What's the difference between roost and roust?

Roost


Definition:

  • (n.) Roast.
  • (v. t.) See Roust, v. t.
  • (n.) The pole or other support on which fowls rest at night; a perch.
  • (n.) A collection of fowls roosting together.
  • (v. i.) To sit, rest, or sleep, as fowls on a pole, limb of a tree, etc.; to perch.
  • (v. i.) Fig.; To lodge; to rest; to sleep.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) These chemical body burdens were obtained naturally under free-living conditions at the maternity roost.
  • (2) By exploiting this bat's preference to roost in crevices, we could separately measure O2 uptake during ventilatory bouts and apneic periods using a flow-through metabolic chamber with a small dead space volume and short time constant.
  • (3) Nevertheless I am thankful that Elizabeth Windsor has ruled the roost rather than some of those likely to have become president in her place.
  • (4) Facebook Twitter Pinterest An example of a rare Bechstein’s bat roost in a partially hollow oak tree, Finemere Wood, Buckinghamshire, ancient wood and nature reserve next to HS2 Photograph: Patrick Barkham for the Guardian After Prideaux dropped me off in a neighbour’s muddy farmyard, I climbed a hill into Finemere Woods, an ancient woodland owned by Berkshire, Buckinghamshire and Oxfordshire Wildlife Trust .
  • (5) A survey was made by serology and virus isolation techniques on 387 wild free-flying birds that fed and roosted in the area.
  • (6) The improved performance with water-cooled over air-equilibrated roost treatments, especially during heat-stress periods, indicates that the water-cooled roosts minimized the deleterious effects of heat stress through conductive heat loss from the birds to the roost.
  • (7) The Tories had previously always been the very clear second place challengers in Brent East, particularly when Ken Livingstone ruled the local roost.
  • (8) Collections of this tick were associated with bat roosting sites in attics of houses.
  • (9) Birds roosting on the floor tended always to be the same individuals.
  • (10) Turnbull had “consistently talked down” the cost of the Coalition’s fibre to the node model “and now the chickens are coming home to roost”, Quigley wrote in the paper.
  • (11) A split-plot experiment was conducted in thermally controlled chambers using Columbian Plymouth Rock chickens to determine the effect of water-cooled roosts on performance in hot ambient conditions.
  • (12) Brains of juvenile gray bats, Myotis grisescens, found dead beneath maternity roosts in two Missouri caves contained lethal concentrations of dieldrin.
  • (13) Decreases in performance during the heat-stress period from the thermoneutral control values were: 5.95 and 13.1 percentage points for hen-day egg production, 22.2 and 34.8 percentage points for average daily feed intake, and 5.17 and 15.38 percentage points for hatchability in water-cooled and air-equilibrated roost treatments, respectively.
  • (14) Seven species of mites were recovered from 133 Brazilian free-tailed bats, Tadarida brasiliensis, and 94 big brown bats, Eptesicus fuscus, from February through November 1990 in colonies that shared roosting space in east-central Alabama.
  • (15) Plater's agent for many years was the terrifying Peggy Ramsay, whom he memorialised in his Hampstead theatre play, Peggy for You (1999), with Maureen Lipman giving one of her greatest performances, ruling the roost in her St Martin's Lane eyrie with the eccentric hauteur of a mad Russian empress.
  • (16) But four years after Greece went hypercritical, triggering a eurozone sovereign debt crisis and a reshaping of how the EU works, the social, economic and political costs of the upheaval are coming home to roost.
  • (17) Hens were housed in an apparatus consisting of an upper roosting chamber connected to two descending passages which led to separate identical feeding chambers.
  • (18) It is concluded that the water-cooled roost partially alleviated heat stress by lowering metabolic rate.
  • (19) Birds subjected to the water-cooled roost treatment had consistently higher performance than birds using the air-equilibrated roost under all three ambient temperatures.
  • (20) On top of that the SNP, which would doubtless rule the roost in the aftermath of a vote for independence it would rightly be seen to have brought about, is still no party of the centre-left.

Roust


Definition:

  • (v. t.) To rouse; to disturb; as, to roust one out.
  • (n.) A strong tide or current, especially in a narrow channel.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Three years ago Rousteing, then 25, gained the same position at Balmain.
  • (2) Saint Laurent was born in Algeria, while Rousteing is mixed race – still an anomaly in fashion where most of the gatekeepers are white men over 40.
  • (3) Alex has never ducked a political challenge in his life and there is an expectation that he will be able to roust up Westminster to the benefit of the north-east of Scotland and Scotland as a whole.
  • (4) This show is Parisian but it has a vision of a globality [sic], a diversity.” Under Rousteing’s stewardship, Balmain is expanding.
  • (5) But then the parallels between Rousteing and Saint Laurent are striking.
  • (6) Backstage, Rousteing explained that this collection was a reaction against the Charlie Hebdo killings in January.
  • (7) Rousteing is the youngest designer to take over at a Parisian fashion house since a 21-year-old Saint Laurent was appointed at creative director of Christian Dior in 1957.
  • (8) In 2006, the ninth circuit court of appeals told the police to stop rousting homeless people out of their tents overnight because, in the absence of alternative housing, it amounted to cruel and unusual punishment.
  • (9) What happened made me realise how important self-expression is.” For Rousteing, that comes with the inclusion of different races on the catwalk.