Purler vs Purer - What's the difference?
purler | purer |
(UK, colloquial) A headlong fall or tumble.
* 1869 , “Stonehenge” (editor), The Coursing Calendar for the Autumn Season 1868, Containing Returns of All the Public Courses Run in Great Britain snd Ireland ,
* 1954 , British Broadcasting Corporation, , Volume 51,
* 1986 , Judith Saxton (), Family Feeling , 2012,
* 2003 , Susan Hill, The Boy Who Taught The Beekeeper To Read'', ''The Boy Who Taught The Beekeeper To Read: And Other Stories , 2011,
(UK, colloquial) A knockdown blow; a blow that causes a person to fall headlong.
* 1867 , , 2006,
(Australia, colloquial) Something extremely good.
* {{quote-newsgroup
, title=Top3 best games of all time
, group=aus.sport.aussie-rules
, author=peter.ryan
, date=May 12
, year=2000
, passage=The greatest game ever played is the one marketed with that tag by Australian Football Video: the 1989 round 6 match at Prince's Park between Hawthorn and Geelong, an awesome display of the skills of the game. It is doubtful whether two such great sides had ever graced a single season as the Hawks and the Cats did in 1989. The return match in September was a bit of a purler too, as I recall.
* {{quote-newsgroup
, title=Best way to transport wreck Syd-Tsv.
, group=aus.motorcycles
, author=George W
, date=December 24
, year=2008
, passage=And just when I had a slight thought that there could be a "Lets be nice to George Week"
And you come along with that purler . (pure)
----
Free of flaws or imperfections; unsullied.
* (1800-1859)
(senseid)Free of foreign material or pollutants.
* (Isaac Watts) (1674-1748)
Free of immoral behavior or qualities; clean.
* Bible, v. 22
(label) Done for its own sake instead of serving another branch of science.
* {{quote-magazine, date=2014-06-21, volume=411, issue=8892, magazine=(The Economist)
, title= (label) Of a single, simple sound or tone; said of some vowels and the unaspirated consonants.
(label) Without harmonics or overtones; not harsh or discordant.
(Liverpool) to a great extent or degree; extremely; exceedingly.
As a noun purler
is (uk|colloquial) a headlong fall or tumble or purler can be (australia|colloquial) something extremely good.As an adjective purer is
(pure).purler
English
Etymology 1
From .Noun
(en noun)- He came a purler on the icy path.
page 172,
- Dilston and Savernake: the latter led, and turned, but in trying to kill came down a purler , which completely knocked all the go out of him; Dilston took possession of the hare, and kept it, winning the course in hollow style.
page 67,
- Her French-speaking table in the dining-room is a riot of second-rate behaviour and dexterously aimed bread-pellets; the stairs outside her bedroom are relentlessly buttered and she comes purler' after ' purler .
unnumbered page,
- Yet he was very sure that he had tripped and gone a purler just as he was leaving the Other Place . . . had that made him gash his forehead, once he was back in the pit?
unnumbered page,
- ‘You could hold the ladder,’ Mart said, ‘see I don?t come a purler .’
page 60,
- but, falling with a mighty crash, gave him a purler on the opposite side, and was within an inch of striking him dead with his hoof in frantic struggles to recover.
Synonyms
* (headlong fall or tumble) * (incapacitating blow) king hit (Australian)See also
* come a cropperEtymology 2
Uncertain.Alternative forms
* pearlerNoun
(en noun)citation
And you come along with that purler .
citation
purer
English
Adjective
(head)pure
English
Adjective
(en-adj)- Such was the origin of a friendship as warm and pure as any that ancient or modern history records.
- A guinea is pure gold if it has in it no alloy.
- Keep thyself pure .
Magician’s brain, passage=The [Isaac] Newton that emerges from the [unpublished] manuscripts is far from the popular image of a rational practitioner of cold and pure reason. The architect of modern science was himself not very modern. He was obsessed with alchemy.}}
Synonyms
* perfect * innocent * See alsoAntonyms
* impure, contaminated * (done for its own sake) appliedDerived terms
* pure finder * as pure as the driven snowAdverb
(en adverb)- You’re pure busy.