Stonewaller vs Stonewalled - What's the difference?
stonewaller | stonewalled |
One who stonewalls.
*{{quote-news, year=2007, date=April 26, author=Ginia Bellafante, title=The Medium, the Message, the Drama of TV’s Q & A, work=New York Times
, passage=Much of the drama of “Frost/Nixon” rests on the idea that Nixon was a consummate stonewaller and Mr. Frost a glitz-hound and possible nincompoop, incapable of the obduracy required for such a reportorial effort. }} (stonewall)
Surrounded or defined in size and shape by a wall of stone.
* 1906 , Ernest W. Dormer, "Memories of Ufton Court", in The Antiquary , Volume 42, page 418:
* 1953 , Ralph Bernard Pugh, The Victoria History of Wiltshire , page 72:
* 2004 , Sigmund Brouwer, The Missing Map of Pirate's Haven , page 53:
As a noun stonewaller
is one who stonewalls.As a verb stonewalled is
(stonewall).As an adjective stonewalled is
surrounded or defined in size and shape by a wall of stone.stonewaller
English
Noun
(en noun)citation
stonewalled
English
Verb
(head)Adjective
(-)- Leading from the terrace to the old stonewalled garden is a flight of stone steps.
- The stonewalled farmhouse is of the late 16th century or the early 17th, extended southwards in the early 19th century
- In fact, one of the few main differences was that Doreen's house had an old stonewalled shed back near the cliffs, and Carl's didn't.
