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ETYMOLOGY from Latin effōcāt- ppl. stem of effōcāre, from ex out + faux throat
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form of dialect OOZLY
CLICK HERE FOR KEY TO SOURCES ETYMOLOGY see example below EXAMPLE From: Stray Leaves from a Border Garden By Mary Pamela Milne-Home, 1901 Part I. VI. "All in ye Merrie Month of May" CLICK HERE FOR KEY TO SOURCES
ETYMOLOGY from ppl. stem of Latin obrogāre partly to repeal a law by passing a new one, from ob- (ob-) + rogāre to ask, supplicate, propose a law, introduce a bill EXAMPLE From: A Second Collection of Tracts on all Subjects By John Somers Somers, 1750 Plain Dealing is a Jewel, and Honesty is the Best Policy, in Answer to a Letter Received by a Gentleman in London from his Friend in the Country, 1682 CLICK HERE FOR KEY TO SOURCES
EXAMPLE From: Philip Neville of Garriton A Yorkshire Tale By Bailey J. Harker, 1875 Chapter IX. Village Gossip CLICK HERE FOR KEY TO SOURCES
EXAMPLE From: Lancashire Rhymes; Or, Homely Pictures of the People. By Samuel Laycock, 1864 Awve Hard Wark to Howd Up Mi Yed. CLICK HERE FOR KEY TO SOURCES
ETYMOLOGY Roman parents would tell their misbehaving children this, invoking their fear of Hannibal EXAMPLE From: Agreement Betwixt the Present and the Former Government Or, A Discourse of this Monarchy, Whether Elective or Hereditary? By Francis Fullwood, Daniel Whitby, 1689 Chap. IX. The Honour of the Church of England, no just Objection against taking the new Oath. CLICK HERE FOR KEY TO SOURCES
EXAMPLE From: Colburn's Kalendar of Amusements in Town and Country for 1840 Edited by Boleyne Reeves, 1840 Reflections of the Month, September also Scottish and dialect form ROW-DE-DOW
CLICK HERE FOR KEY TO SOURCES EXAMPLE From: Habbie and Madge A Series of Scottish Dialogues By James Smith, 1872 NOTE: E-NED shows ONYGOPHAGIST as an erroneous form of ONYCHOPHAGIST
CLICK HERE FOR KEY TO SOURCES EXAMPLE From: The Doctor &c. By Robert Southey, Edited by John Wood Warter, 1865 CLICK HERE FOR KEY TO SOURCES
EXAMPLE From: The Harleian Miscellany Or, A Collection of Scarce, Curious, and Entertaining Pamphlets and Tracts By William Oldys, Edward Harley Earl of Oxford, Vol. VII, 1746 The British Bellman Printed in the Year of the Saints Fear, Anno Domini, 1648 CLICK HERE FOR KEY TO SOURCES
ETYMOLOGY from affection on analogy of caution, cautious, action, actious, etc EXAMPLE From: A New English Dictionary on Historical Principles, James Murray, 1888-1933 also BORUS-SNORUS CLICK HERE FOR KEY TO SOURCES ETYMOLOGY From: A Glossary of the Dorset Dialect, William Barnes, 1886 EXAMPLE From: The Miller's Daughter By Anne Beale, Vol. I, 1878 Chapter XVI? Is Jerusha Jealous? for the noun, also in the form GLIFFIE
CLICK HERE FOR KEY TO SOURCES ETYMOLOGY from gliff (n. short space of time) + -y EXAMPLE From: Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine Vol. VIII. October-March, 1820-21 Sketches of Village Character, No. II CLICK HERE FOR KEY TO SOURCES
ETYMOLOGY from Latin clanculārius secret, from clanculum (adv.), diminutive of clam in secret, private CLICK HERE FOR KEY TO SOURCES
ETYMOLOGY from Greek γαστρ(ο)-, γαστήρ stomach + θίλ-ος friend EXAMPLE From: The Monthly Review Or, Literary Journal, Enlarged From September to December, 1821, Volume XCVI Cookery and Confectionery CLICK HERE FOR KEY TO SOURCES
EXAMPLE From: Mark Twain's Library of Humour Edited by William Dean Howells, 1888 The Notorious Jumping Frog of Calaveras County, By S. L. Clemens (Mark Twain) |
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