shittle

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1
shittle
▪ I. † ˈshittle, a. Obs. Forms: 5 schytylle, -ttyl, schityl, 6 shyttell, -ttle, 6–7 shittle, shet(t)le, (9 dial.) shuttle (see shuttle a.), 7 shickle. [App. repr. an OE. *scytel:—prehist. *skutil, f. *skut- wk. grade of the root of shoot v.] a. Of persons and their faculties: Inconstant, variable, w... Oxford English Dictionary
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shickle
shickle altered f. shittle a. Obs., unstable. Oxford English Dictionary
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shettle
shettle obs. form of shittle a., shuttle. Oxford English Dictionary
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schytylle
schytylle var. shittle a. Oxford English Dictionary
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shuttle-cork
† ˈshuttle-cork Obs. [f. shuttle n.1 + cork n.] = shuttlecock n. In quot. attrib.a 1627 Middleton Chaste Maid iii. (1630) 38 Their short figging little shittle-corke-heeles. Oxford English Dictionary
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shuttlecock
▪ I. shuttlecock, n. (ˈʃʌt(ə)lkɒk) [f. shuttle n.1 (q.v. for forms) + cock n.1 Cf. shuttle-cork.] 1. A small piece of cork, or similar light material, fitted with a crown or circle of feathers, used in the game of ‘battledore and shuttlecock’ (see 2) and also in the game of Badminton.1522 Skelton Wh... Oxford English Dictionary
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shetle
shetle obs. variant of shittle a. Oxford English Dictionary
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shuttle
▪ I. shuttle, n.1 (ˈʃʌt(ə)l) Forms: 1 sciutil, scytel, 4–9 (now dial.) shittle, 5 shotil, shetil, schytle, schetyl(le, s(c)hutylle, 6 shetyll, shuttyll, shyttel(l, shittell, shettle, shoottle, 7 shutle, shuttel, 6– shuttle. [OE. scytel ? masc.:—prehistoric *skutil f. Teut. root *skut-: see shoot v. ... Oxford English Dictionary
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flitter
▪ I. flitter, n.1 (ˈflɪtə(r)) [f. flit v. + -er1.] One who or that which flits. a. One who changes his dwelling. b. A fleeting thing.1554 Bradford in Coverdale Lett. Mart. (1564) 323 If we be flitters and not dwellers (as was Loth a flitter from Segor). 1623 tr. Favine's Theat. Hon. ii. xiii. 203 Su... Oxford English Dictionary
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in-and-in
in and in, in-and-in, adv. and n. [in adv.] A. adv. 1. a. Further and further in; continually inwards; esp. in phrase to breed in and in, to breed always within a limited stock (see breed v. III); so to marry in and in, to marry with near relatives, in successive generations.1633 B. Jonson Tale Tub ... Oxford English Dictionary
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taratantara
taratantara (tɑːrəˈtæntərə, -tænˈtɑːrə) Also 6 taratauntara, 7 taratantarra, tarratantara, tara-tantaro (taratamara); also, 6–7 taratantar, 7–9 tarantara, 9 tarantarratara. Cf. tantara. [Echoic: cf. L. taraˈtantara (Ennius) sound of the trumpet (so It. taratanˈtara in Florio), and med.L. taratantaru... Oxford English Dictionary
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weaver
▪ I. weaver1 (ˈwiːvə(r)) Forms: 4 wefere, 4–5 wevere, 5 wevyr, wewar(e, weiver, weyver, 5–6 weffer(e, 5–7 wever, 6 wevar, wayver, 6–7 Sc. wiver, 6, 9 Sc. weyver, 7 Sc. weifer, 8 weever, 9 Sc. wyver, 6– weaver. [f. weave v.1 + -er1.] 1. a. One who weaves textile fabrics; a workman or workwoman whose ... Oxford English Dictionary
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fumble
fumble, v. (ˈfʌmb(ə)l) Also 6 fomble. [Of obscure origin: equivalent forms exist in other Teut. langs.; cf. Du. fommelen, LG. fummeln, fommeln, Sw. fumla, to fumble, grope; prob. onomatopœic; cf. bumble, jumble, mumble, stumble, also famble, fimble vbs. Possibly the formation of the word may have be... Oxford English Dictionary
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spleen
▪ I. spleen, n. (spliːn) Forms: 4 (6–7) splen; 4–7 splene; 5–7 spleene, 6– spleen. [ad. OF. esplen (esplien, esplene, etc.), or L. splēn, a. Gr. σπλήν, related to Skr. plīhan, L. liēn. In Romanic the word has survived in many Italian dialects, and in Romanian splină, but It. splene is of learned ori... Oxford English Dictionary
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lathe
▪ I. lathe, n.1 (leɪð) [Late OE. lǽð str. neut., corresponding to ON. láð (poet.) landed possession, land:—OTeut. *lǣþo{supm}; according to some scholars cogn. w. -lǣđ- in Goth. un-lēds poor (? lit. without landed possessions), OE. un-lǽd(e wretched. The form lathe (recorded from 14th c.) would, if ... Oxford English Dictionary
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