User:ToilBot/edit logs/2020-05/WT:NORM

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 * Tiranë

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@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@

===Etymology=== From older Terrana (in Latin sources), from, either reflecting or possibly from /, an epithet used to denote the inhabitants of the Tyrrhenian Sea (cf. 🇨🇬). -Tirana is thought to come from the word, mentioned in ancient Greek and Latin sources, which locals called The Rana, since the field was formed as result of solid materials that brought water from the surrounding mountains. +Tirana is thought to come from the word, mentioned in ancient Greek and Latin sources, which locals called The Rana, since the field was formed as result of solid materials that brought water from the surrounding mountains. Or, Tirana comes from old Greek Tyros which means dairy. In the area of Tirana, dairy products made by shepherds from surrounding areas are traded. Or, Tirona, or Tirana as it is called in the dialect of the country, has its origins in what the people of this country are called. Given that the population located in this area come mainly from the mountains of the area around it, locals call them "Te Ronet" (the fallen) from, from. Even today, in everyday language, families who come from mountainous areas use the expression "have fallen (e.g.) in Durres" (or elsewhere). (J. N. Priska) The name of Tirana was mentioned for the first time in 1418 in a Venetian document. Wikipedia contributors. (2020, April 30). List of national capital city name etymologies. In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved

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 * Veleda

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@@ -1,5 +1,6 @@

==Latin== + ===Etymology===

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 * fibra

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@@ -1,5 +1,4 @@

- ==Catalan== ===Etymology===

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 * Albruna

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@@ -5,7 +5,7 @@

*  ===Etymology=== -From +. Note: this spelling is a modern scholarly conjecture based on various differing manuscript readings (for which see Alternative forms above). Though commonly encountered in modern scholarship, it is by no means uncontested, and this name may not have existed at all. +From +. Note: this spelling is a modern scholarly conjecture based on various differing manuscript readings (for which see Alternative forms above). Though commonly encountered in modern scholarship, it is by no means uncontested, and this name may not have existed at all. ===Proper noun===

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 * 危機

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@@ -46,6 +46,7 @@

#: + ====Synonyms==== *
 * 1) crisis, pinch

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 * dressed to kill

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@@ -8,6 +8,7 @@

#* + ====Usage notes==== Usually used postpositively.
 * 1)  Dressed in a very fashionable style.

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 * electro

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@@ -38,12 +38,14 @@

* ===Etymology 1=== + ====Noun==== ===Etymology 2=== + ====Noun====
 * 1)  music genre

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 * tant

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@@ -181,7 +181,7 @@

-#: +#: #   ====Declension====
 * 1)  older lady

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 * eau

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@@ -60,7 +60,7 @@

-#*:"fr"
 * 1) Water, a liquid that is transparent, colorless, odorless, and tasteless in its pure form, the primary constituent of lakes, rivers, seas, and oceans.
 * 2) * 1951, First Congress on Irrigation and Drainage. Transactions. vol. 2, page 149.

- L'alteration de l′eau du lac par l'effect des courants du fond vers la surface semble s'expliquer par le fait, que le courant à densité avait une temperature plus élevée que les couches inférieures et moyennes du lac.

+#*: "fr"

- L'alteration de l′eau du lac par l'effect des courants du fond vers la surface semble s'expliquer par le fait, que le courant à densité avait une temperature plus élevée que les couches inférieures et moyennes du lac.

#: Il buvait un verre d’eau fraîche. #:: He drank a cool glass of water. #: ''L’eau de mer et l’eau de rivière n’ont pas la même teneur en sel et n’abritent donc pas les mêmes poissons. ''

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 * orchestra

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@@ -199,6 +199,7 @@

* + ==Latin== @@ -218,7 +219,6 @@

===Descendants=== - * *  *

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 * ap

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@@ -173,8 +173,8 @@

====Declension==== ====Descendants====

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 * blister

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@@ -26,13 +26,13 @@

#: blister pack -#*:I couldn't help thinking how dashed happy I could have contrived to be in this place if only Aunt Agatha and the other blisters had been elsewhere. +#*: I couldn't help thinking how dashed happy I could have contrived to be in this place if only Aunt Agatha and the other blisters had been elsewhere. -#*:I will say, however, that we fanned her well — her and her old blister of a mother and a bewhisk- ered old goat named Boris. +#*: I will say, however, that we fanned her well — her and her old blister of a mother and a bewhisk- ered old goat named Boris. -#*:'We mustn't laugh about it, my boy. It's no joking matter. It's very wrong to shoot Mr Baxter.' 'But he's a blister.' 'He is a blister,' agreed Lord Emsworth, always fairminded. 'Nevertheless. . . . Remember, he is your tutor.' +#*: 'We mustn't laugh about it, my boy. It's no joking matter. It's very wrong to shoot Mr Baxter.' 'But he's a blister.' 'He is a blister,' agreed Lord Emsworth, always fairminded. 'Nevertheless. . . . Remember, he is your tutor.' -#*:Willie suddenly realized the heat really wasn't off the criminal persons, and he sprang into action. The blonde blister also recovered surprisingly fast and threw the big wordy tome at the Klump coco. +#*: Willie suddenly realized the heat really wasn't off the criminal persons, and he sprang into action. The blonde blister also recovered surprisingly fast and threw the big wordy tome at the Klump coco. ====Synonyms==== * @@ -199,7 +199,7 @@
 * 1) a cause of annoyance
 * 2) * 1923 Pelham Grenville Wodehouse The Inimitable Jeeves page 39
 * 1) * 1933 Collier's Illustrated Weekly, Volume 91 page 14
 * 1) * 2013 P.G. Wodehouse, Blandings: TV Tie-In page 126
 * 1) * 2017 Joe Archibald, The Willie Klump MEGAPACK® page 302

