What's the difference between chowder and crowder?

Chowder


Definition:

  • (n.) A dish made of fresh fish or clams, biscuit, onions, etc., stewed together.
  • (n.) A seller of fish.
  • (v. t.) To make a chowder of.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Paramyosin samples obtained from the chowder clam, Mercenaria mercenaria, by different extraction techniques were studied using transient electric birefringence techniques.
  • (2) With acclaimed dishes of seafood chowder and honey-roast Silverhill duckling coming out of the kitchen, it's a good spot to try the crisp, slightly lemony Emerald Pale Ale.
  • (3) It’s dinnertime anyway, and Chris texts them the soup menu from a nearby restaurant: Manhattan clam chowder, barley vegetable or chicken orzo?
  • (4) As well as those daily-changing one pots, such as chilli, Thai curry, a chicken chowder and parsnip soup, all served with rice or breads, Grub also serves reputedly good deli sandwiches and salads.
  • (5) There are nine homely bedrooms, though some are a little small; the restaurant serves local mussels and scampi, and a signature seafood chowder, available as a main.
  • (6) Seafood chowder is ubiquitous in Belfast, but MSB chef Andy Rae's version (£5) is light and luxuriously creamy, a sensational seafood lucky dip mined with a little potato and generously seasoned with leek and garlic.
  • (7) Our plan had been to reach the harbour village of Carnlough, the halfway point, by lunchtime so that we could have chowder and wheaten bread at the Londonderry Arms to fortify us for the final leg back to Belfast.
  • (8) Their creative cuisine has seduced local Parisians and the place is packed out every lunchtime for dishes such as smoked haddock and cabbage chowder, pork brawn and prune pâté, and lamb chops with broad beans and crunchy puntarella (chicory).
  • (9) There are recognisable foodstuffs, but mingled in compositions that flout credibility – can there be such a thing as "cold corn chowder lemon bisque with peanuts and dill", or "kiwi mustard"?
  • (10) Sweetcorn chowder This is a cosy comforting dish for the winter – you can use ordinary potatoes, or add white fish poached in milk, or prawns or bacon.
  • (11) You eat her burgers and her scotch eggs, her sweetbreads and her chowders, and all you can think is that you will never taste their like again anywhere else.
  • (12) Taste, and if you like a sweeter chowder, add a spoonful of honey.

Crowder


Definition:

  • (n.) One who plays on a crowd; a fiddler.
  • (n.) One who crowds or pushes.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The results are discussed in terms of Serafine, Crowder, and Repp's (1984) hypothesis that one integrates the tune and text of a song in memory, rather than storing components separately.
  • (2) Joanne Crowder, then a personal assistant to Riordan, told the hearing she broke with protocol when she put the $500,000 payment through.
  • (3) The money we raise in the UK is important to our partner in Burundi, but it is the fact that we are committed to working with them that they say is the most important thing we provide them with.” You must ensure you are making this move for the right reasons, says Crowder.
  • (4) Tony Crowder, the executive director of Air and Marine Operations, told the Guardian his agency was struggling to retain and recruit enough pilots.
  • (5) Dr Kevin Trenberth Photograph: Rich Crowder Climate scientist at National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado.
  • (6) Simon Ellis, managing director of Crowders Nurseries in Horncastle, Lincolnshire, said the Horticultural Trades Association wrote to ministers in 2009 warning of a new virulent strain of the ash dieback disease and calling on it to close UK borders.
  • (7) Three experiments were designed to investigate two explanations for the integration effect in memory for songs (Serafine, Crowder, & Repp, 1984; Serafine, Davidson, Crowder, & Repp, 1986).
  • (8) However, this assumption is in conflict with recent evidence [Crowder, J. Exp.
  • (9) You really do ‘birth’ a charity and it hurts,” says Crowder.
  • (10) This is known as 'the suffix effect' (Crowder & Morton, 1969).
  • (11) I don’t want to indict an entire generation but it’s harder to sell self-sacrifice for the common good.” Even so, Crowder said, morale at Air and Marine Operations was high.
  • (12) Upon onset of microwave saturation, however, the orientation with respect to the ordered multilayers where the gy signal (g = 1.9) was maximal, changed drastically and was then similar to the orientation reported previously (Prince R. C., Crowder, M. S., and Bearden, A. J.
  • (13) To be honest, we have always winged it a bit.” Nick Crowder, founder of One Life International , which facilitates development work, suggests first operating under the legal umbrella of another charity, which in his case allowed his initiative to develop its own identity “without the pressure of high-start up costs”.
  • (14) Larry Crowder, a marine biologist at Duke University, said there were already signs that fish were being driven from their habitat.

Words possibly related to "chowder"

Words possibly related to "crowder"