from Latin spurcitia, from spurcus dirty, foul, impure + -ous 1628 - Resolves Divine, Morall, Politicall, Owen Feltham; see Example below From: The Library of the Old English Prose Writers
Volume IV. Resolves, Divine, Moral, Political By Owen Felltham. Printed 1832 Of Idle Books. P. 261
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from pelmato- (from Greek pelmat-, pelma sole of the foot) + -gram From: Wood's Medical and Surgical Monographs
Volume II, 1889 General Orthopedics, Including Surgical Operations By August Schreiber, Chapter I. P. 584 from late Latin sponsālītius, -īcius, from sponsālia betrothal, espousal; wedding 1656 - Glossographia, Thomas Blount
From: The Universal Receipt Book:
Being a Compendious Repository of Practical Information in Cookery, Preserving, Pickling, Distilling and all the Branches of Domestic Economy. By Priscilla Homespun (pseudonym for Richard Alsop) Second Edition, 1818 P. 141 from Latin septem seven, + Latin via way 1861 - The Cloister and the Hearth, Charles Reade; see Example below From: The Cloister and the Hearth,
A Tale of the Middle Ages By Charles Reade, Volume III, 1862 Chapter X P. 48 from Latin lucriōsus, from lucrum lucre 15?? - The Kalender of Shepherdes, translated 1503; see Example below From: Typographical Antiquities:
Or An Historical Account of the Origin and Progress of Printing In Great Britain and Ireland. By Joseph Ames, William Herbert. Volume I. 1785 Wynken De Worde. The Shepherdes Kalendar. P. 211 from Latin ichthyophagus from Greek ἰχθυοϕάγος (ikhthuophagos), from Greek ἰχθυο- fish- + -ϕάγος eating, from ϕαγεῖν to eat 1607 - The Historie of Foure-Footed Beastes, Edward Topsell; see Example below From: The History of Four-Footed Beasts, Serpents, and Insects
Collected out of the Writings of Conradus Gesner and Other Authors By Edward Topsel, 1658 The History of Four-Footed Beasts Of the Horse P. 225 ? from dew a 1325 - Names of The Hare in Reliquiæ Antiquæ; see Example below From: Reliquiæ Antiquæ:
Scraps from Ancient Manuscripts, Illustrating Chiefly Early English Literature and the English Language. Edited by Thomas Wright, and James Orchard Halliwell. Volume I, 1845 P. 133 from Greek ὑβριστικός hybristikos from hybristēs violent, wanton, insolent man (from hybris) + -ikos -ic 1831 - Letter in Russell, Gladstone (1891); see Example below From: The Prime Ministers of Queen Victoria,
Edited by Stuart J. Reid (1891) The Right Honourable William Ewart Gladstone P. 17 from French notification or from medieval Latin nōtificātiōnem, from Latin nōtificāre + -ate 1654 - The Art of Logick, Zachary Coke (pseudonym for Henry Ainsworth); see below from E-NED From: The Free Press Serials
Published 1854 Correspondence of Kossuth M. Kossuth to Mr. Urquhart. 17th December, 1850 P. 37 from Latin cenaticus from cena dinner, supper From: The Amorous Bugbears:
Or, The Humours of a Masquerade By Edward Ward, 1725 P. 53 also AUAROUS, AUEROUS, AUEROUSE, AVARUS, AVEROUS, AVEROUSE CLICK HERE FOR KEY TO SOURCES Pronunciation of AVAROUS from Old French averos, -us, from aveir, avoir, possession Subsequently confused with French avare, and so spelled. 1303 - Handlyng Synne, Robert Manning of Brunne; see Example below From: Robert of Brunne's "Handlyng Synne" A. D. 1303
Re-Edited by Frederick J. Furnivall Part I. Published for the Early English Text Society, 1901 The Tale of Pers the Usurer: how he gave away his All, and was sold as a Slave. P. 182 also APOCRAFATE, APPOCRIFATE, YPOCRAFET CLICK HERE FOR KEY TO SOURCES from Apocrypha + -ate 1486 - Book of St. Albans; see Example below From: Heraldic Miscellanies,
Consisting of the lives of Sir William Dugdale, Garter, and Gregory King Esq. Written by Themselves With an Exact Copy of The Third Part of "The Boke of St. Albans" First Printed in 1486 Printed 1793 The Third Part of The Boke of St. Albans The IV Vertues of Chivalry P. 75 From: The English Dialect Dictionary, Joseph Wright, 1898-1905
obsolete past tense of vb. to quake From: The English Poets: Chaucer to Donne
Edited by Thomas Humphry Ward Volume I. 1881 Langley or Langland Passus XXI. P. 98 after the supposition that a plover needs no food From: The Gentleman's Magazine
Volume CCLXVII (267) July to December, 1889 Some Minor British Game Birds P. 450 Old English hoᵹful, from hoᵹu thought, care, how (n. care, anxiety, trouble, sorrow) + -ful 970 - Diplomatarium Anglicum ævi Saxonici. A Collection of English Charters With a Translation of the Anglo-Saxon.By Benjamin Thorpe, 1865; see Example below From: Diplomatarium Anglicum ævi Saxonici:
A Collection of English Charters With a Translation of the Anglo-Saxon. By Benjamin Thorpe, 1865 Miscellaneous Charters Idem Anglice. P. 240 from valure (worthiness, merit) apparently an alteration of Old French valur or valeur valour, after forms in -ure 1586 - Tamburlane the Great, Christopher Marlowe; see Example below From: The Works of Christopher Marlowe:
Including His Translations Edited by Lt. Col. Francis Cunningham, 1870 The First Part of Tamburlaine the Great Act the First, Scene II P. 4 ? c 1340 - The Pricke of Conscience (Stimulus Conscientiæ); a Northumbrian Poem, Richard Rolle of Hampole; see Example below From: The Pricke of Conscience (Stimulus Conscientiæ):
A Northumbrian Poem By Richard Rolle de Hampole Edited by Richard Morris, 1863 Book I. The Properties of Old Age. P. 22 |
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