Brat vs Prat - What's the difference?
brat | prat |
A child (as a pejorative term); offspring.
Now often specifically, a selfish or spoiled child.
a (w) or flatfish
*
A rough cloak or ragged garment
* '>citation
(obsolete, UK, Scotland, dialect) A coarse kind of apron for keeping the clothes clean; a bib.
*
(obsolete) The young of an animal.
(military) B.R.A.T. - Born, Raised, And Transferred.
(slang) A buttock, or the buttocks; a person's bottom.
*Thomas Dekker , 1608 , The Canters Dictionarie'' in ''The Belman of London'' (second part ''Lanthorne and Candlelight )
*:Pratt , a Buttock.
*1982 , (TC Boyle), Water Music , Penguin 2006, p. 5:
*:Mungo didn't like their attitude. Nor did he like exposing his prat in mixed company.
(UK, slang) A fool.
(slang) The female genitals.
*1967 (sourced to 1942), William A. Schwartz,
*:"She's a far better piece
Than the Viceroy's niece,
Who has also more fur on her prat."
*1984 John Murray, ed,
*:"...they would kidnap a girl and take her back to their camp where they would pull down her knickers, hoping to find hairs on her prat."
*2005 Sherrie Seibert Goff,
*:"My prat was sore from the unfamiliar activities of the night before, but my virgin bleeding had ceased, and we rode most of the day in that unworldly haze that comes with lack of sleep."
In obsolete terms the difference between brat and prat
is that brat is the young of an animal while prat is cunning, astute.As nouns the difference between brat and prat
is that brat is a child (as a pejorative term); offspring while prat is a cunning or mischievous trick; a prank, a joke.As an acronym brat
is b.R.A.T. - Born, Raised, And Transferred.As an adjective prat is
cunning, astute.brat
English
Etymology 1
Origin uncertain. According to theOnline Etymology Dictionary, the term "brat" derives from an Old English (Old English) slang term meaning "beggar's child". Originally a dialectal word, from northern and western England and the Midlands, for a "makeshift or ragged garment"; probably the same word as (etyl) ).
Noun
(en noun)- (Wright)
Synonyms
* See also .Etymology 2
Shortened from bratwurst, from the (etyl) BratwurstSee also
* English clippingsEtymology 3
Etymology 4
Acronym
Anagrams
* ----prat
English
Alternative forms
* prattEtymology 1
From (etyl) prat, from (etyl) . Related to (l).Etymology 2
Origin unknown. Perhaps a specialised note of Etymology 1 (see above).Noun
(en noun)The Limerick: 1700 Examples with Notes, Variants and ExamplesVol 1, Greenleaf Classics 1967, p. 124:
Than the Viceroy's niece,
Who has also more fur on her prat."
Panurge, Vol 1–3, p. 39:
The Arms of Quirinus, iUniverse 2005, p. 135:
Synonyms
* See also * See alsoDerived terms
* pratfall * prat about * prattery (rare) * prattish (rare)Anagrams
* part * rapt * tarp * trapReferences
*pratt'', in Sex-Lexis.com by Farlex. ----
