Citations:elsewhence


 * 1) From elsewhere; from some other place or source.
 * With but one squire to carry shields and swords,
 * Set off, and through bye-ways arriv’d at Morlaix,
 * As if they came elsewhence; but the fair lady,
 * By six-and-twenty knights accompanied,
 * On the high road in loitering state proceeded.
 * ălĭbī,  elsewhere.    ăliās,    at another time.
 * ăliō,   elsewhither.    ălĭtĕr,    in another way.
 * ăliundĕ, elsewhence.   ăliōquī(n), in other respects.
 * but a lot of people seem to take it pretty much for granted as a truth
 * and tricksters along with chance operations get their door in the foot
 * and beknew you for it  every back is wardthing and downside ups
 * what in english is referred to as the past does not exist everywhere universally
 * ucwalmicwts does not have this temporal locativity in the english sense
 * rather the present just opens its wings and is every/where other/wise pervasive
 * the past and future are not trapped outside the eternal now
 * elsewhere  elsewhence wise and whither
 * but a lot of people seem to take it pretty much for granted as a truth
 * and tricksters along with chance operations get their door in the foot
 * and beknew you for it  every back is wardthing and downside ups
 * what in english is referred to as the past does not exist everywhere universally
 * ucwalmicwts does not have this temporal locativity in the english sense
 * rather the present just opens its wings and is every/where other/wise pervasive
 * the past and future are not trapped outside the eternal now
 * elsewhere  elsewhence wise and whither
 * ucwalmicwts does not have this temporal locativity in the english sense
 * rather the present just opens its wings and is every/where other/wise pervasive
 * the past and future are not trapped outside the eternal now
 * elsewhere  elsewhence wise and whither