different between balter vs baiter

balter

English

Alternative forms

  • baulter, bolter, bauter

Etymology

From Middle English balteren, of North Germanic origin, related to Danish baltre, boltre (to roll, tumble, gambol, romp).

Verb

balter (third-person singular simple present balters, present participle baltering, simple past and past participle baltered)

  1. (intransitive) To tumble; dance clumsily.
  2. (intransitive, Britain dialectal) To become tangled or matted.
  3. (transitive) To tread down in a clumsy manner.
  4. (transitive, Britain dialectal) To tangle; clot; mat (as in the hair).

Anagrams

  • Albert, Bartel, Bartle, Tabler, bralet, labret, tabler

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baiter

English

Etymology

bait +? -er

Pronunciation

Noun

baiter (plural baiters)

  1. Agent noun of bait; one who baits, as a fishhook.
    • 1853, Lorenzo Sabine, Thomas Corwin, Report on the Principal Fisheries of the American Seas, p. 183:
      The baiter stands amidships, with the bait-box outside the rail: with a tin pint nailed to a long handle he begins throwing out bait, while every man stands to his berth.
  2. (Internet, slang) A troll who deliberately posts aggravating messages on a message board to elicit responses.

See also

  • flamer
  • troll

Anagrams

  • barite, rebait, terbia, tiebar

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