Useter vs Seter - What's the difference?
useter | seter |
*{{quote-book, year=1870, author=Various, title=Punchinello, Vol. 2, No. 36, December 3, 1870, chapter=, edition=
, passage=There was JOB BIGLER, who useter leed the Skeensboro brick meetin house quire, tryin to pick his teeth with the corner of a pictur-frame, while standin before the lookin glass was WILLYAM DUNBAR vainly endevorin to ascertain if he was the Siameese Twins, or else was the lookin-glass a double-plated one. }}
*{{quote-book, year=1917, author=Stella Benson, title=This Is the End, chapter=, edition=
, passage="Me an' Dusty useter 'ave a drop an' a jaw together every night for three months after we married. }}
*{{quote-book, year=1919, author=Various, title=Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 156, June 18, 1919, chapter=, edition=
, passage="Then I met Spruggy Boyce, who useter drive with me in the Umpteenth Field Ambulance. }} A summer pasture with barns, especially one in the mountains of Scandinavia used for milk and cheese manufacture, to which a farmer takes livestock as part of transhumance.
* 1964 , Reidar Christiansen, Folktales of Norway , page 114:
* 1968 , Axel Christian Zetlitz Sømme, A geography of Norden: Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Sweden , page 248:
* 2002 , Brian Roberts, Landscapes of Settlement: Prehistory to the Present , page 131:
* (seeCites)
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==Norwegian Bokmål==
As a contraction useter
is .As a noun seter is
a summer pasture with barns, especially one in the mountains of scandinavia used for milk and cheese manufacture, to which a farmer takes livestock as part of transhumance.useter
English
Contraction
(en-cont)citation
citation
citation
seter
English
Noun
(en noun)- Every summer, a long long time ago, they went up to the seter with the cows from Melbustad, in Hadeland.
- In Østlandet, on the contrary, the high mountain plateau, the gentle slopes and the grouping of seters' in clusters permit the building of roads and therefore a modernized use of the ' seters .
- For example, twelfth- and thirteenth-century documents from the north of England mention place-names incorporating the term 'shield' or 'shiel', a 'shieling' being an area of summer pasture corresponding to the seters of Sweden.