Stillage vs Stallage - What's the difference?
stillage | stallage |
(uncountable) The residue from the manufacture of alcohol from grain; typically used in animal feed
(countable) A rack or pallet used to hold goods (originally casks) off the floor
(obsolete) The dues levied for the erection and use of a stall at a fair or market.
* 1899 , Joseph Gerald Pease and Herbert Chitty, A treatise on the law of markets and fairs with the principal statutes relating thereto , Knight and Co.,
(obsolete) dung of cattle or horses, mixed with straw
As nouns the difference between stillage and stallage
is that stillage is (uncountable) the residue from the manufacture of alcohol from grain; typically used in animal feed while stallage is (obsolete) the dues levied for the erection and use of a stall at a fair or market.stillage
English
Noun
(wikipedia stillage)Anagrams
*stallage
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Noun
(en noun)pg. 63:
- Stallage and the like payments are made in respect of some user of the soil beyond the mere entry into the market; for no one has a right to erect a stall or appropriate part of the market place as a standing without making a satisfaction for it to the owner of the soil