What's the difference between cotter and cottier?

Cotter


Definition:

  • (n.) Alt. of Cottar
  • (n.) A piece of wood or metal, commonly wedge-shaped, used for fastening together parts of a machine or structure. It is driven into an opening through one or all of the parts. [See Illust.] In the United States a cotter is commonly called a key.
  • (n.) A toggle.
  • (v. t.) To fasten with a cotter.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Paul O’Connell’s cool head leads Ireland through Six Nations furnace | Andy Bull Read more “We were exposed to a very good team,” said Cotter.
  • (2) In contrast, the reductive reaction of sperm whale myoglobin with CBrCl3 results in addition of the CCl3.radical to the 2-vinyl moiety of the heme group (Osawa, Y., Highet, R. J., Murphy, C. M., Cotter.
  • (3) We talked about Brown v Board , the same-sex marriage and Affordable Care Act cases, what happens when you have a vacancy in the supreme court that results in a four-four split ,” said Cotter.
  • (4) I wish [the Scotland coach] Vern Cotter could come out and say I’m angry.
  • (5) Police said the bodies had been released to their grieving families by Birmingham and Solihull coroner Aidan Cotter.
  • (6) The residue is then hydrolyzed with 0.2 M HCl to liberate the "monophosphoryl" lipid A degradation products (Qureshi, N., Cotter, R. J. and Takayama, K. (1986) J. Microbiol.
  • (7) Luckily for Vern Cotter’s team it was ruled out for a knock-on at the final ruck but a subsequent Foley penalty gave Australia a six-point cushion entering the final quarter.
  • (8) The base sequence of DNA has been shown to influence the kinds and amounts of alkylation of purine bases by N-methyl-N-nitrosourea [W. T. Briscoe and L-E. Cotter, Chem.
  • (9) Cork: Cafe Paradiso Rooms Facebook Twitter Pinterest Strictly speaking, you can only book into these two smart rooms above Denis Cotter’s famed Cafe Paradiso restaurant in Cork city as part of a dinner, B&B package for two.
  • (10) An attempt was made to expand the paradigm published by Spradlin, Cotter, and Baxley (1973).
  • (11) "We don't have a big enough workforce to get things done," said Tim Cotter, an executive at Falklands Islands Development Corp. "In the short term, we could employ seasonal workers from St Helena and South America, and those who like it, and fit in, will stay.
  • (12) As Jim Cotter wrote 20 years ago: "There are four stages in the church's response to any challenge to its tradition.
  • (13) Executive headteacher, Paul Cotter, said: “It simply cannot be the right decision to block more schools from benefiting from solar power.
  • (14) As part of an ACS project to educate people, Love our Constitution, Dan Cotter, an attorney in Chicago, gave a talk to a troop of Boy Scouts there last Monday night.
  • (15) Cotter said he intended to review the decision but his Australian counterpart, Michael Cheika, reckoned it was simply another example of rugby’s slim margins.
  • (16) If Maitland had caught the ball – and he clearly tried to – he would, as his coach, Vern Cotter, pointed out, have been away and may well have scored.
  • (17) Dennis Cotter's braised turnip galette Denis Cotter's braised turnip galette of portobello mushrooms and chestnuts with a red wine sauce And finally, this lovely Irish recipe from Dennis Cotter, who runs the renowned vegetarian restaurant Cafe Paradiso in Cork.
  • (18) Just as a fan remonstrated in front of the Scottish coaching box, shouting: “You should be ashamed,” at Vern Cotter, the full-back burst over the Irish line and for all the world appeared to get the ball down.

Cottier


Definition:

  • (n.) In Great Britain and Ireland, a person who hires a small cottage, with or without a plot of land. Cottiers commonly aid in the work of the landlord's farm.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The histology of the lymph nodes was assessed according to the standardized reporting system of Cottier et al.
  • (2) The standardized reporting system of Cottier et al.
  • (3) Two hundred and fifty lymph nodes from 100 patients with lung carcinoma and the same number of regional nodes from 119 patients with gastric ulcer were histologically evaluated by the standardized reporting system of COTTIER et al.
  • (4) One hundred and thirty-four lymph nodes from forty-seven patients with renal adenocarcinoma and the same number of regional nodes from sixty-one patients with gastric ulcer were ewwuated histologically by using the standardized reporting system introduced by Cottier, Turk & Sobin (1973).
  • (5) Lymph nodes from these patients were classified morphologically according to the criteria proposed by Cottier.
  • (6) A standardized system, analogous to that previously proposed for the morphology of the lymph nodes by Cottier et al.
  • (7) One hundred regional lymph nodes from 55 patients with gastric carcinoma and the same number of regional nodes from 51 patients with ulcer of the stomach were evaluated histologically by using the standardized reporting system of Cottier et al.

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