-#: +#:
 * 1) blister pack

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 * pause

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@@ -19,7 +19,7 @@

#: -#* +#* #*  |chapter=15|url=http://openlibrary.org/works/OL2004261W
 * 1)  To take a temporary rest, take a break for a short period after an effort.
 * 2)  To interrupt an activity and wait.
 * 1) * {{quote-book|en|year=1963|author={{w|Margery Allingham}}|title={{w|The China Governess}}

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 * much as

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@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@

{{en-con}} -#* 1927-29, {{w|Mahatma Gandhi|M.K. Gandhi}}, {{w|The Story of My Experiments with Truth}}, translated 1940 by {{w|Mahadev Desai}}, Part I, Chapter iii: +#* 1927-29, {{w|Mahatma Gandhi|M.K. Gandhi}}, {{w|The Story of My Experiments with Truth}}, translated 1940 by {{w|Mahadev Desai}}, Part I, Chapter iii: #*: Much as I wish that I had not to write this chapter, I know that I shall have to swallow many such bitter draughts in the course of this narrative. And I cannot do otherwise, if I claim to be a worshipper of Truth. {{...}}
 * 1) However much; even though; although.
 * 1) Largely in the same way as.
 * 2) * 1888, James M. Barrie, Auld Licht Idyls, Chapter 6:

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 * grill

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@@ -223,7 +223,7 @@

* Vietnamese: {{t+|vi|nướng}} {{trans-bottom}} -{{trans-top|to cook food under a heat element}} +{{trans-top|to cook food under a heat element}} * Finnish: {{t+|fi|grillata}} {{trans-mid}} * Spanish: {{t+|es|gratinar}}

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 * 猶豫

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@@ -1,5 +1,4 @@

{{also|犹豫|猶予}} - ==Chinese== {{zh-forms|s=犹豫|alt=猶夷,猶與,猶預,由豫,由夷,由與,游豫,游預,尤與}}

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 * soba

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@@ -82,7 +82,6 @@

- ==Indonesian== @@ -96,6 +95,7 @@

===Noun=== {{id-noun|}} + ===Further reading===
 * 1) noodle.

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 * صد

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@@ -1,5 +1,4 @@

{{also|ضد}} - ==Arabic== ===Etymology 1=== @@ -72,8 +71,9 @@

==Persian== {{number box|fa|100}} + ===Etymology=== -From {{inh|fa|pal|𐭰𐭲|tr=čat, sad}}, from {{inh|fa|peo|*θata-}}, from {{inh|fa|ira-pro|*catám}}, from {{inh|fa|iir-pro|*ćatám}}, from {{inh|fa|ine-pro|*ḱm̥tóm}}. +From {{inh|fa|pal|𐭰𐭲|tr=čat, sad}}, from {{inh|fa|peo|*θata-}}, from {{inh|fa|ira-pro|*catám}}, from {{inh|fa|iir-pro|*ćatám}}, from {{inh|fa|ine-pro|*ḱm̥tóm}}. Compare {{cog|ku|sed}}, {{cog|ps|سل|tr=səl}}, {{cog|ae|𐬯𐬀𐬙𐬀}}, {{cog|sa|शत|tr=śatá}}, {{cog|hi|सौ}}.

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 * 天宮

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@@ -17,6 +17,7 @@

===See also=== * {{zh-l|天宮圖|horoscope}} + ==Japanese== {{ja-kanjitab|あま|みや|yomi=k}} {{wikipedia|lang=ja|天宮 (曖昧さ回避)}}

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 * unta

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@@ -1,5 +1,4 @@

{{also|untá|-unta}} - ==Brunei Malay== ===Pronunciation=== @@ -63,6 +62,7 @@

===Noun=== {{head|id|noun}} + ====Alternative forms==== @@ -72,6 +72,7 @@
 * 1) camel

* {{R:KBBI Daring}} + ==Italian==

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 * immix

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@@ -4,6 +4,7 @@

{{en-verb|immixes|immixing|immixed}} + ====Translations==== {{trans-top|To mix or blend}} * Bulgarian: {{t|bg|размесвам}}
 * 1) To mix or blend

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 * hadžiluk

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@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@

==Serbo-Croatian== ===Etymology=== -Borrowed from {{bor|sh|ota|حاجیلق|tr={{m|tr|hacılık}}}}, from {{m|ota|حاجی|tr=hacı|t=hajji}}, from {{der|sh|ar|حجي|tr=ḥajji|t=pilgrim}} +Borrowed from {{bor|sh|ota|حاجیلق|tr={{m|tr|hacılık}}}}, from {{m|ota|حاجی|tr=hacı|t=hajji}}, from {{der|sh|ar|حجي|tr=ḥajji|t=pilgrim}} ===Noun=== {{sh-noun|g=m|head=hadžìluk}}

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 * 手ぶら

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@@ -1,5 +1,4 @@

{{also|手ブラ}} - ==Japanese== {{ja-kanjitab|て|yomi=k}}

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 * хаџилук

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@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@

==Serbo-Croatian== ===Etymology=== -Borrowed from {{bor|sh|ota|حاجیلق|tr={{m|tr|hacılık}}}}, from {{m|ota|حاجی|tr=hacı|t=hajji}}, from {{der|sh|ar|حجي|tr=ḥajji|t=pilgrim}} +Borrowed from {{bor|sh|ota|حاجیلق|tr={{m|tr|hacılık}}}}, from {{m|ota|حاجی|tr=hacı|t=hajji}}, from {{der|sh|ar|حجي|tr=ḥajji|t=pilgrim}} ===Noun=== {{sh-noun|g=m|head=hadžìluk}}

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 * vox

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@@ -18,6 +18,7 @@

===Alternative forms=== * {{l|la|uox}} + ===Etymology=== {{PIE root|la|wekʷ}} From {{der|la|itc-pro|*wōks}}, from {{der|la|ine-pro|*wṓkʷs||speech, voice}} (with stem vōc- for voqu- from the nominative case), an o-grade root noun of {{m|ine-pro|*wekʷ-||to speak}}. Cognates include {{cog|sa|sc=Deva|वाच्|tr=vā́c}}, {{cog|grc|ὄψ}}, and {{cog|sq|ves}}.

