Piper vs Piler - What's the difference?
piper | piler |
A musician who plays a pipe.
A bagpiper.
A baby pigeon.
A common European gurnard (Trigla lyra ), having a large head, with prominent nasal projection, and with large, sharp, opercular spines.
A sea urchin (Goniocidaris hystrix ) with very long spines, native to the American and European coasts.
One who piles something
* {{quote-news, year=2007, date=May 10, author=Penelope Green, title=Order and Chaos in a Single Heartbeat, work=New York Times
, passage=Houses and photography sets seem to work better, he said, if “I exert a system of precision.” Ms. Ford, 33, said she is by nature a piler and stacker but has learned to follow what she described good-naturedly as “the Charlie Code.” }}
As a proper noun piper
is .As a noun piler is
one who piles something.piper
English
Etymology 1
Noun
(en noun)Synonyms
* (bagpiper) bagpiper * (baby pigeon) squab, baby pigeon, pigeon chickDerived terms
* bagpiper * pay the piper * Pied Piper * who pays the piper calls the tuneEtymology 2
(etyl) (lena)Noun
Anagrams
* ----piler
English
Noun
(en noun)citation