exhausture or exhaustion

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ostap77

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What's the difference between these two forms? Both nouns but would they be intechangeable?

"The exhaustion/exhauster of natural resources"? "Being sick with cancer, he was going to die of exhausture/exhaustion"?
 
From Uncle M (not a teacher)

As far as I am aware, there is no such word as 'exhausture' in UK English.
 
From Uncle M (not a teacher)

As far as I am aware, there is no such word as 'exhausture' in UK English.

If you look it up in a dictionary, it sure is going to give you these two noun defenitions. Being a non-native speaker, it got me wondering if there would be a difference?
 
If you look it up in a dictionary, it sure is going to give you these two noun defenitions. Being a non-native speaker, it got me wondering if there would be a difference?
Which dictionary did you find "exhausture" in? It doesn't exist in BrE.
 
I, too, doubted the existence of exhausture.

Yes, it is in some dictionaries*, meaning exhaustion, but as I've never heard of it in 70 years as a native speaker and wide reader I advise you to forget it.

I've forgotten it already.

Rover


*
  1. exhausture: Wordnik [home, info]
  2. Exhausture: Dictionary.com [home, info]
  3. Exhausture: Online Plain Text English Dictionary [home, info]
  4. exhausture: Webster's Revised Unabridged, 1913 Edition [home, info]
  5. Exhausture: AllWords.com Multi-Lingual Dictionary [home, info]
  6. exhausture: Free Dictionary [home, info]
  7. Exhausture: Dictionary/thesaurus [home, info]
(OneLook dictionary search)
 
Last edited:
I, too, doubted the existence of exhausture.

Yes, it is in some dictionaries*, meaning exhaustion, but as I've never heard of it in 70 years as a native speaker and wide reader I advise you to forget it.

I've forgotten it already.

Rover

*
  1. exhausture: Wordnik [home, info]
  2. Exhausture: Dictionary.com [home, info]
  3. Exhausture: Online Plain Text English Dictionary [home, info]
  4. exhausture: Webster's Revised Unabridged, 1913 Edition [home, info]
  5. Exhausture: AllWords.com Multi-Lingual Dictionary [home, info]
  6. exhausture: Free Dictionary [home, info]
  7. Exhausture: Dictionary/thesaurus [home, info]

I looked it up in my Webster. It just says there is such a word but doesn't give any clear definition. What would be exhauster?
 
An exhauster would be somebody who exhausts.

You can forget that, too.
 
An exhauster would be somebody who exhausts.

You can forget that, too.

Someone who you have deep feelings for can be "exhauster":-D? Can I call a hard job an exhauster?
 
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Someone who you have deep feelings for can be "exhauster"? No.

Can I call a hard job an exhauster? You'd probably be the first person in history to do so.

I still say forget it.

Rover
 
I'm pretty sure that 99.9% of native speakers would assume you were making a mistake if you used it in any context whatsoever.
 
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