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expeditate
▪ I. † exˈpeditate, pple. Obs.—1 [ad. med.L. expeditātus.] In early use as pa. pple. of next.▪ II. expeditate, v. Hist. (ɛkˈspɛdɪteɪt) [f. med.L. expeditāt- ppl. stem of expeditāre, f. ex- (see ex- prefix1) + ped-em foot: on analogy of med.L. excapitāre.] trans. To cut off from (a dog) three claws o...
Oxford English Dictionary
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unlawed
unˈlawed, ppl. a. [un-1 8.] 1. (See law v. 3, expeditate v.)1598 J. Manwood Laws Forest xvi. 92 The owners..are to be amerced 3s. for the keeping of such Dogges vnlawed. 1659 Termes de la Ley 163 b/2 A privilege to keep Doggs within the Forrest unlawed without punishment. 1685 Brady Hist. Eng. App. ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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expeditation
expediˈtation Hist. Also 6 expeditacion. [ad. med.L. expeditātiōn-em, n. of action f. expeditāre: see expeditate.] The action of ‘expeditating’ or ‘lawing’ a dog.1502 Chart. Forests in Arnolde Chron. (1811) 209 Fro hens⁓forth be ther noo one taken for expeditacion of houndis. a 1693 Ashmole Antiq. B...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Lilleshall Abbey
Around the same time, a jury commissioned by John Biset, Justice in Eyre, decided the abbot need not expeditate his dogs (i.e. remove their claws), as
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
law
▪ I. law, n.1 (lɔː) Forms: 1 laᵹu (oblique cases laᵹe, nom. and acc. pl. laᵹa, once laᵹan; in comb. lah-), 2 laȝwe, laȝa, 2–5 laȝe, 3 Layamon læȝe, læwe, 3 laha, 3–5 lagh(e, 3–7 lau(e, lawe, Sc. lauwe, 4 lach(t, laght, (lake), lauh, 4, 6 Sc. la, lawch, 5 Sc. laucht, laue, laugh, 5–9 Sc. lauch, 5– la...
Oxford English Dictionary
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