Terms vs Fadged - What's the difference?
terms | fadged |
(fadge)
(obsolete) To be suitable ((with) or (to) something).
* Wycherley
(obsolete) To agree, to get along ((with)).
* Milton
(obsolete) To get on well; to cope, to thrive.
*, II.17:
(Geordie) To eat together.
(Yorkshire, of a horse) To move with a gait between a jog and a trot.
(Ulster) Irish potato bread - flat farls, griddle-baked. Often served fried.
(New Zealand) A wool pack. traditionally made of jute now often synthetic.
(Geordie) Small bread loaf or bun made with left-over dough.
(Yorkshire) A gait of horses between a jog and a trot.
As a noun terms
is .As a verb fadged is
(fadge).fadged
English
Verb
(head)fadge
English
Etymology 1
Origin unknown.Verb
(fadg)- Well, Sir, how fadges the new design?
- They shall be made, spite of antipathy, to fadge together.
- I can never fadge well: for I am at such a stay, that except for health and life, there is nothing I will take the paines to fret my selfe about, or will purchase at so high a rate as to trouble my wits for it, or be constrained thereunto.