Trollery vs Trolley - What's the difference?
trollery | trolley |
(informal) Behavior considered to be deliberately provocative or disruptive.
* 2009 , , "
(Australian, New Zealand, British) A cart or shopping cart.
(British) A hand truck.
(British) A .
(British) A gurney.
A single-pole device for collecting electrical current from an overhead electical line usually for a streetcar.
(US) A streetcar or a system of streetcars.
(US, colloquial) A light rail system or a train on such a system.
A truck from which the load is suspended in some kinds of cranes.
A truck which travels along the fixed conductors in an electric railway, and forms a means of connection between them and a railway car.
To bring to by trolley.
To use a trolley vehicle to go from one place to another.
As nouns the difference between trollery and trolley
is that trollery is behavior considered to be deliberately provocative or disruptive while trolley is a cart or shopping cart.As a verb trolley is
to bring to by trolley.trollery
English
Noun
(-)Clive Thompson on the Taming of Comment Trolls", Wired , 23 March 2009:
- Readers can set their filters so they see only comments with high ratings—and trollery effectively vanishes.