What's the difference between fauld and faule?

Fauld


Definition:

  • (n.) The arch over the dam of a blast furnace; the tymp arch.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Faulds praised Alex Salmond, the Scottish National party first minister.
  • (2) Narrated by Faulds, the programme went under the name of The Long, Long Trail.
  • (3) For both Faulds and his young leader this was probably a lucky escape: though on the right of the Labour party on many ideological issues, Faulds was his own man and did not take kindly to pagers, spin doctors or other means of modern thought control.
  • (4) First elected for Smethwick, scene of a famous conflict with racism, in 1966, Faulds was fiercely anti-racist, among whom he sometimes numbered Zionists.
  • (5) Not quite in the Robeson league, the Faulds voice was wonderful then, and remained so to the end.
  • (6) Its chairman, Jim Faulds, who accused the government of "sacrificing" the society, confirmed that the mutuals Nationwide and Britannia, along with two banks, rumoured to be HSBC and Barclays, had been in talks with the Financial Services Authority about a buyout.
  • (7) Yet Faulds, who switched to safer Warley in 1974, was not a man with whom to enter the political jungle.
  • (8) Andrew Matthew William Faulds, politician and actor, born March 1 1923; died May 31 2000
  • (9) Ultrafresh (Faulding) was used as mouth care agent for half the subjects and normal saline was used for the other half.
  • (10) How the fingerprints slowly became standardized involves many persons, including Nathaniel Grew, Johannes Purkinje, William Herschel, Henry Faulds, Charles Darwin, Francis Galton, Mark Twain, Juan Vucetich, Edward Henry, and J. Edgar Hoover.
  • (11) When Andrew Faulds called a Tory opponent "an honourable shit" (1988) or declared that Norman St John Stevas "lacked the capacity to put a bun in anyone's oven" (when the House was discussing abortion) there was not much doubt as to whom said exactly what.
  • (12) Faulds said that if the £26m writedown in its commercial property investments was put to one side, the society was due to make a modest profit this year and it was still a healthy, viable business.
  • (13) Darling, under intense criticism about this decision from Faulds, the Scottish government and opposition MPs, insisted that the FSA and the Treasury had been working intensively to keep the building society in business.
  • (14) The implication that the Dunfermline was in effect insolvent was rejected by Faulds, who claimed the Treasury repeatedly ignored his requests for direct talks on the society's future.
  • (15) Andrew Faulds, the unmistakably loud and thespian Labour backbencher, who has died aged 77, was a House of Commons character who never managed to live up to the role he envisaged for himself.
  • (16) Tall, handsome and imposing, Faulds was a man of deeply-held passions, vocally pro-Arab and pro-European throughout his career.
  • (17) Married to Bunty Whitfield in 1945 (they had one daughter), Faulds was famous around Westminster as a ladies man, happy to flaunt a young conquest in front of MPs whose private lives were quieter.
  • (18) Andrew Faulds was born in what was then Tanganyika, now Tanzania, the son of Matthew Faulds, a Presbyterian missionary.
  • (19) The SNP leader "has been absolutely magnificent without looking for any political gain", Faulds told the BBC.
  • (20) Uncritical in his affections, fond of good company and foreign trips, Faulds was also capable of being offensive to Margaret Thatcher as few Labour men felt able to be, not least Neil Kinnock.

Faule


Definition:

  • (n.) A fall or falling band.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) In the 1970s, the Catholic priest and human rights campaigner Denis Faul dubbed the area where the attack took place as the "Murder Triangle".
  • (2) The priest Father Denis Faul was in no doubt that the Provisional IRA were to blame, saying: "It's a very serious religious, cultural and anti-Irish action to deny these people a burial.
  • (3) Cortisol (10(-7)-10(-4)M) significantly enhanced colony growth in the prednisone-responsive patient but fauled to enhance colony growth in the remaining five patients.

Words possibly related to "fauld"

Words possibly related to "faule"