Snake vs Shark - What's the difference?
snake | shark |
A legless reptile of the sub-order Serpentes with a long, thin body and a fork-shaped tongue.
* '>citation
A treacherous person.
* '>citation
A tool for unclogging plumbing.
A tool to aid cable pulling.
(slang) A trouser snake; the penis.
To follow or move in a winding route.
* {{quote-newsgroup
, title=Football fever...
, group=aus.personals
, author=Mark Addinall
, date=September 24
, year=1996
, passage=Any Brisbane female interested in snaking down a few beers whilst watching the footy on a big screen?
(transitive, Australia, slang) To steal slyly.
* {{quote-newsgroup
, title=Home made supercharger ?
, group=aus.cars
, author=Hyena
, date=April 5
, year=2001
, passage=Although it wouldn't be the first time some one patented an idea that I'd had a year earlier.F*CK ME !! Snaked again !
To clean using a plumbing snake.
(US, informal) To drag or draw, as a snake from a hole; often with out .
(nautical) To wind round spirally, as a large rope with a smaller, or with cord, the small rope lying in the spaces between the strands of the large one; to worm.
A scaleless, predatory fish of the superorder Selachimorpha, with a cartilaginous skeleton and 5 to 7 gill slits on each side of its head.
* 1569', ''The true discripcion of this marueilous straunge Fishe, whiche was taken on Thursday was sennight, the xvi. day of June, this present month, in the yeare of our Lord God, M.D.lxix.'', a
* {{quote-news, year=2011, date=October 13, author=AP, work=The Guardian
, title= Someone who exploits others, for example by trickery, lies, usury, extortion.
* , chapter=7
, title= (informal, derogatory) A sleazy and amoral lawyer; an ambulance chaser.
(informal) A relentless and resolute person or group, especially in business.
(informal) A very good poker or pool player.
(sports, and, games) A person who feigns ineptitude to win money from others.
(obsolete) To steal or obtain through fraud.
(obsolete) To play the petty thief; to practice fraud or trickery; to swindle.
* Bishop Earle
(obsolete) To live by shifts and stratagems.
(obsolete) To pick or gather indiscriminately or covertly.
* Shakespeare, Hamlet I.i.
----
As nouns the difference between snake and shark
is that snake is a legless reptile of the sub-order Serpentes with a long, thin body and a fork-shaped tongue while shark is a scaleless, predatory fish of the superorder Selachimorpha, with a cartilaginous skeleton and 5 to 7 gill slits on each side of its head.As verbs the difference between snake and shark
is that snake is to follow or move in a winding route while shark is to steal or obtain through fraud.As a proper noun Snake
is an early computer game, later popular on mobile phones, in which the player attempts to manoeuvre a perpetually growing snake so as to collect food items and avoid colliding with walls or the snake's tail.snake
English
(wikipedia snake)Noun
(en noun)Synonyms
* (reptile) joe blake, serpent * (plumbing tool) auger, plumber's snake * (tool for cable pulling) wirepullerDerived terms
* snakebite * snake in the grass * snake oilVerb
(snak)- The path snaked through the forest.
citation
- The river snakes through the valley.
- He snaked my DVD!
citation
- (Bartlett)
Synonyms
* (move in a winding path) slither, windSee also
*Anagrams
* *shark
English
(wikipedia shark) (Selachimorpha)Etymology 1
First attested in the 1560s, the word meaning 'scaleless fish' is of uncertain origin: it was apparently brought to England, with a specimen, by . The word may derive from the (etyl) xoc, or it may be an application of the "scoundrel" sense (which derives from the German ) to the fish; no explanation is agreed upon.[http://www.languagehat.com/archives/002843.php]Alternative forms
* sharke (obsolete )Noun
(en noun)broadside printed in London, the earliest known use of the term; reprinted in ''A Collection of Seventy-Nine Black-Letter Ballads and Broadsides: printed in the reigh of Queen Elizabeth, between the years 1559 and 1597'' in ' 1867 :
- The straunge fishe is in length xvij. foote and iij. foote broad, and in compas about the bodie vj. foote; and is round snowted, short headdid, hauing iij. rankes of teeth on either iawe, [...]. Also it hath v. gills of eache side of the head, shoing white. Ther is no proper name for it that I know, but that sertayne men of Captayne Haukinses doth call it a sharke .
Man 'surfs' great white shark, passage=He said he had spoken to a woman who was kayaking off Catalina Island, California, in 2008 when a shark' slammed her kayak from underneath and sent her flying into the air. She then landed on the back of the '''shark''', Collier said. "At that point the ' shark started to swim out to sea, so she jumped off its back," Collier said.}}
The Mirror and the Lamp, passage=“[…] Churchill, my dear fellow, we have such greedy sharks , and wolves in lamb's clothing. Oh, dear, there's so much to tell you, so many warnings to give you, but all that must be postponed for the moment.”}}
Synonyms
* (scaleless cartilaginous fish) (l) (obsolete)Derived terms
(shark and related fish species) * angel shark, angelshark * basking shark * bramble shark * bull shark * bullhead shark * bonnethead shark * carpetshark * catshark, cat shark * cookiecutter shark * cow shark * frilled shark * goblin shark * great white shark * Greenland shark * ground shark * gummyshark, gummy shark * hammerhead shark * hound shark, houndshark * lantern shark, lanternshark * lemon shark * leopard shark * mackerel shark * mako shark * nurse shark * requiem shark * sand shark * saw shark, sawshark * sleepershark * swellshark * thresher shark * tiger shark * weasel shark * whale shark * white sharkSee also
* dogfish * hammerhead * porbeagle * smooth-hound * thresher * white pointerEtymology 2
From the (etyl) .Noun
(en noun)Synonyms
* (player who feigns ineptitude to win money) hustlerUsage notes
* The use of the term by people unfamiliar with pool is rarely well perceived by experienced players.Derived terms
(shark) * card shark * loan shark * pool shark * shark bait * sharklike * sharkskinVerb
(en verb)- Neither sharks for a cup or a reckoning.
- (Beaumont and Fletcher)
Derived terms
* shirkEtymology 3
Perhaps from the noun, or perhaps related to shear.Verb
(en verb)- Fortinbras Sharked up a list of lawless resolutes.
