Gaffled vs Raffled - What's the difference?
gaffled | raffled |
(gaffle)
To seize
To steal
Gaffling is a planning technique for orienteering relay courses whereby individual routes are planned so as to vary slightly and to make following difficult. This means that the competition depends more on navigational skills rather than just physical ability. See British Orienteering Federation's Event Guideline F for Relay Events, Section 3.
To talk incessantly without a purpose, usually about inane or pointless topics; to banter.
(raffle)
A drawing, often held as a fundraiser, in which tickets or chances are sold to win a prize.
(obsolete) A game of dice in which the player who throws three of the same number wins all the stakes.
To award something by means of a raffle or random drawing, often used with off.
To participate in a raffle.
As verbs the difference between gaffled and raffled
is that gaffled is (gaffle) while raffled is (raffle).gaffled
English
Verb
(head)gaffle
English
Verb
(gaffl)References
*OED 2nd edition 1989 (noun sense)raffled
English
Verb
(head)raffle
English
Noun
(en noun)- He entered a raffle to win a lifetime supply of toothpaste, but he did not win.
- (Cotgrave)
Derived terms
* meat raffleVerb
- They raffled off four gift baskets.
- to raffle for a watch