Crump vs Scrap - What's the difference?
crump | scrap |
(UK, Scotland, dialect) Hard or crusty; dry baked
(obsolete) crooked; bent
* Jeremy Taylor
The sound of a muffled explosion.
* 1929 , Robert Graves, Goodbye to All That
* 1999 , Kate Atkinson, Behind the Scenes at the Museum
* 2000 , Richard Woodman, The Darkening Sea
* 2008 , Paul Wood, BBC News.
To produce such a sound.
* {{quote-news, year=2007, date=September 28, author=William Grimes, title=In Middle Leg of the Race, the Prize Was Italy, work=New York Times
, passage=“Mortars crumped , and from the high ground to the east and south came the shriek of 88-millimeter shells, green fireballs that whizzed through the dunes at half a mile a second, trailing golden plumes of dust.” }}
A (small) piece; a fragment; a detached, incomplete portion.
* De Quincey
(usually, in the plural) Leftover food.
Discarded material (especially metal), junk.
(ethnic slur, offensive) A Hispanic criminal, especially a Mexican or one affiliated to the Norte gang.
The crisp substance that remains after drying out animal fat.
To discard.
(of a project or plan) To stop working on indefinitely.
To scrapbook; to create scrapbooks.
To dispose of at a scrapyard.
To make into scrap.
to fight
As a proper noun crump
is .As a noun scrap is
a (small) piece; a fragment; a detached, incomplete portion or scrap can be a fight, tussle, skirmish.As a verb scrap is
to discard or scrap can be to fight.crump
English
Etymology 1
Anglo-Saxon (crumb) stooping, bent down, akin to Old High German chrumb, (etyl) krumm, (etyl) krum, and English cramp.Adjective
(en adjective)- a crump loaf
- Crooked backs and crump shoulders.
Etymology 2
Onomatopoeic.English onomatopoeiasNoun
(en noun)- [hymn] "To an inheritance incorruptible . . . Through faith unto salvation, Ready to be revealed at the last trump." For "trump" we always used to sing "crump." A crump was German five-point-nine shell, and "the last crump" would be the end of the War.
- Crump , crack! A shell exploded near them and the whole aircraft yawned to port as if somebody had punched it through the sky.
- Above this grey skyline slowly lifting clouds of dirty smoke rose into the morning air as the salvoes of Japanese shells exploded with a delayed crump .
Taking cover on Sderot front line
- "Now you can see what life is like for us here," said Yakov Shoshani, raising his voice to make himself heard over the sound of a loud crump .
Verb
(en verb)citation
scrap
English
Etymology 1
(etyl) scrappe, from (etyl) skrap, fromNoun
(en noun)- I have no materials — not a scrap .
- I found a scrap of cloth to patch the hole.
- Give the scraps to the dogs and watch them fight.
- That car isn't good for anything but scrap .
- pork scraps