sleech

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sleech
▪ I. sleech, n. dial. (sliːtʃ) Also 8–9 sleetch, Sc. sleitch. [app. a later form of slitch.] 1. Mud deposited by the sea or a river; soil composed of this.1587 Fleming Contn. Holinshed III. 1540/1 Wher the slub or sleech is fifteene foot deepe at the least, and the maine rocke immediatlie vnderneath... Oxford English Dictionary
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Richard Sleech
Richard Sleech D.D. (d. 2 March 1730) was a Canon of Windsor from 1722 to 1730. Family He was the son of Edward Sleech, organist of Eton College. His son, Stephen Sleech, also entered the church, and followed his father as Rector of Farnham Royal. wikipedia.org
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Stephen Sleech
Stephen Sleech was an 18th-century Honorary Chaplain to the King who was Provost of Eton College from 1746 until his death. The son of Richard Sleech, a canon of St George's Chapel, Windsor, he was educated at Eton and King's; and was awarded a Lambeth degree in 1729. wikipedia.org
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sletch
▪ I. † sletch obs. var. of sleech n. or slitch.1743 Maxwell Ser. Trans. 44 Sea-sletch, Clay and Lime. Ibid. 125 Indeed they chuse to have Mud with the Sand, and this they call Sletch.▪ II. sletch, v. rare. Now dial. (slɛtʃ) Also 5 slech; pa. tense sleghte. [repr. OE. slæccan (also á-, ᵹeslæccan), f.... Oxford English Dictionary
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John Sleech
John Sleech was the Archdeacon of Cornwall from 1741 to 1788. Sleech was from Farringdon, Devon. wikipedia.org
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slitch
slitch Obs. exc. dial. (slɪtʃ) Forms: 5 slicche, slycche, 5–6 sliche, 6 slich, slyche, slytche, slitche, 7– slitch. [app. representing an OE. *sl{iacu}c (see slike n.); for the phonetic development cf. ditch, sitch.] = sleech n. (See also quot. 1794.)c 1400 Destr. Troy 5763 The Troiens dong hom doun... Oxford English Dictionary
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Edward Cotton (priest, died 1675)
Sleech was from Silverton, Devon and educated at Christ Church, Oxford. He was appointed Rector of St. Thomas and St. wikipedia.org
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hazelly
▪ I. hazelly, a.1 (ˈheɪz(ə)lɪ) [cf. hazel2.] Consisting of a mixture of sand, clay, and earth.1587 Fleming Contn. Holinshed III. 1543/1 The stuffe carried..for the erection of the walles at Dover, was earth, being of a haselie mould, chalke and sleech. 1707 Mortimer Husb. iii. (1708) 53 All sorts of... Oxford English Dictionary
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lionel
lionel Her. (ˈlaɪənəl) [a. OF. lionel, dim. of lion lion.] = lioncel.1661 Morgan Sph. Gentry iv. ii. 15 Three demy Lionels passant argent. 1736 Sleech in Lett. Lit. Men (Camden) 366 His Arms (a Chevron between 3 Lionels) carv'd on it. Oxford English Dictionary
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Thomas Fry (priest, born 1775)
Collyer and Fry both retired in 1814, and were replaced by Charles Sleech Hawtrey. wikipedia.org
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Edward Cooke (1755–1820)
the third but only surviving son of William Cooke (1711–1797), provost of King's College, Cambridge and his wife, Catherine, the daughter of Richard Sleech wikipedia.org
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groundage
groundage (ˈgraʊndɪdʒ) [f. ground n. + -age.] 1. † a. Some kind of toll or tax. Obs. rare—1.c 1440 Jacob's Well 29 Alle þo, þat don men of holy cherche..to paye toll, pyckage, murage, or grondage, panage or gwydage, for swyche godys as are noȝt led to feyres & markettes, be-cause of marchaundise. b.... Oxford English Dictionary
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sleek
▪ I. sleek, n.1 Sc. (sliːk) Also slick, slieck. [prob. short for sleek measure: cf. sleek v. 1 c, and MFlem. sleec, sleic (mod.Flem. sleek, sleik) adj., even with the top of the vessel.] A measure for fruit, etc. (see later quots.).1705 in W. Hector Judic. Rec. Renfrewshire (1876) 42 Ten slicks of k... Oxford English Dictionary
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Sussex dialect
black mud of rotting organic matter Ike - a mess or area of mud Pug - a kind of loam, particularly the sticky yellow Wealden clay Slab - the thickest mud Sleech wikipedia.org
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extrusion
extrusion (ɛkˈstruːʒən) Also 6 extrution. [f. as if ad. L. *extrūsiōn-em, n. of action f. extrūdĕre: see extrude.] The action of extruding or thrusting out; the fact of being extruded. 1. In physical sense: a. The action of pushing out; expulsion by mechanical force. b. Protrusion from within an env... Oxford English Dictionary
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