The difference between Fluff and Oose
When used as nouns, fluff means anything light, soft or fuzzy, especially fur, hair, feathers, whereas oose means fluff, particularly from a textile source such as cotton or wool.
Fluff is also verb with the meaning: to make something fluffy.
check bellow for the other definitions of Fluff and Oose
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Fluff as a noun:
Anything light, soft or fuzzy, especially fur, hair, feathers.
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Fluff as a noun:
Anything inconsequential or superficial.
Examples:
"That article was basically a bunch of fluff. It didn't say anything substantive."
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Fluff as a noun:
Lapse, especially a mistake in an actor's lines.
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Fluff as a noun (New England):
Marshmallow creme.
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Fluff as a noun (LGBT):
A passive partner in a lesbian relationship.
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Fluff as a noun (Australia, euphemistic):
A fart.
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Fluff as a verb (transitive):
To make something fluffy.
Examples:
"The cat fluffed its tail."
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Fluff as a verb (intransitive):
To become fluffy, puff up.
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Fluff as a verb (intransitive):
To move lightly like fluff.
Examples:
"rfquotek Holmes"
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Fluff as a verb (transitive, intransitive, of an actor or announcer):
To make a mistake in one's lines.
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Fluff as a verb (transitive):
To do incorrectly, for example mishit, miskick, miscue etc.
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Fluff as a verb (intransitive, Australia, euphemistic):
To fart.
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Fluff as a verb (transitive, slang):
To arouse (a male pornographic actor) before filming.
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Oose as a noun (Scotland):
Fluff, particularly from a textile source such as cotton or wool.
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Oose as a noun (US):
.
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Oose as a verb:
Compare words:
Compare with synonyms and related words:
- fluff vs fuzz
- fluff vs oose
- fluff vs puff
- BS vs fluff
- cruft vs fluff
- fluff vs hype
- all talk vs fluff
- blooper vs fluff
- blunder vs fluff
- boo-boo vs fluff
- defect vs fluff
- error vs fluff
- fault vs fluff
- faux pas vs fluff
- fluff vs gaffe
- fluff vs lapse
- fluff vs mistake
- fluff vs slip
- fluff vs stumble
- fluff vs thinko
- fluff vs ruffle