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oftentime
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oftentime
ˈoftentime, adv. (a.) rare. [f. often adv. + time, as an extended form of oft-time.] = next. (In quot. 1876 as adj. Frequent.)c 1400 Mandeville (1839) ii. 14, I haue often tyme seen it. c 1450 Sir Beues (MS. C) 155/3335 Ȝe wot alle..That often tyme Saber þe hore Hath me greuyd full sore. 1853 Trench...
Oxford English Dictionary
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List of bridges in Bhutan
He build 8 bridges in the country, oftentime near ore deposits, and some of them were still in use in the 20ht century, the last existing bridges are Tamchog
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stufe
† stufe, n. Obs. Also 6 stuphe, stewfe, 7 stuph, stuffe. [ad. It. stufa.] A hot-air bath: = stove n.11533 Elyot Cast. Helthe (1541) 72 b, Moderate sweatynge in hot bathes or stufes be to this complexion necessary. 1547 Boorde Brev. Health §292 Vse than [for itching] purgacions and stuphes and sweate...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Ebola-chan
Oftentime, the character would be depicted in a sexualized manner, alongside a lesbian partner.
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unsoft
▪ I. † unˈsoft, a. Obs. [un-1 7. Cf. MDu. onsoft, -saft(e, sacht(e, etc. (Du. onzacht), MLG. unsacht, OHG. (MHG.) unsamft (G. unsanft).] Not soft; hard, severe.c 1275 Serving Christ 25 in O.E. Misc. 91 Þer is þe sunfulle vnsofte to beon. c 1386 Chaucer Merch. T. 1824 He kisseth hire ful ofte With th...
Oxford English Dictionary
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The Gutenberg Galaxy
The chairman of the selection committee was McLuhan's colleague at the University of Toronto and oftentime intellectual sparring partner, Northrop Frye
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often
often, adv. and a. (ˈɒf(ə)n, ˈɔː-; ˈɒftən, ˈɔː-) Also 4 oftin, 5 oftyn(e, -on, 6 hoften, 8 Sc. aften. [An extended form of oft, or of its ME. variant ofte. In Chaucer we find ofte before a consonant, often before a vowel or h, as if in imitation of inflexional endings in -en reduced before a consona...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Red-billed chough
species
Up to the eighteenth century, the red-billed chough was associated with fire-raising, and was described by William Camden as incendaria avis, "oftentime
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skulk
▪ I. skulk, n. (skʌlk) Also 4–5 sculke, 6 scoulke, sculck; 5 skulke. [f. the vb.] 1. One who skulks or hides himself; a shirker.c 1320 Langtoft Chron. (Rolls) II. 248 The roghe raggy sculke Rug ham in helle! 1838 Knickerbocker XI. 448 Spotswood had told the middie that Tudor was a great ‘skulk’, and...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Malays (ethnic group)
A smaller version of the Belanga is called periok, used for rice-preparation; The Buyong, commonly defined by a straight collar and a spherical body, oftentime
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