Sissy vs Salve - What's the difference?
sissy | salve |
(pejorative, colloquial) An effeminate boy or man.
(pejorative, colloquial) A timid, unassertive or cowardly person.
(BDSM) A male crossdresser who adopts feminine behaviours.
(colloquial) Sister.
(pejorative) .
* 2000 , (revised edition), Bantam Books, ISBN 0-553-58176-7,
(pejorative) .
(childish, colloquial) Urination; urine.
*
An ointment, cream, or balm with soothing, healing, or calming effects.
Any thing or action that soothes or heals.
To calm or assuage.
To heal by applications or medicaments; to apply salve to; to anoint.
* Shakespeare The First Part of King Henry IV :
To heal; to remedy; to cure; to make good.
* Spenser
* Milton
To salvage.
(obsolete, astronomy) To save (the appearances or the phenomena); to explain (a celestial phenomenon); to account for (the apparent motions of the celestial bodies).
(obsolete) to resolve (a difficulty); to refute (an objection); to harmonize (an apparent contradiction).
* 1662 , Thomas Salusbury, Galileo's Dialogue Concerning the Two World Systems
(obsolete) To explain away; to mitigate; to excuse
To say "salve" to; to greet; to salute.
* Spenser
As nouns the difference between sissy and salve
is that sissy is an effeminate boy or man while salve is an ointment, cream, or balm with soothing, healing, or calming effects.As verbs the difference between sissy and salve
is that sissy is to urinate while salve is to calm or assuage.As an adjective sissy
is effeminate.As a proper noun Sissy
is {{given name|female|diminutive=Cecilia}}.As an interjection salve is
hail; a greeting.sissy
English
Etymology 1
Extended form ofNoun
(sissies)Synonyms
* (timid or cowardly person) mama's boy, pansy, nancyboy * (effeminate boy) janegirlDerived terms
* prissy * sissified * sissy bar (a passenger backrest for a motorcycle or bicycle) * sissyphobia * sissy squat (a weightlifting exercise emphasizing knee extension)Adjective
(er)page 173:
- she’d decided the wrapping paper was too feminine. It had a viney pattern that wasn’t anything sissier than you’d see in the old Arabian Nights illustrations. But Richard might think they were flowers.
Etymology 2
Likely onomatopoetic, perhaps related to (etyl) . Compare piss; wee-wee.Noun
(-)salve
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl) sealf, from (etyl) .Noun
(en noun)Derived terms
* (l)Verb
(salv)- I do beseech your majesty . . . salve the long-grown wounds of my intemperance."
- But Ebranck salved both their infamies / With noble deeds.
- What may we do, then, to salve this seeming inconsistence?
Etymology 2
From (etyl)Verb
(salv)- He which should hold it more rational to make the whole Universe move, and thereby to salve the Earths mobility, is more unreasonable....
References
*Etymology 3
(etyl) (lena)Verb
(salv)- By this that stranger knight in presence came, / And goodly salved them.