Sloop vs Saloop - What's the difference?
sloop | saloop |
(label) A single-masted sailboat with only one headsail.
* 1789 , (Olaudah Equiano) (Gustavus Vassa), (The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano) ,
*
, title=(The Celebrity), chapter=10
, passage=Mr. Cooke had had a sloop ?yacht built at Far Harbor, the completion of which had been delayed, and which was but just delivered.}}
(label) A sailing warship, smaller than a frigate, with its guns all on one deck.
A sloop of war, smaller than a frigate, larger than a corvette.
salep.
(dated) An aromatic drink originally prepared from salep, and later from sassafras bark and other ingredients such as milk and sugar, once popular in London, England.
* 1835 , London Medical and Surgical Journal , Volume 7,
* 2003 , Antony Clayton, London's Coffee Houses: A Stimulating Story ,
* 2004 , Tim Fulford, Debbie Lee, Peter J. Kitson, Literature, Science and Exploration in the Romantic Era: Bodies of Knowledge ,
*
As nouns the difference between sloop and saloop
is that sloop is (label) a single-masted sailboat with only one headsail while saloop is salep.sloop
English
(wikipedia sloop)Noun
(en noun)- I stayed in this island for a few days; I believe it could not be above a fortnight; when I and some few more slaves, that were not saleable amongst the rest, from very much fretting, were shipped off in a sloop for North America.
Anagrams
* ----saloop
English
(wikipedia saloop)Alternative forms
* saloupNoun
(en-noun)page 703,
- In simple ordinary diarrhœa, a mixture is prescribed, consisting of two ounces of a decoction of mallow and saloop , and two drops of Sydenham's laudanum.
page 31,
- As an alternative to coffee — in periods such as the beginning of the eighteenth century, when it became expensive — a patron might request saloop .
page 261,
- He[Charles Lamb] reveals some of their tastes - their likes and dislikes, their humour. And, characteristically, he does so in a digression, that turns out not to be a digression at all, about saloop , a drink made from 'the sweet wood yclept sassafras' and sold at roadside stalls throughout London.