Tilly vs Hilly - What's the difference?
tilly | hilly |
(Ireland) An extra product given to a customer at no additional charge; a lagniappe.
* 1855 , Legends of mount Leinster, by Harry Whitney :
* 1939 , James Joyce, 'Finnegan's Wake'':
* 2007 , Patrick Semple, The Rector who Wouldn't Pray for Rain :
(UK) A small open-backed truck.
* 1978 , (Ada F Kay) (A. J. Stewart), Died 1513-born 1929'' / ''King's Memory , page 83:
* 1980 , Once Upon a Ward: V.A.D.s' Own Stories and Pictures , page 119:
As a proper noun tilly
is or tilly can be .As a noun tilly
is .As an adjective hilly is
(of a landscape) abundant in hills; having many hills.tilly
English
Etymology 1
(etyl) .Noun
(tillies)- Myles:'' "Indeed your Honour may safely say so : Iwas ploughing away go myself for the snuff, and be sure to get my ' tillies .
- A bakereen's dusind with tithe tillies to boot.
- At each door he poured from the can into a pint measure and into the house-wife's jug, always with a tilly for the cat, whether there was a cat or not, sometimes splashing the step with milk to the annoyance of the housewife.
Synonyms
* lagniappe (America), pasella (South Africa)Etymology 2
From WWII British Army usage , from utility.Alternative forms
* TillyNoun
(tillies)- After a fortnight's careful nursing my leg healed and I was packed off in a tilly (utility truck) with my kit-bag to join my comrades at Fairmilehead.
- One night soon after our arrival in Belgium, four of us set off to a dance in a rest centre, behind the lines, for the forces. We drove across a snowy waste in a tilly truck, singing "Lilly Marlene".