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clotter
▪ I. † ˈclotter, n. Obs. rare. [f. clotter v.: cf. the variants clodder, and clutter.] Formation of clots, coagulation in a soft mass.1658 A. Fox tr. Wurtz' Surg. ii. vi. 61 A Wound in a joynt cannot endure such great clotter as that which is in the flesh. 1668 Culpepper & Cole Barthol. Anat. i. xxv...
Oxford English Dictionary
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clottery
† ˈclottery, a. Obs. rare—1. [f. clotter n. + -y1.] Clotty, cloddy.1567 Drant Horace's Epist. i. xiv. E v, The glebie fielde, and clottrie glebe with mattock thou must tame.
Oxford English Dictionary
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clottered
† clottered, ppl. a. (ˈklɒtəd) Coagulated in clots; covered with clots; = clotted. arch.c 1386 Chaucer Knt.'s T. 1887 The clothered [v.r. clotered(e, cloþred, clotred] blood..Corrupteth and is in his bouk ylaft. 1557 North Diall Princes 216 b/1 That clottered claye. 1560 W. Baldwin Fun. Edw. VI, Cav...
Oxford English Dictionary
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clodder
▪ I. † ˈclodder, n. Obs. exc. dial. [See next, and cf. clotter, cludder, clutter.] A clotted or curdled mass, a clot.a 1400 Mary & Cross 326 in Leg. Rood 142 In cloddres of blod his her was clunge. 1657 Reeve God's Plea 24 Thou lookest like raw flesh, yea like a prodigious clodder. 1698 Christ Exalt...
Oxford English Dictionary
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clutter
▪ I. clutter, n. (ˈklʌtə(r)) [This and the vb. of same form appear to have arisen late in the 16th c. and to have become suddenly very common, after which they went to a great extent out of literary use, though retained in some senses dialectally, and in U.S. In sense 1 the word was evidently a phon...
Oxford English Dictionary
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clunter
▪ I. † clunter, v. Obs. exc. dial. [In form a frequentative of clunt: see clunch. It is thus to a certain extent a synonym of clutter and its variants; but it has also strong associations of use with clumper, q.v. With the various senses cf. Du. klonteren to clot, coagulate, klontermelk, Ger. dial. ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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glout
▪ I. glout, n. rare. (glaʊt) [f. the vb.] A frown; a sullen look. in the glout: in the sulks.1641 Copie of Let. etc. (N.), Ben Johnson cast a glout, And swore a mighty oath hee'd pluck him out. 1748 Richardson Clarissa (1811) II. xx. 140 My mamma was in the glout with her poor daughter all the way.▪...
Oxford English Dictionary
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slidder
▪ I. ˈslidder, n. dial. [Cf. slidder a. and v.] A trench or hollow running down a hill; a steep slope. For other uses see the Eng. Dial. Dict.a 1793 G. White Selborne, Obs. on Veget. (1853) 301 One of the slidders, or trenches, down the middle of the Hanger..is still called strawberry-slidder. 1842 ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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