Trouvez des professeurs en Anglais
Nanako
"crinkle" vs "wrinkle"
Hi everyone,
Could someone please tell me the difference between "crinkle" and "wrinkle"?
My understanding is that "wrinkle" is more specific, that it can only be used to describe creases in skin that belongs to an aging person, whereas "crinkle" is more general, and can be applied to humans as well as inanimate objects such as paper.
Am I understanding this correctly?
Any help would be really appreciated.
Thanks,
Nanako
10 oct. 2018 23:33
Réponses · 6
2
The dictionary app the came with my computer says that a "crinkle" is a small crease or wrinkle. It is not common to use "crinkle." "Wrinkle" is used much more frequently.
11 octobre 2018
2
No, to me, wrinkle is more general, and common.
I hardly ever use 'crinkle', except in the context of 'crinkle cut chips' and 'crinkle shears'.
If anything, a 'crinkle' is an engineered wrinkle, and a wrinkle is an undesired crinkle.
10 octobre 2018
2
To me I do not see a big difference. Crinkle is perhaps a little more like crease for example crinkled paper/creased paper and wrinkled reserved more for, as you say, skin and age marks but if someone said the "crinkles around her eyes" I wouldn't think anything of it.
10 octobre 2018
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Nanako
Compétences linguistiques
Anglais, Japonais
Langue étudiée
Anglais
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