▪ I. there, adv. (a., n.)
(ðɛə(r), unstressed ðə(r))
Forms: see below.
[OE. þǽr, þár, þér, cognate with OS. thâr, OFris. thêr, dêr, MLG. dār, MDu. daer, Du. daar, OHG. dâr (MHG. dâr, dâ, Ger. da); cf. also Goth. þar, ON. þar (Sw., Da. der); all derivatives of the demonstrative stem þa-, pre-Teut. to- (that, the). The adverbial suffix -r appears also in OE. hwǽr, hwér, hwar, where.
Besides þǽr, etc., OE. had also a rare form þāra, prob. an emphatic deriv., like OHG. dāra, dāre, and not cognate with OHG. dara, MHG. dare, dar, ‘thither’. In ME. all the variants þār, þǣr, þêr, þôr appear also with final -e, perh. taken from the advb. -e in inne, uppe, {uacu}te, fore, etc. The later forms thare and there may represent ME. þāre, þêre, or the final e may merely indicate the long vowel.]
A. Illustration of Forms.
(α) 1 þára.
c 888 K. ælfred Boeth. xxxiii. §5 Ac hit is þeah þara. c 1000 Ags. Gosp. Mark xiv. 15 ᵹe ᵹe-earwiað us þara [Hatton þare, Lindisf. & Rushw. ðer]. |
(
β) 1–3
þǽr, 2
þǽre.
c 888 K. ælfred Boeth. xxxiii. §5 Swa is eac þær fyr on ðam stanum and on ðam wætere. a 900 tr. Bæda's Hist. i. i. (1890) 28 Swa þæt ðær seldon snau leng liᵹeð þonne ðry daᵹas. c 1000 Ags. Gosp. Matt. xiv. 23 He wæs ana þær. a 1131 O.E. Chron. an. 1123, Ða..ferde se king to Winceastre and wæs ealle Eastren tyde þære. c 1200 Ormin 2789 Þe laffdiȝ Marȝe comm Till Zacariȝess bottle, And spacc þær wiþþ Elysabæþ. |
(
γ) 1–2
þár, 2–5
þar,
þare, 3–5
north. þaire, 4–
thar (now
U.S. dial. and
colloq.: see also sense B. 2 c (
c) below), 4–6
thare (4–5
tare), 6
Sc. thair,
yare,
yair.
c 893 K. ælfred Oros. i. i. §22 ᵹyf þar man an ban findeð unforbærned. c 1000 Ags. Gosp. Matt. xxi. 17 He..lærde hi þar [A. þær, Hatt. þar, Lind. ðer, Rushw. þær] be godes rice. c 1275 Lay. 27474 Cnihtes þar aswalten; blodes vt hurnen. Ibid. 25651 Þare. 13.. Cursor M. 5420 (Cott.) Iacob þaire [Gött. þar] liued seuenten yeir. Ibid. 21655 (Edin.) Thare dide him driȝtin to resune. ? a 1400 Morte Arth. 3603 Thare the false men fletyde, and one flode lengede. c 1400 Rule St. Benet 21 Þai sal be broht by-fore þe cuuent and tare amende hir faute. 1483 Cath. Angl. 381/2 Thare, ibi, ibidem, illic. 1535 Stewart Cron. Scot. (Rolls) I. 33 Greit slauchter oftymes wes maid yair. 1562 Reg. Privy Council Scot. I. 226 Williame Gordoun in Wigtoun, Johne Martine thair, Robert Johnestoun thair. 1859 Bartlett Dict. Amer. (ed. 2) 477 A person wishing to imply that he is perfectly at home in any thing, says he is thar; a good hunter or fisher is also thar. 1885 Weekly New Mexican Rev. 29 Jan. 4/5 The Santa Rifles had their first drill at Alhambra hall last night... Nearly all the boys have ‘been thar’ before, and as a consequence, catch up the command very readily. 1887 [see tchick n.]. 1937 W. Blair in B. A. Botkin Treas. S. Folklore (1949) iv. iii. 645 Hello, thar, gin us ‘Forked Deer’, old fiddle-teazer. 1980 ‘D. Shannon’ Felony File i. 27 Thar's a big store, with a lot of different departments. |
(
δ) 1–2
þér, 3–5
þer,
þere (4
tere), 5
þeer,
theer, 4–6
ther, 4–
there.
c 950 Lindisf. Gosp. Matt. v. 24 Forlet ðer [Rushw., Ags. G., Hatt. þær] ðing ðin to wiᵹbed. Ibid. Mark iv. 15 Seðe ymb woeᵹ ðer [Ags. Gosp. þar, Hatt. þær] bið ᵹesauen. c 1205 Lay. 10 Þer he bock radde [c 1275 þer heo bokes radde]. Ibid. 25651 Nes he þere [c 1275 þare] buten ane niht. Ibid. 29876 Alle..þa þer icumen weoren. c 1275 Ibid. 8 Merie þer [c 1205 þar] him þohte. Ibid. 582 Þere [c 1205 þer] Brutus nam Antigo[num]. 1297 R. Glouc. (Rolls) 1796 An vrninde water þat ȝut is þer, ich wene. Ibid. 3519 Þere he huld is parlement. 13.. Cursor M. 21104 (Cott.) His bodi is birid tere [rime sper; other MSS. þere]. c 1400 Destr. Troy 3719 Ermonia þe myld maynly was ther. 1412–20 Lydg. Chron. Troy ii. 4189, I was not þere. c 1420 There [see B. 12]. a 1425 Cursor M. 22980 (Trin.) Men wene þe doom shal be þeer. 1430–40 Lydg. Bochas ix. xxxi. (1558) 32 b, Clement theer concludyng if he may. 1432–50 tr. Higden (Rolls) VII. 401 The sedes..whiche hade bene sawen þer of olde tyme. c 1440 There [see B. 9]. |
(
ε) (variants of δ
þer,
there) 2
þeor, 3
þear,
þiar, 5–7
their, 6
thear, 6–
dial. theare.
