What's the difference between fester and mester?

Fester


Definition:

  • (n.) To generate pus; to become imflamed and suppurate; as, a sore or a wound festers.
  • (n.) To be inflamed; to grow virulent, or malignant; to grow in intensity; to rankle.
  • (v. t.) To cause to fester or rankle.
  • (n.) A small sore which becomes inflamed and discharges corrupt matter; a pustule.
  • (n.) A festering or rankling.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The lesson for the international community, fatigued or bored by competing stories of Middle Eastern carnage, is that problems that are left to fester only get worse – and always take a terrible human toll.
  • (2) Such a commission should begin work immediately, so that anger and suspicion does not fester while Libyans wait 18 months for a constitutionally elected government.
  • (3) We are in our prime, still strong, living full and interesting lives, not stuck at home festering in a candlewick dressing gown (OK, sometimes, but only when it’s cold and dark outside).
  • (4) Yet just because Mr Hague’s ideas have exploded on the launchpad, it does not mean that the issues they address can be left to fester.
  • (5) So there should be no lifting of sanctions as long as the conflict in Ukraine festers on.
  • (6) Few of these plans have yet been agreed, allowing rumours and fears to fester – and when they do emerge, the government can expect no backing, not even from their own MPs and councillors.
  • (7) These approaches enable the children to find ways to externalise the trauma, rather than letting it fester like an internal time bomb.
  • (8) Depression and anxiety fester when children are not supported.
  • (9) A sense of victimhood festers among even relatively advantaged white men, as the rancorously popular candidacy of Donald Trump confirms.
  • (10) Politically, authorities don't have much reason to; it just reopens a big, festering wound."
  • (11) Resist the urge to stroke her brows as her doubts about him begin to fester.
  • (12) It seems that "festering" is OK if there is a political motivation.
  • (13) It remains one of Europe's most volatile flashpoints, driving away trade and allowing distrust to fester in its place.
  • (14) He noted the ambivalence of the world towards US military actions, but argued that failed states such as Somalia and Afghanistan could not be left to fester.
  • (15) The sectarian enmity that festered during the war years has been reignited by the war in Syria, which pitches a Sunni majority against an Alawite minority with links to Shia Islam .
  • (16) This festering resentment came to a head on 23 January 1974, when the two men ended up wrestling on the floor of an ABC studio in New York, five days before their second fight at Madison Square Garden.
  • (17) It festered after Blair resiled from an understanding that he would step down during a second term.
  • (18) There is festering local anger about culture secretary Andy Burnham's refusal to intervene, and things look increasingly grim, though the proposals' outraged opponents have one last hope: allegations that the obligatory consultation was so half-cocked that it should be subject to judicial review.
  • (19) One politician labelled Yau a “cancer cell” while a pro-China scholar referred to her as a “festering pustule” .
  • (20) But behind all the headlines about the €85bn bailout, there was another festering sore – the banks themselves were nearly bust.

Mester


Definition:

  • (n.) See Mister, a trade.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Loretta Mester, president of the Fed’s bank in Cleveland, last week said the time to hike rates was “quickly approaching”.
  • (2) Gastric ulcer induced in rats by restraint were reduced by 40% (Mester et al.)
  • (3) Tamoxifen is a potent anti-estrogen in the chicken oviduct [Sutherland, R., Mester, J., & Baulieu, E.E.
  • (4) This observation is consistent with a previous report suggesting from specific activity determination, scanning of polyacrylamide gels, and cross-linking experiments that each purified nontransformed progesterone receptor molecule includes one progesterone binding unit per two 90-kDa protein molecules (Renoir, J. M., Buchou, T., Mester, J., Radanyi, C., and Baulieu, E. E. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 6016-6023).
  • (5) The nontransformed forms of the chick oviduct cytosol progesterone receptor of sedimentation coefficient approximately 8 S (8S-PR) are heterooligomers including one hormone binding molecule, either B, approximately 110,000, or A, approximately 79,000, and two non-hormone binding subunits recently identified as heat-shock protein Mr approximately 90,000 (hsp 90) [Renoir, J. M., Buchou, T., Mester, J., Radanyi, C., & Baulieu, E. E. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 6016-6023].
  • (6) Abortion case studies of two young women revealed that stress-inducing factors (e.g., sudden termination of a complex hormonal process, surgical aggression, frustration of maternal drive) caused by abortion can either contribute to personality growth and maturation and improved social adjustment (Mester, 1976), or to the development of overt psychopathology in sensitive subjects (Winnik, 1969).

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