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Sarnie vs Nutty - What's the difference?

sarnie | nutty |

As a noun sarnie

is (british|informal) a sandwich.

As an adjective nutty is

containing nuts.

sarnie

English

Alternative forms

* sarny * sarney

Noun

(en noun)
  • (British, informal) a sandwich
  • (UK, birdwatching) the Sandwich tern.
  • Synonyms

    * sanger (qualifier) * sango (qualifier) * sarmie (qualifier) * sambo (qualifier)

    Anagrams

    * * *

    nutty

    English

    Adjective

    (er)
  • Containing nuts
  • Reminiscent of nuts
  • * 1997 , Mary Jo Plutt, Prevention's Stop Dieting and Lose Weight Cookbook , Rodale, ISBN 0875964699, p. 210:
  • Brown rice has had only its outer hull removed, leaving it with a beige color and a a pleasantly nutty flavor.
  • Barmy, crazy, mad.
  • Usage notes

    In sense “insane”, similar to nuts, but more limited and somewhat milder: nutty means “eccentric, insane”, while “nuts” can mean either “insane” or “enthused, agitated” (“the crowd went nuts”), for which “nutty” is not used: *“the crowd went nutty”.

    Synonyms

    * nuts, squirrelly * See also