What's the difference between
and
Enter two words to compare and contrast their definitions, origins, and synonyms to better understand how those words are related.

Flapper vs Lapper - What's the difference?

flapper | lapper |

As nouns the difference between flapper and lapper

is that flapper is or flapper can be something that flaps while lapper is one who laps liquid, who takes liquid in with the tongue.

As a verb lapper is

to make a gentle splashing sound, as the sound of flowing water.

flapper

Etymology 1

(possible etymologies) Possibly from Victorian sporting slang, meaning young wildfowl in August which are full-sized, tender and worthwhile quarry, but are naive and unable to fly properly due to the late development of flight feathers in ducks and geese. Alternative derivations are also suggested. The word "flap" was slang in in the 17th century for a prostituteJames Mabbe (1572 – 1642), Celestina IX. 110 "Fall to your flap, my Masters, kisse and clip. Ibid. 112 Come hither, you foule flappes.": by the late 19th century in England "flapper" could mean either a very young prostituteBarrere & Leland, Dictionary of Slang: "Flippers, flappers, very young girls trained to vice" (1889): or a teenage girl too old to be a child and too young to be considered 'out' in society: "A 'flapper', we may explain, is a young lady who has not yet been promoted to long frocks and the wearing of her hair 'up'"The Times, Thursday, Feb 20, 1908; pg. 15; Issue 38574; col F . The earliest documented use in the sense of "attractive young girl" is in the 1903 novel Sandford of Merton'' by Desmond Coke: "There's a stunning flapper."Oxford English Dictionary, 1989 edition.. The word also suggested a spirited girl of unconventional or mischievous disposition. An advertisement in the ''The Times The Times, Wednesday, Jul 15, 1914; pg. 1; Issue 40576; col B reads: "The father of a young lady, aged 15 – a typical “FLAPPER” – with all the self assurance of a woman of 30 would be grateful for the recommendation of a seminary (not a convent) where she might be placed for a year or two with the object of taming her." By 1912 the word had apparently both crossed the Atlantic and evolved to mean a slightly older girl: British stage impresario John Tiller defined it for readers of the New York Times'' as meaning "a girl who has just "come out". She is at an awkward age, neither a child nor a woman..."''New York Times'', March 31, 1912:'Some facts about the ballet'. The word had clearly caught on, as a Mme. Nordica is quoted using it in the ''New York Times of January 1, 1913: "...a thin little flapper of a girl donning a skirt in which she can hardly take a step, extinguishing all but her little white teeth with a dumpy bucket of a hat..." By 1920 in England it clearly meant any young woman of a pleasure-seeking disposition: a Dr R. Murray-Leslie criticized "the social butterfly type...the frivolous, scantily-clad, jazzing flapper, irresponsible and undisciplined, to whom a dance, a new hat, or a man with a car, were of more importance than the fate of nations."The Times, Thursday, Feb 05, 1920; pg. 9; Issue 42326; col A

Noun

(en noun)
  • * 1910 , (Saki), ‘The Baker's Dozen’, Reginald in Russia :
  • I paid violent and unusual attention to a flapper all through the meal in order to make you jealous.
  • * 2002 , Rena Sanderson, 8: Women in Fitzgerald's Fiction'', Ruth Prigozy (editor), ''The Cambridge Companion to F. Scott Fitzgerald , page 143,
  • F. Scott Fitzgerald is best known as a chronicler of the 1920s and as the writer who, more than any other, identified, delineated, and popularized the female representative of that era, the flapper'. Though it is an overstatement to say that Fitzgerald created the '''flapper''', he did, with considerable assistance from his wife Zelda, offer the public an image of a young woman who was spoiled, sexually liberated, self-centered, fun-loving, and magnetic.Although she is often seen now as a mere fashion of the bygone Jazz Age, the ' flapper should be regarded as one of the great authentic characters in American history.
  • * 2009 , Matthew Avery Sutton, Aimee Semple McPherson and the Resurrection of Christian America , page 125,
  • Among McPherson's most passionate and visible advocates were Southern California's young flappers', who turned out in droves to cheer on the evangelist. While most fundamentalists vehemently criticized '''flappers''', viewing them as symbols of moral decay and the decline of Victorian gender identities, McPherson had embraced them. Critics of her Bible college identified the young female ministers with whom she surrounded herself not as holdouts to Victorianism, but as outright '''flappers'''. The press even dubbed one of McPherson's most successful young protégés the ' flapper evangelist.
    Derived terms
    * flapperdom * flapperesque * flapperhood * flapperism

    Etymology 2

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • Something that flaps.
  • A flipper; a limb of a turtle, which functions as a flipper or paddle when swimming.
  • * (rfdate) Buckley
  • The flapper of a porpoise.
  • * 1878 , , The Three Admirals , page 46,
  • It was still too shallow for the turtle to swim, but it used its four flappers with so much effect against its two assailants, as to give them a thorough shower-bath.
  • (plumbing) A flapper valve in a toilet-flushing mechanism.
  • (rock climbing) Any injury that results in a loose flap of skin on the fingers, making gripping difficult.
  • Derived terms
    * fire flapper * flapper board * flapper valve

    See also

    * flappergast

    References

    lapper

    English

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • One who laps liquid, who takes liquid in with the tongue.
  • * {{quote-book
  • , year=1913 , author=William Atherton Du Puy , title= Uncle Sam, Wonder Worker , chapter= citation , isbn= , page=? , passage=...that recipient of the favors and caresses of the hearthstone, that lapper of milk from the national saucer, the cat.}}
  • * {{quote-book
  • , year=1827 , author=? , title=Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine , chapter= citation , isbn= , page=470 , passage=The pupils of the modern school discover in [the lion] but the crafty, cruel, and cowardly lapper of blood.}}
  • (in combination'') something (especially a race) that is a stated number of laps e.g. ''a 25-lapper
  • * {{quote-book
  • , year=2001 , author=Tim Bongard , title= Richard Petty: The Cars of the King , chapter= citation , isbn= , page=? , passage=...Richard Petty Private Collection outran Buck Baker's '62 Chrysler to win the 200-lapper. One week later, Jim Paschal finished second to race winner Junior.}}
  • (sports) A competitor who is one lap behind another, in the same race, and hence physically in front.
  • * June 2006 , RoadRacingWorld.com - Stanton Tops Formula Pacific Podium In Fourth Round Of AFM Racing At Thunderhill
  • After he tangled with the lapper I thought, ‘Man, that sucks’,” Dorsey explained. “Then I realized I was in the lead! I was going to just cruise home..
  • A mechanism that overlaps material to make it thicker; a lapping cylinder or lapping machine
  • (sailing) A headsail that overlaps the mast.
  • Verb

    (en verb)
  • To make a gentle splashing sound, as the sound of flowing water.
  • * {{quote-book
  • , year=1900? , author=S.R. Crockett , title=The Red Axe , chapter=XXXVII citation , isbn=0543961451 , page=238 , passage=There was mockery of our foolhardy enterprise in the soft whispering sough of the water, as I heard it lapper beneath the ferry-boat that lay ready to cross to the other side.}}

    Anagrams

    * ---- ==Jèrriais==

    Verb

    (roa-jer-verb)
  • to lap (a liquid)
  • Synonyms

    * (l)