What's the difference between toiler and toller?

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.

Toller


Definition:

  • (n.) A toll gatherer.
  • (n.) One who tolls a bell.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Several mucolytic agents were evaluated on sputum for testing their viscolytic activity and the bacterial tollerance to each of them.
  • (2) When asked about this in 1926 by the German leftist Ernst Toller, Gastev replied: "We hope by our discoveries to arrive at a stage when a worker who formerly worked eight hours on a particular job will only have to work two or three".
  • (3) Arrhythmia detection by ambulatory electrocardiography was used to assess drug efficacy; side-effects establish the maximum tollerated dose for each individual patient.
  • (4) Proteolytic enzymes (trypsin, pepsin, papain, pancreatin), KJ, and dithiothreitol (or its derivatives) were better tollerated by common respiratory pathogens (H. influenzae, D. pneumoniae, Klebsiella, etc.)
  • (5) Of other "risk factors" (BP, glucose tollerance, smoking, ESR) entered into the regression together with only age and the LPs, only ESR contributed with borderline significance to ST depressions.
  • (6) The data are discussed on the basis of a differential tollerance-inducing action of mammary tumour viruses (MTVs) which infect C3H, A.CA and RIII, and have an important role in tumour induction.
  • (7) Preliminary results are reported here with respect to the tollerance of the dialytic run and correction of the acid-base balance equilibrium.
  • (8) In our opinion, on the basis of the results obtained acebutolol shows a good efficacy in the treatment of hypertension and a very high tollerability.
  • (9) Reporters looked on bemused when he began quoting a passage from the East German socialist poet Ernst Toller about “it not being seemly to mourn”, but otherwise it was an admirably frank press conference, free at last of the platitudes and cliches that have too often been the norm in Labour’s campaign.
  • (10) The clinical tollerance is excellent despite high dehydration rates even in patients particularly sensitive to ultrafiltration.

Words possibly related to "toiler"

Words possibly related to "toller"