1806 - Poems, Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect, Alexander Douglas; see Example below From: Poems, Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect
By Alexander Douglas, 1806 May Morning P. 24
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from Latin spūtāre to spit a 1639 - Reliquiæ Wottonianæ; Or, A Collection of Lives, Letters, Poems, Sir Henry Wotton; see Example below From: Reliquiæ Wottonianæ
Or, A Collection of Lives, Letters, Poems By Sir Henry Wotton, 1651 Letters, &c. P. 491 from thin (adj.) + gut (n.) 1602 - Blurt Master Constable or The Spanish Night-Walke, Thomas Middleton; see Example below From: The Works of Thomas Middleton,
Edited by the Rev. Alexander Dyce Volume I, 1840 Blurt Master-Constable P. 242 from Latin sitīculōsus, from sitis thirst 1620 - Via Recta ad Vitam Longam; also the True Use of Our Famous Bathes of Bathe, Tobias Venner;
see below from E-NED from rob (vb.) + pot (n.) a vessel for holding wine, beer, etc 1599 - The Pleasant History of the Two Angry Women of Abington, Henry Porter; see Example below From: The Two Angry Women of Abington
By Henry Porter, Edited by The Rev. Alexander Dyce, 1841 P. 48 from Greek µεγαλόϕωνος, from µεγαλο- great + ϕωνή voice, sound + -ous 1819 - Peter Bell the Third, Percy Bysshe Shelley; see Example below From: The Poetical Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley
Edited by Mrs. Shelley Volume II, 1855 Peter Bell the Third. Prologue. P. 440 from rattle (n.) or (vb.) 1589 - The Arte of English Poesie, George Puttenham see Example below (authorship is generally attributed to Puttenham, see Authorship of The Arte of English Poesie) From: English Reprints.
George Puttenham. The Arte of English Poesie. (June, 1589) Edited by Edward Arber, 1869 The Second Booke. Of Proportion Poetical Chapter XIII. (XVIII) Of the breaking your polysillables and when it is to be used. P. 147 from Old French vergoignos (12th c., later French vergogneux, = Italian vergognoso, Portuguese vergonhoso), from vergogne:—Latin verēcundia, from verēcundus verecund (adj. modest, bashful) 1483 - Geoffroi de la Tour I'Andri (The Knyght of the Toure), William Caxton; see Example below From: The Book of the Knight of La Tour-Landry
Translated from the original French into English in the Reign of Henry VI, and edited for the first time from the unique manuscript in the British Museum. By Thomas Wright, 1868 How the holy lady approuued the heremyte. Ca. Cxxxiv. P. 190 from mucker (vb.), to hoard money or goods + -er 1303 - Handlyng Synne, Robert Manning of Brunne; see Example below From: Roberd of Brunne's Handlyng Synne
(Written A.D. 1303) W. the French Treatise on which it is Founded, Le Manuel des Pechiez by William of Wadington. Edited by Frederick J. Furnivall, 1862 The Seven Deadly Sins, and the Sin of Sacrilege Against Niggards and Misers. P. 190 From: Dialect Notes,
A Publication of the American Dialect Society, 1905-1912 from Latin flāvicomus (from flāvus yellow + coma hair) + -ous 1727 - An Universal Etymological English Dictionary, Nathan Bailey From: Temple Bar
A London Magazine for Town and Country Readers Volume L, May 1877 to August 1877 Men Are But Children of a Larger Growth, A Fireside Fancy . By Leigh Hunt P. 387 from Old French pluvieus (1245 in Godef.), French pluvieux, or from Latin pluviōsus rainy c 1420 - Palladius on Husbondrie; see Example below From: Palladius on Husbondrie
From the Unique Manuscript of about 1420 A.D. in Colchester Castle. Edited by the Rev. Barton Lodge, 1873 May. Book the Sixth Weeds, Harrowing, Garden-Seeds, Etc. P. 151 From: A Glossary of Words and Phrases Pertaining to the Dialect of Cumberland,
William Dickinson, 1878 from Latin pergracilis very slender 1623 - The English Dictionarie, or an Interpreter of hard English Words, Henry Cockeram;
"Pergracill, leane, slender" from Old French nuisible, from nuisir or nuire to harm 1490 - The Boke yf Eneydos, William Caxton, translated 1490; see Example below From: Caxton's Eneydos, 1490: Englisht from the French Liure Des Eneydes
Edited by W.T. Culley and F.J. Furnivall, 1890 Dido requests her sister Anne to beg Aeneas to delay his departure a little P. 76 from Latin opertāneus, from opertus covered + -āneus ‘belonging to the class of’ 1656 - Glossographia, Thomas Blount; Opertaneous, done within doors, in secret or in cover From: The Portfolio,
Comprising The Flowers of Literature. The Spirit of the Magazines. The Wonders of Nature and Art. The Family Physician and Domestic Guide. The Mechanic's Oracle. Volume III, 1824 A Love Letter. From a Pedantic Schoolmaster. P. 277 from Old French fauxbourg, variant of faubourg, a portion of a town or city, lying outside the gates, a suburb c 1470 - The Actis and Deidis of the Illustere and Vailðeand Campioun Schir William Wallace, Henry the Minstrel; see Example below From: The Bruce; and Wallace:
Published from Two Ancient Manuscripts Edited by John Jamieson Volume II, 1820 Wallace. Buke Aucht. P. 186 1563-83 - Actes and Monuments of these Latter and Perillous Dayes ( = The Book of Martyrs), John Foxe; see Example below From: Fox's Book of Martyrs:
The Acts and Monuments of the Church By John Fox Edited by the Rev. John Cumming Volume I, 1844 English Ecclesiastical History Richard II, A.D. 1378 P. 599 from age (n.) + mate. Cf. playmate 1582 - Thee First Foure Bookes of Virgil his Æneis translated, Richard Stanyhurst; see Example below From: Richard Stanyhurst
Translation of the First Four Books of the Æneis of P. Virgilius Maro, June 1582 Edited by Edward Arber, 1880 Thee Secund Booke of Virgil his Æneis P. 61 |
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