Foul vs Squally - What's the difference?
foul | squally | Synonyms |
Covered with, or containing unclean matter; polluted; nasty; defiled
* {{quote-magazine, date=2013-06-29, volume=407, issue=8842, page=29, magazine=(The Economist)
, title= obscene or profane; abusive.
Hateful; detestable; unpleasant
* Milton
Loathsome; disgusting; as, a foul disease.
(obsolete) Ugly; homely; poor.
* Shakespeare
Not favorable; unpropitious; not fair or advantageous; as, a foul wind; a foul road; cloudy or rainy; stormy; not fair; -- said of the weather, sky, etc.
* Shakespeare
Not conforming to the established rules and customs of a game, conflict, test, etc.; unfair; dishonest; dishonorable; cheating.
(nautical) Having freedom of motion interfered with by collision or entanglement; entangled; - opposed to clear; as, a rope or cable may get foul while paying it out.
(baseball) Outside of the base lines; in foul territory.
To make dirty.
To besmirch.
To clog or obstruct.
(nautical) To entangle.
(basketball) To make contact with an opposing player in order to gain advantage.
(baseball) To hit outside of the baselines.
To become clogged.
To become entangled.
(basketball) To commit a foul.
(baseball) To hit a ball outside of the baselines.
(sports) A breach of the rules of a game, especially one involving inappropriate contact with an opposing player in order to gain an advantage; as, for example, foot-tripping in soccer, or contact of any kind in basketball.
* {{quote-news
, year=2011
, date=December 10
, author=Arindam Rej
, title=Norwich 4 - 2 Newcastle
, work=BBC Sport
Gosling's plight worsened when he was soon shown a red card for a foul on Martin.}} (bowling) A (usually accidental) contact between a bowler and the lane before the bowler has released the ball.
(baseball) A foul ball, a ball which has been hit outside of the base lines.
Characterized by squalls, or sudden violent bursts of wind; gusty.
* 1759 , John Lindsay, A Voyage to the Coast of Africa, In 1758 ,
* 1824 , John Davy, Observations on the Specific Gravity and Temperature of Sea-Water, Made During a Voyage from Ceylon to England, in 1819 and 1820'', David Brewster, Robert Jameson (editors), ''The Edinburgh Philosophical Journal, Volume 10,
* 2011 , Mary Maclaren, The Four Elizabeths , Xlibris (2011), ISBN 9781456853723,
Producing or characteristic of loud wails.
* 1953 , Annemarie Selinko, Désirée , William Morrow & Company (1953),
* 1984 , Bernard Evslin, Hercules , Open Road Integrated Media (2012), ISBN 9781453264478,
* 2012 , Ferida Wolff, "Not My Father's Son", in Chicken Soup for the Father and Son Soul: Celebrating the Bond That Connects Generations , Open Road Integrated Media (2012), ISBN 9781453274910,
(UK, dialect) Interrupted by unproductive spots, as a field of turnips or grain.
(weaving, of cloth) Not equally good throughout; not uniform; uneven; faulty.
* 1763 , Danby Pickering, The Statutes at Large, From the First Year of Q. Mary to the Thirty-Fifth Year of Q. Elizabeth , Volume VI, Joseph Bentham (1763),
As adjectives the difference between foul and squally
is that foul is covered with, or containing unclean matter; polluted; nasty; defiled while squally is characterized by squalls, or sudden violent bursts of wind; gusty.As a verb foul
is to make dirty.As a noun foul
is a breach of the rules of a game, especially one involving inappropriate contact with an opposing player in order to gain an advantage; as, for example, foot-tripping in soccer, or contact of any kind in basketball.foul
English
(Webster 1913)Etymology 1
From (etyl), from (etyl) . More at (l).Adjective
(er)Unspontaneous combustion, passage=Since the mid-1980s, when Indonesia first began to clear its bountiful forests on an industrial scale in favour of lucrative palm-oil plantations, “haze” has become an almost annual occurrence in South-East Asia. The cheapest way to clear logged woodland is to burn it, producing an acrid cloud of foul white smoke that, carried by the wind, can cover hundreds, or even thousands, of square miles.}}
- Who first seduced them to that foul revolt?
- Let us, like merchants, show our foulest wares.
- So foul a sky clears not without a storm.
Usage notes
* Nouns to which "foul" is often applied: play, ball, language, breath, smell, odor, water, weather, deed.Synonyms
* shameful; odious; wretchedDerived terms
* afoul * befoul * fall foul * nonfoul * nonfoulingEtymology 2
From (etyl) .Verb
(en verb)- to foul the face or hands with mire
- She's fouled her diaper.
- He's fouled his reputation.
- The hair has fouled the drain.
- The kelp has fouled the prop.
- Smith fouled him hard.
- Jones fouled the ball off the facing of the upper deck.
- ''The drain fouled .
- The prop fouled on the kelp.
- Smith fouled within the first minute of the quarter.
- Jones fouled for strike one.
Noun
(en noun)citation, page= , passage=A second Norwich goal in four minutes arrived after some dire Newcastle defending. Gosling gave the ball away with a sloppy back-pass, allowing Crofts to curl in a cross that the unmarked Morison powered in with a firm, 12-yard header.
Gosling's plight worsened when he was soon shown a red card for a foul on Martin.}}
- Jones hit a foul up over the screen.
External links
* * * ----squally
English
Adjective
(en-adj)page 107:
- On the eighth of February the winds grew ?trong and ?qually , accompanied with rain and a north-we?t ?well;.
page 319:
- Feb. 9. 1820.The night was rather squally and cloudy, with occasional showers.
page 138:
- Within three days, having sailed into increasingly squally winds but still with extremely high temperatures, Arndell found himself kept busy with renewed bouts of seasickness.
page 161:
- Something whimpered in the room—high and squally .
unnumbered page:
- One baby was three times as big as his brother and different in other ways. He wasn't bald and squinched and squally like most infants, but had a nimbus of red-gold hair and huge gray eyes and lay there smiling to himself.
unnumbered page:
- “Well,” he said, “if I can't have a Buick, I'll at least have a son.”
- When I was born, he very quickly saw that I was a scrawny, squally baby girl. I was not a Buick, and I was not his son.
- (Halliwell)
page 98:
- It is enacted, That if at any time after the first day of May , any cloth or ker?ie, through the default or negligence of the carders, spinners or weavers, or any of them, shall or do prove purfy, cockly, bandy, squally or rowy by warp or woof,