Fraught vs Naught - What's the difference?
fraught | naught |
(obsolete) The hire of a ship or boat to transport cargo.
(obsolete) Money paid to hire a ship or boat to transport cargo; freight
(obsolete) The transportation of goods, especially in a ship or boat.
(obsolete) A ship's cargo, lading or freight.
(Scotland) A load; a burden.
(Scotland) Two bucketfuls (of water).
To load (a ship, cargo etc.).
* 1610 , , by Shakespeare
(of a cargo-carrier) Laden.
* Shakespeare
Furnished, equipped.
Loaded up, charged or accompanied.
* South
* I. Taylor
* 2005 , .
Distressed.
* '>citation
(UK, Ireland, Australia, NZ) (now rare or archaic in US, Canada ) Zero.
(UK, Ireland, Australia, NZ) (now rare or archaic in US, Canada ) Nothing; nothingness.
As nouns the difference between fraught and naught
is that fraught is (obsolete) the hire of a ship or boat to transport cargo while naught is (uk|ireland|australia|nz) (now rare or archaic in us, canada ) zero.As a verb fraught
is to load (a ship, cargo etc).As an adjective fraught
is (of a cargo-carrier) laden.As a pronoun naught is
nothing.fraught
English
Noun
(-)- fraught money .
- (Shakespeare)
Derived terms
* fraught-freeVerb
(en verb)- Had I been any god of power, I would / Have sunk the sea within the earth, or e'er / It should the good ship so have swallow'd and / The fraughting souls within her.
Adjective
(en adjective)- a vessel of our country richly fraught
- a discourse fraught with all the commending excellences of speech
- enterprises fraught with world-wide benefits
- all these matters are fraught with paradox, just as they always have been
- a fraught relationship
References
*naught
English
Alternative forms
* noughtNoun
(-)- Yet another naught on the scoreboard for the home team.
- Naught can come of this, you mark my words.''