abreid

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abreid
† abreid, adv. Obs. or dial. (əˈbriːd) [OE. on brede in breadth, Chaucer on brede, mod. Scotch a breid, abreed.] Apart, widely. (Cf. abroad, a later formation which took the place of a brede in Eng.)c 1400 Destr. Troy xxix. 11877 Bothe obreade & aboue [þai] brekyn the yates. 1787 Burns III. 143 Spre... Oxford English Dictionary
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abraid
▪ I. † aˈbraid, v. Obs. Forms: inf. 1 abreᵹdan, abrédan, 3 abreiden, 4–5 abreyde, 5 abrayde, abraide, 6 erroneous abray. pa. tense 1 abræᵹd, abræd(de, 2 abred, abræid, 3 abraid, abreid, 4 abreyde, 4–5 abrayde, abraide, 5–6 abraid, abrayed. pa. pple. 1 abroᵹden, abroden, 2 abroiden, abroden, abruden.... Oxford English Dictionary
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brede
▪ I. † brede, n.1 Obs. Forms: 1 brǽde, bréde, 2–5 brede; also 3 brade, bread(e, 6 Sc. breid. [OE. brǽde, Angl. bréde, f. OTeut. *bræ̂d-an, brede v.1, to roast. A synonymous derivative of the same root was WGer. brâdon-, OHG. brâto (Ger. braten) roast flesh, whence Romanic bradon, OF. braon, Eng. bra... Oxford English Dictionary
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snob
▪ I. snob, n.1 (snɒb) Also 9 Sc. snab. [Orig. slang, of obscure origin.] 1. a. dial. or colloq. A shoemaker or cobbler; a cobbler's apprentice.α 1781 in Hone Every-day Bk. II. 837 Sir William Blase, a snob by trade. 1785 Grose Dict. Vulgar T., Snob, a nick name for a shoemaker. 1819 Sporting Mag. IV... Oxford English Dictionary
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