What's the difference between sharer and sparer?

Sharer


Definition:

  • (n.) One who shares; a participator; a partaker; also, a divider; a distributer.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) "File-sharers in the UK were found to spend more on content than those who only consumed legal content, demonstrating the potential boost to legal digital content sales as a result of content sampling."
  • (2) Last month, Peter Mandelson set out the government's plans for a scheme which would see persistent online sharers of copyrighted material sent a series of warning letters before having their broadband connections slowed down or even suspended.
  • (3) It’s like bike sharers are given a cloak of visibility when they set out on a journey.
  • (4) Still, the zero-death record is especially startling given that bike sharing programs don’t generally provide helmets, and many bike sharers don’t carry them around and, therefore, don’t wear them.
  • (5) It is already aware of the risk that ex-offenders can pose to house sharers.
  • (6) In simulations of needlesharing, seven to ten times more blood was transferred from the index user to the first sharer when 2 ml syringes were used compared with 1 ml syringes.
  • (7) Is he a piratical martyr of internet freedom, latest scapegoat in the content providers' war against the information sharers?
  • (8) He notes Thomas Jefferson’s enthusiasm for participatory democracy based on town meetings – a system that Jefferson said made every man “a sharer … a participator in the government of affairs, not merely at an election one day in the year, but every day.” By contrast, Alexander Hamilton described the populace as “the Beast” and argued at one stage for a modified version of the British monarchy to keep them in check.
  • (9) As Napster gave rise to decentralised file-sharing, this will lead to even more de-centralised methods that are harder for authorities to track, and file-sharers will become more adept at hiding their activities.
  • (10) Between 2009 and 2014, the number of flatsharers aged between 35 and 44 rose by 186%, according to Spareroom, the UK’s biggest flatshare website, while the number of sharers aged 45 to 54 went up by 300%.
  • (11) In addition, discrimination can be an ESS if discriminators retaliate against unconditionally aggressive conspecifics of the same allotype, or if the payoff to two sharers of a resource is greater than the payoff to both when sharing does not occur.
  • (12) The assumption of privacy, of home life as castle, tacitly adopted by Bree, Susan, Lynette and Gaby, and their decisions to choose when and with whom to spill secrets, is being made to look antediluvian by the rising, currently victorious, generations of compulsive sharers.
  • (13) The Australian Federal Police (AFP) commissioner, Andrew Colvin, said access to the details known as metadata had application in a wide range of investigations, including pursuing illegal downloaders and file sharers.
  • (14) In the brain, HIV infection induces directly inflammatory infiltrates including the typical multinucleated giant cells described by Sharer.
  • (15) No demographic or personality variables discriminated needle-sharers from nonsharers.
  • (16) In the lung, interstitial inflammation prevails, which may be related to direct HIV infection and include rare multinucleated giant cells like the ones described by Sharer.
  • (17) As Clay Shirky's new book Cognitive Surplus argues, the internet, computer games and mobile devices are creating a new generation of active producers and sharers of content, rather than passive consumers.
  • (18) Nevertheless the persistence of risk behaviours in a consistent proportion of participants emphasizes the urgency of additional prevention strategies, such as syringe exchange or supply to the limited number of sharers and counselling to encourage safer sex.
  • (19) But changes to LHA rules mean payment levels will be reduced and the age from which someone qualifies to be a sole tenant, rather than a house-sharer, will rise from 25 to 35.
  • (20) In caregiving matches, satisfaction is also related to the intensive interpersonal relationship developed between sharers; stress is a particular problem for the caregiver.

Sparer


Definition:

  • (n.) One who spares.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) How could we simultaneously keep our promise to repeal and replace the [Affordable Care Act] without leading to millions of newly uninsured folks, without facing a political backlash because of those newly uninsured folks, and without spending a whole lot of money?” said Sparer, outlining what he felt was the GOP position.
  • (2) If The City and the City marked a new direction, with a sparer prose and a more sombre tone, Kraken , published shortly after, "felt like the end of something".
  • (3) That means Republicans are “between a rock and a hard place”, according to Professor Michael Sparer , chair of health policy at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health.
  • (4) The results indicate that a three-months' therapy with piretanide or with a thiazide-potassium sparer diuretic combination is safe without producing any disturbances in the serum levels of trace elements.
  • (5) Long-term treatment with diuretics can lead to hypomagnesaemia and hypokalaemia, and, if in combination with a potassium-sparer, to hyperkalaemia.
  • (6) Welsh is a sparer language, which presented the odd problem.

Words possibly related to "sparer"