different between bottler vs boncer

bottler

English

Pronunciation

  • (US) IPA(key): /?b?t?l?/, /?b?tl??/, [?b??l??]

Etymology 1

From Middle English boteller, botullere, equivalent to bottle +? -er.

Noun

bottler (plural bottlers)

  1. A person, company, or thing who bottles, especially in bulk.
    • 1994 May 30, Shawn Willett, PC tools help Coke add life to flat AS/400 data, InfoWorld, page 63,
      Such data is of great value both to the bottlers and to Coca-Cola?s sales and marketing groups.
      “When the bottler looks at this information, he might be interested in how a certain supermarket is performing, while we in the company are interested in how much, for example, McDonalds is buying in the Southeast,” Aviles notes.
    • 2010, James M. Wahlen, Clyde P. Stickney, Paul Brown, Stephen P. Baginski, Mark Bradshaw, Financial Reporting, Financial Statement Analysis, and Valuation: A Strategic Perspective, 7th edition, page 278,
      Note 8, “Noncontrolled Bottling Affiliates” (Appendix A), indicates that PepsiCo owns approximately 40 percent of the common stock of some of its bottlers.
  2. A truck used for transporting bottled goods in crates.
  3. (Britain, slang) A person who or group that fails to meet expectations, especially one prone to such failure.
  4. A Punchman's assistant who collects money ("bottle") from the audience.
Synonyms
  • (person or group prone to unexpected failure): choker

Derived terms

  • water bottler

Related terms

  • butler

Etymology 2

Origin relates to something being of a high quality and worthy of preservation by bottling, probably from the phrase "good enough to bottle"; compare corker.

Noun

bottler (plural bottlers)

  1. (Australia, New Zealand, slang, often with "real") a person or thing that is excellent or admirable.
    • 2007, Anthony David Parsons, Tony Parsons, Valley of the White Gold, unnumbered page,
      Mum's a real bottler and you?ll find her very sympathetic.

References

  • “bottler”, in The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 4th edition, Boston, Mass.: Houghton Mifflin, 2000, ?ISBN
  • “bottler” in Dictionary.com Unabridged, Dictionary.com, LLC, 1995–present.
  • "bottler" in WordNet 2.0, Princeton University, 2003.

Anagrams

  • Roblett, Tolbert, blotter

bottler From the web:

  • bottler meaning
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  • what do butlers do
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boncer

English

Etymology 1

In marble sense: British dialect (north Hampshire), probably variant of bouncer (a large thing). In slang sense (= remarkable, excellent): replaced by voiced variant bonzer.

Alternative forms

  • bonzer

Adjective

boncer (comparative more boncer, superlative most boncer)

  1. (Australia, New Zealand, informal, obsolete) Remarkable; wonderful.
    Synonyms: bottler, ripper

Etymology 2

Noun

boncer (plural boncers)

  1. (New Zealand, dated) A kind of large marble; a bonce.
  2. (New Zealand, Australia, informal, obsolete) Something remarkable, wonderful, excellent, etc.

References

Anagrams

  • Brecon

boncer From the web:

  • what bouncers do crossword
  • what bouncers look for in fake id
  • bouncer meaning
  • what does bouncer mean
  • what is bouncer in cricket
  • what age bouncer
  • what is bouncer job
  • what is bouncer for baby
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