a 1200 Moral Ode 273 (Lamb. MS.) Þeor beð naddren and snaken. c 1200 Ibid. 165 (Trin. Coll. MS.) Ne sal þeih no man samie þiar. c 1205 Lay. 607 Brutus hefde þa men..idon into þan castle & þear heom quic heolde. a 1225 Leg. Kath. 8 Constantin..wunede summe hwile þear. c 1425 Cursor M. 10042 (Laud) Their buxumnes holt her state. 1535 Coverdale Josh. xxi. 45 Their myssed nothinge of all the good that the Lorde had promysed. 1563 B. Googe Cupido Eglogs, etc. (Arb.) 117 And..thear, for succour thus doth call. 1570 ― Pop. Kingd. ii. (1880) 13 Togither stande they theare [rime weare]. 1616 Purchas Pilgrimage, India (1864) 49 Three of the Gallions driuen on ground,..and had beene their left but for the Frigates. 1655 Stanley Hist. Philos. i. 53/2 For their's no order in Equality. |
(
ζ) 3–4
þôr, 3–5
þôre, 4–5
thôre.
c 1250 Gen. & Ex. 1844 He droȝ ðider and wunede ðor. Ibid. 2270 Ðat riche louerd ðore. c 1300 Havelok 922 Go þu yunder and sit þore [rime more]. Ibid. 1044 For neuere yete ne saw he or Putten the stone, or þanne þor. c 1300 Harrow. Hell (Harl. MS.) 30 Ihesu crist..seide he wolde vacche hem thore [rime sore]. c 1330 R. Brunne Chron. Wace (Rolls) 1021 He..wende haue founde Brutus þore. c 1380 Sir Ferumb. 544 Þe Sarsyn þat was þor. c 1420 Chron. Vilod. 2040 To make alle thyngus redy þore [rime byfore]. a 1425 Cursor M. 409 (Trin.) He vs ȝaf ensaumple þore [rime more; earlier MSS. þare..mare]. c 1470 Harding Chron. iii. iv, Seleucus than was the first kynge þore [rime afore]. |
B. Signification.
I. As a demonstrative adverb.
*
Expressing locality or position.
1. a. In or at that place; in the place (country, region, etc.) pointed to, indicated, or referred to, and away from the speaker; the opposite of
here.
c 888 [see A. α, β]. a 900 [see A. β]. c 950 [see A. δ]. c 1050 Byrhtferth's Handboc in Anglia (1885) VIII. 303 Þonne beoð þær swa fela concurrentes. c 1205 Lay. 716 Þær þu findest seouen houndred. c 1400 Three Kings Cologne 118 Þei ȝede to þe cite of Sewill..and þere þei leuyd .ij. ȝere. 1523 Ld. Berners Froiss. I. cv. 126 The erle of Derby went to Pelagrue, and ther was sixe dayes. 1673 Ray Journ. Low C. 23 At our being there it was held with a strong Garrison. 1786 Cowper Let. to Lady Hesketh May, I have walked there, but have never walked thither. 1827 Scott Highl. Widow iii, The cloudberry..which is only found on very high hills, and there only in very small quantities. 1874 R. B. Smith Mohammed, etc. (1876) 322 There if anywhere, will be the Armageddon of Islam. |
b. there (in emphatic use) may be defined by a relative clause, following or preceding, introduced by
where (
† there) or an equivalent.
c 950 Lindisf. Gosp. Matt. vi. 21 Ðer vel huer forðon is strion ðin ðer is and hearta ðin. c 1000 Ags. Gosp. ibid., Þær ðin gold is þær is ðin heorte. a 1300 Cursor M. 20258 Þar i sal be, quar mi sun is. c 1500 Melusine xxxvi. 294 There where he passed by he enquyred after guedon. 1591 Harington Orl. Fur. Pref. ¶ij b, Where the hedge is lowest, there doth euery man go ouer. 1810 Crabbe Borough iii. 195 Where Time has plough'd, there Misery loves to sow. 1850 M{supc}Cosh Div. Govt. ii. i. (1874) 138 Wherever we find law, there we see the certain traces of a lawgiver. 1850 Tennyson In Mem. cxxiii, There rolls the deep where grew the tree. |
2. a. Appended, unstressed, to the name of a person or thing to whose presence attention is called:
= Who or that is there, whom or which you see there.
1590 Shakes. Com. Err. v. i. 275 He din'de with her there, at the Porpentine. 1606 ― Tr. & Cr. ii. i. 91, I would haue peace.., but the foole will not: he there. 1611 ― Wint. T. ii. iii. 160 You that haue beene so tenderly officious With Lady Margerie, your Mid-wife there. 1794 Mrs. Radcliffe Myst. Udolpho xlii, There she lay,..her face was upon the pillow there! Mod. Hand me that book there, please. |
b. As a brusque mode of address (often in commands) to a person or persons in the place or direction indicated;
= you (that are) there. Now also appended casually to exclamations of greeting, etc., as
hi (or hello) there!, with varying purpose:
freq. to attract attention or to express cordiality.
1589 [see hollo, hollow int.]. a 1596 Sir T. More i. ii. 97 Silence there, hoe! 1605 Shakes. Lear iv. vii. 25 Louder the music there! a 1619 Fletcher Mad Lover iii. ii, Put to the doors a while there. 1676 Dryden Aurengzebe ii. i. 24 Your fury hardens me:..A Guard there; seize her. 1840 [see hallo, halloa int.]. 1859 Habits Gd. Soc. v. 200 He will..use some such phrase as: ‘May I trouble you for that ball, sir?’ not ‘Ball, you there’, as one sometimes hears it. 1885 [see hi int. 2]. a 1912 Mod. Hurry up there! Do you hear there? Pass along there, please! 1924 Dialect Notes V. 270 Hi there, (call or warning). 1945 T. Williams Battle of Angels ii. i. 33 A girl: Hello! Val: (amiably) Hello there. 1962 J. Braine Life at Top xv. 188 ‘Hello there,’ I said, ‘What's new?’ |
c. Emphatically appended to the demonstrative
that.
dial. and
vulgar. (
Cf. here adv. 1 d.)
Also
that 'ere,
that 'air.
1742 Richardson Pamela III. 404 On leaving yours and Mr. B.'s hospitable House, because of that there Affair. 1778 F. Burney Evelina (1791) II. xxxvii. 244 Did you ever get a ducking in that there place? Ibid. 245 ‘For the matter of that there’, said the Captain, ‘you must make him a soldier’. 1818 Scott Hrt. Midl. xli, That trunk is mine, and that there band-box, and that pillion mail. 1825 J. Neal Bro. Jonathan I. 244 Is that 'air fellow gone yet? 1840 Thackeray Catherine vi, How came you by that there horse? 1863 Literary Times 20 June, The ‘this here’ and ‘that there’ (euphonically contracted into ‘that 'ere’) of the Cockney. |
(
b)
that there. Used adjectivally and absolutely, often in
euphem. reference to sexual activity,
esp. in catch-phrase
you can't do that there 'ere (see
quot. 1933).
