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feaze
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FEAZE Definition & Meaning - Dictionary.com
verb. nautical to make or become unravelled or frayed .
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www.dictionary.com
FEAZE Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
1. dialectal, British : to become frayed usually used with out his coat was all feazed out at the edges 2. dialectal, British : to become rough or jagged at ...
www.merriam-webster.com
www.merriam-webster.com
feaze - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Middle English fesen (“to drive, incite, put into action; frighten, terrify, prosecute, punish”), from Old English fēsan, fȳsan (“to hasten, impel”)
en.wiktionary.org
en.wiktionary.org
feaze
▪ I. feaze, v.1 Obs. exc. Naut. (fiːz) Forms: 6 faze, 9 faize, 8– feaze. [In some way related to OE. fæs (see fas) fringe; possibly as a naut. term f. MDu. vese, veze fringe, frayed edge, which is related by ablaut to the OE. word.] 1. a. trans. To unravel (a rope), etc. b. intr. Of a rope or thread...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Webster's Dictionary 1828 - Feaze
Feaze ... FEAZE, verb transitive To untwist the end of a rope.
webstersdictionary1828.com
webstersdictionary1828.com
feaze, v.¹ meanings, etymology and more | Oxford English Dictionary
OED's earliest evidence for feaze is from 1568, in the writing of Thomas Smith, scholar, diplomat, and political theorist. feaze is of unknown origin.
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www.oed.com
feeze
▪ I. feeze, n. (fiːz) Forms: 4 veze, 6 feas(e, 6–7 feese, 7 feaze, 7– feeze, 9 U.S. pheese, -ze. [f. feeze v.1] 1. A rush, impetus; hence, a violent impact. Also, a rub. Now dial. and U.S.1386 Chaucer Knt.'s T. 1127 And there out came a rage and such a veze, That it made al the gate for to rese. 159...
Oxford English Dictionary
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FEAZE definition in American English - Collins Dictionary
Definition of 'feazing'. feazing in American English. (ˈfizɪŋ). noun. Nautical (often feazings). an unraveled portion at the end of a rope. Most material © ...
www.collinsdictionary.com
www.collinsdictionary.com
Feaze Definition & Meaning | YourDictionary
To beat; to chastise; also, to humble; to harass; to worry. Wiktionary. To untwist; to unravel, as the end of a rope. Wiktionary ...
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www.yourdictionary.com
feaze - WordReference.com Dictionary of English
feeze, feaze, feese /fiːz/ dialect vb. (transitive) to beat; to drive off; chiefly US to disconcert; worry. n. a rush; chiefly US a state of agitation.
www.wordreference.com
www.wordreference.com
feaze - definition and meaning - Wordnik
noun See feeze . from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English. transitive verb To untwist; to unravel, as the end of a rope ...
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www.wordnik.com
Meaning of feaze - Scrabble and Words With Friends - WinEveryGame
feaze: Definition, sample sentence, origin, Scrabble and Words With Friends score.
www.wineverygame.com
www.wineverygame.com
faze
▪ I. faze, v. orig. U.S. (feɪz) Also feaze (fiːz). [Var. of dial. feeze v.1] trans. To discompose, disturb.α 1830 Western Monthly Rev. III. 357 They were too well up to these things to be fazed by a little cold lead. 1843 ‘R. Carlton’ New Purchase I. xix. 174 This didn't faze me, only I steps back f...
Oxford English Dictionary
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List of Macross characters
singing Yoshiki Fukuyama)
Mylene Flare Jenius (speaking Tomo Sakurai, singing Chie Kajiura)
Emilia Jenius
Ray Lovelock (Masashi Sugawara)
Veffidas Feaze
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
battle-axe
battle-axe, -ax (ˈbæt(ə)lˌæks) (The spelling with -ax is now chiefly U.S.) 1. A kind of axe used as a weapon of war in the Middle Ages.c 1380 in Tytler Hist. Scot. (1864) I. 367 Bow, and spier, And battle-axe, their fechting gear. 1437 Test. Ebor. (1855) II. 70 Unam loricam de optimis, et optimum ba...
Oxford English Dictionary
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