Mazer vs Maker - What's the difference?
mazer | maker |
(obsolete) The maple tree, or maple wood.
(archaic, or, historical) A large drinking bowl made from such wood; a mazer bowl.
* 1885 , Sir Richard Burton, The Book of the Thousand Nights and One Night , Night 16:
Someone who makes; a person or thing that makes or produces something.
(usually, capitalized and preceded by the) God.
A poet.
* 2000 , , The Book of Prefaces , Bloomsbury 2002, p. 9:
(obsolete, legal) Someone who signs a cheque or promissory note, thereby becoming responsible for payment.
As nouns the difference between mazer and maker
is that mazer is (obsolete) the maple tree, or maple wood while maker is .As a verb maker is
.mazer
English
Alternative forms
* maserNoun
(en noun)- Presently he rose up and set before each young man some meat in a charger and drink in a large mazer , treating me in like manner; and after that they sat questioning me concerning my adventures and what had betided me
Derived terms
* mazer bowlmaker
English
Noun
(en noun)- It is refreshing to read how makers find great allies in the past to help them tackle the present. It helps us to see that literature is a conversation across boundaries of nation, century and language.