Powder vs Noodle - What's the difference?
powder | noodle |
The fine particles to which any dry substance is reduced by pounding, grinding, or triturating, or into which it falls by decay; dust.
* (rfdate) (William Shakespeare):
A mixture of fine dry, sweet-smelling particles applied to the face or other body parts, to reduce shine or to alleviate chaffing.
* 1912 , :
An explosive mixture used in gunnery, blasting, etc.; gunpowder.
(informal) Light, dry, fluffy snow.
To reduce to fine particles; to pound, grind, or rub into a powder.
To sprinkle with powder, or as with powder.
* (rfdate) :
To be reduced to powder; to become like powder.
To use powder on the hair or skin.
To sprinkle with salt; to corn, as meat.
(usually in plural) A string or strip of pasta.
(colloquial, dated) A person with poor judgement; a fool.
* Sydney Smith
* Charles Dickens, Hard Times
(colloquial) The brain, the head.
(colloquial) A pool noodle.
(fishing) To fish (usually for very large catfish) without any equipment other than the fisherman's own body
To think or ponder.
To fiddle, play with, or mess around.
To improvise music.
(Australia) To fossick, especially for opals.
* 1989 , Association for Industrial Archaeology, Industrial archaeology review , Volume 12,
* 1994 , RonMoon, Outback Australia: a Lonely Planet Australia guide ,
* 2006 , Marele Day, Susan Bradley Smith, Fay Knight (editors), Making Waves: 10 Years of the Byron Bay Writers Festival ,
As nouns the difference between powder and noodle
is that powder is the fine particles to which any dry substance is reduced by pounding, grinding, or triturating, or into which it falls by decay; dust while noodle is (usually in plural) a string or strip of pasta.As verbs the difference between powder and noodle
is that powder is to reduce to fine particles; to pound, grind, or rub into a powder while noodle is (fishing) to fish (usually for very large catfish) without any equipment other than the fisherman's own body.powder
English
Alternative forms
* powdre (obsolete)Noun
- Grind their bones to powder small.
- She was redolent of violet sachet powder, and had warm, soft, white hands, but she danced divinely, moving as smoothly as the tide coming in.
Derived terms
* Atlas powder * baking powder * Bolivian marching powder * powder blue * powder burn * powder down * powder-down feather * powder-down patch * powder hose * powder hoy * powder magazine * powder mine * powder monkey * powder post * powder puff * powder room * take a powderVerb
(en verb)- to powder the hair
- A circling zone thou seest / Powdered with stars.
- Some salts powder easily.
- She paints and powders .
Synonyms
* (to reduce to fine particles) pound, grind, comminute, pulverize, trituratenoodle
English
Noun
(en noun) (wikipedia noodle)- She slurped a long noodle up out of her soup.
- the chuckling grin of noodles
- If that portrait could speak, sir — but it has the advantage over the original of not possessing the power of committing itself and disgusting others, — it would testify, that a long period has elapsed since I first habitually addressed it as the picture of a noodle .
Quotations
(English Citations of "noodle")Derived terms
* egg noodle * noodle bar * noodlehead * pool noodleSee also
* pasta *Verb
(Noodling)- Fred had several lacerations on his hands from noodling for flathead in the river.
- He noodled over the problem for a day or two before making a decision.
- "Noodle that thought around for a while" said Dr. Johnson to his Biblical Interpretations class
- If the machine is really broken, noodling with the knobs is not going to fix it.
- He has been noodling with that trumpet all afternoon, and every bit of it sounds awful.
- On the Olympic Field the tour-group is permitted to ‘noodle ’ (hunt for opals) on the waste or mullock heaps ...
- In Coober Pedy, noodling' for opals is generally discouraged, although a few tourist spots, such as the Old Timers Mine, have ' noodle pits open to the public.
- We learn how Lennon used to noodle (fossick) for opal as a kid, how camels were for a long time the only form of transportation, and where the name 'Coober Pedy' came from.
