Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

settler

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

Remove ads

English

English Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia

Etymology

From settle + -er.

Pronunciation

Noun

settler (plural settlers)

English Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia
  1. Someone who settles in a new location, especially one who takes up residence in a previously uninhabited place; a colonist.
    the first settlers of New England
    • 2020 June 9, David M. Halbfinger, Adam Rasgon, “Israel Court Rejects Law Legalizing Thousands of Settlement Homes”, in The New York Times, archived from the original on 1 November 2020:
      The law, which let settlers stay on private land if they had built there without knowing the property belonged to Palestinians or had done so at the state’s direction, was backed by Israel’s most right-wing governing coalition to date.
    • 2021 November 7, Claire [G.] Coleman, “Not quite blak enough: ‘The people who think I am too white to be Aboriginal are all white’”, in The Guardian, archived from the original on 3 December 2021:
      It was the racist, settler colonialism that created whiteness, that created blackness, half-caste, quarter-caste, octoroon, that saw mixed-race people as a third race. [] This belief was one of the drivers of the ‘protection’ laws that led to the settler government’s theft of children.
  2. Someone who decides or settles something, such as a dispute.
  3. (colloquial) That which settles or finishes, such as a blow that decides a contest.
  4. (British) The person in a betting shop who calculates the winnings.
  5. A drink which settles the stomach, especially a bitter drink, often a nightcap.
    • 1874, Marcus Clarke, For the Term of His Natural Life, Penguin, published 2009, page 80:
      [H]aving got out the rum bottle for a quiet “settler” just as the victim of his fascinations glided through the carefully adjusted door, he had been persuaded to go on drinking.
  6. A vessel, such as a tub, in which something, such as pulverized ore suspended in a liquid, is allowed to settle.
    • 2011, C. P. Leslie Grady, Jr.; Glen T. Daigger; Nancy G. Love, Biological Wastewater Treatment, Third Edition, page 189:
      First, there will be little reaction in the settler so that the concentrations of soluble constituents in the recycle stream are the same as those in the bioreactor.

Derived terms

Descendants

  • Swahili: setla

Translations

Anagrams

Remove ads

Norman

Etymology

From English settle + -er.

Verb

settler

  1. (Jersey) to settle (an argument, a dispute, etc.)

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads