sowth

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sowth
▪ I. † sowth, n. Obs.—1 [a. ON. sauð-r (Icel. sauður, Norw. saud, sau; MSw. södh, söd, Sw. dial. sau, sö).] A sheep.c 1200 Ormin 15565 Crist..draf hemm alle samenn ut, & nowwt & sowwþess alle.▪ II. sowth, v. Sc. (saʊθ) Also 8 south, 9 sooth. [Alteration of sowff v.] trans. = sowff v.? 1784 Burns in ... Oxford English Dictionary
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William Hunter (merchant)
Loird Boithwell whear thay knaw he is nott, for Aberdene is neir fowr scoir mylis derrect north frome Edinburgh and Kellso is twenty eight mylis derrect sowth wikipedia.org
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sowff
sowff, v. Sc. (saʊf) Also 8–9 sowf, 9 souf(f. [Later Sc. form of solf v. See also sowth v.] trans. To sing, hum, or whistle (a tune) softly.1719 Ramsay To Arbuckle 20, [I] Bang'd up my..whistle, To sowf ye o'er a short epistle. 1728 ― Friends in Ireland 13 Sowfing Sonnets on the Lasses. 1819 R. Gall... Oxford English Dictionary
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Anne Bourchier, Baroness Dacre
The stanza which is addressed to Anne reads: "To my Lady Anne Dakers of the sowth". Her name also appears in several of Skelton's other poems. wikipedia.org
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besouth
besouth, prep. now Sc. (bɪˈsaʊθ) Also 5–6 besowth. [f. be- + south: cf. be-east, be-north.] On the south side of; to the south of.c 1410 Sir Cleges 473 A gest..Of a knyght there be-sowth. 1530 Lyndesay Papyngo 918 The borrow mure, Besouth Edinburgh. 1551 Recorde Cast. Knowl. (1556) 85, 29 degrees be... Oxford English Dictionary
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Ieuan Deulwyn
to Edward IV to look into the lineage of the Herberts, in which the poet is said to be one of the four 'cheyffest men of skill within the provynce of Sowth wikipedia.org
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diligently
diligently, adv. (ˈdɪlɪdʒəntlɪ) [f. diligent a. + -ly2.] In a diligent manner; with diligence. a. With steady application; assiduously, industriously; not idly or lazily; † with dispatch.1340 Ayenb. 208 Huo þet zecþ diligentliche. 1382 Wyclif 2 Chron. xix. 11 Takith coumfort and doith diligently, an... Oxford English Dictionary
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portator
† portator Obs. rare Forms: 5 -ur, 6 -our, 7 -or. [a. AF. portatour = obs. F. portateur (1540 in Godef.), ad. L. *portātōr-em, agent-n. f. portāre to carry.] A bearer, carrier, supporter.c 1485 Digby Myst. (1882) iii. 306 Also I am þe prymatt portatur next heueyn, yf þe trewth be sowth, & that I Iug... Oxford English Dictionary
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Sweetbriar Hall
was consumed by the same ffyeer ... all the hospell strete vpon both sydes past the myddest thereoff & dyd staye at the howse of Thoms. wryghte opon ye sowth wikipedia.org
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west country
west country [west a.] The western part of any country; the district or region towards the west; spec. of England or of Scotland. Usually the remoter counties west (or south-west) of the speaker, or of London (in Scotland west of Edinburgh); sometimes spec. the south-western counties (Somerset, Devo... Oxford English Dictionary
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pipple
▪ I. † ˈpipple, v. Obs. Also 6 pypple (pimpel). [App. dim. or frequent. of pipe v.1] intr. To blow with a gentle sound; to pipe or whistle softly, as the wind; to murmur or ripple, as a stream. Hence † ˈpippling vbl. n. and ppl. a.a 1529 Skelton Replyc. Wks. 1843 I. 207 Yong scolers..enbolned with t... Oxford English Dictionary
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couching
▪ I. couching, vbl. n. (ˈkaʊtʃɪŋ) [f. couch v.1 + -ing1.] 1. The action of couch v.1, in various senses.c 1391 Chaucer Astrol. ii. §29 Thanne wol the..lyne merydional of thyn astrolabie lye evene sowth..so that thow werke softly and avisely in the cowchyng. 1571 Golding Calvin on Ps. lviii. 10 By re... Oxford English Dictionary
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south
▪ I. south, adv., prep., n., and a. (saʊθ) Forms: 1, 3 suð, suþ, 3 suþe, 4–5 suthe, 4, 6 suth (6 Sc. sutht); 3 soþ, 4 soth, 6 north. soyth; 3–5 souþ (4 zouþ), 4–5 souþe, 4 sowþe; 3– south (4 souht, 5 Sc. soucht), 4–6 southe (5 Sc. souythe), 5–6 sowth(e. [Common Teut.: OE. s{uacu}ð, = OFris. sûth (WF... Oxford English Dictionary
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summer season
summer season 1. The season of summer. Now rare.1362 Langl. P. Pl. A. Prol. 1 In A somer sesun whon softe was þe sonne. a 1400 Stockholm Med. MS. i. 107 in Anglia XVIII. 297 Late take a gres in somer-sesoun. 1530 Palsgr. 703/1 In the sommer season I love to shyfte me often. 1588 A. King tr. Canisius... Oxford English Dictionary
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lodestar
lodestar, loadstar (ˈləʊdstɑː(r)) Also 4–6 lood(e-, 5–6 lod-, 6 loade-, (lodes-); see star n. β. north. and Sc. 5–6 lade-, 6 leid-, laidsterne, laydsterre. [f. load, lode + star n. Cf. ON. leiðarstjarna.] 1. A star that shows the way; esp. the pole star.c 1386 Chaucer Knt.'s T. 1201 Calistopee..Was ... Oxford English Dictionary
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