What's the difference between pelter and pewter?

Pelter


Definition:

  • (n.) One who pelts.
  • (n.) A pinchpenny; a mean, sordid person; a miser; a skinflint.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Smyth is going to give me pelters for this, Millings.
  • (2) Algeria have taken the opposite tack to South Korea's toffee pelters , the press lauding Les Verts as heroes and shuffling together a petition to persuade Vahid Halilhodzic to stay on as coach, as Rob Bleaney reports : The Algerian coach is set to leave his position after the tournament, having endured a long-running battle with some sections of the media.
  • (3) He's been getting pelters from the crowd, as you'd expect.
  • (4) I got pelters for this when I wrote it on ma blog in 2006, but I reckon football needs bigger pitches.
  • (5) For fans who have had pelters for acting up down the years, they're taking this with good grace.

Pewter


Definition:

  • (n.) A hard, tough, but easily fusible, alloy, originally consisting of tin with a little lead, but afterwards modified by the addition of copper, antimony, or bismuth.
  • (n.) Utensils or vessels made of pewter, as dishes, porringers, drinking vessels, tankards, pots.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Scores of archaeologists working in a waterlogged trench through the wettest summer and coldest winter in living memory have recovered more than 10,000 objects from Roman London , including writing tablets, amber, a well with ritual deposits of pewter, coins and cow skulls, thousands of pieces of pottery, a unique piece of padded and stitched leather – and the largest collection of lucky charms in the shape of phalluses ever found on a single site.
  • (2) The pewter trait is allelic with and phenotypically identical to platinum, and represents an independent recurrence of this mutant.
  • (3) All of them were employed in small (not more than 30 persons) pewter factories and were randomly selected from those regularly controlled by the National Health Service, Occupational Health Unit of Brescia (USSL 41).
  • (4) An interview with Messud in New York magazine – in the form of an "at home" with her and her husband James Wood, once of this parish and now book critic at the New Yorker – kicks off by telling us that her hair has turned grey, swiftly qualified to a somewhat classier-sounding pewter, which, luckily, looks well with her shirt and necklace.
  • (5) Naked bulbs sit in glass lantern boxes on the walls; tiny pewter plates are laid on light oak refectory tables.
  • (6) Other finds include an amber charm in the shape of a gladiator's helmet, which may have been a good luck charm for an actual gladiator; a horse harness ornament combining two lucky symbols, a fist and a phallus, plus clappers to make a jingling sound as the horse moved; and a set of fine-quality pewter bowls and cups, which were deliberately thrown into a deep well.
  • (7) The results of a survey performed in 50 pewter manufacturing workers, as well as in 16 workmen involved in artistic bronze melting, are also reported.
  • (8) Compared with 1980, say, when Golding's Rites of Passage pipped Burgess's Earthly Powers , this is an age of pewter.
  • (9) The woman beside me – Stars ’n’ Stripes Hat – was wearing a pewter elephant pendant.
  • (10) It is the same with Miss Amelia Martin in "The Milliner's Mishap", eyeing up her friend's wedding breakfast ("pewter-pots at the corners; pepper, mustard and vinegar in the centre; vegetables on the floor") – a world so vivid and variegated to the person writing about it that there is almost too much to set down.
  • (11) I slammed the rusting door, and set off with my binoculars through a forest washed pewter with frost.

Words possibly related to "pelter"