Weller vs Willer - What's the difference?
weller | willer |
As a proper noun weller is . As a noun willer is one who wills, who causes by an act of will or willpower.
Other Comparisons: What's the difference?
weller English
Adjective
(head)
(well)
* {{quote-book, year=1822, author=Charles and Mary Lamb, title=The Works of Charles and Mary Lamb (Vol. 6), chapter=, edition= citation
, passage=Emma is looking weller and handsomer (as you say) than ever. }}
* {{quote-book, year=1913, author=Henry Sydnor Harrison, title=V. V.'s Eyes, chapter=, edition= citation
, passage=He forgot the Huns; forgot John the Baptist; forgot even his sick, till one of the weller of them (as we may assume) knocked memorially upon his door.... }}
* {{quote-book, year=1922, author=Samuel Hopkins Adams, title=From a Bench in Our Square, chapter=, edition= citation
, passage=Now we come home he is already weller . }}
|
willer English
Noun
( en noun)
One who wills, who causes by an act of will or willpower.
One who causes an inheritance by writing a will.
|
|