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arear
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List of Cornish dialect words
familiar way to address a man)
Anvon - a hard stone on which large stones are broken (mining term, from Cornish language anwen, meaning 'anvil'))
Areah, Arear
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a-rear
a-rear, advb. phr. (əˈrɪə(r)) [a prep.1 + rear n.; cf. arrear adv. from Fr.] In the rear.1849 Carlyle Irish Journ. 94 Wind is arear of us. 1865 Fredk. Gt. xiii. x. V. 104 The Saxons dragged heavily arear.
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arearer
† aˈrearer Obs. rare—1. [f. arear v. + -er1.] One who rears, raises up, or arouses.1382 Wyclif Judith xiv. 9 That not of the arereris [v.r. rereres; Vulg. ab excitantibus]..Olofernes shulde waken.
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under-arear
† under-aˈrear, v. [under-1 4 a.] trans. To suborn.1502 Arnolde Chron. 174 Also al thei..whiche such false witnesse in-bryng or vnder-areren in cause of matrimony.
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arreare
▪ I. † aˈrrear, adv. Obs. Forms: 4–6 arere, 6 arear(e, arreir, 6–7 arreare, 6–8 arrere, 7–8 arrear. [a. OF. arere, ariere (mod.F. arrière), Pr. a(r)reire:—Merovingian L. ad retro, f. ad to, retro backward.] 1. Of direction: Backward, to the rear, behind, into the background.1393 Langl. P. Pl. C. vii...
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araise
† aˈraise, v. Obs. Forms: 4–5 arayse, areise, 4–6 areyse, 5 arrays, -reise, -reyse, 6 -raise, arais, 5–8 araise. [f. a- prefix 1 + raise v.; cf. the pair rise, arise. Cf. also arear: rear and raise being the cogn. forms from OE. and ON.] 1. To raise, lift up, elevate. lit. and fig.1303 R. Brunne Han...
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areare
▪ I. † aˈrear, v. Obs. Forms: 1–2 arǽr-an, 2 arer-en, 3 arær-en, 3 areri, 2–6 arere, 3–6 areare, 5 areyre, 5–6 arrere, 6–7 ereare, arreare. [OE. arǽran, f. a- prefix 1 up, out + rǽran to rear. In 15–17th c. the r was corruptly doubled: see ar- prefix2. The OE. arǽran, cogn. with Goth. urraisjan, was...
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arrearage
arrearage (əˈrɪərɪdʒ) Forms: 3–7 arer-, 4 arrir-, 4–7 arrer-, 5 (arrage), 6 arear-, 7 arrier-, arrere-, arreer-, (arreage), 5– arrearage. See aphet. rearage. [a. OF. arerage, f. arere behind, mod. arrérage; cf. avant-age, advantage.] † 1. The state or condition of being behind, or in arrear, with th...
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broke
▪ I. broke, n. (brəʊk) Forms: 1–2, 4 broc, 6–8 brok, 8–9 (dial.) brock, 5– broke. [OE. broc ‘misery’, and ᵹebroc ‘fragment’, f. brecan (pa. pple. ᵹe-brocen) to break. The later lengthening of the vowel may be from the inflected dissyllabic forms broces, brocu, etc.: cf. the pple. broke, brōken, form...
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rear
▪ I. † rear, n.1 Obs.—1 [variant of reere.] A crash, peal.1584 Hudson Du Bartas' Judith ii. in Sylvester's Du Bartas ii. (1621) 702 At this Hebrew's prayer such a reare Of thunder fell that brought them all in feare.▪ II. † rear, n.2 Obs. rare. [f. rear v.1] That which is reared or got (from cattle)...
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