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 * voice

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@@ -77,7 +77,7 @@

#: He voiced the sentiments of the nation. -#*:How often he would voice his love of England, his admiration of her Parliament, his pride in her history. +#*: How often he would voice his love of England, his admiration of her Parliament, his pride in her history. #*: Rather assume thy right in silence and. . . then voice it with claims and challenges.
 * 1) {{lb|en|transitive}} To give utterance or expression to; to utter; to publish; to announce
 * 1) * 1893, {{w| Annie Wood Besant}}, An Autobiography
 * 1) * 1612, {{w|Francis Bacon}}, {{w|Of Great Place}}
 * 1) * 1622, {{w|Francis Bacon}}, {{w|History of the Reign of King Henry VII}}

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 * speed

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@@ -266,12 +266,12 @@

#*: At night returning, every labor sped, / He sits him down the monarch of a shed: / Smiles by his cheerful fire, and round surveys, / His children’s looks, that brighten at the blaze; #: {{ux|en|God speed, until we meet again.}} -#*{{RQ:Shakespeare Winter|act=IV|scene=iv|passage=Fortune speed us! So we set forth to sea}} +#* {{RQ:Shakespeare Winter|act=IV|scene=iv|passage=Fortune speed us! So we set forth to sea}} #*: with rising gales that speed their happy flight #: {{ux|en|The Ferrari was speeding along the road.}} -#*{{RQ:Shakespeare Henry 4-2|act=IV|scene=ii|passage=I have speeded hither with the very extremest inch of possibility.}} +#* {{RQ:Shakespeare Henry 4-2|act=IV|scene=ii|passage=I have speeded hither with the very extremest inch of possibility.}} #: {{ux|en|Why do you speed when the road is so icy?}} @@ -285,7 +285,7 @@
 * 1) {{lb|en|transitive|archaic}} To help someone, to give them fortune; to aid or favour.
 * 1) * {{rfdatek|en|John Dryden}}
 * 1)  To go fast.
 * 1) * {{quote-book|en|year=1963|author={{w|Margery Allingham}}|title={{w|The China Governess}}| chapter=10| url=http://openlibrary.org/works/OL2004261W| passage=With a little manœuvring they contrived to meet on the doorstep which was […] in a boiling stream of passers-by, hurrying business people speeding past in a flurry of fumes and dust in the bright haze.}}
 * 2)  To exceed the speed limit.

#*: If Hector had not been speeding, it was possible that his next thought would have hurt: he loves his uncle unconditionally, in a way he will never love me. -#*{{RQ:Shakespeare Taming of the Shrew|act=III|scene=ii|passage= infected with the fashions, full of wingdalls, sped with spavins, rayed with yellows}} +#* {{RQ:Shakespeare Taming of the Shrew|act=III|scene=ii|passage= infected with the fashions, full of wingdalls, sped with spavins, rayed with yellows}}
 * 1) {{lb|en|obsolete}} To be expedient.
 * 2) {{lb|en|archaic}} To hurry to destruction; to put an end to; to ruin.
 * 1) * {{RQ:Pope Arbuthnot|passage=A dire dilemma! either way I'm sped. / If foes, they write, if friends, they read, me dead.}}
 * 2) {{lb|en|archaic}} To wish success or good fortune to, in any undertaking, especially in setting out upon a journey.
 * 3) * {{RQ:Pope Odyssey|book=XV|passage=Welcome the coming, speed the parting guest.}}

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 * 捉襟見肘

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@@ -20,6 +20,6 @@

-# to have too many problems to handle at one time; to be severely lacking in resources to deal with issues on multiple fronts +# to have too many problems to handle at one time; to be severely lacking in resources to deal with issues on multiple fronts
 * 1) tattered
 * 2) pitifully poor
 * 3) to be desperately poor; to be hard up

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 * spurt

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@@ -20,7 +20,7 @@

#*: With that he pulled open his shirt, and with his long sharp nails opened a vein in his breast. When the blood began to spurt out, he took my hands in one of his, holding them tight, and with the other seized my neck and pressed my mouth to the wound, so that I must either suffocate or swallow some to the. . . Oh, my God! My God! What have I done? -====Synonyms==== +====Synonyms==== * {{l|en|spout}} ====Translations==== @@ -100,12 +100,12 @@
 * 1) * 1897, {{w|Bram Stoker}}, {{w|Dracula}} Chapter 21

* {{l|en|growth spurt}} ====Translations==== -{{trans-top|a moment}} -{{trans-mid}} -{{trans-bottom}} - -{{trans-top|a sudden brief rise in activity, etc.}} -{{trans-mid}} +{{trans-top|a moment}} +{{trans-mid}} +{{trans-bottom}} + +{{trans-top|a sudden brief rise in activity, etc.}} +{{trans-mid}} {{trans-bottom}} ====Verb====

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 * garb

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@@ -15,7 +15,7 @@

#*: This new-comer was a man who in any company would have seemed striking.{{...}}Indeed, all his features were in large mold, like the man himself, as though he had come from a day when skin garments made the proper garb of men. -#*} +#* } =====Translations=====
 * 1) * {{RQ:EHough PrqsPrc|I|0108}}
 * 1) {{lb|en|figurative}} A guise, external appearance.

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 * ovolo

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@@ -31,6 +31,7 @@

==Italian== + ===Alternative forms=== *

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 * pale

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@@ -333,7 +333,7 @@

-#*{{quote-journal +#* {{quote-journal |ht |title=Rankont ann Itali ant Anvwaye Espesyal Etazini ak Larisi sou Kriz Venezuela a |journal=Lavwadlamerik
 * 1) to talk, to speak

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 * tragica

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@@ -1,5 +1,4 @@

{{also|trágica}} - ==Italian== ===Adjective===

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 * pelota

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@@ -53,6 +53,7 @@

==Galician== + ===Etymology=== From {{bor|gl|pro|pelota}} or {{bor|gl|fro|pelote}}, from {{der|gl|la|pila|t=ball}}.

