outas

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outas
▪ I. † outas, outes, n. Obs. Forms: 3 uthes, -heis, -hest, 4 outheys, 5 out(e)hees, outehese, 5–6 outas, 5–7 outes, 6 owtis, 7 outis. [Early ME. ūthēs, whence later outhees, -hese, and (with shortening of unstressed second element) outes, outis, outas; also, in 13th c., ūthest. App. representing an ... Oxford English Dictionary
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outehees
outehees, -hese early ff. outas, outcry. Oxford English Dictionary
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Daniel Inman
2000, Structural and Machine Design Using Piezoceramic Materials: a Guide for Structural Design Engineers, Final Report  NASA Langley Grant NAG-1-1998 outas-Little wikipedia.org
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uthes
uthes var. outas n. Obs. Oxford English Dictionary
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Hubert du Plessis
Le rêve) Die Stem van Suid-Afrika, for the SABC, 1960 Vallée d’Obermann (Liszt) 1961 Drie outas het in die haai Karoo, for the SABC, 1973 Other music wikipedia.org
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outhes
outhes, -hest, -heys var. ff. outas Obs. Oxford English Dictionary
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Michael Blake (composer)
organ Choral Beamish Grace (1988; rev.1989) SAB a cappella Five Traditional Animal Poems of the Khoikhoi (1992) SATB a cappella Carol of the Three Outas wikipedia.org
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owtas
owtas owter, owth, owtrage (owterage), owtray, owtred, etc.: see outas, outer, outh, outrage, outray, outred, etc. Oxford English Dictionary
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outes
outes variant of outas, outcry. Oxford English Dictionary
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outhorn
† ˈouthorn Obs. [Cf. out- 7, horn n. 14.] A horn blown to raise the outas (uthes), to summon the lieges to the pursuit of a criminal, or the like, and to give the alarm on various occasions. (In later use only Sc. and north. Eng.)c 1210 Pseudo-Alfred (in Liebermann Leges Angl. Lond. coll. 19) Nullus... Oxford English Dictionary
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utas
▪ I. utas1 Now Hist. (ˈjuːtæs) Also 5 vtaus, vtauce, vtase (Sc. wtast, wtes), 5–7 vtas (7 outas), 6 utais, 7 vtis. [Reduced form of the pl. utaves: see octave n.] a. = octave n. 1 a. b. = octave n. 1 b.1387, c 1420 [see octave n. 1]. c 1430 Pilgr. Lyf Manhode iii. xx. (1869) 146, I selle it by dayes... Oxford English Dictionary
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scarcehead
† ˈscarcehead Obs. rare. [f. scarce a. + -head.] Stinginess, niggardliness. Cf. dial. scarceheed ‘scarcity, want’ (Elworthy W. Somerset Word-bk. 1886).1420–2 Lydg. Thebes iii. in Chaucer's Wks. (1561) 369/1 But in his Courte let him first deuise To exile Scarcehed and Couetise. 1566 Drant Horace, Sa... Oxford English Dictionary
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oyes
oyez, oyes, int. (n., v.) (əʊˈjɛs) Forms: 5– Oyes, O yes, (5 Oyas, 6 Oies, O is, O ys, ooyess); 6–7 Sc. hoyes; 7– Oyez, (7 oiez, O yez, oh yes, O ace, 7–9 oyess). [OF. oiez, oyez, hear ye! imperative pl. of oir to hear:—L. audiātis, pres. subj.; orig. pronounced oˈyets, but subseq. reduced to oˈyes,... Oxford English Dictionary
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octave
octave, n. (a.) (ˈɒktəv) Also in sense 1 (pl.) 4 utaves, 4–6 utas, 5 oeptaves, optas, oeptas, 7 outas. [a. F. octave (12th c. in Hatz.-Darm.), ad. L. octāva fem. of octāv-us eighth (sc. dies day), which superseded the pop. OF. oitieve (witieve, huitieve), sing. f., also huiteus, uyteaus, pl. masc. (... Oxford English Dictionary
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