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begrime
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begrime
begrime, v. (bɪˈgraɪm) [f. be- 6 + grime.] trans. To blacken or soil with grime, or dirt which sinks into the surface, and discolours it.a 1553 Udall Roister D. (Arb.) 48 All to begrime you with worshyp. 1603 Holland Plutarch 215 (R.) Enjoyning men to begrime and bewray themselves with dirt. 1853 Si...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Translation of grubby in Chinese | English-Chinese dictionary
see also - grubby. grubby (adj.). ↘ basely, begrime, bemire, colly, dingily, dirt, dirtily, dirtiness, dirty, filthily, filthiness, foul, foully, foulness, grubbily ...
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Noctis Valkyries Metal Festival
Mountain
Wargod
2008: Noctis II - Age of Darkness
October 4, 2008
MacEwan Hall Ballroom
Korpiklaani
Woods of Ypres
Ahab
Verbal Deception
Dark Forest
Begrime Halifax
Sacha Laskow - Divinity
Greg Musgrave - Exit Strategy, Phantom Limb
Therese Lanz - Ex-Exit Strategy, Kilbourne, Mares of Thrace
Derek Orthner - Begrime
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
grime
▪ I. grime, n. (graɪm) [= mod. Flemish grijm in the same sense (Kilian has grijmsel): cf. grime v.] Soot, smut, coal-dust, or other black particles, deposited upon or ingrained in some surface, esp. the human skin.1590 Shakes. Com. Err. iii. ii. 106 She sweats a man may goe ouer-shooes in the grime ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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bruckle
▪ I. bruckle, a. Chiefly Sc. and dial. (ˈbrʌk(ə)l) Forms: 4 brukel, 5 brukyl, 5–6 -ill, 6 -il, brukkil, -yll, brukle, brucle, 6– bruckle. [OE. brucol (in scipbrucol) f. stem bruk- of brekan to break (see also brockle): but in later use, perhaps phonetic variant of brickle: cf. Sc. muckle and mickle....
Oxford English Dictionary
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smeech
▪ I. smeech, n. Now dial. (smiːtʃ) Forms: 1–2 smec, 2–4 smech, 3–4 smeche, 9 smeech, smeach. [OE. sméc, variant of sm{iacu}c, sm{yacu}c (see smitch n.), from the stem of sméocan smeek v. For the equivalent northern forms see smeek n.] Smoke; dense or thick vapour, etc. Also in fig. context. Also in ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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colly
▪ I. colly, n.1 Obs. exc. dial. (ˈkɒlɪ) [prob. f. colly a., or a dial. form of collow n., assimilated to the adj.] 1. Soot; smut.1708–15 Kersey, Colly, the Black that sticks on the outside of a Pot, or Kettle. Colly, to dawb with Colly, to smut. 1825 Britton Beauties Wiltsh. Gloss., Colley, the soot...
Oxford English Dictionary
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collow
▪ I. collow, v. Obs. exc. dial. (ˈkɒləʊ, -ə) Also 5 colwe(n, 5–6 colowe, (9 dial. collar). [Late ME. colwen perh.:—OE. *colᵹian, f. *coliᵹ coaly, f. col coal (cf. hálᵹian, ME. halwen to hallow, f. háliᵹ holy): see also colly v. and a. With mod. dial. collar, cf. foller = follow.] trans. To make blac...
Oxford English Dictionary
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coom
▪ I. coom, n.1 (kuːm) Forms: 6–7 coame, 7 coome, come, koom, comb, 8 coomb, 7– coom. [In senses 1–2 app. another form of culm, pointing to a ME. colm, whence also ME. colmy adj. sooty, grimy, bicolmen vb. = bicollen to begrime with soot. In Sc. and north Eng., ul may become ū, as in bulk, Sc. bouk (...
Oxford English Dictionary
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求推荐Bestial Black metal?
Nuclearhammer、Necroholocaust、Death Worship、Antediluvian、Axis of Advance、Sacramentary Abolishment、Rites of Thy Degringolade、Adversarial、Mitochondrion、Allfather、Begrime
zhihu
www.zhihu.com
toil
▪ I. toil, n.1 (tɔɪl) Forms: 4–7 toyle, toile, (7 toiel), 7–8 toyl, 6– toil; see also the Sc. form tuilyie. [a. AF. toil, toyl dispute, contention, forensic strife = OF. tooil toeil, toel, touil, tueil bloody mêlée, trouble, confusion, etc. (12th c. in Godef.), f. tooillier, etc.: see toil v.1] 1. †...
Oxford English Dictionary
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be-
be- prefix :—OE. be-, weak or stressless form of the prep. and adv. b{iacu} (biᵹ), by. The original Teut. form was, as in Gothic, bi, with short vowel, prob. cognate with second syllable of Gr. ἀµϕί, L. ambi; in OHG. and early OE., when it had the stress, as a separate word, and in composition with ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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soil
▪ I. soil, n.1 (sɔɪl) Forms: 4–8 soyle (5 soylle), 5, 7–8 soyl (6 Sc. soyll), 5–7 soile, 6– soil. [a. AF. soil, soyl in sense 2 b (1292–1305), app. representing L. solium (whence also OF. soil, suel: see soil n.2), taken in the sense of L. solum (F. sol) ground. For Sc. forms see also sulye.] I. 1. ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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