hortyard

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hortyard
† ˈhortyard Obs. Also 6–7 horteyard, hort-yard. [An affected alteration of orchard, frequent in 16–17th c., influenced by L. hortus garden. The earliest OE. form was ortᵹeard, whence later orceard, ME. orchard (from c 1200); in 16th c. this was written by some ortyard, after med.L. ortus or It. orto... Oxford English Dictionary
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horteyard
horteyard see hortyard. Oxford English Dictionary
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orchard
orchard (ˈɔːtʃəd) Forms: see below. [orig. OE. ort-ᵹeard, parallel to Goth. aurti-gards garden, the first element of which is considered to be L. hortus (in late and med.L. ortus, It. orto) garden. Cf. Goth. aurtja gardener, and OHG. orzôn (:—*ortôjan) to cultivate. Already in 9th c., OE. ortᵹeard p... Oxford English Dictionary
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emplastration
† emplaˈstration Obs. Also 5 emplastracioun, 6 emplaistration, 6 implastration. [ad. L. emplastrātiōnem, noun of action f. emplastrāre: see emplaster v.] 1. A mode of budding trees mentioned by Latin writers; so called from the piece of bark surrounding the bud, which was attached like a ‘plaster’ (... Oxford English Dictionary
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lichen
▪ I. lichen, n. (ˈlaɪkən) [a. L. līchēn, ad. Gr. λειχήν in all the senses below. Cf. F. lichen, Sp. liquen, It. lichene. Not in Johnson. The pronunciation (ˈlɪtʃən) is given in Smart without alternative, and most of the later Dicts. allow it a second place; but it is now rare in educated use.] † 1. ... Oxford English Dictionary
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