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cow-house
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cow-house
ˈcow-house A house in which cows are sheltered or stabled; a cowshed, byre, or shippon.1530 Palsgr. 209/2 Cowe house, uacherie. 1688 R. Holme Armoury iii. 243/2 In the Cow-House, a Boosee is the space between Range and Cratch. 1760–72 tr. Juan & Ulloa's Voy. (ed. 3) I. 235 I was obliged to remain in...
Oxford English Dictionary
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House cow
A house cow is a cow kept to provide milk for a home kitchen. This differentiates them from dairy cows, which are farmed commercially. They can also provide manure, for use as a garden fertilizer, and their offspring can be a source of meat. House cows are used in locations, usually rural, without c...
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oxhouse
oxhouse Now local. (ˈɒkshaʊs) A house for the sheltering or stabling of oxen: cf. cow-house.14.. Nom. in Wr.-Wülcker 727/2 Hoc bostare, a nox⁓hows. 1523 Fitzherb. Surv. 35 b, Two barnes and an oxe house, a hey house and a stable. 1533 Test. Ebor. (Surtees) VI. 39 All the haie that is in the oxhouse ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Werburgh Street Theatre
In October the Lords Justices prohibited playing there; and shortly after, we are told, the building was 'ruined and spoiled, and a cow-house made of the
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Bank barn
A common arrangement had an open-fronted single bay cartshed below the threshing floor, with stables on one side and a cow-house on the other. In other bank barns in Cumbria, the side walls entrances gave access to a cow-house, stable, and cartshed; some 19th-century examples have four-horse stables
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mig
mig Obs. exc. dial. (mɪg) Forms: 1 micge, migga, migge, 3 migge, 5– mig. [OE. micge wk. fem., migga wk. masc.:—prehistoric *migjôn-, -on, f. *mig- wk.-grade of OTeut. *mîg- (OE. m{iacu}ᵹan, ON. m{iacu}ga) to make water, cogn. w. L. mingĕre.] Urine; or the drainings from manure. Also fig.c 1000 Sax. ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Dugort
Some of these included a slated cow-house which was added to the hospital, two two-roomed cottages were finished and a room was added to each of the houses
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bing
▪ I. bing, n.1 (bɪŋ) Also 5–6 bynge, 6–7 binge, byng, 7 bingg. [a. ON. bing-r masc. ‘heap’; cf. Sw. binge masc. ‘heap.’ Da. bing has the sense not of ‘heap,’ but of ‘bin’; and in Eng. bing has also been used dialectally for bin in various senses since the 15th c. In Da. this change can only be expla...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Taylor–Bray Farm
A cow-house (barn) only sheltered the cows and other stock; the fodder (usually salt hay) was stacked outside.
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tore
▪ I. tore, n.1 Sc. (tor) Also 6, 9 tor, 7 torre, 8 torr. [Origin uncertain: Welsh torr belly, bulge, boss, knob, has been compared.] † 1. An ornamental knob upon a piece of furniture, as a chair or a cradle. Obs.1560 Rolland Seven Sages 55 Betuix thame twa, the Creddill ouir thay cast, With boddum v...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Mary Butters
She sent Alexander and a young man called Carnaghan out to the cow-house at 10pm, told then to turn their waistcoats inside out, and stand at the head
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tying
▪ I. tying, vbl. n.1 (ˈtaɪɪŋ) [f. tie v. + -ing1.] 1. The action of the verb tie in various senses; fastening with a cord or string; connexion, binding, etc. Also attrib.1480 Wardr. Acc. Edw. IV (1830) 123 For vj teyng haltres, price the pece xvj d. 1505 Sel. Cases Crt. Star Chamb. (Selden) 219 The ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Duffield Frith
references to Duffield Frith, including, in 1314, a great larder at Belper, where the venison of the deer was salted down for winter use, and a large cow-house
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درم (إنجلترا)
يتم تفسير الأسطورة من خلال نحت الحجر الفيكتوري المنحوت على الوجه الجنوبي للكاتدرائية ومؤخراً من خلال النحت البرونزي "Durham Cow" (1997، أندرو بيرتون)، تم بناء Dunelm House لاستخدام اتحاد الطلاب أولاً، يليه Elvet Riverside الذي يحتوي على قاعات المحاضرات ومكاتب الموظفين.
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tealer
▪ I. teal (tiːl) Forms: 4–6 tele, 5 teill, 5–6 teele, 6–7 teyle, teale, 7 teil, tayle, 8 teall, 7– teal. [ME. tele, exemplified early in 14th c., but pointing to an unrecorded OE. tǽle, téle:—WGer. *taili. Du. has a deriv. form taling, teling masc., in Kilian teelingh, MDu. têling, teiling, MLG. têl...
Oxford English Dictionary
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