1826 - Tales of the O'Hara Family, John Banim; see Example below From: Tales by the O'Hara Family
By John Banim Second Series Volume II. 1826 Chapter IX. P. 278
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also FRAMPAL, FRAMPALD, FRAMPARD, FRAMPART (dialect), FRAMPEL, FRAMPLED, (dialect) FROMPALL, FROMPERED, CLICK HERE FOR KEY TO SOURCES from E-NED: of obscure origin; it is uncertain which of the many divergent forms is the earliest; formation on fram, from + poll head, would suit sense 2. Cf. frommard = fromward, froward; also frump, and Scottish frample ‘to put in disorder’ 1598 - The Merry Wives of Windsor, William Shakespeare; see Example below From: The Merry Wives of Windsor
By William Shakespeare Published 1910 Act II Scene II p. 54 from mim (adj.) primly silent or quiet, modest + mouthed 1721 - Lucky Spence's Last Advice, Allan Ramsay; see Example below From:Poems by Allan Ramsay
1733 Edition Lucky Spence's Last Advice P. 21 from dull (adj.) + man 1615 - Satyrical Essays, Characters and Others, John Stephens; see below from E-NED From: The Works of the English Poets
Edited by Dr. Samuel Johnson Volume VI. 1810 The Poems of Alexander Brome Epistles P. 682 ? perhaps from an old African-American minstrel song, "The Hamfat Man", or perhaps an alteration of "amateur" 1882 - America Revisited, George Augustus Sala; see Example below From: America Revisited:
From the Bay of New York to the Gulf of Mexico, And from Lake Michigan to the Pacific By George Augustus Sala Sixth Edition. 1886 IV. All the Fun of the Fair P. 57 properly paramythetic, from Greek παραµυθητικός, from παραµυθεῖσθαι to encourage, console, from παρα- beside + µυθεῖσθαι to speak 1854 - Moral and Metaphysical Philosophy, John Frederick Denison Maurice; see Example below From: Moral and Metaphysical Philosophy
By Frederick Denison Maurice Volume I. Ancient Philosophy and the First to the Thirteenth Centuries New Edition, 1882 P. 309 DEFINITIONS CONTINUED NOUN 4. a mole-catcher (dialect) 5. a person who goes to an auction intending to buy (dialect) CLICK HERE FOR KEY TO SOURCES from want (vb.) + -er 1611 - (definition 2) The Scourge of Folly, John Davies (of Hereford); see Example below From: The Complete Works of John Davies
Edited the Rev. Alexander B. Grosart Volume II. 1878 The Scourge of Folly P. 21 1546 - A Dialogue Conteinyng the Nomber in Effect of all the Prouerbes in the Englishe Tongue, John Heywood; see Example below From: The Proverbs and Epigrams of John Heywood
Printed for the Spenser Society, 1867 The fyrst parte. P. 37 originally a Homeric epithet for Zeus, c1715 From: Poems
By Arthur Hugh Clough Seventh Edition, 1879 The Bothie of Tober-na-Vuolich: A Long Vacation Pastoral P. 173 1888 - Detroit Free Press in Farmer's Americanisms; see Example below From: Americanisms--Old & New
By John Stephen Farmer, 1889 P. 247 from thanat-, combining form of Greek θάνατος (thanats) death + phobia 1860 - as per E-NED and the Historical Thesaurus of English, in Robert Mayne's An Expository Lexicon of the terms ... of Medical and General Science; "Thanatophobia, term for a dread or fear of death: *thanatophoby"; earlier example (1847) below From: The Principles of Medical Psychology
Translated from the German by H. Evans Lloyd Edited by B.G. Babington Printed for the Sydenham Society, 1847 Therapeutics P. 348 from mutton (n.) loose women, prostitutes (slang) + monger 1532 - (definition 1) The Confutacyon of Tyndale's Answere. Sir Thomas More; see below from E-NED From: Supplement to the Edition of Shakespeare's Plays
Published in 1778 By Samuel Johnson and George Steevens Volume the Second, 1780 First Part of Sir John Oldcastle P. 294 Latin, from Greek βάραθρον (barathron) gulf, pit 1520 - (definition 2) A Treatyse of a Galaunt; see below From: A Treatyse of a Galaunt From the Unique Edition Printed by Wynkyn De Worde Edited by J.O. Halliwell, 1860 P. 17 (for definition 1)
From: Descriptive Notices of Popular English Histories By James Orchard Halliwell Printed for the Percy Society, 1848 The Man in the Moone Telling Strange Fortunes Or, the English Fortune Teller, 1609 P. 27 altered form of scurn (vb.) to shrink, flinch, take flight (obs. rare) a 1300-1400 - Cursor Mundi;
see below From: Cursor Mundi (The Cursor of the World): A Northumbrian Poem of the XIVth Century Edited by the Rev. Richard Morris Volume III. 1892 P. 1115 1855 - Nature and Human Nature, Thomas Haliburton; see Example below From: Nature and Human Nature
By Thomas Chandler Haliburton, 1855 Chapter XXII. A Dish of Clams P. 288 1692 - An Argument Proving that the Abrogation of King James...., Samuel Johnson; see Example below From: An Argument Proving that the Abrogation of King James....
By Samuel Johnson The Fifth Edition, 1693 P. 18 from rebuke (n.) + -ous 1494 - The Newe Cronycles of Englande and of Fraunce, Robert Fabyan;
see below From: The New Chronicles of England and France By Robert Fabyan Edited by Henry Ellis, 1811 Septima Pars Caroll VII P. 557 from Latin ēbriōsus addicted to drink 1871 - The Atlantic Monthly, Vol. XXVII see Example below From: The Atlantic Monthly
A Magazine of Literature, Science, Art, and Politics Volume XXVII. 1871 Our Whispering Gallery P. 133 |
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