1819 Byron Let. 26 Oct. (1976) VI. 232 As to ‘Don Juan’ confess—confess—you dog—and be candid—that it is the sublime of that there sort of writing—it may be bawdy—but is it not good English? 1933 Squiers & Wark You can't do that there 'Ere in Feldman's 41st Song & Dance Album 37 As they took a kiss, The keeper shouted this: You can't do that there 'ere, so there! You can't do that there 'ere. You'd ought to know you 'ad, I'm sure, That that there 'ere's agin the law. 1937 Even. News 13 Apr. 8/3 The British Government gives vent to a ‘John-Bullism’, and says, after the abduction of a Hindu girl from within the border, ‘You can't do that there 'ere!’ 1962 Auden Dyer's Hand (1963) 406 How suitable, too, for a that-there poet that the room in which his ‘Memoirs’ were burned should now be called the Byron Room. 1974 P. Wright Lang. Brit. Industry xi. 96 Long before the song ‘You can't do that there here’, Northerners used that there as a euphemism for the sexual act. It is a standard phrase in the north when youngsters of both sexes are ‘educating’ themselves by discussing sex matters. |
(
c) Phr.
there's gold in them there (freq. thar) hills, with reference to a potentially profitable enterprise or activity. Also allusively.
orig. U.S.1941 C. B. Kelland House of Cards xiv. 159 She heard him chuckle. ‘Thar's gold in them thar hills.’ 1961 J. L. Austin Philos. Papers vi. 129 There is gold in them thar hills. 1965 E. Gundrey Foot in Door xxxiii. 189 There's money in them thar pills—but very little else. 1976 New Society 16 Sept. 607/1 There's gold in them there sand-dunes, about 10 million people enjoyed a naturist holiday last year. |
3. a. Pointing to something as present to the sight or perception, chiefly in
there is,
there are (
ˈðɛərɪz,
ðɛəz;
ˈðɛərə(r)); also, calling attention to something offered (often
absol.;
cf. 7).
1535 Lyndesay Satyre 1355 Tak, thair, ane vther [i.e. blow] vpon thy peild harne-pan. 1597 Shakes. 2 Hen. IV, v. ii. 117 There is my hand, You shall be as a Father, to my Youth. 1601 ― Twel. N. iv. i. 27 And. Now sir, haue I met you again: ther's for you. Seb. Why there's for thee, and there, and there. 1728 Ramsay There's my Thumb ii, There's my thumb I'll ne'er beguile thee. 1742 Richardson Pamela IV. 375 There's for you, dear Sir! See what a Mother can do, if she pleases! 1890 ‘L. Falconer’ Mlle. Ixe v, There was that lazy Mr. Lethbridge lounging in the doorway. Mod. There is the dinner-bell; make haste. See, there comes the train. Hark! there goes the bugle. |
b. Pointing out a person or object with approval or commendation, or the contrary. Also in anticipatory commendation of the person addressed;
cf. that dem. pron. B. I. 1 b.
1595 Shakes. John ii. i. 163 It grandame will Giue yt a plum, a cherry, and a figge; There's a good grandame. 1596 ― Tam. Shr. v. ii. 180 Why there's a wench: Come on, and kisse mee Kate. 1741 Richardson Pamela II. 224 There's a Word for a Lady's Mouth! 1780 Mirror No. 97 ¶26 ‘Quantity of syllables’, exclaimed the Captain, ‘there is modern education for you!’ 1825 T. Hook Sayings Ser. ii. Man of Many Fr. I. 191 Tom,..go and fetch the wine for your sister, there's a dear love. 1870 Dickens E. Drood ii, Don't moddley-coddley, there's a good fellow. 1872 ‘L. Carroll’ Through Looking-Glass vi. 123 There's glory for you! Mod. There's a fine horse! all skin and bones. |
c. there is,
usu. contracted to
there's (with succeeding
adj.): used in statements or exclamations in place of standard English
that is or
how adv. 7.
Welsh dial.1939 R. Llewellyn How Green was my Valley ii. 23 ‘Go on, boy,’ Cedric whispered, ‘there is soft you are to eat old cake.’ 1951 E. Coxhead One Green Bottle v. 113 There's tantalising! Plenty of company and no time for a word. 1968 A. Laski Keeper vi. 68 There's sad, about Japhet; that was a good man. 1971 ‘H. Calvin’ Poison Chasers ix. 123 There's selfish you are, I had him saved up for myself. |
4. Used unemphatically to introduce a sentence or clause in which, for the sake of emphasis or preparing the hearer, the verb comes before its subject, as
there comes a time when, etc.,
there was heard a rumbling noise. In interrogative sentences
there comes between the verb and subject, as
Breathes there the man, etc.
?, or follows the first word of a compound verb, as
Does there breathe a man?,
Shall there be any notice taken of it? The same order was formerly observed after an introductory
adv. or clause, as
Then came there a voice,
Soon shall there arise a prophet.
Grammatically, there is no difference between
There comes the train! and
There comes a time when, etc.; but, while in the former
there is demonstrative and stressed, in the latter it has been reduced to a mere anticipative element occupying the place of the subject which comes later. Preceding or following a main verb, or following any verb,
there, thus used, is stressless (proclitic or enclitic:
e.g. there-ˈcame,
ˈbreathes-there,
ˈis-there,
ˈwill-there), but preceding
be or an auxiliary,
there has a slight stress, and the verb is enclitic (
e.g. ˈthere-is,
ˈthere-was,
ˈthere-will).
a. with intransitive verbs.
