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1
whereinto
whereinto, adv. arch. (hwɛərɪnˈtuː, hwɛərˈɪntuː) [f. where 15 + into.] 1. Into which.1539 Bible (Great) John vi. 22 None other shyp..saue that one wher into his disciples were entred. 1569 Golding tr. Heminge's Postill Ded. a vij b, The death whereintoo all mankynde was falne. 1641 J. Jackson True E... Oxford English Dictionary
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whereout
whereout, adv. arch. (hwɛərˈaʊt) [f. where 15 + out adv. Cf. Du. waaruit, G. woraus.] Out of which, out from which (in various senses: see out adv. and out of).1340 Ayenb. 242 Lottes wyf lokede behinde hire þe cite þet bernde, huerout hi wes iguo. 1375 in Horstmann Altengl. Leg. (1878) 132/1 Þe tre ... Oxford English Dictionary
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Ixion
In The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy by Laurence Sterne, Book VII Chapter 13: "Now the wheel we are talking of, and whereinto (but not whereonto wikipedia.org
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A Study of Whom God Refers to by Saying, "My Servant"
Mal 4:4 Remember ye the law of Moses my servant, which I commanded unto him in Horeb for all Israel, with the statutes and judgments. Caleb (1x; 1 verse; 1 book) Num 14:24 But my servant Caleb, because he had another spirit with him, and hath followed me fully, him will I bring into the land whereinto he went; and his seed shall possess it.
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wherein
wherein, adv. Now formal or arch. (hwɛərˈɪn) [f. where 15 + in prep. Cf. Du. waarin, G. worin, MSw. hvarinne, Sw. vari, Da. hvori.] I. Interrogative. 1. In what (thing, matter, respect, etc.)? In quot. 1600 = in what dress? (in prep. 6.) For the distinction between the use in dependent clauses and t... Oxford English Dictionary
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copland
† copland Obs. [? f. cop n.2 + land.]1678 Phillips, Copland, a Land [1706 piece of ground] whereinto the rest of the Lands in a furlong do shoot. [Hence 1708–21 in Kersey; 1721 in Bailey.] Oxford English Dictionary
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manurable
manurable, a. (məˈnjʊərəb(ə)l) Also 7 maynorable, maniorable (corruptly for *mainorable), manureable. [f. manure v. + -able.] † 1. Law. Admitting of being held in corporeal possession. Obs.1628 Coke On Litt. 47 If a man demiseth the vesture or herbage of his land, he may reserue a rent, for that the... Oxford English Dictionary
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miraculate
† miˈraculate, v. Obs. [f. L. mīrāculum miracle n. + -ate3.] trans. To produce by means of a miracle.1633 T. Adams Exp. 2 Peter i. 2 The vessels whereinto Christ miraculated wine, were filled up to the brim. Oxford English Dictionary
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enormious
† eˈnormious, a. Obs. Also 6 -iouse, -eous, inormious. [f. L. ēnormi-s (see enorm) + -ous.] 1. Deviating from ordinary rule or type, irregular, extraordinary; = enormous 1 and 3.1613 R. C. Table Alph. (ed. 3) Enormious, out of square, vnorderly. 1622 Callis Stat. Sewers (1647) 151 And I have..beheld... Oxford English Dictionary
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bow-net
bow-net (ˈbəʊnɛt) [f. bow n.1 + net: possibly the original form of the thing explained the name.] 1. A kind of trap used for lobsters, crayfish, etc., consisting now of a cylinder of wicker-work closed at one end and having a narrow, funnel-shaped entrance at the other; also called, a bow-weel.a 100... Oxford English Dictionary
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croze
▪ I. croze, n. Coopering. (krəʊz) In 7 croes, crowes. [perh. derived from F. creux, OF. croz, hollow, cavity, groove, excavation, creuser, OF. croser, to hollow out, excavate. Quot. 1706 (repeated in a number of 18th c. Dicts.) appears to be due to a combination of blunders; crome is prob. a misprin... Oxford English Dictionary
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carling
▪ I. carling1, carline (ˈkɑːlɪŋ, -lɪn) [Of uncertain etymology: in mod.F. carlingue ‘the step of a mast, the peece of timber whereinto the foot thereof enters’ (Cotgr.), (according to Littré from English); Pg., Sp., It. carlinga. Icel. kerling (in the þulur), as if the same word as carline1.] 1. Nau... Oxford English Dictionary
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water-board
ˈwater-board † 1. A board to throw off water; a gutter, louver-board, or the like. Obs.1417 For. Acc. 8 Hen. V D/2 In diuersis peciis Maeremii Bordis vocatis Waynescotbordis Waterbordis Shipbordis Englisshbordis [etc.]. 1477–9 Rec. St. Mary at Hill (1904) 85 To a Carpynter, for his labour, a princip... Oxford English Dictionary
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loch
▪ I. loch1 Sc. (lɒx) Forms: 4–6 locht, louch, (6 louche), 6– loch. [Gael. (and Irish) loch. Cf. the Anglo-Irish lough. The word was adopted in ONorthumbrian as luh.] A lake; applied also to an arm of the sea, esp. when narrow or partially landlocked.1375 Barbour Bruce iii. 430 In A nycht and In A da... Oxford English Dictionary
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inhumanity
inhumanity (ɪnhjuːˈmænɪtɪ) [a. F. inhumanité (14th c. in Hatz.-Darm.), or ad. L. inhūmānitāt-em, n. of quality f. inhūmānus inhuman.] 1. The quality of being inhuman or inhumane; want of human feeling and compassion; brutality, barbarous cruelty.c 1477 Caxton Jason 23, I shall kepe the ryght well..f... Oxford English Dictionary
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