What's the difference between felly and telly?

Felly


Definition:

  • (adv.) In a fell or cruel manner; fiercely; barbarously; savagely.
  • (n.) The exterior wooden rim, or a segment of the rim, of a wheel, supported by the spokes.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Gilbert Felli, IOC executive director for the Olympic Games , will brief all the chefs de mission of the competing nations on the issue on Thursday.
  • (2) It was also highlighted by the International Olympic Committee's director of the Olympic Games , Gilbert Felli, as he hailed a "fantastic" first half of the Games.

Telly


Definition:

Example Sentences:

  • (1) There would never be a meeting in a darkened room where a winner was chosen just to fit an audience demographic or to create more entertaining telly.
  • (2) We used to watch River Cottage on the telly and thought: “Wow, where’s that?
  • (3) The Gogglebox people are all nice(ish) and funny(ish), qualities vital to keep at bay total self-loathing that we are gathered as a family, watching on telly other people watching telly.
  • (4) Changing Rooms and Ground Force – market- leaders in the home make-over genre that was the telly sensation in the decade before incarceration game-shows – ran from 1996 to 2004 and 1997 to 2005 respectively.
  • (5) And it is quite striking, when you look into the history of telly, that predominantly women have been written by men, and represented through the prism of men’s eyes.
  • (6) Mum and Dad may not have wanted to talk about sex, but telly, film, literature, newspapers and pop music did.
  • (7) However there is little time to savour the triumph with his team, because of the extensive media duties: telly, radio, telly... then upstairs for the newspaper hacks.
  • (8) "There is a sense that if you're not on the telly then you might have died.
  • (9) For six weeks it's me saying on the telly what I've been saying on my blog for two years: "This is where I shop, this is what I do."
  • (10) Barely a radio or telly interview passes by which isn't stuffed with "issues", and only the new waffly sort, not the ones you could either mop up or be proud of.
  • (11) I'd rather discuss what was on telly, avoid the issue, discuss anything other than the relationship.
  • (12) It's nerve-racking to present and it's technically pretty complicated but it's fun, live telly.
  • (13) I used to watch the Mercury prize on the telly when I was 16, wondering when it would be my time, so this is really special.” East India Youth’s Doyle was also delighted that the band’s album had been selected.
  • (14) IDS's spinners are continuing an increasingly popular political tactic in both the US and UK of using telly references to connect with the electorate.
  • (15) Faced with this mutant telly genre masquerading as reality, soaps have become unreal just when we needed them to be otherwise.
  • (16) (Amstell, curiously enough, wasn’t a comedian when he started presenting telly.
  • (17) I don’t really remember, I suppose I watched a bit of telly, scrounged around the fridge for something to eat … that was a grim, grim day.” His next choice of music, perhaps tellingly, was one he first heard while working on reconciliation during his time at Coventry cathedral, a poignant Advent composition by John Tavener.
  • (18) I always wanted to listen to them and watch them on telly – I was a drummer so I wanted to be their drummer.
  • (19) On Sundays in the mid-70s, he and his family would gather round the telly to watch Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman, a satire on soap operas.
  • (20) I repeat: 1.5m viewers for a half-hour comedy before it's on "normal" telly.