Wheedle vs Glib - What's the difference?
wheedle | glib |
To cajole or attempt to persuade by flattery.
* 1977 , ("The Wife of Bath's Tale"), Penguin Classics, p. 290:
To obtain by flattery, guile, or trickery.
* Congreve
Having a ready flow of words but lacking thought or understanding; superficial; shallow.
Smooth or slippery.
Artfully persuasive in nature.
* Shakespeare
To make glib.
(historical) A mass of matted hair worn down over the eyes, formerly worn in Ireland.
*1596 , (Edmund Spenser), The Faerie Queene , IV.8:
*:Whom when she saw in wretched weedes disguiz'd, / With heary glib deform'd and meiger face, / Like ghost late risen from his grave agryz'd, / She knew him not […].
* Spenser
* Southey
(obsolete) To castrate; to geld; to emasculate.
* 1623 : , Act II Scene 1
mud, mire
As verbs the difference between wheedle and glib
is that wheedle is to cajole or attempt to persuade by flattery while glib is to make glib or glib can be (obsolete) to castrate; to geld; to emasculate.As an adjective glib is
having a ready flow of words but lacking thought or understanding; superficial; shallow.As a noun glib is
(historical) a mass of matted hair worn down over the eyes, formerly worn in ireland.wheedle
English
Verb
and (intransitive)- Though he had beaten me in every bone / He still could wheedle me to love.
- I'd like one of those, too, if you can wheedle him into telling you where he got it.
- A deed of settlement of the best part of her estate, which I wheedled out of her.
Anagrams
*glib
English
Etymology 1
Probably modification of Low German glibberig'' (slippery) or a shortening of English ''glibbery (slippery).Adjective
(glibber)- a sheet of glib ice
- a glib''' tongue; a '''glib speech
- I want that glib and oily art, / To speak and purpose not.
Derived terms
* glibly * glibnessVerb
(glibb)- (Bishop Hall)
Etymology 2
From (etyl) glib.Noun
(en noun)- The Irish have, from the Scythians, mantles and long glibs , which is a thick curled bush of hair hanging down over their eyes, and monstrously disguising them.
- Their wild costume of the glib and mantle.
Etymology 3
Compare Old English and dialect (lib) to castrate, geld, Danish dialect (live), Low German and Old Dutch lubben.Verb
(glibb)- Fourteen they shall not see
- To bring false generations. They are co-heirs;
- And I had rather glib myself than they
- Should not produce fair issue.
