different between easter vs paster

easter

English

Etymology

Old English eastera, eastra. Compare norther, souther, wester.

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /?i?.st?/

Adjective

easter (comparative more easter, superlative most easter)

  1. (now regional) Eastern. [from 8th c.]
    • 1824, James Hogg, The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner, Oxford 2010, p. 57:
      In the mean while, as our apartment was a corner one, and looked both east and north, I ran to the easter casement to look after Drummond.

Derived terms

  • easterly
  • Easter Ross

Related terms

  • wester

References

  • “easter” in the Dictionary of the Scots Language, Edinburgh: Scottish Language Dictionaries.

Anagrams

  • Teresa, aretes, arsete, arêtes, asteer, earset, eaters, ratees, reseat, saeter, seater, staree, teares, teaser

easter From the web:

  • what eastern time
  • what eastern standard time
  • what easter means
  • what eastern time is 9am central
  • what eastern king bed
  • what eastern time means
  • what eastern states have elk
  • what easter eggs are in soul


paster

English

Etymology

paste +? -er

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -e?st?(r)

Noun

paster (plural pasters)

  1. One who, or that which, pastes.
  2. A slip of paper, usually bearing a name, intended to be pasted by the voter, as a substitute, over another name on a printed ballot.

Anagrams

  • Pearts, paters, petars, prates, pretas, repast, repats, retaps, tapers, trapes, treaps

West Flemish

Etymology

From Middle Dutch past?or, from Latin p?stor. The West Flemish word has stress on the first syllable, like the Latin, but this is not clearly attested in Middle Dutch.

Noun

paster m (plural pasters)

  1. priest

paster From the web:

  • apple pie pastry
  • quiche pastry
  • pie pastry
  • what pastries does starbucks have
  • paster meaning
  • pastern meaning
  • what pastry is used for pie
  • pasterns what does it mean
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