c 888 K. ælfred Boeth. iii. §1 Þa com þær gan in to me heofencund Wisdom. c 1000 Ags. Gosp. Matt. vii. 25 Þa com þær ren and mycele flod and þær bleowun windas. c 1250 Gen. & Ex. 3863 And ðer ros wreððe and strif a-non Aȝen moysen and aaron. a 1300 Cursor M. 19867 Als petre þan bigan til hon [Fairf., Gött. hone] Þar com anoþer voice alson. c 1320 Cast. Love 736 In þulke derworþe feire tour Þer stont a trone wiþ muche honour. c 1386 Chaucer Melib. ¶537 Ne neuere cam ther a vileynous word out of his mouþ. 1470–85 Malory Arthur i. xxiii. 70 Ther maye no knyght ryde this wey but yf he Iuste with the. c 1477 Caxton Jason 22 For to sle a man..ther behoueth but one stroke wel sette. c 1566 J. Alday tr. Boaystuau's Theat. World K viij b, There died an infinite number of people. 1590 Spenser F.Q. ii. ix. 59 There chaunced to the Princes hand to rize An auncient booke. 1609 Holland Amm. Marcell. 47 In these Cottian Alpes..there peaketh up a mightie high mount. 1611 Bible Numb. xxiv. 17 There shall come a starre out of Iacob, and a Scepter shall rise out of Israel. 1761–2 Hume Hist. Eng. (1806) V. lxx. 247 There want not sufficient materials on which to form a true judgment. 1805 Scott Last Minstr. vi. i, Breathes there the man with soul so dead, Who never [etc.]? 1812 Byron Ch. Har. ii. lxxxii, Lurk there no hearts that throb with secret pain? 1857 Buckle Civiliz. I. vii. 399 From all these things there resulted consequences of vast importance. |
† b. with transitive verbs: usually before an auxiliary of tense or mood.
Obs.13.. Cast. Love (Halliw.) 306 Withoute these..Ther may no kyng lede gret lordship. 1387 Trevisa Higden (Rolls) I. 223 Whan it was ones i-tend..þere couþe no man it aquenche wiþ no craft. 14.. Hoccleve Compl. Virgin 54 Ther may no martirdom me make smerte. 1548 Udall, etc. Erasm. Par. Acts 43 b, Peter, knowing..that there woulde some Iewes reproue this his doing. |
c. with a verb in the passive voice.
a 1533 Ld. Berners Huon cxi. 385 There coude not be founde a more goodlyer man. 1584 R. Scot Discov. Witchcr. x. vii. (1886) 147 Whilest the treasure is a digging, there must be read the psalmes [etc.]. 1691 T. H[ale] Acc. New Invent. 99 There's nothing said herein. 1877 Ruskin St. Mark's Rest i. §4 There were no plenipotentiaries sent to the East, and back again. Mod. Here, there were found various relics of Franklin's expedition. |
d. especially with the verb
to be:
cf. be B. 1, 1 b, 5 b.
there is,
there are, are equivalent to F.
il est,
il y a,
Ger. es ist,
es sind,
es giebt,
Sp. hay. (For such phrases as
there is no saying = ‘it is impossible to say’, see
no a. 4.)
c 893 K. ælfred Oros. i. i. §22 Þær is mid Estum an mæᵹð. 1297 R. Glouc. (Rolls) 7551 Þer nas prince in al þe world of so noble fame. a 1300 Cursor M. 17787 Vp risen [he] es, dut es þar nan. Ibid. 20123 Ne was tar noiþer seke ne fere. 13.. Cast. Love (Halliw.) 275 Ther wes a kyng of myche myȝht. c 1330 R. Brunne Chron. Wace (Rolls) 5467 Waster [was there] non þat wolde hym feyne. c 1380 Wyclif Wks. (1880) 147 As þouȝ þer were no lif but only in þis wrecchid world. a 1415 Lydg. Temple of Glass 179 And some þer were..That pleined sore. 1456 Sir G. Haye Law Arms (S.T.S.) 1 Into the quhilk buke thare salbe foure partis. 1485 Caxton Malory's Arthur Pref., Dyuers men holde oppynyon that there was no suche Arthur. 1531 in J. Bulloch Pynours (1887) 59 Considering thair has bene and is dalie besynes and ado with the pynouris. 1605 Shakes. Lear ii. iv. 305 For many Miles about There's scarce a Bush. 1657–83 Evelyn Hist. Relig. (1850) I. 79 Epicurus and his scholars of old.. make this an argument of there being no God. 1782 Cowper Alex. Selkirk 2 My right there is none to dispute. 1823 F. Clissold Ascent Mt. Blanc 22 There being no moon. 1842 Tennyson Lady Clare xi, I will know If there be any faith in man. |
e. When a relative clause follows, the relative
pron. (
that,
who, or
which) is often omitted. Now chiefly
colloq. or
arch., as in ballad style.
Cf. that rel. pron. 10, of which this is a case.
? a 1366 Chaucer Rom. Rose 1239 Ther is no cloth sitteth bet On damiselle, than doth roket. 1470–85 Malory Arthur xiii. iii. 616 There was no knyȝt knewe from whens he came. 1596 Shakes. 1 Hen. IV, ii. iv. 568 There are two Gentlemen Haue in this Robberie lost three hundred Markes. 1806 Wordsw. Address to Child 8 But how he will come, and whither he goes, There's never a scholar in England knows. Mod. colloq. There's a man at the door wants to see you. |
f. The antecedent, when a simple pronominal word (
usu. pl.,
e.g. they,
those,
some, rarely
sing.,
e.g. he,
she,
that), is sometimes omitted. (
App. a Latinism, after
sunt qui dicunt, and the like.)
Cf. that rel. pron. 3.
c 1400 Destr. Troy 12860 There come out of castels & of cloise townes..þat hom bale wroght. 14.. Why I can't be a Nun 244 in E.E.P. (1862) 144 There weren that dyd not so. a 1533 Ld. Berners Gold. Bk. M. Aurel. K k iv, There were that saied, that this ambassadour should be chastised. 1560 Bible (Genev.) Prov. xi. 24 There is that scatereth, and is more increased. 1569 J. Sandford tr. Agrippa's Van. Artes 101 b, There are of them whiche accompte it a greate offence to touche monie. 1628 Feltham Resolves ii. [i.] xiii. 35 There are, to whom Death doth seeme no more then a blood-letting. 1657–83 Evelyn Hist. Relig. (1850) I. 9 There have been..who pretend [etc.]. 1736 Welsted Wks. (1787) 455 There are, I know, who have strong prejudices to opinions of this sort. a 1849 H. Coleridge Ess. (1851) I. 236 Waller called Milton the old blind schoolmaster, and there are who have spoken of Wordsworth as the stamp⁓master. 1864 Browning Abt Vogler v, There wanted not who walked in the glare and glow. |
5. a. At that point or stage in action, proceeding, speech, or thought; formerly sometimes referring to what immediately precedes or follows: at that juncture; on that; on that occasion; then.
a 1400 Relig. Pieces fr. Thornton MS. 77 At myn endynge..I pray þe lady helpe me þare. a 1450 Le Morte Arth. 2388 The kynge Arthur Answerys thore Wordys that were kene and throo. Ibid. 3480 ‘A! false traytor’ he sayd thore. 1596 Shakes. Merch. V. ii. viii. 46 And euen there his eye being big with teares, Turning his face, he put his hand behinde him. 1602 ― Ham. ii. i. 19 And there put on him What forgeries you please. 1647 May Hist. Parl. i. vii. 76 There we are at this instant. 1706 Farquhar Recruit. Officer i. i, Brother! hold there, friend; I am no kindred to you that I know of yet. |
b. and there('s) an end: and that is the end of the matter or the last word on the subject; ‘and that's all’.