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 * vapour

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@@ -62,8 +62,8 @@

#*: Running waters vapour not so much as standing waters. -#*1782, {{w|Frances Burney}}, Cecilia, III.vi.9: -#*:“I only mean,” cried she, giddily, “that he might have some place a little more pleasant to live in, for really that old moat and draw-bridge are enough to vapour him to death […].” +#* 1782, {{w|Frances Burney}}, Cecilia, III.vi.9: +#*: “I only mean,” cried she, giddily, “that he might have some place a little more pleasant to live in, for really that old moat and draw-bridge are enough to vapour him to death […].” ====Translations==== {{trans-top|intransitive: to become vapour; to be emitted or circulated as vapour}}
 * 1) * {{rfdatek|en|Francis Bacon}}
 * 1) {{lb|en|transitive}} To give (someone) the vapours; to depress, to bore.

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 * viewless

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@@ -9,7 +9,7 @@

#: a viewless hotel room -#*{{RQ:Shakespeare Measure|act=III|scene=i|passage=To be imprison'd in the viewless winds}} +#* {{RQ:Shakespeare Measure|act=III|scene=i|passage=To be imprison'd in the viewless winds}} ====Derived terms====
 * 1) Without a view.
 * 1) {{lb|en|poetic}} invisible; unseen
 * 1) * {{RQ:Pope Odyssey|book=IV|passage=Swift through the valves the visionary fair Repassed, and viewless mixed with common air.}}

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 * yemiş

+++

@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@

{{az-variant|c=јемиш|r=yemiş|a=یئمیش}} ===Etymology=== -From {{inh|az|trk-pro|*yẹ̄miĺč||vegetable, fruit}}. Cognate with {{cog|cv|ҫимӗҫ||vegetable}}, {{cog|hu|gyümölcs||fruit}}, etc. +From {{inh|az|trk-pro|*yẹ̄miĺč||vegetable, fruit}}. Cognate with {{cog|cv|ҫимӗҫ||vegetable}}, {{cog|hu|gyümölcs||fruit}}, etc. ===Noun=== {{az-noun|i|lər}}

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 * hive

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@@ -15,9 +15,9 @@

#*: ''First, for thy Bees a quiet Station find, -#*:And lodge 'em under Covert of the Wind: -#*:For Winds, when homeward they return, will drive -#*:The loaded Carriers from their Ev'ning Hive.'' +#*: And lodge 'em under Covert of the Wind: +#*: For Winds, when homeward they return, will drive +#*: The loaded Carriers from their Ev'ning Hive.'' #*: When that the general is not like the hive, to whom the foragers shall all repair, what honey is expected?
 * 1) A structure, whether artificial or natural, for housing a swarm of honeybees.
 * 2) * {{rfdatek|en|Dryden}}, Virgil's Georgics IV.10-13:
 * 1) The bees of one hive; a swarm of bees.
 * 2) * c. 1602, {{w|William Shakespeare}}, {{w|Troilus and Cressida}}, Act I, Scene iii:

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 * route

+++

@@ -49,7 +49,7 @@

-# {{lb|en|computing}} A specific entry in a router that tells the router how to transmit the data it receives. +# {{lb|en|computing}} A specific entry in a router that tells the router how to transmit the data it receives. =====Synonyms===== * {{sense|Chinese administrative division}} {{l|en|lu}}, {{l|en|circuit}}, {{l|en|province}} @@ -310,12 +310,12 @@
 * 1) * {{quote-book|en|year=2005 |title=Village Governance In North China: Huailu County, 1875-1936 |author=Huaiyin Li |page= |ISBN=0804767556 |passage= Under the director were eight education promotion officials (quanxue yuan), each installed in a “route”(lu,corresponding to the policing ward).}}
 * 2) * {{quote-book|en|year=2008|title=Lan Na in Chinese historiography |author=Foon Ming Liew, ‎Volker Grabowsky, & ‎ʻArunrat Wichīankhīeo |page= |ISBN=9742244170 |passage=In the year Zhiyuan 8, 5th month, on xinwei day (around June, 1271), owing to the fact that the chieftains of the eight polities in Dali had submitted recently and were adhered to [China], the thirty-seven tribal regions under Dali were divided into three routes.  }}
 * 3) * {{quote-book|en|year=2012|title=Marco Polo Was in China |author=Hans Ulrich Vogel |page= |ISBN=9004231935 |passage=Chinese administrative "cities" were often the location of more than one yamen, each with its own territorial jurisdiction. For instance, Yangszhou was not only the seat of the Pacificiation Commission (xuanweisi) of Huaidonglu, but also the capital of the Yanzhou Route (lu) subordinated to the Pacification Commision.  Morevover, it was the administrative seat of Jiangdu District, which was subordinated to the Yangzhou Route. }}

- ===Verb=== {{head|enm|verb}} + ==Norman==
 * 1) {{l|en|route}}
 * 1) {{rfdef|en}}
 * 2) * {{RQ:Chaucer Canterbury|title=Man of Law's Tale|passage=In all that land no Christian durste route.}}

