Failer vs Ailer - What's the difference?
failer | ailer |
One who fails.
* 2004 , Diane Eble, Abundant gifts: a daybook of grace-filled devotions
* 2008 , David L. Streiner, Geoffrey R. Norman, Health Measurement Scales
(ail)
(obsolete) Painful; troublesome.
To cause to suffer; to trouble, afflict. (Now chiefly in interrogative or indefinite constructions.)
* Bible, Genesis xxi. 17
* 2011 , "Connubial bliss in America", The Economist :
To be ill; to suffer; to be troubled.
* Richardson
As a noun failer
is one who fails.As an adjective ailer is
comparative of ail.failer
English
Noun
(en noun)- While God is disciplining me and humbling me, He is also showing me His great love for failers .
- The distributions of scores on the exam for passers and failers are plotted
Anagrams
*ailer
English
Adjective
(head)ail
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl) (m), (m), from (etyl) .Adjective
(en-adj)Etymology 2
From (etyl) .Verb
(en verb)- Have some chicken soup. It's good for what ails you.
- What aileth thee, Hagar?
- Not content with having in 1996 put a Defence of Marriage Act (DOMA) on the statue book, Congress has now begun to hold hearings on a Respect for Marriage Act. Defended, respected: what could possibly ail marriage in America?
- When he ails ever so little he is so peevish.