What's the difference between striven and striver?
Striven
Definition:
() p. p. of Strive.
(p. p.) of Strive
Example Sentences:
(1) In acute indications for discontinuing the treatment with antithrombotics depending on the clinical urgency a gradually different discontinuation by stages should be striven for, in order to avoid thromboembolic relapses.
(2) By exact references to the mathematical derivation and to the construction a practical use is striven for.
(3) Until last night Angela Merkel and François Hollande had striven almost heroically to present a united front, visiting each other’s capitals for preparatory talks before almost every potentially contentious EU discussion on Greece.
(4) Although there are many issues with the historical accuracy of the plot, as well as the portrayal of Canadians and the Iranian people , I understand these issues, as I have made a career of producing historical films and biographies where I have striven to be as accurate as possible.
(5) We have striven for the past 12 months not to be in this situation and it is a relief amongst the vast majority of petrol tanker drivers that common sense seems to have prevailed.
(6) This will particularly damage specialities such as anaesthetics, a department that has striven to make itself family friendly.
(7) Secured by a rare goal from Gabriel Obertan this long striven for victory was not always entirely convincing but at least offers Alan Pardew a little respite as he endeavours to keep his seat in the home manager’s dugout.
(8) Another spokesman, Arthur Huang, wrote in an email: "Foxconn has provided workers with a far better environment and benefits [than] the manufacturing industry as a whole, yet has long striven to be a leader in corporate social responsibility and continuously pushes for [improvement]."
(9) It is demonstrated how quantity and distribution of the dialyses, clearance and duration of the dialysis are to be chosen in order to obtain in a patient a course of the urea concentration striven for.
(10) Recent investigations of the developments which began in 1938 show that by way of intensive efforts for a juridicial legalization of the "active euthanasia" an enlargement of this killing practice has been striven after.
(11) Despite a higher risk of a renewed extrauterine pregnancy especially in younger women without any pregnancy before and in women wishing a child with only one tube or with a pathologically changed contralateral tube, respectively, the tube-saving operation should be striven for.
(12) The mutual relationships between coronary and peripheral arterial occlusive diseases are of particular significance for the rehabilitation measures striven for.
(13) Further investigations on large populations of patients must, however, still confirm whether or not the advantages of the fix combination striven for or theoretically to be expected can be proved in practice.
(14) In these cases in the adipose asymptomatic diabetes should primarily always be striven for a normalisation of the body-weight, whereas for test persons with normal weight the indication for the buformin-therapy is given.
(15) The iodisation of the entire common salt with modified iodine concentration is striven for.
(16) It is urged that early recognition of non-A, non-B hepatitis should be striven for, because interferon therapy may lead to an improved prognosis of the disease, particularly in cases of possible transitional phase from acute to chronic disease.
(17) After a time of overstated diet prescriptions nowadays the individual nutrition of the patient with ulcer with a diet of high quality is striven for.
(18) Tsai said Liu had striven to transform China into a nation where human rights and the rule of law were respected.
(19) In recent decades the governments of the nations that surround the Bay of Bengal have striven to expand and encourage their fisheries.
(20) Transfusion must principally be striven for, taking into consideration the HLA-typing, but at present it is only limitedly possible.
Striver
Definition:
(n.) One who strives.
Example Sentences:
(1) September 12, 2013 Both the Conservatives and Labour are targetting the nation's toilers and strivers.
(2) Only those with very long memories could recall the former Labour health minister’s call in 2013 for the coalition government to drop “the strivers versus shirkers rhetoric” .
(3) Osborne faced close questioning from both wings of the party about the measures that some MPs fear will be seen to be hitting the “working strivers” that the Tories promised to help at the election.
(4) They say: "While the chancellor paints a picture of so-called 'strivers' and 'skivers', our organisations see the reality on the ground: families scraping by in low-paid work, or being bounced from insecure jobs to benefits and back again."
(5) I don’t believe the electorate will support making millions of strivers worse off.
(6) We urge all party leaders to tackle the deficit fairly, to repair the recent damage to the social security system and to cease misleading, and divisive, rhetoric such as “strivers” and “shirkers”.
(7) We have successfully divided up the bottom half of the population into scroungers and strivers.
(8) The truth is that, for all their rhetoric about making work pay or supporting strivers, it is working families and those in real need who are footing the bill for the government's catastrophic economic failure.
(9) The work and pensions secretary had claimed that his department's cap on benefits was turning scroungers into strivers – even before it had come into force.
(10) But such is the toxicity of the shirkers-versus-strivers message, delivered by all the leading political parties, that facts are no longer believed.
(11) But Morrison argued strivers – workers “going to work every day, backing themselves everyday” – as well as business owners, were worthy recipients of compensation as well.
(12) Osborne gloried in his depiction of his actions in support of the nation's "strivers" and attack on the shirkers.
(13) He loathed the way the chancellor framed arguments about benefits as “strivers versus shirkers”.
(14) To justify the cuts, the Tories are likely to employ a narrative of skivers v strivers, suggesting a clear division between a large, permanently welfare-dependent group and the rest of the population who pay taxes to support it.
(15) Millions of working families – “hard-working strivers”, as the Tories sometimes label them – are going to be significantly worse off, even with other measures taken into account.
(16) But the Tories have chosen to hit millions of working families on modest incomes again, while keeping their huge tax cut for millionaires.” Labour has regularly pointed out that cuts or freezes to working-age benefits penalise women and amount to a strivers’ tax on low-paid workers.
(17) Or in the parlance of the moment, "the strivers" v "the skivers".
(18) In George Osborne's dichotomy of strivers versus skivers, they fall on the government-approved side.
(19) But somehow or other we have got to reform the tax credit system.” Now austerity is hitting strivers, how will the Tories sell it?
(20) Since class 4 applies to those with annual profits of more than £8,060 a year, was this not an assault on the very strivers May had promised to champion?