Crimp vs Crisp - What's the difference?
crimp | crisp |
(obsolete) Easily crumbled; friable; brittle.
* J. Philips
(obsolete) Weak; inconsistent; contradictory.
* Arbuthnot
A fastener or a fastening method that secures parts by bending metal around a joint and squeezing it together, often with a tool that adds indentations to capture the parts.
(obsolete, UK, dialect) A coal broker.
(obsolete) One who decoys or entraps men into the military or naval service.
(obsolete) A keeper of a low lodging house where sailors and emigrants are entrapped and fleeced.
(usually, in the plural) A hairstyle which has been crimped, or shaped so it bends back and forth in many short kinks.
(obsolete) A card game.
To fasten by bending metal so that it squeezes around the parts to be fastened.
To pinch and hold; to seize.
To style hair into a crimp.
To join the edges of food products. For example: Cornish pasty, pies, jiaozi, Jamaican patty, and sealed crustless sandwiches.
An agent making it his business to procure seamen, soldiers, etc., especially by seducing, decoying, entrapping, or impressing them. [Since the passing of the Merchant Shipping Act of 1854, applied to one who infringes sub-section 1 of this Act, i.e. to a person other than the owner, master, etc., who engages seamen without a license from the Board of Trade.]
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To impress (seamen or soldiers); to entrap, to decoy.
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(of something seen or heard) Sharp, clearly defined.
* This new television set has a very crisp image.
(dated) Curling in stiff curls or ringlets.
(obsolete) Curled by the ripple of water.
* Shakespeare
Brittle; friable; in a condition to break with a short, sharp fracture.
* Goldsmith
Possessing a certain degree of firmness and freshness; in a fresh, unwilted condition.
* Leigh Hunt
Of weather, air etc.: dry and cold.
Quick and accurate.
* {{quote-news
, year=2010
, date=December 29
, author=Sam Sheringham
, title=Liverpool 0 - 1 Wolverhampton
, work=BBC
Brief and to the point. (Esp. in make it crisp .)
* It is better to understand the question clearly, pause for a little thinking and give a crisp answer.
* If we ask an expert about a certain query, this expert will often come up with a crisp answer (“yes” or “no”).
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(obsolete) Lively; sparking; effervescing.
* Beaumont and Fletcher
Brisk; crackling; cheerful; lively.
* Charles Dickens
Of wine: having a refreshing amount of acidity; having less acidity than green wine, but more than a flabby one.
To make crisp.
To become crisp.
(dated) To curl; to form into ringlets, as hair, or the nap of cloth; to interweave, as the branches of trees.
(archaic) To undulate or ripple.
* Tennyson
(archaic) To cause to undulate irregularly, as crape or water; to wrinkle; to cause to ripple.
* Drayton
* Milton
In obsolete terms the difference between crimp and crisp
is that crimp is a card game while crisp is lively; sparking; effervescing.crimp
English
Etymology 1
(etyl) crempen, from (etyl) .Germanic etymology. Cognate to Dutch krimpen, via Middle Dutch crimpen, to Low German crimpen,
Origins, p. 130, by Eric Partridge and to Faroese . From or cognate to Old Norse kreppa. Possible cognate to cramp.
Adjective
- Now the fowler treads the crimp earth.
- The evidence is crimp ; the witnesses swear backward and forward, and contradict themselves.
Noun
(en noun)- The strap was held together by a simple metal crimp .
- (De Foe)
- (Marryat)
- (Ben Jonson)
Verb
(en verb)- He crimped the wire in place.
Etymology 2
Noun
(en noun)- When a master of a ship..has lost any of his hands, he applies to a crimp ..who makes it his business to seduce the men belonging to some other ship.
- Trepanned into the West India Company's service by the crimps or silver-coopers as a common soldier.
- Offering three guineas ahead to the crimps for every good able seaman.
- I hear there are plenty of good men stowed away by the crimps at different places.
- Sallying forth at night..he came near being carried off by a gang of crimps .
- In the high and palmy days of the crimp , the pirate, the press-gang.
Verb
(en verb)- Coaxing and courting with intent to crimp him. — Carlyle.
- Plundering corn and crimping recruits.
- Clutching at him, to crimp him or impress him.
- The cruel folly which crimps a number of ignorant and innocent peasants, dresses them up in uniform..and sends them off to kill and be killed.
- The Egyptian Government crimped negroes in the streets of Cairo.
- Why not create customers in the Queen's dominions..instead of trying..to crimp them in other countries?
References
crisp
English
Adjective
(er)- crisp hair
- You nymphs called Naiads, of the winding brooks Leave your crisp channels.
- The crisp snow crunched underfoot.
- The cakes at tea ate short and crisp .
- It [laurel] has been plucked nine months, and yet looks as hale and crisp as if it would last ninety years.
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- your neat crisp claret
- the snug, small room, and the crisp fire
Derived terms
* crisply * crispness * crispySynonyms
* (US) potato chip, potato crisp.Verb
(en verb)- to crisp bacon by frying it
- to watch the crisping ripples on the beach
- The lover with the myrtle sprays / Adorns his crisped tresses.
- The crisped brooks, / Rolling on orient pearl and sands of gold.