What's the difference between tiler and toiler?

Tiler


Definition:

  • (n.) A man whose occupation is to cover buildings with tiles.
  • (n.) A doorkeeper or attendant at a lodge of Freemasons.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) asks Richard Glover A In 1990 England's U-21 squad won the eight-nation tournament in Toulon for the first time with the following squad: Crossley, Muggleton, Lee, Sharpe, Le Saux, Barrett, Tiler, Sherwood, James, Ebbrell (capt.
  • (2) The roof tiler was then taken to Bowral police station where he later slumped to the ground and died.
  • (3) A former carpenter (Chapman) and roof tiler (Bustin) from Norwich, who became personal trainers and, in October 2011, decided to share their expertise on YouTube, pulling in a muscular 41,000 subscribers in the process.
  • (4) Instead he works as a tiler whenever he gets the chance.
  • (5) He also found there was little awareness about roofs being a "typically dangerous electrical place" among other professionals such as builders, tilers, painters and pest controllers and also among homeowners.
  • (6) Ed Miliband seems a bit of a schoolboy.” Steve, a 53-year-old tiler, is also considering voting Tory because they have “more of a backbone” than other parties.
  • (7) The accident, in which five people died, including his friend and employer, the Bournemouth managing director Brian Tiler, left him with no sense of smell and a pronounced facial tic.
  • (8) So what exactly makes a top tiler, premier plasterer or world-class window dresser?

Toiler


Definition:

  • (n.) One who toils, or labors painfully.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) September 12, 2013 Both the Conservatives and Labour are targetting the nation's toilers and strivers.
  • (2) He would face a predictable volley of criticism from Conservative-leaning papers who didn't like the idea of a former Blair toiler – or "labour crony" in Mail speak – at No 10 ruling the corporation they love to hate.
  • (3) This seemed to be a bid to reclaim the curtain vote from the chancellor, who routinely claims that low-paid dawn toilers resent neighbours whose curtails remain closed until the pub opens for them to spend their dole on champagne and oysters.
  • (4) Yet Ed's most exotic passage came when he praised Britain's "forgotten wealth-creators" This was not a reference to Brunel or Michael Faraday – giants of Lord Derby's prime – but to low-paid toilers who go out to work early "before George Osborne's curtains are open and come back late at night when he has closed them again".
  • (5) Samantha Cameron is not a humble backroom toiler at Smythson: she has acted as a public face for the firm, which we now discover is ultimately controlled by a trust based in the notorious tax haven of Guernsey.
  • (6) • A diary date meanwhile: 11 October, when former toilers on the Aberdeen Press and Journal and Aberdeen Evening Express meet to remember the 1989 strike for pay and conditions.

Words possibly related to "toiler"