hereaway

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hereaway
hereaway, adv. Now dial. and U.S. (ˈhɪərəweɪ) [f. here adv. 16 + away adv.] 1. Away in this direction; in this quarter or neighbourhood, hereabouts.14.. Voc. in Wr.-Wü lcker 590/41 Istac, herawey. 1483 Cath. Angl. 184/1 Heraway (A. hereaway), hac, istac. 1613 Purchas Pilgrimage (1864) 95 Minnagara, ... Oxford English Dictionary
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thereaway
thereaway, adv. Chiefly Sc. and north. dial. (ˈðɛərəweɪ) [Orig. two words, there 17 and away adv.] † 1. Of motion: Away thither, or in that direction. hereaway, thereaway: see hereaway. Obs.1375 Barbour Bruce x. 32 (MS. E.) For gif the king held thar away, He thoucht he suld soyn vencust be. c 1400 ... Oxford English Dictionary
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Parsonsfield, Maine
Another tradition goes something like this: "Many years ago a famous hunter, named Randall, hunted hereaway among these mountains and caught much game. wikipedia.org
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thinnish
thinnish, a. (ˈθɪnɪʃ) [f. thin a. + -ish1.] Somewhat thin; tending to thinness.1545 T. Raynalde Byrth Mankynde 139 Her vryne shall appeare whyte and thynnyssh. 1780 C. A. Burney in Mme. D'Arblay's Early Diary (1889) II. 289 The Masquerade at the Pantheon was rather thinnish. 1827 F. Cooper Prairie I... Oxford English Dictionary
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Coldharbour Mill Working Wool Museum
shares in the Grand Western Canal between 1809 and 1813, Thomas having considered the original proposal of 1792 with considerable reticence: "People hereaway wikipedia.org
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lycanthrope
lycanthrope (ˈlaɪkænθrəʊp, laɪˈkænθrəʊp) Also 7 lycanthrop. [ad. mod.L. lycanthrōp-us, ad. Gr. λυκάνθρωπ-ος lit. wolf-man, f. λύκο-ς wolf + ἄνθρωπος man.] 1. One who is afflicted with lycanthropy, q.v.1621 Molle Camerar. Liv. Libr. iv. xiii. 276 The organs of the fantasie of such foolish Lycanthrops... Oxford English Dictionary
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yearne
▪ I. yearn, n. (jɜːn) [f. next.] A yearning.a 1797 M. Wollstonecraft Wks. (1798) III. xliv. 134, I feel my fate united to yours by..the yearns of..a true, unsophisticated heart. 1853 Kingsley Misc., Shelley & Byron (1859) I. 307 In one mighty yearn after that beauty from which he is debarred, [Keats... Oxford English Dictionary
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here
▪ I. † here, n. Obs. Forms: 1–5 here, 3 hære, 4 her, 4–5 heere. [Com. Teut.: OE. hęre masc., gen. hęrᵹes, hęriᵹes, hęres = OFris. here, hiri, OS. heri m. and n. (MDu. hēre, Du. heir, heer n., LG. hêr n.), OHG. hari, hęri (MLG. here, Ger. heer) n., ON. hęrr m., gen. hęrjar (Sw. här, Da. hær), Goth. h... Oxford English Dictionary
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something
something, n. (a.), and adv. (ˈsʌmθɪŋ) Forms: 1 sum þing(c), ðing, 2 sum ðinc, 3–5 sumþing, 3– 6 -thing; 4 somþing (zom-), -þyng, 5 -thyng (6 -e), 7 somthing; 6– something, 6 -thyng, 9 dial. somethin', etc. [f. some a.1 2 + thing n.1 17. Orig., and freq. down to the end of the 16th cent., written as... Oxford English Dictionary
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