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carroty
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carroty
carroty, a. (ˈkærətɪ) [f. carrot n. + -y1.] a. Like a carrot in colour, red; said of hair. Also, of persons: red-haired.1696 Tutchin Pind. Ode v. 18 Long was his Chin, and carotty his Beard. 1728 Morgan Algiers I. iv. 106, I have never met with any North-Briton, Dane, or any other, more carotty and ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Cosmos (Gombrowicz novel)
Characters
Witold – the narrator, who's had undefined troubles with his parents back in Warsaw
Fuks – his "carroty" "fish-like" companion, escaping his
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Rock UK
Locations
Rock UK runs four Outdoor Activity Centres around the country, including:
Carroty Wood - A site set in mature woodlands (Tonbridge, Kent)
Frontier In 1977, Belgrave House was sold in order to expand the work, with the proceeds being used to buy Carroty Wood in Tonbridge which was turned into an outdoor
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carrotiness
ˈcarrotiness [f. carroty + -ness.] Carroty quality or colour, ‘redness of hair’ (J.).1730–6 Bailey, Carotiness. 1755 in Johnson.
Oxford English Dictionary
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William Twaits (actor)
commenced acting at a place called Waltham Abbey… [he was] Short and thin, yet appearing broad; muscular yet meagre; a large head, with stiff, stubborn, carroty
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carrot
▪ I. carrot, n. (ˈkærət) Forms: 6 caret, carete, carette, carot, carote, carotte, 6–7 carret, 7 carrat, carroote, 7– carrot. [a. F. carotte:—L. carōta; ad. Gr. καρωτόν ? f. κάρᾱ head, top. (Cf. κεϕαλωτόν, headed, said of plants, as garlic.)] 1. An umbelliferous plant (Daucus Carota) having a large, ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Creepy Carrots!
Suddenly, something strange happens: the carrots begin to follow him wherever he goes, lurking in the dark corners at night (he hears "terrible, carroty
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sugarallie
sugarallie Sc. colloq. (ʃugəˈralɪ) Also sugarellie (-ˈɛlɪ), -olly (-ˈɑlɪ), etc. [A shortened form of sugar alicreesh, 16th-cent. Sc. sukker lagrace, succour alacreische, f. sugar n. + Du. lakk(e)ris liquorice, licorice.] a. Liquorice.1812 P. Forbes Poems 21 Sulphur, salt fish, sugar allie. 1842 Chil...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Tonbridge
Tonbridge is also the location of Carroty Wood, an outdoor activity and residential centre run by Rock UK, offering groups of young people the opportunity
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brashness
▪ I. ˈbrashness1 orig. U.S. [f. brash a.1] Brittleness.1864 Ret. Agric. Soc. Maine 54 They [sc. sheep] become very fat in the summer, which increases the brashness of the wool. 1929 Ann. Appl. Biol. XVI. 41 The term ‘brashness’ arose in America, and is now in common use in the timber trade of both t...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Blanche Ostertag
The two dainty figures were in themselves winning, but gathered artistic force from the child's carroty tresses against the pink-striped wall-paper, the
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tattie
▪ I. tattie (ˈtætɪ) [Dial. variant of potato n. 2. See dialect dicts. for fuller documentation. Cf. tater; tatie.] 1. = potato n. 2. Also fig., a stupid person.c 1800 in F. P. Hett Mem. S. Sibbald (1926) 203 Then there's champit tatties, after they are boiled, the water is poured off them then they ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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After Blenheim
British anti-war poems, while living at Westbury with his mother and his cousin (Peggy) in a renovated ale-house, which he shared also with a "great carroty
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ginger
▪ I. ginger, n. and a.1 (ˈdʒɪndʒə(r)) Forms: 1 ᵹingiber, ᵹingifer(e, 3 gingivere, (3 gingevir, 4 gyngure, gyngyvre), 4–6 gynger(e, 5 gingere, gyngour, gyngevere, (zenzyber, gingivre, -ver, gyngangre, -yre), 4– ginger. [The OE. ᵹingiber, ᵹingifer(e are directly a. late L. gingiber = the earlier zingi...
Oxford English Dictionary
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