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Slype - Wikipedia
The term slype is a variant of slip in the sense of a narrow passage; in architecture, the name for the covered passage usually found in monasteries or ...
en.wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
SLYPE Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
a narrow passage; specifically : one between the transept and chapter house or deanery in an English cathedral.
www.merriam-webster.com
www.merriam-webster.com
Slype | Building, Design, Construction | Britannica
Slype, in architecture, covered passageway in a medieval English cathedral or monastery. The slype may lead from either the transept or the nave of the church ...
www.britannica.com
www.britannica.com
slype
▪ I. slype, n. Arch. (slaɪp) [Perhaps a special sense of slipe n.2, but cf. WFlem. slipe, slijpe a secret path.] A covered way or passage, esp. one lying between the transept of a cathedral or monastic church and the chapter-house, and commonly leading out from the cloister.1860 M. E. C. Walcott Cat...
Oxford English Dictionary
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SLYPE Definition & Meaning - Dictionary.com
a covered passage, especially one from the transept of a cathedral to the chapter house. slype. / slaɪp /. noun. a covered passageway in a cathedral or church ...
www.dictionary.com
www.dictionary.com
slype - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
slype (plural slypes). (architecture) A covered passageway, especially one connecting the transept of a cathedral or monastery to the chapter house.
en.wiktionary.org
en.wiktionary.org
SLYPE definition in American English - Collins Dictionary
A covered passageway in a cathedral or church that connects the transept to the chapterhouse.... Click for pronunciations, examples sentences, video.
www.collinsdictionary.com
www.collinsdictionary.com
The Slype - The State Library of Ohio
The Slype is a dark passage, reputedly haunted, adjoining the ancient cathedral of Dullchester, and it plays a central role in this thrilling mystery.
search.library.ohio.gov
search.library.ohio.gov
slype - Bosworth-Toller Anglo-Saxon Dictionary
Slip a child's pinafore; an outside covering, as a pillow- slip (= -case) : in earlier times, a sheath, Halliwell's Dict. Slip an upper petticoat, Jamieson.].
bosworthtoller.com
bosworthtoller.com
Slype Definition & Meaning - YourDictionary
Slype definition: A covered passage, especially one between the transept and chapter house of a cathedral.
www.yourdictionary.com
www.yourdictionary.com
slipe
▪ I. slipe, n.1 Sc. and north. (slaɪp) Also 5 Sc. slyp, 6 slype. [app. a. LG. slîpe (cf. MSw. slipa to drag, draw), var. of the usual slêpe, = MHG. sleife (G. schleife) sledge, train, loop, knot, etc., related to LG. slîpen to whet, and slêpen to drag (see Grimm's Wbch. s.v. schleifen). For various ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Robert Egerton Swartwout
A sketch of the later career of Rupert Lister Audenard, First Earl of Slype, etc.
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
Henry Maddocks (RAF officer)
On 16 September he sent an Albatros D.III down in flames east of Slype, and on the 25th did the same to another D.V north of Middelkerke.
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
bobble
▪ I. ˈbobble, v. colloq. (ˈbɒb(ə)l) [frequentative of bob v.3 (see -le), helped by onomatopœic suggestiveness: cf. also boble, babble, bubble.] intr. To move with continual bobbing. Also transf. and refl. So ˈbobbling ppl. a.1812 W. Tennant Anster F. i. xxxvi, Hobbling, bobbling round, and straining...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Owen Scholte
On 13 July he and Lieutenant Alan Light drove down an Albatros D.V over Slype, and on 5 September, with Second Lieutenant G. R.
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org