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Tother vs Fother - What's the difference?

tother | fother |

As a pronoun tother

is other.

As a noun fother is

(obsolete) a wagonload; a load of any sort.

As a verb fother is

(dialect) to feed animals (with fother).

tother

English

Alternative forms

* (l),

Pronoun

(English Pronouns)
  • Other.
  • an' they left one'n the sarvant gals as well for comp'ny for the housekeeper, but the tother sarvant gals they took wid 'em. — The Robber and the Housekeeper.

    Usage notes

    * Originally preceded by the . The spelling arose from the misconception of being a contraction of (term).

    See also

    * tone

    Anagrams

    *

    fother

    English

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • (obsolete) a wagonload; a load of any sort.
  • an old English measure of lead or other metals, usually containing 19.5 hundredweight; a fodder.
  • *1866 : Now measured by the old hundred, that is, 108 lbs. the charrus contains nearly 19½ hundreds, that is it corresponds to the fodder, or fother, of modern times. —James Edwin Thorold Rogers, A History of Agriculture and Prices in England , Volume 1, p. 168.
  • (dialect) Food for animals.
  • * 1663 ,
  • *:He ripp'd the womb up of his mother, / Dame Tellus, 'cause he wanted fother , / And provender, wherewith to feed / Himself and his less cruel steed.
  • (unit of weight)
  • Verb

    (en verb)
  • (dialect) To feed animals (with fother).
  • To stop a leak with oakum or old rope (often by drawing a sail under the hull).
  • Anagrams

    *