yearth

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yearth
yearth etc., obs. or dial. ff. earth n.1, etc.1542 Udall Erasm. Apoph. 49 An yearthen potte. 1561 Plowman's T. in Chaucer's Wks. 95 b/2 That taketh maistrie in his name Ghostly, and for yearthly good. c 1581 Lodge Repl. Gosson's Sch. Abuse (Shaks. Soc.) 6 To make a yearthly creature to beare the per... Oxford English Dictionary
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Phonological history of English consonants
/j/ may be lost in words like yeast and yes (this has also been reported in parts of eastern England), and may be added in words like earth (making "yearth wikipedia.org
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yearne
▪ I. yearn, n. (jɜːn) [f. next.] A yearning.a 1797 M. Wollstonecraft Wks. (1798) III. xliv. 134, I feel my fate united to yours by..the yearns of..a true, unsophisticated heart. 1853 Kingsley Misc., Shelley & Byron (1859) I. 307 In one mighty yearn after that beauty from which he is debarred, [Keats... Oxford English Dictionary
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horsen
† ˈhorsen, a. Obs. rare. [See -en4.] Of or belonging to horses.1558 Warde tr. Alexis' Secr. i. vi. (1580) 108 a, Let hym put the Yearth onely, the Floxe, and the Horsen doung. Oxford English Dictionary
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Prince's feather
Prince's feather A popular name of several plants. a. London Pride (Saxifraga umbrosa). Now dial.1629 Parkinson Paradisus 234 Some of our English Gentlewomen have called it, The Princes Feather. 1688 R. Holme Armoury ii. 91/2 Princes Feather hath the leaves invecked, the Flowers grow in branches. 18... Oxford English Dictionary
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dispersed
dispersed, ppl. a. (dɪˈspɜːst, poet. -sɪd) [f. prec. + -ed1.] a. Scattered or spread about; driven asunder; diffused.1526 Pilgr. Perf. (W. de W. 1531) 167 The mynde y{supt} is dispersed in the waueryng consideracion of many thynges at that time whan it sholde be specially occupyed about one thyng. 1... Oxford English Dictionary
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endanger
endanger, v. (ɛnˈdeɪndʒə(r)) Forms: 6 en-, indaunger, 7–8 indanger, 6– endanger. [f. en-1 + danger n.] † 1. trans. To subject (a person) to the absolute control of another; to render (an official) liable to dismissal or punishment at the will of a superior. Const. to. Obs. rare.1551 Robinson tr. Mor... Oxford English Dictionary
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teetotally
▪ I. ˌteeˈtotally, adv.1 dial. and U.S. [Reduplicated form of totally.] Totally, entirely, wholly.1832 Judge Jas. Hall Legends of W. Philadelphia 38 [Kentucky backwoodsman says] These Mingoes..ought to be essentially, and particularly, and tee-totally obflisticated off of the face of the whole yeart... Oxford English Dictionary
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ketre0.dolcesportonline.com
Well, it wath the cathe of the man who had very properly got twenty yearth of the betht for thaying that he could reveal how old Ballymulrock had got his peerage ... a dithgrathef ketre0.dolcesportonline.com
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hotch
▪ I. hotch, v. Sc. and north. dial. (hɒtʃ) [Corresponds to Du. hotsen, hossen, to jog, jolt, MHG. and Ger. dial. hotzen to move up and down; also in form to F. hocher (12th c. hocier in Littré) to shake; but the original relations between these words are obscure.] 1. intr. To move up with a short je... Oxford English Dictionary
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creasing
▪ I. † ˈcreasing, vbl. n.1 Obs. [f. crease v.1 + -ing1.] Increasing, increase, growth.1398 Trevisa Barth. De P.R. vii. lxiv. (1495) 279 Lepra mesylry..hath the begynnynge of the veynes, and full cresynge without the veynes. 1587 Golding De Mornay xiv. (1617) 211. 1629 Mabbe tr. Fonseca's Dev. Contem... Oxford English Dictionary
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wroot
▪ I. † wroot, n. Obs. In 1 wrot, urot, uurot, 4–5 wrot, 5 wrotte, wroughte. [OE. wrót, = MLG. wrote (a mole), LG. wrote, wröte, WFlem. wroete (snout). Cf. next and wort n.3] The snout of a swine, etc.; a proboscis.c 725 Corpus Gloss. (Hessels) B 188 Bruncus, wrot. a 1100 Gloss. in Wr.-Wülcker 118 Pr... Oxford English Dictionary
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angletwitch
† ˈangletwitch, -touch Obs. or dial. Forms: 1 -twæcca, -twicce, 2 -twæcche, 4–6 -twytche, -twitche, 5–6 angle-twache, 5–7 -towch, -touch. [? f. angle n.1 + OE. *twæcca, *twicce, app. connected with vb. twiccean, twitch, of which the OHG. cognate zwickan, MHG. zwicken (also zwacken) had orig. the sen... Oxford English Dictionary
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undermine
▪ I. ˈundermine, n. [under- 4 d, 5 c. Cf. next.] † 1. An underground excavation. Obs.1599 Hakluyt Voy. II. 86 They put fire in the vndermines, weening to haue cast downe the wall. 1610 Holland Camden's Brit. i. 650 Under-mines or caves of very great widenesse. 1629 Descr. S'hertogenbosh 36 We made a... Oxford English Dictionary
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believe
believe, v. (bɪˈliːv) Forms: 2–3 bileuen, 4–5 bileue, -leve, -leeve, 4–6 beleue, -leve, 6–7 -leeve, 6– believe. (Also, 3 biliuen, byleuen, 4–5 byleeue, 4–6 byleue, -leve, 7 -leeue, -leive.) pa. tense and pple. believed, occas. in 6–7 beleft (still dial.). [Early ME. bileven, f. bi-, be- + leven:—OE.... Oxford English Dictionary
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