Flap vs Flack - What's the difference?
flap | flack |
Anything broad and flexible that hangs loose, or that is attached by one side or end and is easily moved.
* Sir Thomas Browne
*
A hinged leaf, as of a table or shutter.
An upset, stir, scandal or controversy
The motion of anything broad and loose, or a stroke or sound made with it.
* , chapter=4
, title= A disease in the lips of horses.
(aviation) A hinged surface on the trailing edge of the wings of an aeroplane.
(surgery) A piece of tissue incompletely detached from the body, as an intermediate stage of plastic surgery.
(slang) The female genitals.
To move (something broad and loose) back and forth.
*
To move loosely back and forth.
* {{quote-news
, year=2011
, date=September 29
, author=Tom Rostance
, title=Stoke 2 - 1 Besiktas
, work=BBC Sport
a publicist, a publicity agent
*1998 , , Art Crime: The Montage Art of Winston Smith ,
*:Edward Bernay, who was a consultant to the US Delegation to the Versailles Peace Conference which terminated the first World War (and who finally wound up as a flack for the United Fruit Company in Latin America), believed that propaganda and its covert marketing could effectively alter the will of the American public.
*1999 , Patricia Cornwell, The Southern Cross,
*:Thought you were flack ," she said.
*:"I'm not flack ."
*:"All right, P.R., a reporter, a novelist."
to publicise, to promote
* 1997 , Don DeLillo, Underworld :
As nouns the difference between flap and flack
is that flap is anything broad and flexible that hangs loose, or that is attached by one side or end and is easily moved while flack is flake (esp of snow).As a verb flap
is to move (something broad and loose) back and forth.flap
English
Noun
(en noun)- a cartilaginous flap upon the opening of the larynx
Mr. Pratt's Patients, passage=Then he commenced to talk, really talk. and inside of two flaps of a herring's fin he had me mesmerized, like Eben Holt's boy at the town hall show. He talked about the ills of humanity, and the glories of health and Nature and service and land knows what all.}}
Synonyms
* (upset)See also
* ("flap" on Wikipedia) * * lappetVerb
(flapp)- The crow slowly flapped its wings.
- The flag flapped in the breeze.
citation, page= , passage=Former Turkey goalkeeper Rustu Recber flapped at his first Delap throw but was given a soft free-kick by referee Antony Gautier.}}
Derived terms
* cat flap * flapper * unflappable ----flack
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl) .Etymology 2
Noun
(en noun)page 25
page 233
Verb
(en verb)- [..] he told funny stories about his early days in the theater district, flacking shows up and down the street, but Klara wasn’t listening.
