Spat vs Fracas - What's the difference?
spat | fracas |
(spit)
The spawn of shellfish, especially oysters and similar molluscs.
* 2005 , TVR Pillay & MN Kutty, Aquaculture: Principles and practices , p. 525:
(ambitransitive) To spawn. Used of shellfish as above.
A covering or decorative covering worn over a shoe.
(automotive) (UK, Australia) A piece of bodywork that covers the upper portions of the rear tyres of a car.
to quarrel or argue briefly
(transitive, and, intransitive) To strike with a spattering sound.
* 1922 , , The Trail of the White Mule , ch. 3:
* 2007 , Nolan Clay, "
(US, dialect) To slap, as with the open hand; to clap together, as the hands.
* Sylvester Judd
An obsolete unit of distance in astronomy (symbol S), equal to one billion kilometres.
A noisy disorderly quarrel, fight, brawl, disturbance or scrap.
* 1989 , , Faber 1999, paperback edition, p. 16,
* 1964 , , Vintage Books 2002, paperback edition, p. 37,
As nouns the difference between spat and fracas
is that spat is spar while fracas is failure.spat
English
Etymology 1
(etyl) spittan,Verb
(head)- There was no sink in the room so we spat out the window.
- If I had known you had a spittoon in the corner I would never have spat on the floor.
Etymology 2
Of uncertain origin; perhaps related to (spit).Noun
(-)- As spat-fall often occurs in areas away from environments suitable for oyster growing, the collection, transport and sale of oyster spat has developed into a separate industry.
Verb
(spatt)Etymology 3
Shortening of spatterdash, from spatter + dash. 1779.Noun
(en noun)Synonyms
* (automotive) fender skirt (US)See also
* gaiterEtymology 4
1804. American English, unknown origin.Verb
(spatt)- (Smart)
Etymology 5
Attested from 1823.Verb
(spatt)- He felt the wind of a second bullet that spatted against a boulder near Barney.
Co-workers testify about Kelsey's mother," Daily Oklahoman , 13 July, (retrieved 25 Aug. 2009):
- "She mentioned she had spatted Kelsey on her diaper with a hairbrush," said Mildred Johnson, a co-worker.
- Little Isabel leaped up and down, spatting her hands.
Etymology 6
(etyl)Noun
(en noun)fracas
English
Noun
(en-noun)- And I recall also some years ago, Mr Rayne, who travelled to America as valet to Sir Reginals Mauvis, remarking that a taxi driver in New York regularly addressed his fare in a manner which if repeated in London would end in some sort of fracas , if not in the fellow being frogmarched to the nearest police station.
- The Oregon-Northern California region had lost much of its population during the fracas of 1980; it had been heavily hit by Red Chinese guided missiles, and of course the clouds of fallout had blanketed it in the subsequent decade.