astony

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astony
astony, v. arch. (əˈstɒnɪ) Forms: 3 astoney, 3–5 astonie, -ye, 6 astunnye, 6– astony. [A variant of astone, of difficult explanation; perh. the ending is due to OF. pa. pple. estoné, estonné. The instance in the Ayenbite may be only the inf. in -ie of astone: it has pr. tense aston-eth.] 1. trans. =... Oxford English Dictionary
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hestunye
hestunye obs. form of astony v.c 1425 Found. St. Bartholomew's (E.E.T.S.) 21 The seruantes so yn soule he-stunyid and with grete feer affrayed. Oxford English Dictionary
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Sherlock Holmes (1932 film)
Simpson as Faulkner Stanley Fields asTony Ardetti Uncredited: Ted Billings as Carnival Thug Roy D'Arcy as Manuel Lopez Edward Dillon as Al John George wikipedia.org
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astonied
astonied, ppl. a. (əˈstɒnɪd) Forms: 4–5 astoneyd, 4–6 -yed, 5 -eyed, 5–6 astoyned, astonnyed, -ied, 6– astonied. Aphet. 4 stoneyd, stoneȝid. [A variant of prec.; pa. pple. of astony v. (Various writers have apparently fancied this word to be a derivative of stony, and used it as = petrified, in the ... Oxford English Dictionary
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astone
† astone, astun, v. Obs. (əˈstʌn) Forms: 3–6 aston-e(n, 4 astune, astoune, 5 astoon, astown, 5–6 astoyne, astoun, 6 astonne, 6–7 aston, 7–8 astun (some of these only in pa. pple.). [The etymology and form-history present points of difficulty. To all appearance, astone, astune, astoune, was a. OF. es... Oxford English Dictionary
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astonish
astonish, v. (əˈstɒnɪʃ) Also 6 astonysshe. Aphetized in 7 to stonish. [An alteration (not found before 1500) of earlier astony, as if this represented a F. *estonnir, estonissant. Perhaps such a form had arisen in Anglo-Fr.: Palsgrave has ‘astonysshyng, estonissement,’ Godefroy a ppl. adj. estoni.] ... Oxford English Dictionary
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stony
▪ I. stony, a. (ˈstəʊnɪ) Forms: 1 stániᵹ, 3 stoni, 3–4 stani, 4–5 stany, 5–6 stonye, 6 stoany, Sc. staany, 6–7 stonie, 7 Sc. stanie, 7– stoney, 4– stony. [OE. stániᵹ = OHG. steinag, Goth. stainah-s:—OTeut. *stainaᵹo-, -aχo-, f. *staino- stone n.: see -y. (OE. had also stǽniᵹ:—OTeut. type *stainīᵹo-.... Oxford English Dictionary
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Tom
Tom, n.1 (tɒm) Forms: 4–6 tomme, (5 thomme, 6 thom), 6– Tom; also, in general uses, with lower-case initial. 1. A familiar shortening of the Christian name Thomas; often a generic name for any male representative of the common people; esp. in Tom and Tib (cf. Jack and Jill); Tom, Dick, and (or or) H... Oxford English Dictionary
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