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 * bearing

+++

@@ -65,7 +65,7 @@

#: She walks with a confident, self-assured bearing. -#*{{quote-web|en|author=Steven Pifer| work=Five years after Crimea’s illegal annexation, the issue is no closer to resolution| url=https://cisac.fsi.stanford.edu/news/five-years-after-crimea’s-illegal-annexation-issue-no-closer-resolution| publisher=The Center for International Security and Cooperation| date=18 March 2019| passage= The little green men were clearly professional soldiers by their bearing, carried Russian weapons, and wore Russian combat fatigues, but they had no identifying insignia. Vladimir Putin originally denied they were Russian soldiers; that April, he confirmed they were.}} +#* {{quote-web|en|author=Steven Pifer| work=Five years after Crimea’s illegal annexation, the issue is no closer to resolution| url=https://cisac.fsi.stanford.edu/news/five-years-after-crimea’s-illegal-annexation-issue-no-closer-resolution| publisher=The Center for International Security and Cooperation| date=18 March 2019| passage= The little green men were clearly professional soldiers by their bearing, carried Russian weapons, and wore Russian combat fatigues, but they had no identifying insignia. Vladimir Putin originally denied they were Russian soldiers; that April, he confirmed they were.}} #: A lintel or beam may have four inches of bearing upon the wall.
 * 1) One's posture, demeanor, or manner.
 * 1) * {{RQ:Shakespeare Ado|II|i|passage=I know him by his bearing.}}
 * 1) {{lb|en|in the plural}} Direction or relative position.
 * 2) {{lb|en|architecture}} That part of any member of a building which rests upon its supports.

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 * puddle

+++

@@ -135,7 +135,7 @@

-#*{{RQ:Shakespeare Othello|III|iv|passage=Some unhatched practice {{...}} / Hath puddled his clear spirit.}} +#* {{RQ:Shakespeare Othello|III|iv|passage=Some unhatched practice {{...}} / Hath puddled his clear spirit.}} ====Translations==== {{trans-top|to form a puddle}}
 * 1) To collect ideas, especially abstract concepts, into rough subtopics or categories, as in study, research or conversation.
 * 2) To make (clay, loam, etc.) dense or close, by working it when wet, so as to render impervious to water.
 * 3) To make foul or muddy; to pollute with dirt; to mix dirt with (water).

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 * beneath

+++

@@ -47,7 +47,7 @@

{{en-prep}} -#*{{RQ:Shakespeare Macbeth|act=IV|scene=iii|passage=Our country sinks beneath the yoke.}} +#* {{RQ:Shakespeare Macbeth|act=IV|scene=iii|passage=Our country sinks beneath the yoke.}} #*: Beneath a rude and nameless stone he lies.
 * 1) Below.
 * 1) * 1718, {{w|Alexander Pope}}, epitaph to {{w|Nicholas Rowe}}
 * 1) * {{quote-book|en|year=1918|author={{w|W. B. Maxwell}}|chapter=5

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 * zhooniyaa

+++

@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@

==Ojibwe== ===Etymology=== -From {{inh|oj|alg-pro|*šoᐧliyaᐧw-||money}}. +From {{inh|oj|alg-pro|*šoᐧliyaᐧw-||money}}. Cognate with {{cog|sac|shôniyâhi||money}}. ===Noun=== @@ -14,5 +14,4 @@

* zhooniyaawigamigong (locative) ===References=== -

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 * cuico

+++

@@ -1,5 +1,6 @@

==Spanish== {{wikipedia|lang=es}} + ===Etymology=== {{rfe|es}}

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 * charm

+++

@@ -156,10 +156,10 @@

#: {{ux|en|He charmed her with his dashing tales of his days as a sailor.}} -#*{{RQ:Shakespeare Cymbeline|IV|ii|passage=No witchcraft charm thee!}} +#* {{RQ:Shakespeare Cymbeline|IV|ii|passage=No witchcraft charm thee!}} #: {{ux|en|After winning three games while wearing the chain, Dan began to think it had been charmed.}} -#*{{RQ:Shakespeare Cymbeline|V|iii|passage=I, in my own woe charmed, / Could not find death.}} +#* {{RQ:Shakespeare Cymbeline|V|iii|passage=I, in my own woe charmed, / Could not find death.}} #: {{ux|en|She led a charmed life.}}
 * 1) * {{quote-book|en|year=1898|author={{w|Winston Churchill (novelist)|Winston Churchill}}| title={{w|The Celebrity}}|chapter=4| passage=The Celebrity, by arts unknown, induced Mrs. Judge Short and two other ladies to call at Mohair on an afternoon when Mr. Cooke was trying a trotter on the track. The three returned wondering and charmed with Mrs. Cooke; they were sure she had had no hand in the furnishing of that atrocious house.}}
 * 1) {{lb|en|transitive}} To use a magical charm upon; to subdue, control, or summon by incantation or supernatural influence.
 * 1) To protect with, or make invulnerable by, spells, charms, or supernatural influences.
 * 1) {{lb|en|obsolete|rare}} To make music upon.
 * 2) * {{rfdatek|en|Edmund Spenser}}

---
 * notturlabio

+++

@@ -1,5 +1,6 @@

==Italian== + ===Etymology=== Derived from {{der|it|la|nocturnus|noctur(nus)|nocturnal}} + {{m|it|astrolabio|(astro)labio}}.

---
 * Kilimanjaro

+++

@@ -48,6 +48,7 @@

==Spanish== {{wikipedia|lang=es}} + ===Pronunciation=== * {{es-IPA}} * {{rhymes|es|aɾo}}

---
 * heal

+++

@@ -161,7 +161,7 @@

#*: "Heal, conceal and keep secret." -#*: 'I swear before God and all these witnesses that I will always heal, conceal and never reveal any art or part of this secret of horsemanry which is to be revealed to me at this time or any other time hereafter.' +#*: 'I swear before God and all these witnesses that I will always heal, conceal and never reveal any art or part of this secret of horsemanry which is to be revealed to me at this time or any other time hereafter.' #*: The man in black asked Christopher for the secret passwords he'd been given and he answered correctly. As soon as he had, Christopher felt the point of a blade at his throat. “Do you swear to heal, conceal and never reveal the secrets of the witching arts for all your days{{...}}?"
 * 1) * 1907, John. H. Brownell, Arthur Maurice Smith, Joseph E. Morcombe, The American Tyler-Keystone: Devoted to Freemasonry, page 6:
 * 1) * 1998, Clive Richardson, The Horse Breakers, page 212:
 * 1) * 2015, Lee Morgan, The Bones Would Do: Book Two of the Christopher Penrose Novels:

