Sheepskin vs Chuba - What's the difference?
sheepskin | chuba |
(uncountable) The skin of a sheep, especially when used to make parchment or in bookbinding.
* 1891 , Outing: Sport, Adventure, Travel, Fiction (volume 17, page 137)
(US, countable) A diploma.
(countable) The tanned skin of a sheep with the fleece left on, especially when used for clothing, rugs, etc.
a long sheepskin coat made of thick wool worn by Tibetans.
*{{quote-news, year=2007, date=November 4, author=Shaila Dewan, title=Emorys Little Tibet, work=New York Times
, passage=DRESSED in a pale blue, floor-length chuba , Paige Wilson silently mouthed a paragraph-long greeting, in Tibetan, that she was about to deliver to the Dalai Lama . }}
As nouns the difference between sheepskin and chuba
is that sheepskin is (uncountable) the skin of a sheep, especially when used to make parchment or in bookbinding while chuba is a long sheepskin coat made of thick wool worn by tibetans.sheepskin
English
Noun
- I confess to having felt a prejudice against sleeping in a bag, more especially a sheepskin bag, which would probably have a muttony odor; but it was pronounced to be the warmest and least cumbersome form of bedding we could have
References
* OEDchuba
English
(wikipedia chuba)Noun
(en noun)citation