Slattern vs Trapes - What's the difference?
slattern | trapes |
A slut, a sexually promiscuous woman.
(dated) A dirty and untidy woman.
* 1809 , Noah Webster, Esq., An American Selection of Lessons in Reading and Speaking: Calculated to Improve the Minds and Refine the Taste of Youth, to Which are Prefixed Rules in Elocution and Directions for Expressing the Principal Passions of the Mind , p24
* 1868' September 17, Lizzie Leavenworth, ''??'''Slattern''' Genius??''; quoted in '''2001 by Anne Russo and Cherise Kramarae in ''The Radical Women’s Press of the 1850s , page 202:
* 1933 , Noel Coward, Private Lives: an Intimate Comedy in Three Acts , Act 3:
(obsolete, colloquial) A slattern; an idle, sluttish, or untidy woman.
* Hudibras
* Gay
* Young
As nouns the difference between slattern and trapes
is that slattern is a slut, a sexually promiscuous woman while trapes is or trapes can be (obsolete|colloquial) a slattern; an idle, sluttish, or untidy woman.As a verb trapes is
.slattern
English
Noun
(en noun)- 3. Cookery is familiar to her, with the price and quality of provisions; and she is a ready accountant. Her chief view, however, is to serve her mother and lighten her cares. She holds cleanliness and neetness to be indispensable in a woman; and that a slattern is disgusting, especially if beautiful.
- How many times I have heard a woman called a slattern , because she could not keep a house in order, when had she been allowed to write out her sublime thoughts, which were all in another direction, she would have astonished the world with her genius.
- AMANDA: I’ve been brought up to believe that it’s beyond the pale, for a man to strike a woman.
- ELYOT: A very poor tradition. Certain women should be struck regularly, like gongs.
- AMANDA: You’re an unmitigated cad, and a bully.
- ELYOT: And you’re an ill-mannered, bad tempered slattern .
- AMANDA (loudly) Slattern indeed.
- ELYOT: Yes, slattern', '''slattern''', ' slattern , and fishwife.
- VICTOR: Keep your mouth shut, you swine.
Synonyms
* See * (untidy woman) moggy (archaic)Derived terms
* slatternliness * slatternlyReferences
trapes
English
Etymology 1
Verb
Noun
(es)Etymology 2
See trape.Noun
- He found the sullen trapes / Possest with th' devil, worms, and claps.
- From door to door I'd sooner whine and beg, / Than marry such a trapes .
- Since full each other station of renown, / Who would not be the greatest trapes in town?