What's the difference between fitter and titter?

Fitter


Definition:

  • (n.) One who fits or makes to fit;
  • (n.) One who tries on, and adjusts, articles of dress.
  • (n.) One who fits or adjusts the different parts of machinery to each other.
  • (n.) A coal broker who conducts the sales between the owner of a coal pit and the shipper.
  • (n.) A little piece; a flitter; a flinder.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The results indicate, that the transgenic yeast strain behaves like wild-type strains and the plasmid-free laboratory strain and has no properties which would make it fitter under environmental conditions, which are inappropriate for baker yeast.
  • (2) The proportion of patients was high among the adjusting fitters aged 30-39 years (40.4%) and founders (36.3%).
  • (3) Hall, the son of a fitter in an engineering plant, left school at 14 and ambitiously tried his hand at journalism.
  • (4) Jonas Bröcke, a 20-year-old heating fitter, thinks Germany can afford the bailouts but has a problem with countries that have not dealt properly with their economies.
  • (5) We need to get the new signings fitter and get others back, so this is an opportunity to get organised.
  • (6) Though 56, her work in the fields means she is fitter than most women half her age.
  • (7) The ease of insertion without a plunger and gloves (inserter tube diameter 3 mm) and the ease of removal (force of traction approximately 1 N) mean safety also for the medical and paramedical fitter of the CU SAFE 300 IUD.
  • (8) Younger, fitter people can help our hardworking NHS doctors and nurses by only attending if it’s absolutely necessary.” The number of attendances of children at A&E with psychiatric conditions is up 8% to 18,673 in 2014-15, compared with 17,278 last year.
  • (9) I feel lighter, fitter, more open, less chained to my phone.
  • (10) Pierre Fitter in Delhi When the news broke that Yvo de Boer was standing down from his post at the head of the UN's Framework Convention on Climate Change, India was the first country to offer up a candidate for the role.
  • (11) From early on, it is obvious that Sedbergh has the edge – they are bigger, fitter and more skilled to a boy – but sensible refereeing makes it a more even contest.
  • (12) These baselines were found to be poorly replicated the fitters.
  • (13) Hence, males aged 20-29 years working at the foundry and automatic-assembly plants and adjusting fitters and founders aged 30-39 years can be considered as a peculiar risk group of tuberculosis.
  • (14) "I will never be able to be back to being the sprinter that I used to be," says the former schoolboy athlete ruefully, "but I want to be fitter.
  • (15) Fitters' negative attitudes toward reconstruction mammaplasty are also presented.
  • (16) I think they’ve lost touch,” said Michael, 47, a window fitter from Kirkburton.
  • (17) Inevitably, companies will seek to make themselves leaner and fitter in the coming years.
  • (18) We will be better for it and more prepared for this final.” Lallana has looked sharper and fitter in Klopp’s team than during his difficult debut season under Brendan Rodgers but says that is merely a reflection of the manager’s gameplan: “I have been as fit as this before.
  • (19) On the other hand, the fitter subjects related their subjective health to the more conventional activity indicators; frequency of working, sexual activity and exercise.
  • (20) It is important, he said, that the patient should make the decision that is right for him or her, weighing up the benefits of the drugs against the side-effects and also considering the other option – to get fitter and healthier.

Titter


Definition:

  • (v. t.) To laugh with the tongue striking against the root of the upper teeth; to laugh with restraint, or without much noise; to giggle.
  • (n.) A restrained laugh.
  • (v. i.) To seesaw. See Teeter.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) But in and among the general approval, there was the odd titter that such a well-established prize should find itself being backed by a purveyor of sticky drinks.
  • (2) But there’s also generic observational material (how British people avoid speaking to strangers on trains, and so on), and I soon found Hess’s incessant burbling and tittering around largely trivial subjects beginning to wash over me.
  • (3) The audience tittered when Murdoch said he thought the channel's news coverage had no political bias.
  • (4) Well Dave genuinely thought the reptiles would go mad for tantric sex lolz because when he tested it in cabinet people were seriously woof, Govey was so hysterical that Haguey was like, hark at Lady Govina, titter ye not missus & Picklesy kept shouting encore, so Dave said funny you should ask, well they have this position called the BT engineer as in you stay in all day and no one comes.
  • (5) There was a bit of tittering from the audience and it has to be said that in this city of nostalgia and football passion, where Diego Maradona will always be king and everybody is an expert, Benítez retains popular support.
  • (6) The muses holding up the balcony tittered and the huge chandelier, only just out of reach of Dodd's enormous tickling stick, tinkled with delight.
  • (7) Labour's shadow education secretary, and historian, Tristram Hunt retorts that it is Gove's argument, rather than unpatriotic Britons tittering over fictional tortoises, that is really shocking.
  • (8) And there was a certain amount of twitter tittering about two of the world's most eminent economists getting their sums wrong.
  • (9) It’s easier to say we are not guilty, the Russians are guilty … It reminds me of antisemitism: the Jews are guilty of everything,” Putin said at the end of his comments, which drew titters from the audience.
  • (10) Nadine Dorries "the suspended member for Mid Bedfordshire" – titter ye not – has not yet achieved her stated aim of encouraging a discussion about abortion or the nasty Lib Dems while emptying the dunny.
  • (11) There are a few titters from the crowd; the venue comfortably holds about 100, but because of the excitable reviews for Musgraves's new album, Same Trailer Different Park , the room is crammed with perhaps double that.
  • (12) With a competitive league match under their belts, most English teams will have a better of idea where they stand with regard to the season ahead, with Arsenal the subject of much tittering in the wake of their home defeat at the hands of West Ham after All That Talk.
  • (13) Pretentious in the best sense of the word, Bush in the early 80s became one of those artists, such as the Associates or Japan, who caused Radio 1 daytime DJs to titter nervously, or be openly derisive.
  • (14) At this point in our conversation Portman, 26 now but still with the proportions and doll-like features of a child, titters - there's no other word for it - nervously.
  • (15) Significant differences in end point titter were observed both within and between species.
  • (16) So forget Shagga, titter ye not and consider the (serious face) … Geopolitical context Remember that episode of Borgen where they spent an hour that you'll never get back on the power plays over the election of Denmark's next EU commissioner?
  • (17) Let the camp tittering cease while its spiritual significance is finally acknowledged.
  • (18) A real human voice – the conductor, presumably – raises a significant titter in the carriage when reminding us of this, adding “assuming they arrive on time”.
  • (19) "A mountain has been made out of a molehill," said Dave Bassett, oblivious to the tittering around him.
  • (20) Titter in the audience as he speaks of the controversy the award has generated.