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coaly
▪ I. coaly, a. (ˈkəʊlɪ) [f. coal n. + -y. Cf. colly.] 1. Abounding in coal; covered or charged with coal or coal-dust.1592 W. Wyrley Armorie 104 Black colie smith. 1628 Milton Vac. Exerc. 98 Of utmost Tweed..Or coaly Tyne, or ancient hallowed Dee. 1865 Dickens Mut. Fr. II. 187 The coaly..little stea...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Old Coaly
Several points of interest on campus have been named in honor of Old Coaly; There was an eatery in the HUB known as "Coaly's Cafe" until renovations on Penn State's new baseball stadium, Medlar Field at Lubrano Park, features a food concession called "Coaly's Corner".
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colly-clogger
† colly-clogger Obs. [? = colly grimy + clogger one that clogs or cumbers; perhaps it ought to be read as two words coaly clogger.]1537 T. Wylley to Cromwell in Froude Hist. Eng. (1858) III. 240, note, The priests..have disdained me ever since I made a play against the Pope's councillors, Error Coll...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Corone (crow)
literature
John Gower took up the tale for use in his Confessio Amantis, with particular emphasis on her delight in her escape:
With feathers of a coaly
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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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Swalwell
The fire at the camp ignited a seam of coal which apparently burned for several years in various places including the Coaly Well.
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Thomas Wilson (poet)
Dicky's Wig
The Opening of the Newcastle and Carlisle Railway
The Captain's and the Quayside
A Keelman's Tribute to a Friend
A Dirge on the Death of Coaly
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coal-hood
ˈcoal-hood, -hoodie Also 7 cole-hooding, 9 cole-hood, -head, coaly-hood. [f. coal + hood, in reference to its black head.] A local name of the Blackcap and Coal-tit; sometimes applied also to other birds: see quots.1684 Sibbald Scotia Illust. 22 (Jam.) Junco, avis capite nigro, cole-hooding dicta. 1...
Oxford English Dictionary
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John Hodgson Campbell
List of works
Edward Fletcher (1807–1889), Locomotive Engineer, North Eastern Railway (1882)
Workman Eating Lunch (1886–1887)
Under the coaly Tyne (1887
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carbonaceous
carbonaceous, a. (kɑːbəˈneɪʃəs) [f. L. carbōn-em charcoal, coal + -aceous.] 1. Of the nature of coal, charcoal, or other common form of carbon; coaly.1791 Hamilton Berthollet's Dyeing I. 8 It destroys the carbonaceous or coaly matter. 1863 Possibil. Creation 53 Manchester would soon be enveloped in ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Lou Killen
Records 1932 (1980)
Sea Songs Smithsonian Folkways FTS 37311 (1979)
50 South to 50 South Seaport SPT-102 (1972)
(with Johnny Handle) Along the Coaly
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tumphy
tumphy Sc. (ˈtʌmfɪ) Also tumfie. [Cf. sumph, in same sense.] a. A stupid person, a blockhead. b. Coal-mining. (See quot. 1886.)1795 A. Wilson The Spouter in Poems & Lit. Prose (1876) II. 331 The puir unfort'nate tumphy. 1823 Galt Entail III. iv. 41 Neither you nor that unreverent and misleart tumphy...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Old Main (Pennsylvania State University)
Old Coaly
Old Coaly was a Kentucky-born mule who was brought to Penn State in 1857 by his owner Piersol Lytle. Old Coaly was very well liked by the students and became somewhat of a mascot.
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Oil shale in Serbia
Serbian oil shale is of sapropel type (Aleksinac, Mionica and Petnica) and sapropel-coaly type.
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