different between fraked vs frayed
fraked
English
Etymology
From Middle English fraked, from Old English fracod, fracoþ (“vile, bad, base, wicked, criminal, impious, filthy, abominable, useless, worthless”), from Proto-Germanic *frakunþaz, equivalent to for- +? couth. See also Middle English forcouth, English frakel.
Adjective
fraked (comparative more fraked, superlative most fraked)
- (obsolete) Bad; vile; shameful.
Anagrams
- farked
fraked From the web:
- what does franked mean
frayed
English
Etymology
From English fray, from Old French froiier (“to rub against, scrape; thrust against”), from Latin fricare (“to rub, rub down”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /f?e?d/
- Homophone: 'fraid
- Rhymes: -e?d
Adjective
frayed (comparative more frayed, superlative most frayed)
- Unravelled, worn at the end or edge.
Translations
Verb
frayed
- simple past tense and past participle of fray
Anagrams
- defray, fedary
frayed From the web:
- what frayed means
- what's frayed nerves
- what frayed wire
- what frayed in spanish
- what faded means in spanish
- frayed what channel
- what does frayed mean
- what is frayed abomination stitching used for
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- fraked vs frayed
- raked vs fraked
- fraked vs franked
- farked vs fraked
- fraked vs faked
- fraked vs frakel
- frakked vs fraked
- framed vs fraked
- breakie vs breakle
- brekkie vs breakie
- breakfast vs breakie
- adaptively vs adaptitude
- adaptiveness vs adaptitude
- break vs breake
- fish vs fishwich
- filling vs fishwich
- burger vs fishwich
- homegirl vs homeslice
- gang vs homegirl
- friend vs homegirl