---
 * flint

+++

@@ -185,7 +185,7 @@

-#:{{ux|sv|Vilken flint han har fått!|My God, he has balded!}} +#: {{ux|sv|Vilken flint han har fått!|My God, he has balded!}} ====Declension==== {{sv-infl-noun-c-ar}} @@ -197,7 +197,7 @@
 * 1) a bald head

{{sv-adj|peri}} -#:{{syn|sv|flintis|flintskallig|q1=colloquial}} +#: {{syn|sv|flintis|flintskallig|q1=colloquial}} ====Declension==== {{sv-adj-peri|2=flint}}
 * 1) {{lb|sv|colloquial}} bald

---
 * software

+++

@@ -5,8 +5,8 @@

From {{af|en|soft|-ware|id2=substance, kind, or use}}, by contrast with {{m|en|hardware||the computer itself}}. Coined 1953 by Paul Niquette; first used in print by {{w|John Tukey}} 1958. ===Pronunciation=== -*{{a|RP}} {{IPA|en|[ˈsɒftˌwɛə]|}} -*{{a|GA|Canada}} {{IPA|en|[ˈsɔftˌwɛɹ]|}} +* {{a|RP}} {{IPA|en|[ˈsɒftˌwɛə]|}} +* {{a|GA|Canada}} {{IPA|en|[ˈsɔftˌwɛɹ]|}} {{audio|en|en-us-software.ogg|Audio (US)}} ===Noun===

---
 * bird

+++

@@ -42,7 +42,7 @@

#*: The usual visual grammar was in place – a carpet in the street, people in paddocks awaiting a brush with something glamorous, blokes with earpieces, birds in frocks of colliding colours that if sighted in nature would indicate the presence of poison. -#*:{{quote|en|“All these fantastic birds, long hair, made up, false eyelashes and things, crowding round this group of scabby, spotty teenagers,” marveled Anderson.}} +#*: {{quote|en|“All these fantastic birds, long hair, made up, false eyelashes and things, crowding round this group of scabby, spotty teenagers,” marveled Anderson.}} #: {{ux|en|Mike went out with his bird last night.}}
 * 1) * 2013, Russell Brand, Russell Brand and the GQ awards: 'It's amazing how absurd it seems'  (in The Guardian, 13 September 2013)
 * 1) * 2017, David Weigel, The Show That Never Ends: The Rise and Fall of Prog Rock, W. W. Norton & Company.
 * 1) {{lb|en|UK|Ireland|slang}} Girlfriend. {{defdate|from the early 20th c.}}
 * 1) * {{quote-song|en| lyricist=Mike Skinner| title=Geezers need excitement| album=Original Pirate Material| artist=The Streets| year=2002| passage=But all of a sudden though, just through the smoke / It's your bird laughing and joking with a bloke / Ain't just that either, as she moves closer / In a shape what looks like they're lovers, he's tonguing her!}}

---
 * earth

+++

@@ -637,7 +637,7 @@

{{en-verb}} -#:{{syn|en|ground}} +#: {{syn|en|ground}} #: That noise is because the amplifier is not properly earthed.
 * 1) {{lb|en|UK|transitive}} To connect electrically to the earth.
 * 1) {{lb|en|transitive}} To bury.
 * 2) * {{rfdatek|en|Young}}

---
 * finger

+++

@@ -39,8 +39,8 @@

##*: By now, we hope you have said “no” to processed nuggets and fingers. Instead, how about taking some real chicken, tossing it with real eggs, a little tangy mustard, and a crunchy quinoa coating? -##*1996, Susan Trumbore, Mass Spectrometry of Soils, p. 318: -##*:An oven is placed over the finger with Co catalyst (oven temperature will depend on whether a quartz or Pyrex finger is used, see Ref. 24), and a cold finger (usually a copper rod immersed in dry ice–isopropanol slurry) is placed on the other tube. +##* 1996, Susan Trumbore, Mass Spectrometry of Soils, p. 318: +##*: An oven is placed over the finger with Co catalyst (oven temperature will depend on whether a quartz or Pyrex finger is used, see Ref. 24), and a cold finger (usually a copper rod immersed in dry ice–isopropanol slurry) is placed on the other tube. #: a finger of land; a finger of smoke
 * 1) * 2014, Laurie David, The Family Cooks
 * 1) {{lb|en|chemistry}} A tube extending from a sealed system, or sometimes into one in the case of a cold finger.
 * 1) {{lb|en|UK|_|regional|botany|usually|_|in|_|plural|obsolete}} {{syn of|en|foxglove|nodot=a}} (D. purpurea).
 * 2) Something similarly extending, {{lb|en|especially}} from a larger body, particularly:

---
 * thumb

+++

@@ -249,9 +249,9 @@

-#To fire (a single action revolver) quickly by pulling the hammer while keeping the trigger depressed. +# To fire (a single action revolver) quickly by pulling the hammer while keeping the trigger depressed. -#*:To thumb a single-action revolver, hold down the trigger and use the thumb on the same hand to fire the gun by manipulating the hammer. +#*: To thumb a single-action revolver, hold down the trigger and use the thumb on the same hand to fire the gun by manipulating the hammer. ====Synonyms==== * {{sense|to turn pages}} {{l|en|browse}}, {{l|en|leaf}}, {{l|en|page}}, {{l|en|peruse}} @@ -267,7 +267,7 @@
 * 1) * {{quote-book|en|year=2009|author=Jon Sharp|title=The Trailsman #337: Silver Showdown|passage=Fargo palmed out his own revolver, thumbing back the hammer as the barrel came up.}}
 * 2) * {{quote-book|en|year=2015|author=Tony Monchinski|title=Bad Men (I Kill Monsters Book 3)|passage=Rainford reached down and found the revolver. Thumbing the cylinder open, he inspected the load.}}
 * 3) * {{quote-book|en|year=2015|author=Don Fitzsimmons|title=If You Need a Laugh|passage=Andy opened the revolver, thumbed in a cartridge.}}
 * 1) * 2011, by Hans-Christian Vortisch, GURPS Tactical Shooting, pg 14

