What's the difference between gilder and guilder?

Gilder


Definition:

  • (n.) One who gilds; one whose occupation is to overlay with gold.
  • (n.) A Dutch coin. See Guilder.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Janet Gilder, registered manager at care home Mary Feilding Guild, started as a nurse before working her way up the ranks in older people’s care.
  • (2) Gilder recommends starting in frontline work before becoming a manager: “If you’re progressing somebody through the ranks then they remain familiar to the resident.” By retaining staff and helping them move up in the organisation, the consistency of care is upheld.
  • (3) The impact this will have on homelessness is truly worrying.” Ian Gilders, director of business intelligence at Sovereign, said the cap meant social landlords would no longer be able to accept all nominations made from council waiting lists: “Housing associations will say to councils, ‘We would like to help, but with this family, under this benefit system, we can’t help.’” The leaked DWP memo warns that it is vital ministers increase the amount of temporary cash help to capped tenants to prevent immediate eviction.

Guilder


Definition:

  • (n.) A Dutch silver coin worth about forty cents; -- called also florin and gulden.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) In addition the costs per gained woman-year are about 5,000 guilders (1 US $ = 3.60 guilders).
  • (2) The average cow showing clinical symptoms of paratuberculosis, which was disposed of, caused a total loss of 2,250 guilders, whereas the average cow with a non-clinical form of Johne's disease was estimated to cause a loss of 1,800 guilders.
  • (3) Over 250,000 jobs, roughly 9,600 million guilders' worth of exports in 1977 and roughly 11,000 million guilders' worth of annual sales to home consumers.
  • (4) For simvastatin, cost-effectiveness ratios range from 50,000 to 110,000 guilders per year of life saved among this group of men.
  • (5) The losses at slaughter from inflammation of the tail in the Netherlands are estimated at 3-4 million guilders per annum.
  • (6) The economic loss resulting from the skinning and trimming of pig carcases is estimated at from 2.5 to 3 million Netherlands guilders per annum.
  • (7) Riding a white bike was no longer free of charge; it cost one guilder per trip and payment was made with a chip card developed by Postbank, a Dutch bank.
  • (8) However, if the greying of the patient population is taken into account (the elderly on average stay long in hospital), together with the devaluation of the guilder, a clear rise of the mean costs per hospitalization is no longer demonstrable.
  • (9) It is calculated that the public costs of 'care' will increase with 1.4 billion guilders in the next four years due to the aging of the population.
  • (10) The financial profit of a completely cured instead of an ultimately fatal cancer can be roughly estimated at 55,000 guilders.
  • (11) We classified estimated direct costs of illness (39.8 thousand million guilders) by type of care, sex, age and 48 diagnostic categories for 1988.
  • (12) A new study of Keynes’s attempts to make money out of movements in the pound against five major currencies of his day – the dollar, French franc, German mark, Italian lire and Dutch guilder – comes to a stark conclusion.

Words possibly related to "gilder"

Words possibly related to "guilder"