Grippie vs Gripple - What's the difference?
grippie | gripple |
(informal) A grip; something used to take hold, or to reduce friction.
* 2004 , Jeff Ishaq, Treo Fan Book: Your Brain on Silicon
* 2008 , Molly G. Shane, Rumored Legacy (page 62)
* 2012 , Joseph Labrecque, Adobe Edge Quickstart Guide
Griping; tenacious; gripping.
Grasping; greedy; snatchy; mean; niggardly; avaricious, covetous.
* Bishop Joseph Hall
Sprained.
(obsolete, rare) A hook.
(obsolete, rare) A grasp; a grip.
*1596 , (Edmund Spenser), The Faerie Queene , V.2:
*:Ne ever Artegall his griple strong / For any thing wold slacke, but still upon him hong.
As nouns the difference between grippie and gripple
is that grippie is (informal) a grip; something used to take hold, or to reduce friction while gripple is a ditch; a drain or gripple can be (obsolete|rare) a hook.As an adjective gripple is
griping; tenacious; gripping.As a verb gripple is
(rare) to grasp.grippie
English
Noun
(en noun)- Rubber grippies , partially visible on the right of the case above and below the hinge, keep it from sliding out of your hand.
- I crocheted chenille socks and put little grippies on the bottom.
- To tear a panel out of the main application window and create a floating panel, simply click upon the grippies (the textured area of the panel tab) next to an anchored panel's name.
gripple
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl) gripel, from (etyl) gripol, .Alternative forms
* * * (Scotland)Adjective
(en adjective)- (Spenser)
- It is easy to observe, that none are so gripple and hard fisted, as the childless