{{rel-bottom}} ====Related terms==== -*{{q|firing a single action revolver via hammer flicks while trigger is held down}} fanning (using opposite hand instead of thumb) +* {{q|firing a single action revolver via hammer flicks while trigger is held down}} fanning (using opposite hand instead of thumb) ====Translations==== {{trans-top|touch with the thumb}}

---
 * bear

+++

@@ -566,7 +566,7 @@

{{fy-noun|c|bearen|bearke}} -#:{{uxi|fy|Hoewol't de earste bearen net tige grut wiene, hawwe se harren meitiid wol ta grutte lichemsomfang ûntwikkele.|Although the first bears were not very large, they have since developed the be much larger.}} +#: {{uxi|fy|Hoewol't de earste bearen net tige grut wiene, hawwe se harren meitiid wol ta grutte lichemsomfang ûntwikkele.|Although the first bears were not very large, they have since developed the be much larger.}} ====Further reading==== * {{R:WFT|3782|II}}
 * 1) {{topics|fy|Ursids}} bear

---
 * sweet

+++

@@ -50,7 +50,7 @@

#: {{ux|en|The new Lexus was a sweet birthday gift.}} -#*:GORDON Strachan enjoyed the sweetest of his 16 matches in charge of Scotland so far as his team enhanced their prospects of Euro 2016 qualification with a crucial and deserved victory over Republic of Ireland. +#*: GORDON Strachan enjoyed the sweetest of his 16 matches in charge of Scotland so far as his team enhanced their prospects of Euro 2016 qualification with a crucial and deserved victory over Republic of Ireland. @@ -776,6 +776,7 @@
 * 1) * {{quote-book|en|year=1932|year_published=1965|author={{w|Delos W. Lovelace}}| title=King Kong| page=1| passage=Her crew knew that deep in her heart beat engines fit and able to push her blunt old nose ahead at a sweet fourteen knots, come Hell or high water.}}
 * 2) * 14 November 2014, {{w|Steven Haliday}}, Scotland 1-0 Republic of Ireland: Maloney the hero
 * 1) {{lb|en|slang}} Doing well; in a good or happy position.
 * 2) * {{quote-book|en|year=2012|author=John Hoskison|title=Inside: One Man's Experience of Prison|passage="Visit in two days though," said Tommo. "Hang in there mate, got a joey coming, we'll be sweet then."}}
 * 3) {{anchor|be_sweet_on}}{{lb|en|informal|followed by {{m|en|on}}}} Romantically fixated, enamoured with, fond of

===Interjection=== {{en-interj}} + #: ''They're making a sequel? Ah, sweet!'' @@ -820,8 +821,8 @@
 * 1) Used as a positive response to good news or information.

-#*1613, {{w|John Marston}}, William Barksted, The Insatiate Countess, III.2: -#*:Fear's fire to fervency, which makes love's sweet prove nectar. +#* 1613, {{w|John Marston}}, William Barksted, The Insatiate Countess, III.2: +#*: Fear's fire to fervency, which makes love's sweet prove nectar. ====Synonyms==== * {{sense|sweet taste sensation}} See sweetness
 * 1) {{lb|en|obsolete}} That which is sweet or pleasant in odour; a perfume.
 * 2) * {{RQ:Milton PL|book=5|passage=a wilderness of sweets}}
 * 3) {{lb|en|obsolete}} Sweetness, delight; something pleasant to the mind or senses.

---
 * flesh

+++

@@ -24,8 +24,8 @@

#*: The flesh that twycheth any vnclene thinge shall not be eaten. but burnt with fire:and all that be clene in their flesh, maye eate flesh. #*: Yf any soule eate of the flesh of the peaceofferynges, that pertayne vnto the Lorde and hys vnclennesse yet apon him, the same soule shall perisshe from amonge his peoole{{sic}}. &para; Moreouer yf a soule twych any vnclene thinge, whether it be the vnclennesse of man or of any vnclene beest or any abhominacion that is vnclene: ad the eate of the flesh of the peaceoffrynges whiche pertayne vnto the Lord, that soule shall perissh from his people. -#*2018, Raj Patel and Jason W Moore, How the chicken nugget became the true symbol of our era in The Guardian, 8 May -#*:Chicken is already the most popular meat in the US, and is projected to be the planet’s favourite flesh by 2020. +#* 2018, Raj Patel and Jason W Moore, How the chicken nugget became the true symbol of our era in The Guardian, 8 May +#*: Chicken is already the most popular meat in the US, and is projected to be the planet’s favourite flesh by 2020. #*: And the preast shall put on his lynen albe and his lynen breches apon his flesh, and take awaye the asshes whiche the fire of the burntsacrifice in the altare hath made, and put them besyde the alter,
 * 1) * c.1530s, William Tyndale, Tyndale Bible, Leviticus, 7, xix-xxi,
 * 1) The human body as a physical entity.
 * 2) * c.1530s, William Tyndale, Tyndale Bible, Leviticus, 6, x,

---
 * basket

+++

@@ -423,7 +423,7 @@

-#:{{ux|fr|On y va dès que tout le monde a fini de mettre ses baskets.|We'll go once everyone has put on their trainers. +#: {{ux|fr|On y va dès que tout le monde a fini de mettre ses baskets.|We'll go once everyone has put on their trainers. }} =====Synonyms===== @@ -446,6 +446,7 @@
 * 1) {{lb|fr|Europe|especially in plural}} sneaker, trainer {{qualifier|UK}}

===Noun=== {{id-noun|head=baskèt}} +
 * 1) {{lb|id|sports}} {{l|en|basketball}}.
 * 2) The particular kind of ball used in the sport of basketball.
 * 3) A sport in which two opposing teams of five players strive to put a ball through a hoop.

