Sporked vs Porked - What's the difference?
sporked | porked |
(spork)
An eating utensil shaped like a spoon, the bowl of which is divided into tines like those of a fork, and so has the function of both implements; some sporks have a serrated edge so they can also function as a knife.
To move or impale (food etc.) with a spork.
* 2002 , Olivia Goldsmith, Pen pals
* {{quote-news, year=2007, date=July 29, author=Erin McKean, title=Corpus, work=New York Times
, passage=Now, obviously, most of this sporking' is facetious, done purely for humorous intent (none of the eyeballs being ' sporked were in news reports), but the phenomenon of the weaponized spork is one that passed lexicographers and language researchers by until we saw the corpus evidence. }}
To be extensively broken or beyond repair.
(pork)
As verbs the difference between sporked and porked
is that sporked is past tense of spork while porked is past tense of pork.As an adjective porked is
to be extensively broken or beyond repair.sporked
English
Verb
(head)spork
English
(sporks) ("spork on Wikiquote")Noun
(en noun)Verb
(en verb)- She was sporking up her food with the kind of relish Jennifer had rarely seen at three star restaurants.
citation
See also
* foon * knork * runcible spoon * spladeAnagrams
*porked
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- "What did the mechanic say about your car?"
- "It's porked ; it will be extremely expensive to repair."
