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Crapper vs Crupper - What's the difference?

crapper | crupper |

As nouns the difference between crapper and crupper

is that crapper is a water closet containing a flushable toilet, especially a toilet fixture identified "T. Crapper", a well known Victorian-era English engineer and plumbing installer, Thomas Crapper while crupper is a strap, looped under a horse's tail, used to stop a saddle from slipping.

As an adjective crapper

is comparative of crap.

As a proper noun Crapper

is {{surname|A=An|English occupational|from=occupations}}, variant of Cropper ( "a cropper").

As a verb crupper is

to fit with a crupper; to place a crupper upon.

crapper

English

Noun

(en noun)
  • (dated) A water closet containing a flushable toilet, especially a toilet fixture identified "T. Crapper", a well known Victorian-era English engineer and plumbing installer, .
  • (slang) A flush toilet, a commode.
  • A privy, an outhouse.
  • Adjective

    (head)
  • (crap)
  • crupper

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • A strap, looped under a horse's tail, used to stop a saddle from slipping.
  • * 1663 , :
  • Our knight did bear no less a pack / Of his own buttocks on his back: / Which now had almost got the upper- / Hand of his head, for want of crupper .
  • * 1784 , Alonzo Fernandez de Avellaneda, A continuation of the history and adventures of the renowned Don Quixote de la Mancha'', tr. William Augustus Yardley, ''The Novelist's Magazine volume 16, page 112:
  • he e?pied a mule's crupper , which hung to the ceiling of the room; this he took down, and tendering it to Don Quixote, went on, ?aying...
  • * 1877 , (Anna Sewell), (Black Beauty):
  • Captain went out in the cab all the morning. Harry came in after school to feed me and give me water. In the afternoon I was put into the cab. Jerry took as much pains to see if the collar and bridle fitted comfortably as if he had been John Manly over again. When the crupper was let out a hole or two it all fitted well. There was no check-rein, no curb, nothing but a plain ring snaffle. What a blessing that was!
  • * 1882 , Edmondo de Amicis, Morocco: Its People & Places , tr. C. Rollin-Tilton:
  • I sought among the mules one with a mild expression of generosity and gentleness in its eyes, and found it in a white mule with a crupper adorned with arabesques.
  • The buttocks or rump, especially of a horse.
  • A piece of armour covering the hindquarters of a horse.
  • Synonyms

    *(The buttocks or rump) croupe

    Verb

    (en verb)
  • To fit with a crupper; to place a crupper upon.
  • to crupper a horse