Ripple vs Gurgle - What's the difference?
ripple | gurgle | Related terms |
A moving disturbance or undulation in the surface of a liquid.
A sound similar to that of undulating water.
A style of ice cream in which flavors have been coarsely blended together.
(electronics) A small oscillation of an otherwise steady signal.
An implement, with teeth like those of a comb, for removing the seeds and seed vessels from flax, broom corn, etc.
To move like the undulating surface of a body of water; to undulate.
To propagate like a moving wave.
* 2008 , Bradley Simpson, Economists with Guns , page 65:
To make a sound as of water running gently over a rough bottom, or the breaking of ripples on the shore.
To remove the seeds from (the stalks of flax, etc.), by means of a ripple.
(by extension) To scratch or tear.
To flow with a bubbling sound.
* Young
To make such a sound.
A gurgling sound.
* 1898 , , (Moonfleet) Chapter 4
As nouns the difference between ripple and gurgle
is that ripple is a moving disturbance or undulation in the surface of a liquid while gurgle is a gurgling sound.As verbs the difference between ripple and gurgle
is that ripple is to move like the undulating surface of a body of water; to undulate while gurgle is to flow with a bubbling sound.ripple
English
Noun
(en noun)- I dropped a small stone into the pond and watched the ripples .
- I enjoy fudge ripple''' ice cream, but I especially like to dig through the carton to get at the '''ripple part and eat only that.
Verb
- These problems were complicated by a foreign exchange crunch which rippled through the economy in 1961-1962, [...].
- (Holland)
Anagrams
*gurgle
English
Verb
- The bath water gurgled down the drain.
- Pure gurgling rills the lonely desert trace, / And waste their music on the savage race.
- The baby gurgled with delight.
Noun
(en noun)- Then the conversation broke off, and there was little more talking, only a noise of men going backwards and forwards, and of putting down of kegs and the hollow gurgle of good liquor being poured from breakers into the casks.