What's the difference between freer and frier?

Freer


Definition:

  • (n.) One who frees, or sets free.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Professor Androsov was extremely hospitable and showed a keen interest in the freer exchange of knowledge between American and Soviet surgeons.
  • (2) The American president at the time, George HW Bush, captured the mood well in his September 1990 address to Congress when he articulated his vision of a “new world order … freer from the threat of terror, stronger in the pursuit of justice, and more secure in the quest for peace”.
  • (3) Overjet was also found to be an important predictor variable by Freer in relating Grainger's orthodontic TPI to dentofacial measurements in a group of patients with distoclusion; the ANB angle was found to be the most effective discriminator between normal and Class II American children.
  • (4) He was the most popular of the many Egyptians who took advantage of the freer political landscape to broadcast thoughts and jokes from their bedrooms to the internet.
  • (5) This clause has given developers a much freer licence to force their plans through the system regardless of constraints, on the basis that local planning policies represent needless “burdens” on their pockets.
  • (6) "We can't afford climate to be a dysfunctional regime like trade," like the inconclusive Doha round on freer world trade launched in 2001, he said.
  • (7) Why not look at which ones the US really needs, and whether old-fashioned targeted surveillance might not keep us all as safe (or safer), and freer too?
  • (8) DfID will rattle off impressive numbers including vaccinating more than 12 million children against preventable diseases; improving the land and property rights of 1.1 million people; supporting 5.3 million children (2.5 million of them girls) to go to primary school: enabling 11.9 million people to work their way out of poverty by providing access to financial services; preventing 2.7 million children and pregnant women from going hungry: reaching 6 million people with emergency food assistance; supporting freer and fairer elections in five countries and improving hygiene conditions for 7.4 million people.
  • (9) WTO membership, if Britain moved towards freer trade, would allow it to benefit from cheaper food from outside Europe – EU prices on beef and veal are currently around 30% higher than world prices – as well as cheaper cars, textiles and other goods subject to the EU’s common external tariff.
  • (10) The spokesman declined to comment on the email from Freer criticising the way the protest had been policed.
  • (11) Freer, the policy's mastermind, was a professional business consultant and is standing as the Conservative parliamentary candidate at the next general election in Finchley and Golders Green, covering Margaret Thatcher's former stronghold.
  • (12) "Going back to the Ryanair example, some things will be cheap and cheerful and in other areas we will provide complete services," said council leader, Mike Freer.
  • (13) While individuals are far freer than in the days of Mao Zedong, any form of organised dissidence is ruthlessly crushed – the budget for internal security is greater than that for the armed forces.
  • (14) An Alexander teacher will show you, through simple daily activities such as sitting, lying down, standing, walking and lifting, how to move in a freer, more integrated way.
  • (15) Despite these perceived similarities, however, respondents perceived their siblings as contributing less than themselves, gaining less satisfaction, feeling freer to alter their caregiving, and being resistant to increasing their relative contributions.
  • (16) Freer is an architect of the law – section 144 of the Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders (Laspo) Act 2012.
  • (17) With the aid of the X-ray crystal structure [Carter, C.W., Kraut, J., Freer, S. T., Xuong, N. H., Alden, R. A., & Bartsch, R. G. (1974) J. Biol.
  • (18) A few months later, the oil price soared and the board, realising its mistake, gave Rich a freer hand.
  • (19) Despite its advantages, the "sensation" objection is unquestionably valid, and more research is required into the potential extended use-effectiveness of thinner, more sensitive condoms compared with the thicker products which are freer from minor defects.
  • (20) The new relationship might be better for that country on the global aspect, because it might be freer to have different relationships with other parts of the word, and more flexibility, but you cannot imagine a situation where you leave a club, you leave Europe and you expect Europe to give you a better deal than the one you had,” he says.

Frier


Definition:

  • (n.) One who fries.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) A four and a half year old boy was hospitalised with acute respiratory failure due to the inhalation during two hours of the smoke from an overheated frier.
  • (2) However, the standard Alinsky and Friere techniques have limitations in organizing efforts directed toward nursing home reform.
  • (3) While the techniques of Saul Alinsky and to a lesser extent Paulo Friere have provided the theoretical backbone for most community organizing efforts, these campaigns frequently are characterized by a rather eclectic synthesis of different methodologies.

Words possibly related to "freer"

Words possibly related to "frier"