different between mammer vs maimer

mammer

English

Etymology

From Middle English mameren (to hesitate, be undecided, waver, mutter), from Old English m?mrian, m?morian (to think through, deliberate, plan out, design), from Proto-Germanic *maimr?n? (to take care, worry), from Proto-Indo-European *mer-, *smer- (to fall into thought, remember, take care). Related to Old English m?mor (deep thought, deep sleep, unconsciousness), Old English mimorian (to remember), Dutch mijmeren (to ponder, muse). More at remember.

Verb

mammer (third-person singular simple present mammers, present participle mammering, simple past and past participle mammered)

  1. (rare) To hesitate.
    Tell me, Othello: I wonder in my soul, What you would ask me, that I should deny, Or stand so mammering on — Shakespeare, Othello.
  2. (rare) To mumble or stammer from doubt or hesitation.

Derived terms

  • mammery
  • mammering

Translations

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maimer

English

Etymology

maim +? -er

Noun

maimer (plural maimers)

  1. Agent noun of maim; one who maims.

Anagrams

  • Meriam

maimer From the web:

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