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Stickler vs Stickled - What's the difference?

stickler | stickled |

As a noun stickler

is a referee or adjudicator at a fight, wrestling match, duel, etc. who ensures fair play.

As a verb stickled is

past tense of stickle.

stickler

English

Noun

(en noun)
  • *, II.27:
  • *:In ancient time they were wont to employ third persons as sticklers , to see no treachery or disorder were used, and to beare witnes of the combates successe.
  • * Sir Philip Sidney
  • Basilius, the judge, appointed sticklers and trumpets whom the others should obey.
  • * Dryden
  • Our former chiefs, like sticklers of the war, / First sought to inflame the parties, then to poise.
  • Someone who insistently advocates (for) something.
  • :Lexicographers are stickler s for correct language.
  • * Jonathan Swift
  • The Tory or High-church were the greatest sticklers against the exorbitant proceedings of King James II.

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    stickled

    English

    Verb

    (head)
  • (stickle)
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    stickle

    English

    Verb

    (en-verb)
  • (obsolete) To act as referee or arbiter; to mediate.
  • To argue or struggle (for).
  • * 1897 , Henry James, What Maisie Knew :
  • ‘She has other people than poor little you to think about, and has gone abroad with them; so you needn't be in the least afraid she'll stickle this time for her rights.’
  • To raise objections; to argue stubbornly, especially over minor or trivial matters.
  • (obsolete) To separate, as combatants; hence, to quiet, to appease, as disputants.
  • * Drayton
  • Which [question] violently they pursue, / Nor stickled would they be.
  • (obsolete) To intervene in; to stop, or put an end to, by intervening.
  • * Sir Philip Sidney
  • They ran to him, and, pulling him back by force, stickled that unnatural fray.
  • (obsolete) To separate combatants by intervening.
  • * Dryden
  • When he [the angel] sees half of the Christians killed, and the rest in a fair way of being routed, he stickles betwixt the remainder of God's host and the race of fiends.
  • (obsolete) To contend, contest, or altercate, especially in a pertinacious manner on insufficient grounds.
  • * Hudibras
  • Fortune, as she's wont, turned fickle, / And for the foe began to stickle .
  • * Dryden
  • for paltry punk they roar and stickle
  • * Hazlitt
  • the obstinacy with which he stickles for the wrong

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • (UK, dialect) A shallow rapid in a river.
  • (UK, dialect) The current below a waterfall.
  • * W. Browne
  • Patient anglers, standing all the day / Near to some shallow stickle or deep bay.

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