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azured
ˈazured, ppl. a. [f. azure + -ed; cf. F. azuré (16th c.).] 1. arch. orObs. Coloured azure; = azure a. (in various senses): a. pple.1490 Caxton Eneydos xv. 57 The blewe cote of the heuens azured. 1587 Fleming Contn. Holinshed III. 1335/2 Two banners of silke azured with the armes of Aniou. b. adj.156...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Campanula rotundifolia
William Shakespeare makes a reference to 'the azured hare-bell' in Cymbeline:
With fairest flowers,
Whilst summer lasts, and I live here, Fidele,
I'll sweeten thy sad grave: thou shalt not lack
The flower that's like thy face, pale primrose, nor
The azured hare-bell, like thy veins; no, nor
The leaf
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yasured
† yasured [y- 4] azured.c 1483 Caxton Dialogues 14/36 Bleu asuret, Blyew y-asured.
Oxford English Dictionary
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azure
▪ I. azure, n. and a. (ˈæʒə(r), ˈæʒ(j)ʊə(r), ˈeɪ-) Forms: 4 azer, 4–5 asur(e, 5 aser(e, aserre, 6 asour, aisur, 7 azur, 5– azure. [a. OF. azur, asur (11th c.), cogn. with Pr., OSp. azur, Pg., Sp. azul, It. azzurro, azzuolo, med.L. azura, azzurum, azolum, adaptations of Arabic (al-)lazward, a. Pers. ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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skylit
skylit, ppl. a. (ˈskaɪlɪt) [Pa. pple. of skylight v.] = skylighted ppl. a.1923 A. E. Housman Shropshire Lad xli. 62 And like a skylit water stood The bluebells in the azured wood. 1978 Jrnl. R. Soc. Arts CXXVI. 237/2 It occupies eight of the Royal Academy skylit galleries. 1979 United States 1980/81...
Oxford English Dictionary
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hepatica
‖ hepatica Bot. (hɪˈpætɪkə) [med.L., fem. (quasi herba hēpatica) of hēpatic-us: see prec.] 1. A subgenus or section of the genus Anemone; esp. the common spring-flowering Anemone (Hepatica) triloba, a native of continental Europe, cultivated in Britain, the three-lobed leaves of which were fancied t...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Lyonnais
Lyonnais, n. and a. (liːəˈneɪ, ‖ ljɔnɛ) Also Lyon(n)ese (liːəˈniːz); (fem.) Lionnoise, Lyonnaise, Lyonoise. [Fr.] A. n. A native or inhabitant of the city of Lyons (Fr. Lyon), or the former province of Lyonnais, in eastern France; these people collectively; also, the French dialect of this area.1653...
Oxford English Dictionary
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dais
▪ I. dais (ˈdeɪɪs, deɪs) Forms: 3–5 deys, 3–6 deis, 4–5 des, 4–6 dese, dece, deyse, dees, 5 deise, deesse, 5–6 dess(e, deas(e, 6 deasse, dysse, Sc. deiss, deische, 8–9 Sc. deas, 4, 8–9 dais, 9– daïs. Pl. daises, daïses. [a. OF. deis (later dois), mod.F. (from Picard dial.) dais = Pr. des, It. desco:...
Oxford English Dictionary
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waving
▪ I. waving, vbl. n. (ˈweɪvɪŋ) [f. wave v. + -ing1.] The action of the verb. † 1. The action of changing capriciously; vacillation, wavering, Obs.a 1628 F. Greville Life of Sidney (1652) 223 She preserved her Religion without waving. 1665 E. Hopkins Serm. Vanity (1685) 88 Such is the waving and fluc...
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water
▪ I. water, n. (ˈwɔːtə(r)) Forms: 1–3 wæter, 2–5 weter, 3 Orm. waterr, (pl. wattress), 3–5 watre, 4 Sc. valtir, vatter, vatyr, (pl. wateren), 4–5 watere, wattre, watur, -yr, 4–6 watir, 4, 6 Sc. vattir, 4–7 chiefly Sc. watter, -ir, 4–7 Sc. walter, 5 vatur, wature, -yre, wadyr, Sc. wattyr, 5–6 Sc. wal...
Oxford English Dictionary
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