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Fudge vs Caramel - What's the difference?

fudge | caramel |

As nouns the difference between fudge and caramel

is that fudge is light or frothy nonsense while caramel is a smooth, chewy, sticky confection made by heating sugar and other ingredients until the sugars polymerize and become sticky.

As a verb fudge

is to try to avoid giving a direct answer; to waffle or equivocate.

As an interjection fudge

is colloquially, used in place of fuck.

fudge

English

(wikipedia fudge)

Noun

  • Light or frothy nonsense.
  • A type of very sweet candy or confection. Often used in the US synonymously with chocolate fudge.
  • Have you tried the vanilla fudge ? It's delicious!
  • (countable) A deliberately misleading or vague answer.
  • (uncountable, dated) A made-up story; nonsense; humbug.
  • (countable) A less than perfect decision or solution; an attempt to fix an incorrect solution after the fact.
  • Verb

    (fudg)
  • To try to avoid giving a direct answer; to waffle or equivocate.
  • When I asked them if they had been at the party, they fudged .
  • To alter something from its true state, as to hide a flaw or uncertainty. Always deliberate, but not necessarily dishonest or immoral.
  • The results of the experiment looked impressive, but it turned out the numbers had been fudged .
    I had to fudge the lighting to get the color to look good.

    Derived terms

    * fudger

    Interjection

    (head)
  • (euphemistic) Colloquially, used in place of fuck.
  • Oh, fudge !

    Derived terms

    * fudge factor * fudge packer

    caramel

    English

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • A smooth, chewy, sticky confection made by heating sugar and other ingredients until the sugars polymerize and become sticky.
  • A (sometimes hardened) piece of this confection.
  • A yellow-brown color.
  • Usage notes

    Both the two syllable and the three syllable pronunciations are very common in all regions of the United States, but the trisyllabic pronunciation is more common than the disyllabic one in the South (excluding western Texas), northern New Jersey, eastern New York and New England, while the disyllabic one is more common than the trisyllabic one in other regions. Dialect Survey map 1], showing that both pronunciations are common in all regions, and [http://spark.rstudio.com/jkatz/SurveyMaps/ map 2, showing which regions the di- and tri-syllabic pronunciations predominate in

    Derived terms

    * caramelise, caramelize

    See also

    * fudge, toffee

    Anagrams

    * * *

    References

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