Obs. or
arch.1591, 1615 [see end n. 23]. 1596 Shakes. 1 Hen. IV, v. iii. 64 If not, honour comes vnlook'd for, and ther's an end. 1650 Trapp Comm. Exod. vii. 25 As the dog, who getting out of the water, shakes his ears, and there's an end. 1872 Ruskin Fors Clav. xvi. §5 Confirmed by the signature of any person whom the Queen might appoint.., and there an end. |
6. † a. In that case; then.
Obs.c 888 K. ælfred Boeth. xvi. §2 Hu ne is se anweald þon þær nauht? 1362 Langl. P. Pl. A. ix. 32 Þer [B. viii. 37 þanne] weore þe Monnes lyf I-lost þorw lachesse of him⁓selue. |
b. In that thing, matter, or business; in that fact or circumstance; in that respect, as to that.
c 1386 Chaucer Prol. 259 In loue dayes ther koude he muchel helpe, For there he was nat lyk a Cloystrer. 1585 T. Washington tr. Nicholay's Voy. ii. xx. 57 b, If the moneye ordayned for the poore is not there bestowed. 1592 Shakes. Rom. & Jul. iii. iii. 137 Thy Iuliet is aliue,..There art thou happy. 1602 ― Ham. iii. i. 65, I, there's the rub. 1605 ― Lear iv. vi. 148 Oh ho, are you there with me? 1613 ― Hen. VIII, iii. ii. 408 There was the waight that pull'd me downe. 1855 Browning Bp. Blougram's Apol. 85 You would be all, I would be merely much; you beat me there. 1884 H. James in Eng. Illustr. Mag. Dec. 248/2 It was beastly awkward certainly; there I could quite agree with him. 1896 Daily News 17 June 5/4 There is where the Japanese differ from us. |
c. Referring to something said or done: In those words, in that act.
a 1596 Sir T. More i. i. 176 Wil. My maisters..lets..sweare true secrecie vppon our liues. Geo. There spake an angell. Come, let vs along, then. 1603 Shakes. Meas. for M. iii. i. 86 There spake my brother: there my fathers graue Did vtter forth a voice. 1829 Blackw. Mag. XXV. 558 There you have hit the nail on the head, James. Mod. colloq. You have me there! I cannot tell you. |
7. Used interjectionally, usually to point (in a tone of vexation, dismay, derision, satisfaction, encouragement, etc.) to some fact, condition, or consummation, presented to the sight or mind. Hence
there-there vb. trans., to soothe or comfort by saying these words.
1535 Coverdale Ps. xxxiv. [xxxv.] 21 They gape vpon me with their mouthes, sayenge: there, there [1611 Aha, aha!]: we se it with oure eyes. 1596 Shakes. Merch. V. iii. i. 87 Why there, there, there, there, a diamond gone cost me two thousand ducats. 1606 ― Tr. & Cr. v. v. 43 Ajax. Troylus, thou coward Troylus. Diom. I, there, there. 1788 J. O'Keeffe Prisoner at large i. vi, There, sir, the bed's ready. 1798 Jane Austen Lett. (1952) 42 There! I may now finish my letter and go and hang myself. 1824 Scott St. Ronan's xxx, ‘There now’, said Touchwood, ‘there was a rencontre between them—the very thing I wanted to know’. 1840 T. C. Haliburton Clockmaker 3rd Ser. xx. 284 It's no such thing, says mother, quite snappishly; Sam is only twenty-one last Thanksgiving-day, and he was born just nine months and one day arter we was married, so there now. 1856 Mrs. Carlyle Lett. (1883) II. 295 There! I have put my foot in it! 1872 Routledge's Ev. Boy's Ann. 514/1 ‘There, there’, my poor father answered, ‘it is not that’. 1875 L. Troubridge Life amongst Troubridges (1966) 101 There now, if I haven't entirely forgotten to say anything about the boys. 1876 Stevenson Lett. (1901) I. iii. 115 There, that's your prophecy did that! 1878 Browning La Saisiaz 49 There, the dread descent is over. 1888 ‘J. S. Winter’ Bootle's Childr. ix, And, indeed—but there, what's the good of talking about it. 1893 Burrell & Cuthell Indian Mem. 210 But there! I was not going to tell you how you felt. 1894 ‘J. S. Winter’ Red-Coats 55 My life's my own to do what I like with, and I'm going to 'em now; so there! 1903 Daily Chron. 28 Oct. 7/1 She showered blows upon the lad's head and shoulders, with the words,..‘There now, how do you like it?’ 1924 R. Macaulay Orphan Island xxi. 280, I suppose you think I'm in love with you. Well, I'm not, so there. 1938 D. Runyon Furthermore viii. 159 He..starts whispering, ‘There, there, there, my itty oddleums.’ 1948 ‘J. Tey’ Franchise Affair iv. 39 Only one thing your Aunt Lin makes better than me..hot cross buns, and that's only once a year. So there! 1968 J. Sangster Touchfeather xv. 180, I was sobbing my heart out on his chest and he was there there-ing me all over the place. 1969 Listener 15 May 698/1 But Gwen was going to marry her lecherous tutor, so there. 1977 ‘E. Crispin’ Glimpses of Moon xii. 240 There, There, sir. 1977 C. Dexter Silent World N. Quinn 254 Joyce took the baby..and lovingly there-thered his raucous cries. |
**
Expressing motion to a place.
