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Quakeress
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Quakeress
Quakeress (ˈkweɪkərɪs) [f. quaker + -ess.] A female Quaker.1721 New-England Hist. & Geneal. Reg. (1876) XXX. 61 [Baptism of] John Rennolds, the little child of John Rennolds, his wife a Quakeress, not consenting. 1764 Stewardson (title) Spiritual Courtship, or, The Rival Quakeresses. 1821 Lamb Elia ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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The Quakeress
The Quakeress is a 1913 silent era short costume drama motion picture starring Louise Glaum, Charles Ray, and William Desmond Taylor.
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J. G. Hawks
Filmography
The Quakeress (1913)
The Geisha (1914)
Aloha Oe (1915) co-written with Ince
"Bad Buck" of Santa Ynez (1915)
D'artagnan (1915)
House of His
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-ess
▪ I. -ess, suffix1 forming ns. denoting female persons or animals, is a. Fr. -esse:—Com. Romanic -essa:—late L. -issa, a. Gr. -ισσα (:—-ikyā: cf. the OE. fem. agent-suffix -icge:—-igjôn-) occurring in class. Gr. only in βασίλισσα queen (f. βασιλ-εύς king), but after the analogy of this employed in s...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Ruth Alcock
Ruth Alcock may refer to:
Ruth Alcock, character in The Lakes (TV series)
Ruth Alcock (Quakeress), English Quakeress
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prim
▪ I. † prim, n.1 Obs. Also 6 prym(me. [Origin obscure; the sense and date are against connexion with prim a.] A pretty girl or young woman; a paramour.1509 Barclay Shyp of Folys (1874) I. 250 Than must he have another prymme or twayne. 1514 ― Cyt. & Uplondyshm. (Percy Soc.) 2 Aboute all London there...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Hannah Lightfoot
attributed another painting of Hannah Lightfoot by Reynolds and followed an earlier guide of 1817 in describing the sitter as 'Miss Axford, the Fair Quakeress A historical novel by Sir Walter Besant in which Hannah Lightfoot is the narrator
The Prince and the Quakeress, Jean Plaidy, Hale, London, 1968,
Kingdom
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extravagate
extravagate, v. (ɛkˈstrævəgeɪt) [f. med.L. extrāvagāt- ppl. stem of extrāvagārī (or extrā vagārī) to wander, stray outside limits, f. extrā outside + vagārī to wander. Cf. Fr. extravaguer.] To wander; only in fig. sense. 1. intr. To wander away, stray, from, into. Also, † to extravagate it.1600 Abp....
Oxford English Dictionary
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Michael Antoine Garoutte
Michel's life was saved and he married John Smith's daughter The Quakeress, Sophia Smith.
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Charles Heber Clark
1881)
"The Fortunate Island and Other Stories" (US edition of "An Old Fogey and Other Stories) (1882)
"Captain Bluitt, A tale of Old Turly" (1901)
"The Quakeress
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New England
New England [See New Englander.] a. Used to denote a form of U.S. speech characteristic of New England, and attrib. of persons, produce, etc., native to New England; of mentality, idiom, etc., marked by the characteristics of New England.1638 J. Underhill in Mass. Hist. Soc. Coll. (1837) 3rd. Ser. V...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Jessie Craigen
from plays and recitations, before moving onto delivering orations at temperance meetings, and was described on one such occasion in 1861 as a 'clever Quakeress
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James Clifton Brown
His mother-in-law was born in Lima, Peru in 1825 to Friedrich (Frederick) Pfeiffer, an Hanoverian-born flour merchant, and his Quakeress wife who left
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Raymond B. West
Ashes (1913) (actor)
The Great Sacrifice (1913) (director)
The Iconoclast (1913) (director)
The Banshee (1913) (director)
Flotsam (1913) (director)
The Quakeress
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Phebe Ann Coffin Hanaford
The first of these, Lucretia the Quakeress (1853) was inspired by the life of a famous cousin, the abolitionist and women's rights activist Lucretia Coffin Books
Lucretia the Quakeress (1853)
Chimes of Peace and Union (1861, with Mary Trask Webber)
Life of Abraham Lincoln (1865)
The Soldier's Daughter (1867
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en.wikipedia.org