A medieval English villein.
1He was held together by cotter pins, hose clamps, nuts, bolts, and magnets.
2The real Scottish cotter is quite another kind of person.
3She had taken lodgings in a cotter's but at Borg.
4The religion of the live cotter is well seasoned with fear, malevolence and absurd dogmatism.
5I walk on along my great arc and come down by the first cotter's house.
6But what are these in the cotter's life to the stirring vicissitudes of a pie!
7Good connections on the end of wires for batteries can be made from cotter pins, Fig.
8I dropped a nut and a cotter pin out of my mouth, I was so astonished.
9Just about this time a child of the cotter's daughter at Kampen was brought to be christened.
10In Antrim and Down, in too many instances, the farmers have taken the cotter's gardens into their fields.
11I want to live in a cot like a cotter-thatis, for us to live like two cotters.
12Others wanted to know how it happened that a poor cotter's lass stood there in such fine raiment.
13Every cotter sings of just ways!
14Each end of the wire is put through the eye of a cotter pin, twisted around itself and soldered.
15Cork-based artist Maud Cotter wanted a combined living space and work studio.
16Ten minutes before our deadline, Cotter and I stood up in unison.