lubbard

answer Answers

ProphetesAI is thinking...

MindMap

Loading...

Sources

1
lubbard
lubbard Obs. exc. Sc. and north. dial. (ˈlʌbəd) Also 7 lubberd, 8 lubber'd, 9 lobbart, lubbart, -ert. [Altered form of lubber: see -ard.] = lubber n.1586 in Neal Hist. Purit. (1754) I. 321 That all cathedral churches may be put down... They are the dens of idle loitering lubbards. 1612 tr. Benvenuto... Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai 0.0 3.0 0.0
2
lubber'd
lubberd, lubber'd obs. forms of lubbard. Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai 0.0 1.5 0.0
3
John Edwin (1768–1805)
Death Edwin drank himself to death one night in Dublin on 22 February 1805 after a satirical poem, ascribed to John Wilson Croker, called Edwin, the "lubbard wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org 0.0 0.90000004 0.0
4
lubbert
lubbert variant of lubbard. Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai 0.0 0.6 0.0
5
Elizabeth Rebecca Edwin
a talented comic actor but his reputation was lost in his wife's fame and he had drunk himself to death following a cruel poem that cast his as the 'lubbard wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org 0.0 0.6 0.0
6
lighthead
▪ I. † ˈlighthead1 Obs. [f. light a.1 + -head.] Lightness, folly, levity; an instance of this.1340 Ayenb. 207 Ine zuyche liȝthedes [hi] wasteþ hare time. 1382 Wyclif Jer. iii. 9 Thurȝ liȝthed of hir fornycacioun [she] defoulede the lond. c 1400 Cato's Morals 196 Loke for na liȝthede, at þat þing in ... Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai 0.0 0.3 0.0
7
trickster
trickster (ˈtrɪkstə(r)) [f. trick n. or v. + -ster.] One who practises trickery; a rogue, cheat, knave.1711 Medley No. 39 The other..was such a Lubbard Trickster, so awkward at Mischief, that he deserv'd only to be laugh'd at. 1741 Richardson Pamela II. 260 Tho' I have won the Game, I hope, Sirs, I ... Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai 0.0 0.3 0.0
8
English folklore
Lob, also called loby, looby, lubbard, lubber, or lubberkin, is the name given to a fairy with a dark raincloud as a body. wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org 0.0 0.3 0.0
9
liðere
▪ I. † ˈlither, n. Obs. [OE. lið(e)re:—prehistoric *liþrjôn-, f. *leþro{supm} leather.] A sling.c 725 Corpus Gloss. (Hessels) F 385 Funda, liðre. c 900 tr. Bæda's Hist. iv. xvii. [xiii.] (1890) 304 Swa micelre brædo swa mon mæᵹe mid liðeran ᵹeweorpan. 1297 R. Glouc. (Rolls) 8124 Me ne miȝte noȝt ise... Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai 0.0 0.3 0.0