Swelted vs Sweated - What's the difference?
swelted | sweated |
(swelt)
(obsolete, outside, dialect) To die.
(obsolete, outside, dialect) To succumb or be overcome with emotion, heat, etc.; to faint or swelter
(obsolete) (swell)
(sweat)
Characterized by sweatshop conditions.
* 1913 ,
*:“Do you like jennying?” he asked.
*:“What can a woman do!” she replied bitterly.
*:“Is it sweated ?”
*:“More or less. Isn’t all woman’s work? That’s another trick the men have played, since we force ourselves into the labour market.”
* 1920 , Sidney Webb and Beatrice Webb, Industrial Democracy ,
As verbs the difference between swelted and sweated
is that swelted is (swelt) while sweated is (sweat).As an adjective sweated is
characterized by sweatshop conditions.swelted
English
Verb
(head)Anagrams
*swelt
English
Etymology 1
Old English sweltan. Cognate to Dutch .Verb
(en verb)- (Bishop Hall)
Etymology 2
Verb
(head)Anagrams
*sweated
English
Verb
(head)Adjective
(en adjective)- So long as the African slave-trade lasted, the importation of slaves being presumably cheaper than breeding them, the industries run by slave labor were economically in much the same position as our own sweated trades [...]