different between croaky vs hoarse
croaky
English
Etymology
croak +? -y
Adjective
croaky (comparative croakier, superlative croakiest)
- (of a sound) Like that of a frog.
- a croaky voice
croaky From the web:
- croaky meaning
- what causes croaky voice
- what does croak mean
- what causes croaky throat
- what is croaky voice
- what does croaky voice mean
- what does croaked mean
- what does croaky mean
hoarse
English
Etymology
From Middle English hors, hos, from Old English h?s, *h?rs, from Proto-Germanic *haisaz, *haisraz, akin to Old Norse háss (West Norse) and heiss (East Norse) (whence Icelandic hás, Norwegian Nynorsk hås, Norwegian Bokmål hes and Swedish hes).
Pronunciation
- (General American) enPR: h?rs, IPA(key): /ho?s/
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /h??s/
- (non-rhotic, without the horse–hoarse merger) IPA(key): /ho?s/
- Homophone: horse (in accents with the horse-hoarse merger)
- Rhymes: -??(?)s
Adjective
hoarse (comparative hoarser, superlative hoarsest)
- Having a dry, harsh tone to the voice, as a result of a sore throat, age, emotion, etc.
- I am old and my voice is hoarse […]
Derived terms
- hoarsely
- hoarsen
- hoarseness
Translations
Anagrams
- ahorse, ashore, hearos, shoare
hoarse From the web:
- what hoarse means
- what hoarse voice means
- what's hoarse voice
- what hoarseness means in tagalog
- what's hoarseness mean in spanish
- what hoarse in tagalog
- what hoarse syllables
- what hoarseness mean in arabic
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- croaky vs hoarse
- frog vs croaky
- terms vs craunching
- graunching vs craunching
- traunching vs craunching
- scranching vs scrunching
- brunching vs branching
- bunching vs brunching
- crutching vs clutching
- crocodile vs crocks
- rocks vs crocks
- crucks vs crocks
- cracks vs crocks
- crocks vs brocks
- crocks vs chocks
- crocks vs drocks
- crooks vs crocks
- fat vs bunchy
- bunchy vs buncha
- bunchy vs munchy