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roomth
roomth Now dial. (ruːmθ) Also 6 rumeth, 6–7 rometh(e, roometh; 6 romth(e, rompth; 7 roumth, roomthe. [f. room a. + -th1: cf. Færöese r{uacu}md. The earlier form is rimth.] 1. Space; esp. ample or unconfined space. † to make roomth, to make way.1540 Bible (Cranmer) 2 Sam. xxii. 20 For he brought me o...
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room | Etymology of room by etymonline
The sense of "persons assembled in a room" is by 1712. Make room "open a passage, make way" is from mid-15c. Room-service is attested from 1913; room-temperature, comfortable for the occupants of a room, is so called from 1879. Roomth "sufficient space" (1530s, with -th (2)) now is obsolete.
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roomthsome
† ˈroomthsome, a. Obs.—1 In 6 romth-. [f. roomth.] Spacious, roomy.1599 Nashe Lenten Stuffe 42 A cage or pigeon house, romthsome enough to comprehend her and..her nurse.
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roomthy
roomthy, a. Now dial. (ˈruːmθɪ) Also 6 romthie, romthy, room(e)thie, roomethy. [f. roomth + -y.] 1. Spacious, ample, roomy.1578 Banister Hist. Man i. 30 With a slacke or romthy kynde of knitting. Ibid. 33 These bones in women [are]..much more ample, and romthy. 1612 Drayton Poly-olb. i. 210 After wh...
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rimth
† rimth, n. Obs. rare. Forms: 1 r{yacu}mþ (?), 3 rumth, 5 rymthe. [? OE. r{yacu}mþ (Lye), f. r{uacu}m room a. Cf. MDu. ruumte, ruymte (Du. ruimte), G. räumte and the later roomth.] Room, space; leisure. a-rimth, in wide array.c 1205 Lay. 27492 Þa hæf þat fiht of þar studen Þer heo ær fuhten, and big...
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house-roomth
† ˈhouse-roomth Obs. rare. = prec.1579 Twyne Phisicke agst. Fort. ii. xlvii. 222 b, The first gaue thee house-romth the space of a few monethes.
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burliness
burliness (ˈbɜːlɪnɪs) [f. burly + -ness.] Burly state; fullness of figure; stoutness, bigness.1612 Drayton Poly-olb. viii. 119 Into a lesser roomth thy burlinesse to bring. 1832 L. Hunt Sir R. Esher (1850) 128 In the rest of his face..a kind of bloated prominence, or rather burliness. 1859 Sala Tw. ...
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scopid
▪ I. † scope, n.1 Obs. rare. In 4 scoppe. [Related to scope v.1] A leap or skip.13.. K. Alis. 5777 Tho hy seighe that folk, I wys, Hy plumten doune, as a doppe, In the water at on scoppe. 1688 Holme Armoury iii. xix. (Roxb.) 184/1 Scop of an horse, is the distance of his treat vpon the ground from t...
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probability
probability (prɒbəˈbɪlɪtɪ) [ad. F. probabilité (14th c. in Littré), ad. L. probābilitātem, f. probābil-is probable: see -ity.] 1. a. The quality or fact of being probable; the appearance of truth, or likelihood of being realized, which any statement or event bears in the light of present evidence; l...
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field
▪ I. field, n. (fiːld) Forms: 1–2 feld, 3–6 feild(e, feld(e, 3 fæld, south. vælde, vald(e, (5 falde, feald), 3–4 south. veld(e, 3–5 felt(e, fild(e, (5 fyld(e), 4–6 feeld(e, 6–7 fielde, 6– field. [Com. WGer.; OE. feld str. masc. corresponds to OFris. and OS. feld masc. (MDu. velt, Du. veld neut.), OH...
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miss
▪ I. miss, n.1 (mɪs) Forms: 3–6 mis, mysse, 3–7 misse, 4–5 mys, (5 myss, 6 myshe), 6– miss. [Partly f. miss v.1; but other formations (likewise from the OTeut. *misso-) seem to have coalesced with this. In the sense of ‘loss’ (branch I) the word may partly represent OE. *miss neut., ‘absence, loss’ ...
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