mowth

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mowth
▪ I. mowth (məʊθ) [app. a refashioning of math after mow v.] A mowing, math.1711 J. Greenwood Eng. Gram. 175 Later-mow'th, the after-mowth, now call'd Math. 1817 V. Thomas Papers (Bodl. MS. Top. Oxon b. 19) lf. 174 A man's Mowth is reckoned at a Statute Acre. 1886 Schedule to Conveyance Oct., The fi... Oxford English Dictionary
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unpinned
unˈpinned, ppl. a. [un-1 8.] a. Not fastened with a pin or pins.1390 Gower Conf. I. 293 He berth evere his mowth unpinned, So that his lippes ben unloke. 1568 Depositions xvi, 11 May (MS. Cant. Cath. Lib.), The said wif with her peticote vnpynned. 1655 tr. Sorel's Com. Hist. Francion vi. 18 Her wait... Oxford English Dictionary
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plitch
† plitch, v. Obs. Forms: 1 *plycc(e)an, 5 plycche. pa. tense 4 plight(t)e, (pleightte), 5 plyȝte, plyghte. pa. pple. 4 plyȝt, 5 plight, 6 plyghte. [OE. 2 sing. subj. and imper. plyce, plice, irreg. forms from *plycc(e)an:—WGer. type *plukkja- pluck (whence also Du. plucken, LG. plücken, MHG., Ger. p... Oxford English Dictionary
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girr
girr Sc. (gɪr) [var. girth n.1] A hoop for a barrel. Also, a child's hoop. Cf. gird n.1 2, girth n.1 2.1611 in Glasgow Burgh Rec. (1876) I. 322 Na firlot to be sealit bot sik as hes yron girris about the mowth. 1796 Burns Cooper o' Cuddie, The cooper o' Cuddie cam here awa, And ca'd the girrs out ow... Oxford English Dictionary
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unfill
unˈfill, v. [un-2 3. Cf. obs. Flem. ontvullen.] trans. † a. To stop, break off. Obs. b. To empty.1486 Bk. St. Albans, Hunting e vj b, To fulfill or vnfill eche maner of chaas The hunt euermoore in his mowth that worde he haas. 1607 Tourneur Rev. Trag. ii. ii, Thy veines are sweld with lust, this sha... Oxford English Dictionary
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groping
▪ I. groping, vbl. n. (ˈgrəʊpɪŋ) [f. grope v. + -ing1. In OE. grápung.] The action of the verb grope in its various senses; † in early use, touch, the sense of touch; in groping, to the touch (obs.).c 1000 ælfric Hom. I. 234 Forðan ðurh his [sc. St. Thomas's] grapunge we sind ᵹeleaffulle. a 1225 Anc... Oxford English Dictionary
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eatage
eatage north. dial. (ˈiːtɪdʒ) [f. eat v. + -age; cf. eddish, which may have been confused.] 1. Grass available only for grazing; esp. the aftermath, or growth after the hay is cut. Also with some defining word, as after-, spring, winter.1641 Best Farm. Bks. (1856) 129 Three landes in the Carre at 16... Oxford English Dictionary
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twelvemonth
twelvemonth (ˈtwɛlvmʌnθ) Forms: see twelve and month; also 4 tuelfmoth; β. 4 tuelmoneth, -monþ, -moth, twelmoneþ, 4–6 twelmunth, 5 -monyth, twolmonthe, 5–6 twelmoneth(e, -month(e, -mond(e, (6 -motte); γ. 5 towlmonyth, 6 tolmonth, -mont, Sc. -mount, -mond, -mowth, towmound, 8 Sc. towmond, -month, 8–9... Oxford English Dictionary
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sowinge
▪ I. sowing, vbl. n.1 (ˈsəʊɪŋ) [f. sow v.1] 1. The action of scattering seed.13.. Cursor M. 6378 (Gött.), Moyses..fand þaim fode in þair nede, widuten sauing of ani sede. 1362 Langl. P. Pl. A. viii. 102, ‘I schal sese of my sowynge,’ quod pers, ‘and swynke not so harde’. c 1440 Promp. Parv. 466 Sowy... Oxford English Dictionary
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expressing
expressing, vbl. n. (ɛkˈsprɛsɪŋ) [f. as prec. + -ing1.] The action of the vb. express; the action a. of pressing out, pressing out the contents of; b. of representing, uttering, or manifesting (thoughts, meanings, etc.). Now gerundial.1530 Palsgr. Introd. 17 No parte of the vowell, at his expressyng... Oxford English Dictionary
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wasteful
wasteful, a. (ˈweɪstfʊl) Forms: see the n. and -ful. [f. waste n. + -ful.] 1. That causes devastation, desolation, or ruin; that destroys or lays waste. a. of a person or animal, thing personified, personal action or attribute. ? Obs.a 1300–1400 Cursor M. 18230 (Gött.) Þu prince of tinsel and þu duk... Oxford English Dictionary
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avoid
▪ I. avoid, v. (əˈvɔɪd) Forms: 4–7 au- avoide, -oyde, 5 awoyde, 5–6 aduoyde, -voyde, 6 advoid, awode, 6–7 auoyd, auoid, 6– avoid. [a. AF. avoide-r = OF. esvuidier, évuider (see a- prefix 9), to empty out, clear out, quit, get quit of, banish, f. es out + vuidier, f. vuit, vuide, empty: see void v. a... Oxford English Dictionary
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charnel
▪ I. charnel, n.1 (and a.1) (ˈtʃɑːnəl) [a. OF. charnel, carnel in same sense:—late L. carnāle ‘flæschus’ (flesh-house) (ælfric's Gloss.), = carnārium, whence OF. charner, charnier.] 1. † a. A burial-place, cemetery (obs.). b. A mortuary chapel, a charnel house.1377 Langl. P. Pl. B. vi. 50 For in cha... Oxford English Dictionary
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weltering
▪ I. weltering, vbl. n. (ˈwɛltərɪŋ) [f. welter v.1 + -ing1.] 1. The action of turning or twisting the body about (on the ground), rolling (in the mire), wallowing (in sin), etc. Now rare or Obs.1448–9 J. Metham Amoryus & Cl. 1631 This lyoun..Wypt on the gres hys blody mowth; and in hys welteryng Mad... Oxford English Dictionary
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soothe
▪ I. soothe, v. (suːð) Forms: 1 soðian, 3 soðien, 4, 6 sothe, 6 soth, south, 6–9 sooth, 6– soothe. [OE. sóðian (also ᵹesóðian i-sothe v.), f. sóð sooth a. Cf. ON. (Icel., Norw., Sw.) sanna (Da. sande).] † 1. trans. To prove or show (a fact, statement, etc.) to be true; to verify, demonstrate. Also c... Oxford English Dictionary
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