What's the difference between wielder and yielder?
Wielder
Definition:
(n.) One who wields or employs; a manager; a controller.
Example Sentences:
(1) One of the Democratic Senators who is in jeopardy of losing his seat on Tuesday is Colorado’s Mark Udall, who – along with Oregon’s Ron Wyden – has been one of the only voices of accountability on this committee of rubber-stamp wielders.
(2) I don't know if Mars One will make the 2023 deadline but we just need to get started and that is what Bas Lansdorp and Arno Wielders are doing with Mars One.
(3) Police shot dead the Palestinian knife-wielder and the military arrested five members of Hamas for the shooting.
(4) During my childhood, my mother baked a cake every Saturday: I remember Victoria sponges, cherry madeiras, chocolate sandwich cakes, coffee and walnut cakes with buttercream icing, dundee cake, and being allowed to “clean out” the last remnants of the mix (never enough, for my mother was a thrifty wielder of her spatula).
(5) This is Thor.” This strong statement is how it was announced that the next wielder of Mjölnir will be female .
(6) In the interim, the scissor-wielders went after films likely to deprave the morals of the nation’s youth.
(7) If that gamble pays off, then it may help Clegg's ambition to build a reputation for the Lib Dems as credible and competent wielders of power.
(8) Jarvis Cocker has previously criticised phone-wielders in the audience for driving him "insane at concerts", adding: "It seems stupid to have something happening in front of you and look at it on a screen that's smaller than the size of a cigarette packet.
(9) The issue here is not threatening with a knife, still less wounding with one, where a first, never mind a second, offence would often land the wielder behind bars.
(10) Ahead of its new issue, which will feature a series of shots from the film’s Pinewood set by thephotographer Annie Leibovitz, the magazine has confirmed that Driver will play Kylo Ren – likely a villain, and the wielder of the triple-pronged lightsaber seen in early trailers.
(11) In his campaign, flying the equivalent air miles of five times round the globe to meet Fifa’s vote-wielders in person, Infantino has shown himself to be not just a technocrat, but shrewdly aware of football’s political heart: self-interest.
Yielder
Definition:
(n.) One who yields.
Example Sentences:
(1) Although all of the mKS-U lines contained the SV40-specific tumor antigen, some were poor virus yielders (SV40 was recovered in less than 50% of the trials) and five lines were rare virus yielders (SV40 recovered only once in four or more trials).
(2) Further studies of the viral properties of non-yielder HeLa cell populations were made with a clone obtained from one of these sublines by plating under antibody.
(3) The frequency of induction was about 7 x 10(-2) for TSV-5 cells, about 3 x 10(-3) for mKS-BU100 cells, greater than 10(-4) for the mKS-U lines which were "good" yielders, and about 10(-5) to 10(-4) for the mKS-U lines which were "average" yielders.
(4) Cold-sensitive restriction of Pseudomonas phage CB3 by Pseudomonas aeruginosa strain PAT2 involves some aspect of CB3 specific RNA synthesis at 20 C. Experiments using chloramphenicol treatment and RNA-DNA hybridization establish that the amount of CB3 RNA present at 20 C is consistent with the known percentage of phage yielder cells at 20 C. Thus, it appears that nonyielder cells of PAT2 synthesize little or no phage-specific mRNA.
(5) Mycobacillin non-producers, whether sporogenous or asporogenous, possess less exoprotease, but effective exoprotease producers are not always good mycobacillin yielders.
(6) The reaction 2 ADP in equilibrium with AMP + ATP was employed and the ATP formed assayed with firefly luciferase as light yielder.
(7) In the infection of Escherichia coli B(P1) with restricted T1, it was shown that yielder cells consist of both special and nonspecial cells.
(8) To learn whether some of the rescued SV40 strains were mutants, monkey kidney (CV-1) cells were infected with the rescued virus strains at 37 C and at 41 C. The SV40 strains studied included strains rescued from transformed cell lines classified as "good," "average," "poor," and "rare" yielders on the basis of total virus yield, frequency of induction, and incidence of successful rescue trials.
(9) The mKS-U lines which were poor virus yielders, rare yielders, or which never yielded virus have been classified tentatively as "defective lysogens" which contain mutational lesions at loci essential for detachment of SV40 from integration sites or for SV40 replication, or for both.
(10) The hybrid particle in the Ad.2(++) low-efficiency yielder population was not separable from the nonhybrid Ad.2 virions.
(11) Although most of the cells produced only lambda or T1, approximately 10% of the infectious centers were dual yielders.
(12) Half of each group was high yielders and the other half was low with a mean daily milk yield of 32.2 and 18.6 kg for Holstein-M, 14.6 and 6.7 kg for Holstein-E, and 7.2 and 1.8 kg for Buffaloes-E, respectively.
(13) In most instances, yielder-cell formation was most easily explained by assuming that the first step was a chance escape of the restricted phage DNA from the degrading enzyme of the restricting cell.
(14) All of the virus strains rescued from the "rare" yielder lines were similar to parental SV40.
(15) Milk yield data in the first trial indicated that the cystic cows were not significantly higher yielders than their herd-mates.
(16) Special or predetermined yielders occurred only among the earliest yielders.
(17) Virus strains rescued from all classes of transformed cells were capable of inducing the transplantation antigen, and they induced the intranuclear SV40-T-antigen, thymidine kinase, deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) polymerase, and cellular DNA synthesis at 37 C and at 41 C. With the exception of four small plaque strains rescued from "poor" yielders, the rescued SV40 strains replicated their DNA and formed infectious virus with kinetics similar to parental SV40 at either 37 or 41 C. The four exceptional strains did replicate at 37 C, but replication was very poor at 41 C. Thus, only a few of the rescued virus strains exhibited defective SV40 functions in CV-1 cells.
(18) In all animal groups, the high yielders generally had lower plasma thyroxine and antidiuretic hormone but higher plasma triiodothyronine contents than the low yielders.
(19) High yielders which succumbed to E coli mastitis in three herds were producing less milk than mastitis-free controls in the fourth herd which suggests that the correlation is not with yield per se.
(20) Four small plaque mutants isolated from "poor" yielder lines and fuzzy and small plaque strains isolated from an "average" and a "good" yielder line, respectively, were among the SV40 strains tested.