8. To that place: now taking in ordinary use the place of
thither.
there and back, to that place and back again; also as a catch-phrase reply (see
quot. 1937).
to get there (
colloq. or slang): see
get v. 31 c.
a 900 O.E. Chron. an. 894, Wæs Hæsten þa þær cumen mid his herᵹe. c 1205 Lay. 29876 Alle ut wenden þa þer [c 1275 þider] icumen weoren. 13.. Cursor M. 1780 (Gött.) Quen þai cam þar [v.rr. þare, þere] was þar na bote. a 1425 Ibid. 9929 (Trin.) Waried wiȝt comeþ þere neuer. c 1440 Alphabet of Tales 122 Þis clerk denyed hym & sayd he come nott þer. 1592 Shakes. Ven. & Ad. 780 And will not let a false sound enter there. 1610 ― Temp. ii. i. 99 And the rarest that ere came there. 1663 Gerbier Counsel 41 Strangers that come there. 1772 in S. Rosenfeld Temples of Thespis (1978) v. 78 Pd Mr. Richards..at 2 Guineas p{supr} Day & expenses there & Back {pstlg}62.5.0. 1803 G. Colman John Bull iii. ii. 32 Aye, he might have been there and back, over and over again; but my husband is slow enough in his motions. 1830 M. Edgeworth Let. 18 Oct. (1971) 419 This ‘Trip to the Viaduct’..five shillings apiece there and back. 1858 J. H. Newman Mission Bened. Ord. Sel. Ess. 211 When St. Hubert was brought there. 1871 Mrs. H. Wood Dene Hollow xxviii, We shall go only there and back, grandpapa. 1907 Westm. Gaz. 7 June 12/1 The ‘there-and-back’ distance between ‘Auld Reekie’ and Inverness is but eight miles less. a 1912 Mod. Going to the meeting?—I am on my way there. 1937 Partridge Dict. Slang 874/2 There and back, a c.p. reply to an impertinent or unwelcome inquiry ‘where are you going (to)?’: late C. 19–20. 1977 Transatlantic Rev. lx. 191 ‘Where are we going?’ ‘Oh, there and back,’ said the cabbie, giggling. |
II. As a relative or conjunctive adverb.
† 9. In, on, at, or into which place;
= where.
a. with a
n. as antecedent.
a 800 O.E. Chron. an. 755, On þære byriᵹ..þær se cyning ofslæᵹen læᵹ. c 950 Lindisf. Gosp. Matt. vi. 20 Strionas..iuh striona in heofnum, ðer [Rushw. þær] ne hrust ne ec mohðe ᵹespilles. c 1000 Ags. Gosp. John xviii. 20 Ic lærde..on temple þar [Hatt. þær] ealle iudeas togædere comon. c 1175 Lamb. Hom. 91 Bi þere stret þere petrus forð-eoðe. a 1272 Luue Ron 122 in O.E. Misc. 97 Hit stont vppon a treowe mote Þar hit neuer truke ne schal. 1297 R. Glouc. (Rolls) 7683 In þe tresorie at westmunstre þere it ȝut is. c 1300 Cursor M. 2904 (Cott.) Þai sink in þat wele Þar neuer man sank Þat was o sele. c 1386 Chaucer Frankl. T. 347 In to hir owene dirke Regioun Vnder the ground ther Pluto dwelleth Inne. c 1440 Pallad. on Husb. i. 21 In places there thow wilt have the culture. 15.. Merch. & Son 92 in Hazl. E.P.P. I. 139 The erthe tremelyd there Wyllyam stode. |
b. with
there also as antecedent:
there there = there where, in that place where.
c 1000 ælfric Gen. ii. 21 God..ᵹefilde mid flæsce, þær þær þæt ribb wæs. c 1000 ælfric Saints' Lives xiii. 67 Man mot..hine ᵹebiddan, beo þærþær he beo. c 1175 Lamb. Hom. 85 He..scal þer þer hit is ful, makien hit clene. a 1250 Owl & Night. 295 Loke þat þu ne beo þare þar changling beoþ. a 1400 Relig. Pieces fr. Thornton MS. 24 Lecherye..mase manes herte to melte, and to playe thare þare his herte lykes. |
c. with
there serving as both antecedent and relative: (In) the place in which;
= mod. where, as in ‘I found it where I left it’.
c 888 K. ælfred Boeth. xxxii. §1 He nænne ne mæᵹ ᵹebringan þær he him ᵹehet. c 1175 Lamb. Hom. 35 Ga to þine feder burinesse oðer þer eni of þine cunne lið in. c 1220 Bestiary 10 Ðe leun..Draȝeð dust wið his stert ðer he steppeð. 1303 R. Brunne Handl. Synne 851 And þere men haunted þat custome lest, Falleþ oft tyme grete tempest. c 1340 Hampole Prose Tr. 5 For þare he es he sekes hym noghte. 13.. Cursor M. 2768 (Gött.) Again þaim he ras fra þar [Trin. þere] he sate. c 1400 Laud Troy Bk. 2926 Thei sayled alle on a rawe, Til thei were come ther thei were knawe. c 1440 J. Capgrave St. Kath. i. 506 Wyth a G set there C shuld stond. c 1500 God Speed the Plough 22 Than cometh the clerk..To haue A shef of corne there it groweth. a 1533 Ld. Berners Huon lxiv. 221 It had been better for hym to haue taryed there he was. 1594 T. Bedingfield tr. Machiavelli's Florentine Hist. (1595) 182 Your laughing there you are, is the occasion I weep not where I am. |
† 10. In the very case or circumstances in which; where on the other hand, or on the contrary; whereas, while. (
Cf. 6.)
Obs.c 1200 Trin. Coll. Hom. 219 For nu is euerihc man ifo þare he solde fren[d] be. c 1380 Wyclif Wks. (1880) 32 Þei han..welfare of mete and drynk, þere þei myȝtten unneþe before have bene-bred and watir or feble ale. c 1380 Antecrist in Todd 3 Treat. Wyclif 134 Þei putten grete penaunce unto men þere Cristis charge is liȝt. 1393 Langl. P. Pl. C. xvii. 88 For pouerte haþ bote pokes to putten yn hus goodes, Ther auarice haþ almaries and yre-bounden cofres. |
III. 11. as
n. That place; the (or a) place yonder.
