Hurtle vs Frisk - What's the difference?
hurtle | frisk | Related terms |
To move rapidly, violently, or without control.
(archaic) To meet with violence or shock; to clash; to jostle.
* Fairfax
(archaic) To make a threatening sound, like the clash of arms; to make a sound as of confused clashing or confusion; to resound.
* Shakespeare
* Elizabeth Browning
To hurl or fling; to throw hard or violently.
(archaic) To push; to jostle; to hurl.
A fast movement in literal or figurative sense.
* 1975 , Wakeman, John. Literary Criticism
* Monday June 20, 2005 , The Guardian newspaper
A clattering sound.
* 1913 , Eden Phillpotts. Widecombe Fair p.26
Lively; brisk; frolicsome; frisky.
To frolic, gambol, skip, dance, leap.
To search somebody by feeling his or her body and clothing.
Hurtle is a related term of frisk.
As verbs the difference between hurtle and frisk
is that hurtle is to move rapidly, violently, or without control while frisk is to frolic, gambol, skip, dance, leap.As nouns the difference between hurtle and frisk
is that hurtle is a fast movement in literal or figurative sense while frisk is a frolic; a fit of wanton gaiety; a gambol: a little playful skip or leap.As an adjective frisk is
lively; brisk; frolicsome; frisky.hurtle
English
Verb
(hurtl)- The car hurtled down the hill at 90 miles per hour.
- Pieces of broken glass hurtled through the air.
- Together hurtled both their steeds.
- The noise of battle hurtled in the air.
- The earthquake sound / Hurtling 'neath the solid ground.
- He hurtled the wad of paper angrily at the trash can and missed by a mile.
Noun
(-)- But the war woke me up, I began to move left, and recent events have accelerated that move until it is now a hurtle .
- Jamba has removed from Marlowe's Doctor Faustus all but the barest of essentials - even half its title, leaving us with an 80-minute hurtle through Faustus's four and twenty borrowed years on earth.
- There came a hurtle of wings, a flash of bright feathers, and a great pigeon with slate-grey plumage and a neck bright as an opal, lit on a swaying finial.
Anagrams
* *frisk
English
Adjective
(head)- (Bishop Hall)
Verb
(en verb)- The police frisked the suspiciously-acting individual and found a knife as well as a bag of marijuana.
