot, Fulica caribaea * Eurasian coot, Fulica atra * giant coot, Fulica gigantea * Hawaiian coot, Fulica alai * horned coot, Fulica cornuta * mascarene coot, * red-fronted coot, Fulica rufifrons * red-gartered coot, Fulica armillata * red-knobbed coot, Fulica cristata * white-winged coot, Fulica leucoptera * bald as a coot * cracked as a coot * crazy as a coot * daft as a coot * daffy as a coot * deaf as a coot * dizzy as a coot * drunk as a coot * gay as a coot * happy as a coot * old coot * loony as a coot * mad as a coot * pissed as a coot * queer as a coot * rich coot * silly as a coot * simple as a cootcoom
English
Etymology 1
Noun
(-)Etymology 2
See (come).Verb
(en verb)page 411:
- “Not a bit,” replied the Yorkshireman, extending his mouth from ear to ear. “There I lay, snoog in schoolmeasther’s bed long efther it was dark, and nobody coom' nigh the pleace. ‘Weel!’ thinks I, ‘he’s got a pretty good start, and if he bean’t whoam by noo, he never will be; so you may '''coom''' as quick as you loike, and foind us reddy’—that is, you know, schoolmeasther might ' coom .”