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Dillion vs Sillion - What's the difference?

dillion | sillion |

As nouns the difference between dillion and sillion

is that dillion is an unspecified large number (of) while sillion is the thick, voluminous, and shiny soil turned over by a plow.

dillion

English

Noun

(en noun)
  • (slang, hyperbole) An unspecified large number (of).
  • * 1982 , Roald Dahl, The BFG
  • 'The human bean,' the Giant went on, 'is coming in dillions of different flavours.
  • * 2012 , Gretel Killeen, My Sister's a Yo-Yo
  • He'd been sitting in the car for a dillion years waiting for his mother to find her glasses.
  • * 2014 , Lev Grossman, The Magician's Land
  • You have like a dillion books here, probably nobody would have even looked at it.

    Synonyms

    * See also .

    sillion

    English

    Noun

    (-)
  • (rare) The thick, voluminous, and shiny soil turned over by a plow.
  • * 1877, , published 1918, verse 3,
  • ?No wonder of it: shéer plód makes plough down sillion
    Shine, and blue-bleak embers, ah my dear,
    ?Fall, gall themselves, and gash gold-vermillion.
  • * 1951, Hazelton Spencer, British Literature , Heath, page 827,
  • The hard, plodding work of plowing (of the priest) makes the plowshare shine as it goes down the row turning up the sillion .
  • * 1968, Wendell Stacy Johnson, Gerard Manley Hopkins: The Poet As Victorian , Cornell University Press, page 87,
  • The freely flying windhover, after all, has something essential in common with the sillion of a plowed field and the broken embers of a…
  • * 2006, Mark DeLong, Inetogether , Lulu.com, ISBN 141169175X, page 4,
  • My tiller cut easily in the moist ground, and the weeds of winter and early spring easily yielded to the tines. Gerard Manly Hopkins wrote that there is “no wonder” that “sheer plod makes plough down sillion' shine” — but the fact is, Mr. Hopkins, that there is in spring great wonder in the glimmer of “' sillion ” falling off the plough. And that wonder takes the “sheer plod” from my feet.
    That is quite the reverse for the gardener who churns under his failed crops in August. In dust, there is no sillion , and that work in hot summer sun is the sheerest of plod.