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I would think spatter is more appropriate when there are only a few drops of blood, or a fine mist. Splatter is when that shit is everywhere, messy murderer.
OK, I've been thinking about the spatter vs splatter issue. The blood spatter is splattered all over the place. See, the droplets of blood are the spatter, and splatter is more of a description. One single drop of blood is still blood spatter, but it isn't splattered. Except spattered is a word, so my whole theory just fell all apart, GODDAMMIT.
i think it has most to do with the amount of blood that's splashing onto whatever surface it's splashing onto; a spatter is a little, a splatter is a lot.
i think it has most to do with the amount of blood that's splashing onto whatever surface it's splashing onto; a spatter is a little, a splatter is a lot.
i think it has most to do with the amount of blood that's splashing onto whatever surface it's splashing onto; a spatter is a little, a splatter is a lot.
splat·ter (spltr)
v. splat·tered, splat·ter·ing, splat·ters
v.tr.
To spatter (something), especially to soil with splashes of liquid.
v.intr.
To spatter, especially to move or fall so as to cause splashes.
n.
A splash of liquid.
adj.
Characterized by gory violence: splatter films.