1588 R. Parke tr. Mendoza's Hist. China 202 They..kneeled downe right ouer against there whereas the Viceroye sate in a chaire. 1857–8 Sears Athan. 19 [Motion] requires a here and a there. 1888 J. Martineau Stud. Relig. I. i. i. 68 In the Space-field lie innumerable other theres that never have been here. 1907 Outlook 16 Mar. 339/2 We..draw, laboriously, a small circle in the dark and say, ‘We are here’, forgetful that there is no ‘here’ nor ‘there’. Mod. We shall stay in Birmingham overnight, and go on from there next day. He left there last night. |
IV. Phrases. (from I.)
12. a. to be there: to be at or in the place in question; to be present or at hand.
a 1300 Cursor M. 1248 Þou wat þat i was neuer þare. c 1400 Brut ccxxv. 295 He wolde be þer him-self in al þe haste þat he myȝt. c 1420 Avow. Arth. xxiii, Kay callut on Gauan, ȝorne Asshes ‘Quo is there?’ 1600 St. Papers Eliz., Domestic CLXXVIII. No. 78 (P.R.O.), Whether S{supr} John davyes were ther or not thys examinate can not tell. 1602 Shakes. Ham. i. i. 1 Who's there? 1722 Ramsay Three Bonnets ii. 43 Ha, ha! ye Judas, are ye there? 1818 Lady Morgan Autobiog. (1859) 49 The Duke of Sussex was there, with Lady Arran,..and the whole family of Gore. 1881 M. E. Herbert Edith 17 The ‘little rift within the lute’ was still there. |
b. to be all there (
colloq.): to have all one's faculties or wits about one; to be smart or on the alert; hence,
not all there = not quite right in the head.
1864 Mrs. Gatty Parab. fr. Nat. Ser. iv. 3 Hans Jansen was what is commonly called not all there. 1883 Payn Thicker than Water xx, It was his excusable boast..that when anything was wanted he was ‘all there’. 1889 L. B. Walford Stiff-necked Generation 325 ‘Was he there after dinner last night?’ ‘Very much there’. 1900 Daily News 23 Apr. 8/1 But they were of the real Lancashire type, and were, as the phrase goes, ‘all there’. |
c. to have been there (before) (
colloq.): to have had previous experience of the activity or thing under review; to be fully conversant with or know something at first hand.
orig. U.S.1877 Sat. Even. Post in J. R. Ware Passing Eng. (1909) 24/1 Some reasons why I left off drinking whiskey, by one who has been there. 1913 A. Bennett Great Adv. i. ii. 46 But I'm not a young girl. If it's a question of the male sex, I may say that I've been there before. 1977 J. Wambaugh Black Marble (1978) viii. 106 Philo Skinner's been in this racket thirty years. Philo Skinner's been there, baby! |
d. in there (
U.S. slang): excellent, superlative (
esp. of a jazz musician's performance); well-informed,
au fait.
1944 D. Burley Orig. Handbk. Harlem Jive 104 Now, this skull was in there, Jack. 1945 L. Shelley Jive Talk Dict. 26 In there, superlative performance. 1955 Shapiro & Hentoff Hear me talkin' to Ya vii. 101 The Lincoln Gardens, of course, was still in there. 1958 J. Kerouac On Road i. i. 6 It took him just a few months..to become completely in there with all the terms and jargon. 1962 Down Beat 13 Sept. 37 A guy playing a horn has..gotta get in there. |
13. a. there and then (
† there then), at that precise place and time; on the spot, forthwith. Also
attrib. (Also
then and there: see
then adv.1 1 d.)
1428 in Surtees Misc. (1888) 8 And þar þan he was asked. 1496 Coventry Leet Bk. 580 Wheruppon þe seid Laurence was there & then commyt vnto þe Flete. 1600 Abp. Abbot Exp. Jonah 564 Although God do not say before, that there and then he will strike. 1848 Mrs. Gaskell Mary Barton xxxviii, Going on the search there and then. 1908 Daily Chron. 16 July 3/5 Happily..a there-and-then agreement was come to on their behalf. |
b. here and there,
here..there,
here, there and everywhere,
neither here nor there: see
here adv. 9–12.
14. there or († and) thereabouts: primarily in the literal local sense; hence also
= that or very nearly that (amount); something like that; approximately. See also
thereabouts.
a 1696 Aubrey Lives (1898) II. 226 (Shakspere) He left 2 or 300li. per annum there and thereabout to a sister. 1819 Scott Leg. Montrose xiii, ‘Speak plainly, will there be five thousand men?’ ‘There and thereabouts’, answered Dalgetty. 1825 T. Hook Sayings Ser. ii. Passion & Princ. i. II. 248 A close, or field, containing eight acres, there or thereabouts. 1890 ‘R. Boldrewood’ Col. Reformer (1891) 431 You'll mostly find him there or thereabouts, as long as he's alive. 1890 Bp. Lightfoot in Expositor Feb. 91 Forty-six years there or thereabouts had actually elapsed. |
15. there he (or she) goes,
there you, they, go, is primarily literal, the person going being pointed to (as in 3); but it also calls attention to the way in which a person goes on, acts, talks, etc., usually expressing surprise or disapproval.
there it goes! is a common exclamation when a thing falls, disappears, goes off, breaks, bursts, or the like.
1780 Mirror No. 97 ¶32 ‘There she goes, the travelled lady’, cried the Captain; ‘she must always have a fling at her catechism’. 1837 Dickens Pickw. ii, ‘They're beginning up-stairs..fiddles tuning—now the harp—there they go’. The various sounds..announced the commencement of the first quadrille. |
16. a. there you are! (
colloq.) (
a)
= there you go! in 15; (
b) expressing or drawing attention to the simplicity or ready consummation of a process or action;
= There it is for you, there you have it, the thing is done; (
c)
= What did I tell you? (
d) expressing resignation to an unpleasant fact.
1857 Dickens Dorrit ii. xxv. 536 All the people who had tried to make money and had not been able to do it, said, There you were! [1863 H. E. P. Spofford Amber Gods 133 She couldn't hire him a nurse, and there he was.] 1883 ‘Mark Twain’ Life on Mississippi xlii. 431 The immortelle requires no attention: you just hang it up, and there you are. 1894 A. Conan Doyle Mem. Sherlock Holmes 142 ‘There you are!’ said Holmes smiling. 1907 Westm. Gaz. 22 May 3/1 Tables, setting out in a there-you-are! fashion the declining percentage to the total of British imports into certain countries for two contrasted decades. a 1912 Mod. Can't find the waiter? That's quite easy; just press that button and there you are! Accidents are common in Alpine ascents; one false step, and there you are! 1915 Conrad Victory iv. x. 373 ‘There you are!’ Ricardo shrugged his shoulders philosophically. ‘Can't be helped.’ 1937 M. Sharp Nutmeg Tree xix. 250 ‘We've no business to talk about him. But there you are,’ said Julia harshly, ‘I'm the sort of woman any one talks to about anything.’ 1926 S. Jameson Three Kingdoms i. 49 I'm sure that's a revolting sentiment, and revoltingly sentimental, but there you are. 1953 L. P. Hartley Go-Between xiv. 173 It's a pity we have to shoot so many of them but there you are. |
b. there it is = sense 16 a (
d) above. Also with past tense.
