cothe

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cothe
▪ I. cothe, coath, n. Obs. or dial. (kəʊð) Forms: 1 coðu, 1–3 coðe, 5 coth(e, kothe, 8–9 dial. couth, cooth, 9 caud, coad. [OE. coðu, coðe disease, pestilence, affecting men or beasts.] † 1. Sickness, disease, pestilence; an attack of illness, as swooning, the pains of childbirth, etc.c 1000 in Thor... Oxford English Dictionary
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coath
coath var. f. cothe to swoon. Oxford English Dictionary
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quoath
† quothe, quoath obs. varr. cothe v. to faint.1567 Golding Ovid's Met. v. (1593) 107 He quothing as he stood Did looke about where Atys lay. Ibid. vii. 179 She quoath'd, and with her bloud Her little strength did fade. Oxford English Dictionary
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coathy
ˈcothy, coathy, a. dial. [f. cothe n. + -y1.] Diseased, sickly. Of sheep: Affected with the ‘coe’ or rot.a 1825 Forby Voc. E. Anglia, Cothy, faint, sickly, ailing..A dog is said to be cothy when he is meek and delicate. 1883 Hampshire Gloss., Coathy, rotten; applied to diseased sheep. Oxford English Dictionary
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cooth
▪ I. cooth (kuːθ) Also cuth, cuith. The local name in Shetland and Orkney of the Coal-fish, before it is full-grown. (Jamieson.)1793 Statist. Acc. Orkney VII. 453 (Jam.) But the fish most generally caught..is a grey fish here called cuths, of the size of small haddocks. 1795 Ibid. XVI. 261 These boa... Oxford English Dictionary
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coe
▪ I. coe, n.1 local Mining. Also Sc. cow. [The Sc. form is more etymological, corresp. to Du. kouw, MDu. and MLG. couwe, côje, Ger. kaue, MHG. kouwe, köwe, in same sense, also ‘cage’:—WGer. type *kauja, a. L. cavea hollow, stall, cage, coop, etc., f. cavus hollow. App. introduced from Low German as ... Oxford English Dictionary
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uncouth
uncouth, a. and n. (ʌnˈkuːθ) Forms: α. 1 uncuþ, 1–3 uncuð (3 vn-), 2 unkuþ, 3 -kuð, 4 un-, vncuth (-cut), 5 vnchut; 3 vnecouþ, 3–4 onecouþ, 4 vnkouþ; 4–7 vn-, 4– uncouth (5–6 Sc. wn-, 6 on-), 4–6 vnkouth (5 -koud, 6 Sc. wn-, onkouth), 6 Sc. oncoutht, 6–8 uncooth, 7 uncough; 4 oncouþe, 4–5 vn-, unkou... Oxford English Dictionary
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treble
▪ I. treble, n. (ˈtrɛb(ə)l) Forms: see next. [a. OF. treble, n. use of treble a.] I. 1. Anything threefold; a sum or quantity three times as great as another; the product of a sum or magnitude multiplied by three.[1324–5 Rolls of Parlt. I. 416/1 Que amounteront a treble & quatreble de lour coustages... Oxford English Dictionary
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scour
▪ I. scour, n.1 (skaʊə(r)) Also 4 skour(e, skowr(e, scowr, 6 scoure. [See scour v.1] 1. The action of moving rapidly or going in haste; a run or rush. † Adv. phr. good scour = with hasty movement, at a good pace (obs.).a 1300 K. Alis. 4276 To his ost he farith, good skour. c 1796 J. Burness Thrummy ... Oxford English Dictionary
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weird
▪ I. weird, n. (wɪəd) Forms: 1 wyrd, 3–5 wird, (4 wired, 5 wirid), wirde, 4–5 wyrde; 4 wyerde, wierde, 4–6 werd (5 werid), werde, 4– weird (5 Sc. veird), 7–8 (9 Sc.) wierd; Sc. 6 waird, 6–7 weard, 8 weerd. [OE. wyrd fem., = OS. wurd (pl. wurdi), OHG. wurt, ON. urð-r, from the weak grade of the stem ... Oxford English Dictionary
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can
▪ I. can, n.1 (kæn) Forms: 1 canne, (4 cane), 4–7 canne, kan, 5–6 kanne, 6–9 cann, 6– can. [app. Com. Teut.: OE. canne:—WGer. kanna weak fem. (whence MDu. kanne, Du. kan, OHG. channa, MHG. and Ger. kanne); also ON. kanna (Sw. kanna, Da. kande):—OTeut. type *kannôn-. The word occurs also in med.L. ca... Oxford English Dictionary
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