gashly

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gashly
▪ I. ˈgashly, a. Obs. exc. dial. [? Altered form of ghastly: cf. gashful.] Ghastly, horrid.1633 P. Fletcher Purple Isl. vii. xxxi, Next Pharmacus, of gashly wilde aspect; Whom hell with seeming fear, and fiends obey. 1650 Fuller Pisgah iv. vii. 131 Their warm and wanton embraces of living bodies, il... Oxford English Dictionary
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gashful
ˈgashful, a. Obs. exc. dial. [? alteration of ghastful, through association with gash n.1: cf. gash a.1 and gashly.] Ghastly.1620 Quarles Feast Wormes H ij, Prodigall up-banding of thine eyes, Whose gashfull balls doe seeme to pelt the skyes. 1621 ― Argalus & P. (1678) 4 His gashful countenance swar... Oxford English Dictionary
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Robert Sidney Bowen
James Robert Richard In Periodicals Enough’s Too Much, (short story) War Stories June 1927 For Men Only, (short story) Munsey’s Magazine July 1927 A Gashly wikipedia.org
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gash
▪ I. gash, n.1 (gæʃ) Also 6 gashe. [Later form of garse n. Garse and gash are given side by side in Levins (quot. 1570), and Palsgrave has the intermediate form garsshe. The change may have been helped by the analogy of slash and similar words.] 1. A cut, slash or wound, relatively long and deep, ma... Oxford English Dictionary
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List of Cornish dialect words
G Gad – a pick, especially a miner's pick; this kind of pick is a small pointed chisel used with a hammer, e.g. a hammer and gad Gashly – terrible, dismal wikipedia.org
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pint
▪ I. pint1 (paɪnt) Forms: 4–6 pynt(e, 5 pintte, pyynte, 5–7 pinte, 6 Sc. point, poynt(t, 7 Sc. pinct, 6– pint. [ME. pynte, a. F. pinte a liquid measure (13th c.) = It., Sp., Pg. pinta; so OFries. pint, MDu., MLG., MHG. pinte. Ulterior source uncertain. Diez inclined to think it the same word as Sp. ... Oxford English Dictionary
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uncle
▪ I. uncle, n. (ˈʌŋk(ə)l) Forms: α. 3–7 vncle (5 wncle), 4– uncle (5–6 oncle). β. 4, 6–8 unkle (vn-) 6–7 unckle (vn, 7 wn-). γ. 4 unkel, 5 vnkel, 6 unkell (vn-), 5–6 vn-, unkil(l, -kyll (5 hunckyl, oncyll, ownkyll, 6 onkill); 5 vn-, uncull, 6 unckall. See also nuncle. [a. AF. uncle, OF. uncle, oncle... Oxford English Dictionary
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twist
▪ I. twist, n.1 (twɪst) Forms: 4–6 twyst, -e, 4–7 twiste, (5 twest, tweeste, 5–6 twys, 6 tweyste, Sc. tuist), 4– twist. [Related to twist v., and presenting similar obscurities of history (except in senses directly derived from the verb). Sense 1 may be related to the OE. -twist which appears in can... Oxford English Dictionary
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