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padle
▪ I. padle, paidle, n. Sc. (ˈpeɪd(ə)l) Also 6 paiddill, 7 pedle. [app. Sc. form of paddle n.1: cf. Sc. pronunciation of daddle, saddle (ˈded(ə)l, ˈsed(ə)l).] A field or garden hoe; a scraper of this shape.a 1568 Anon. in Bannatyne MS. 325/33 Ane pluche, ane paiddill, and ane palme corss. 1644 Regist...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Padale
Padle is a small village in Ratnagiri district, Maharashtra state in Western India. Padle's geographical area is .
References
Villages in Ratnagiri district
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paidle
▪ I. paidle var. padle, hoe; Sc. f. paddle v.▪ II. paidle var. paddle n.3
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Vile Parle
History
A village named Padle near Santacruz and Irle near Andheri and the station named Vidlai Padlai led to the name Vile Parle.
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mundle
mundle dial. (ˈmʌnd(ə)l) Also 9 mungle. A stick used for stirring.1551–60 in H. Hall Soc. Eliz. Age (1887) 152 In the Kytchyn..a great mundle. 1688 R. Holme Armoury iii. xx. (Roxb.) 247/1 The Third, is called a Padle or Mundle, it is like an old spade without its Iron shooe, all wood. 1879 G. F. Jac...
Oxford English Dictionary
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pattle
▪ I. pattle, pettle, n. Sc. and north. dial. (ˈpæt(ə)l, ˈpɛt(ə)l) Also 4–5 pat(t)yl, 5 patil(l, 6 patle. [Origin obscure; app. another form of paddle n.1, with which it partly coincides in meaning.] 1. A tool like a small spade with a long handle, used chiefly to remove the earth adhering to a ploug...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Hector Pitchforth
He visited a company outpost in Durban Harbour, then travelled to Padle Fiord, Kingait Fiord in Cumberland Sound, and Pangnirtung, where he met with rival
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bagaty
ˈbagaty, ˈbaggety Sc. The lump-fish.1710 R. Sibbald Fife & Kinross ii. ii. 52 Lumpus alter..which our Fishers call the Hush-Padle or Bagaty. 1794 in Statist. Acc. Scotl. XII. 521 The fish caught here are..mackerel, baggety, sand-eel [etc.]. 1810 [see paddle n.2]. 1828 J. Fleming Hist. Brit. Anim. 19...
Oxford English Dictionary
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palm-cross
palm-cross † a. A cross, usually a monumental cross in a churchyard, formerly decorated with palm-branches (or substitutes for them) on Palm Sunday. Obs. b. (See quot. 1855.)1469–70 in Swayne Sarum Church-w. Acc. (1896) 13 Pro emend'de le Palmecros. 1525 in Glasscock Rec. St. Michael's, Bp. Stortfor...
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1945 Auckland Rugby League season
Padle, (Manukau): T. Hira, B. Morris, S. Leefe, P. Habib, W. Webster, P. Sullivan, T. Timoko, P. Warren, D. Collier, R.E. Kirk, (Richmond): H.T.
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paddle
▪ I. paddle, n.1 (ˈpæd(ə)l) Also 5 padell. [Origin obscure; see also padle, pattle. The implement in sense 1 was sometimes in 17–18th c. also called spaddle, which has been taken by some as the original form, and viewed as a dim. of spade. But spaddle is not known nearly so early as paddle, and may ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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dabble
▪ I. dabble, v. (ˈdæb(ə)l) [Appears late in 16th c. Agrees in form, and in sense 2, with Du. dabbelen, var. of dabben, expl. by Plantijn as ‘pattrouiller, ou patteler de mains’ to dabble with the feet or hands, met de voet int slijck dabbelen, ‘trepiner des piedz en la fange’, to trample with the fe...
Oxford English Dictionary
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stirrile
▪ I. stirrer (ˈstɜːrə(r)) Forms: see stir v. Also 7 stirrier (sense 3 b). [f. stir v. + -er1.] One who or something which stirs, in various senses. 1. a. One who or something which excites or provokes something, as strife, passion, etc., or incites a person to something; an inciter, instigator; † a ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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hush
▪ I. hush, n.1 (hʌʃ) A local Sc. name for the Lumpfish (Cyclopterus lumpus). Also hush-bagaty, hush-padle (cf. cock-paddle).a 1605 Polwart Flyting w. Montgomerie 746 Hush padle, lick ladle. 1808–18 Jamieson, Hush, the Lump, a fish.▪ II. hush, n.2 (hʌʃ) [f. hush v.1 Rare before the 19th c., but then ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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patrol
▪ I. patrol, n. (pəˈtrəʊl) Also 7–9 patrole, (7 petrol(l), 8 patrouille, petrouille, -oville, padrole, patroll, patroul. [a. F. patrouille (1539 in R. Estienne, 1611 in Cotgr. ‘a still night-watch in warre: faire la patrouille, to be driuen to linger, and spend his time idly, as one thats forced to ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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