1857 Trollope Barchester T. III. i. 10 There it is. If they haven't the spirit to enjoy it, the fault shan't be mine. 1884 ‘Mark Twain’ Huck. Finn xxxiii. 345 So there it was!—but I couldn't help it. 1904 H. James Golden Bowl I. xviii. 311 ‘It's not, at any rate,’ she went on, ‘my fault. There it is.’ 1932 ‘A. Bridge’ Peking Picnic xxiii. 296 He had been hurt hideously, and it made her cry; she was nearly as much surprised as he, but there it was. 1954 R. Macaulay Last Lett. to Friend (1962) 196, I feel a little mean about the dear Chapel, but there it is. 1973 C. Sagan Cosmic Connection xxii. 150 We would not ordinarily consider the flatulence of cattle as a dominant manifestation of life on Earth, but there it is. |
V. 17. there (in branch I) in combination with adverbs and prepositions.
For the history of these, see note
s.v. here adv. 16. ‘The compounds of
there meaning
that, and of
here meaning
this, have been for some time passing out of use, and are no longer found in elegant writings, or in any other than formulary pieces’ (Todd's
Johnson 1818,
s.v. Therewithall). But see the Main words
thereabout,
thereafter, etc.
a. With adverbs, as
there all-about,
there east,
there-without;
† there-gates, in that manner;
† there-thence, thence;
† there-whyne (
there-quhyne), from whence. Also
thereaway, etc.
b. With prepositions:
= that, that place, matter, etc., as
there-among (
† there-imong),
there-below,
there-between;
thereamid (
† there-emid), amid that;
† therebout (
there-buten)
= thereabout;
† therebove (
there-buve(n)
= thereabove;
† therenext, next to that;
† thereoffen = thereoffe;
† thereouten, out of that;
† there-ovenon (
there-ufenen), above that;
† there-toforn, before that (time). Originally mostly written as two words. See also the main words from
thereabout to
therewithin.
1422 tr. Secreta Secret., Priv. Priv. 198 Noone god of al that weryn *ther al aboute in al regions. |
a 1300 Cursor M. 11988 Mani childer was *þar emid. 1901 G. Gissing in Literature 21 Dec. 572/1 Thereamid stood a girl, her eyes fixed upon the prospect of city roofs. |
c 1220 Bestiary 601 He ðe swiken *ðer imong. |
1899 Westm. Gaz. 18 Apr. 2/1 It is a real joy to know that the pilot-fish does hide itself within the capacious throat, or some snug harbourage *therebelow, when danger threatens. |
1876 Morris Sigurd iii. 194 And lingering flecks of the cloud-host are tangled *there-between. 1885–94 R. Bridges Eros & Psyche, October 9 She..sweeping therebetween a passage wide, Made clear of corn and chaff the temple space. |
c 1250 Gen. & Ex. 3625, .vii. moneð *ðor buten he ben. 1297 R. Glouc. (Rolls) 11614 Bruggen hii breke oueral hii ne beleuede ssip non..þer boute [C. aboute]. |
c 897 K. ælfred Gregory's Past. C. viii. 52 *Ðærbufan is ᵹeteald hwelc he beon sceol. a 1300 Floriz & Bl. 294 Aboue þe walle stant a treo..lef and blosme beoþ þer buue. |
1639 Baillie Lett. 28 Sept. (Bann. Club) I. 201 The Tables *there East thought meet they should not conjoyne, bot divided them in foure. |
c 1440 York Myst. xii. 48 Þus may *þer-gatis be mente. |
13.. Cursor M. 141 (Cott.) *Þar neist [F. þar next] sal be sythen tald How þat ioseph was boght and sald. 1387 Trevisa Higden (Rolls) VII. 71 Under a treen brugge þat was þere next. |
c 1450 Lovelich Merlin 6294 The wheche child to hire schal ben browht; but *there-offen the peple may weten nowht. |
c 1250 Gen. & Ex. 3364 And he smot wið his wond ðor on, And water gan *ðor vten gon. |
c 1205 Lay. 12423 Heo bigunnen..ane swiðe deope dich & *þer ouen on ouer al ænne strongne stanene wal. Ibid. 17696 Þer ufenen he hæfde Ane ladliche here. |
c 1475 Partenay 3125 *Ther thens to uavuent [Vauvent] A man sent in message, Which full courtois was, inly wise also. |
a 1425 Cursor M. 12479 (Trin.) [He] wende þe maistir were of lyue As oþere *þer to forn were. |
1456 Sir G. Haye Law Arms (S.T.S.) 77 And *thairquhyne cumis this? |
a 1500 Flower & Leaf 71 Al tho that yeden *there without. |
▸
colloq.to have been there, done that and variants: to be fully experienced in or familiar with something,
esp. to the point of boredom or complacency. Also as
int.:
been there, done that (etc.), flippantly expressing boredom, impatience, or total lack of interest.
1982 Syracuse (N.Y.) Herald-Amer. 21 Feb. 11 Miss Tewes, who has just divorced, says she doesn't plan to get married at this time. Using an Australian expression, she says, ‘Been there, done that.’ 1984 L. Kallen & C. B. Greenfield Piano Bird i. 11 You don't have to prove anything... You've been there, you've done it, one more credit, what do you care? 1991 Ski Surv. (BNC) Feb. Knee Injuries. Rosemary Burns has been there, done that and got the T-shirt. She gives fellow sufferers her sympathy and sound advice. 1995 Internet World Feb. 5/1 (advt.) Getting bored watching your 14.4 modem limp along the Internet? How about those endless downloads, especially for images and sound clips? Been there, done that. 2000 New Yorker 11 Sept. 48/3 He liked the idea of..space-based interceptors but couldn't see the purpose of a new treaty that would once again give Russia a veto over our defenses. ‘Been there, done that,’ Cooper says. |
▪ II. there obs. gen. and
dat. sing. fem. of
the;
obs. var. of
their,
thir; inflexion of
tharf v.
Obs.