unweeting

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unweeting
▪ I. † unˈweeting, vbl. n. Obs.—1 [un-1 12.] Ignorance.14.. Wycliffite Bible Acts iii. 17 (New Coll. MS. 67), Now, breþeren, I woot þat bi þe vnwetinge [L. per ignorantiam] ȝe diden.▪ II. unˈweeting, ppl. a. Now arch. [un-1 10, 5 d. Cf. MDu. onwetende (Du. onwetend), MLG. unwetende, Sw. ovetande, an... Oxford English Dictionary
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unwitting
▪ I. † unˈwitting, vbl. n. Obs. [un-1 13.] 1. Lack of knowledge; ignorance.1382 Wyclif Acts iii. 17, I woot that by vnwittinge [L. ignorantiam] ȝe diden, as and ȝoure princes. 1620 T. Granger Div. Logike 34 The involuntarie vnwitting causeth, or effecteth a thing being ignorant thereof. 2. Unsoundne... Oxford English Dictionary
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intwist
entwist, intwist, v. (ɛn-, ɪnˈtwɪst) [f. en-1 + twist v.] trans. a. To clasp with a twist. b. To form into a twist. c. To twist in with.α 1590 Shakes. Mids. N. iv. i. 48 So doth the woodbine, the sweet Honisuckle, Gently entwist. 1683 A. Snape Anat. Horse i. x. (1686) 20 They [the guts] are gathered... Oxford English Dictionary
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Piers Plowman tradition
conservative agrarian complaints: Thence she thee brought into this faerie Lond, And in an heaped furrow did thee hyde, Where thee a Ploughman all unweeting wikipedia.org
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unhappily
unˈhappily, adv. [un-1 11. Cf. ON. {uacu}heppiliga (Norw. dial. uheppelege).] 1. Unfortunately, unluckily; by misfortune or mischance; regrettably.c 1374 Chaucer Troylus v. 937 But he was slayn..Vnhappyly at Thebes al to raþe. c 1400 Destr. Troy 7104 Þen vnhappely hys hest he hastid to do, Þat angar... Oxford English Dictionary
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superconscious
ˈsuperconscious, a. Psychol. [super- 4 a.] Transcending human or normal consciousness. Also absol.1884 F. W. H. Myers in Proc. Soc. Psychical Res. II. 219 We shall come, perhaps, to find super-conscious as necessary a term as sub-conscious. 1904 Hardy Dynasts i. v. iv. 166 In that immense unweeting ... Oxford English Dictionary
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pre-ordain
pre-ordain, v. (priːɔːˈdeɪn) Also Sc. in 6 preordine. [f. pre- A. 1 + ordain v.; = late L. præordināre (Vulg.), OF. preordiner (15th c. in Godef.), F. préordonner.] trans. To ordain or appoint beforehand; in Theol. to foreordain.1533 Gau Richt Vay 68 Quhen y⊇ time is cum preordinit be God. 1576 Foxe... Oxford English Dictionary
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misdeem
▪ I. † misˈdeem, n. Obs. [prob. f. next, but cf. deem n.] Misjudgement.1593 Lyly in Phœnix Nest Wks. (1902) III. 477 Such life leads Loue entangled with misdeemes. 1602 Warner Alb. Eng. xii. lxxv. 313 What should we say his Ioy, that his Mis-deemes did sort to this?▪ II. misˈdeem, v. Now chiefly arc... Oxford English Dictionary
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second
▪ I. second, n.1 (ˈsɛkənd) Forms: 4, 6 seconde, 6– second. [a. F. seconde, ad. med.L. secunda, fem. of L. secundus second a., used ellipt. for secunda minuta, lit. ‘second minute’, i.e. the result of the second operation of sexagesimal division; the result of the first such operation (now called ‘mi... Oxford English Dictionary
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rear
▪ I. † rear, n.1 Obs.—1 [variant of reere.] A crash, peal.1584 Hudson Du Bartas' Judith ii. in Sylvester's Du Bartas ii. (1621) 702 At this Hebrew's prayer such a reare Of thunder fell that brought them all in feare.▪ II. † rear, n.2 Obs. rare. [f. rear v.1] That which is reared or got (from cattle)... Oxford English Dictionary
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