Anglish wordbook/T
From The Anglish Moot
| T |
| A B C D E F G H IJ K L M N O P Q R S T UV W XYZ |
| tharf | vb | intrans. to be under necessity or obligation (to do something) 2. impers. it is needful,; compelled, forced [rare, from OE þurfan]
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| tharf | adj | unleavened, not leavened, containing no leaven; as in unleavened bread. Unleavened bread is often simply flour mixed with water. Bread or cake without yeast or baking powder; as in tharf-cake; unraised [OE. and dialect]
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| tharm | n | an intestine; chiefly in pl. 2 an intestine as cleansed and prepared for some purposes. Also in sing., as a substance or material; catgut for fiddlestrings, etc.; intestine(s) [rare, from OE. þarm, þearm. OTeut. þarmoz: to go through.]
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| thew | n | the tissue of the body which contracts to exert a force and movement, physical strength; muscle [rare, from OE þeaw 'habit, custom']
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| thedewielding | n | political entity that controls, maintains, and represents a nation or state; government [neologism using archaisms, from thede 'nation, people' (archaic) + wield 'guide, manage' (archaic meanings) + -ING]
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| three-milk | n | the fifth month of the year (because, in the long, spring days, the cows could be milked three times between sunrise and evening); May [Anglo-Saxon, from "Thrimilce"]
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| throsm | n | visible vapours from burning matter; smoke [literary revival, from OE þrosm 'smoke, fume' "As I Lay" ..in thresh of limbs, in choke of throsm:
nothing is behind me when I go in,]
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| tilth | n | work or effort directed to useful or profitable means; work in cultivating the soil; ploughing, harrowing; the cultivation of knowledge, religion, mind; crop, harvest; land being tilled; a ploughed field; labour, cultivation, agriculture, husbandry [archaism, from OE tilþe; till vb + th suffix]
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| thrumstone | n | a fibrous mineral made into an incombustible fabric, used formerly as a fireproof insulating material.; earthstone, flaxstone, asbestos [rare, from ME thrum & stone < OE þrum 'thread' & stan 'stone']
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| thrutch | vb | to press, squeeze, crowd, throng; fig:to oppress; thrust, push; jostle; press, crowd, push, [archaic, from OE þryccan: to press]
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| thung | n | any poisonous plant.; banewort, bugbane, baneberry [archaic, from OE ðung]
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| timeworn | adj | worn out with old age, old & feeble; decrepit [putting together of OE words time & worn]
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| tor | n | hill or abrupt conical form, lofty hill, eminence, mound, grave, heap, heap of rocks; top of a hill, rocky peak; mount, peak, tumulus [OE. probably cognate with Gael. torr]
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| tucker | n | the daily supply of food of a gold digger or station-hand; rations, meals; also food generally,; food, victuals, rations [Australian slang from OE tucian: to draw, pull sharply or forcibly]
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| turd | n | a lump or piece of excrement, excrement or ordure; faeces, dung [from OE turd, now not in polite use]
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| twost | adj | next to the first; second [neologism]
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