---
 * bib

+++

@@ -131,8 +131,10 @@

* {{l|en|bibble}} ===Etymology 2=== + ====Verb==== {{en-verb|bibb}} + ===References===
 * 1) {{lb|en|informal}} To beep (e.g. a car horn).

---
 * join

+++

@@ -89,7 +89,7 @@

#: {{ux|en|Parallel lines never join.}} #: {{ux|en|These two rivers join in about 80 miles.}} -#*{{RQ:Shakespeare King John|act=3|scene=i|passage=Nature and fortune joined to make thee great.}} +#* {{RQ:Shakespeare King John|act=3|scene=i|passage=Nature and fortune joined to make thee great.}} #: {{ux|en|I will join you watching the football game as soon as I have finished my work.}}
 * 1) {{lb|en|intransitive}} To come together; to meet.
 * 1) {{lb|en|transitive}} To come into the company of.
 * 1) * {{quote-book|en|year=1898|author={{w|Winston Churchill (novelist)|Winston Churchill}}| title={{w|The Celebrity}}|chapter=4| passage=No matter how early I came down, I would find him on the veranda, smoking cigarettes, or otherwise his man would be there with a message to say that his master would shortly join me if I would kindly wait.}}

---
 * play

+++

@@ -77,7 +77,7 @@

#*: The colonel and his sponsor made a queer contrast: Greystone [the sponsor] long and stringy, with a face that seemed as if a cold wind was eternally playing on it. -#*{{RQ:Shakespeare Taming of the Shrew|act=Induction|scene=ii|passage=the waving sedges play with wind}} +#* {{RQ:Shakespeare Taming of the Shrew|act=Induction|scene=ii|passage=the waving sedges play with wind}} #*: The setting sun / Plays on their shining arms and burnished helmets.
 * 1) * {{RQ:Frgsn Zlnstn|I}}
 * 1) {{lb|en|intransitive}} To move to and fro.
 * 1) * {{rfdatek|en|Joseph Addison}}
 * 1) * {{RQ:Pope Man|chapter=V|passage=All fame is foreign but of true desert, / Plays round the head, but comes not to the heart.}}

---
 * freshwater

+++

@@ -15,7 +15,7 @@

#: a freshwater sailor -#*:{{quote|en|Meanwhile, the freshwater side of the dispute rapidly reverted to arguments from the nineteenth century, which had been debunked by Keynes and Irving Fisher.}} +#*: {{quote|en|Meanwhile, the freshwater side of the dispute rapidly reverted to arguments from the nineteenth century, which had been debunked by Keynes and Irving Fisher.}} #: {{syn|en|sweetwater}} ====Translations====
 * 1) {{lb|en|economics}} neoclassical, in reference to U.S. macroeconomics and economics departments near the Great Lakes.
 * 2) * 2012, John Quiggin, Zombie Economics: How Dead Ideas Still Walk Among Us, Princeton University Press (expanded paperback ed., 1st ed. from 2010), {{ISBN|1400842085}}, page 86.

---
 * half

+++

@@ -1,6 +1,7 @@

{{also|half-|hálf-}} ==English== {{number box|en|2}} + ===Alternative forms=== * {{alter|en|'arf|ha'f}} @@ -500,6 +501,7 @@

===Verb=== {{head|de|verb form}} +
 * 1) {{de-verb form of|helfen|1|s|v}}
 * 2) {{de-verb form of|helfen|3|s|v}}

---
 * baba

+++

@@ -368,6 +368,7 @@

==Hausa== {{rfe|ha|all etys}} + ===Etymology 1=== ====Noun==== @@ -475,6 +476,7 @@

===Noun=== {{head|kab|noun|g=m}} + @@ -790,7 +792,7 @@
 * 1) father

-#:{{syn|sn|fata}} +#: {{syn|sn|fata}} {{topics|sn|Family|Male}} @@ -882,7 +884,7 @@
 * 1) father
 * 2) {{lb|sn|Christianity}} father {{gloss|priest}}

#: {{ux|es|La chacha lavaba, y mientras lavaba, la baba se le caía.|The maid washed, and as she washed, she drooled.}} -#{{lb|es|Venezuela}} baby alligator, caiman or crocodile +# {{lb|es|Venezuela}} baby alligator, caiman or crocodile ====Related terms==== {{rel3|es|babear
 * 1) drool, dribble
 * 1) slime

---
 * languide

+++

@@ -41,10 +41,10 @@

===Adverb=== languidē (comparitive languidius, superlative *languidissimē) -#faintly -#feebly -#slowly -#spiritlessly +# faintly +# feebly +# slowly +# spiritlessly ===References=== * {{R:L&S}}

---
 * bagassa

+++

@@ -1,4 +1,5 @@

==Catalan== + ===Etymology=== From {{inh|ca|pro|bagassa}}, from Gallo-Roman *bacassa ("servant").

---
 * course

+++

@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@

#: {{ux|en|The normal course of events seems to be just one damned thing after another.}} -##*{{RQ:Shakespeare Midsummer|act=I|scene=i|passage=The course of true love never did run smooth.}} +##* {{RQ:Shakespeare Midsummer|act=I|scene=i|passage=The course of true love never did run smooth.}}
 * 1) A sequence of events.
 * 1) A normal or customary sequence.
 * 1) * {{RQ:Milton PL|book=10|passage=Day and night, / Seedtime and harvest, heat and hoary frost, / Shall hold their course.}}
 * 2) A programme, a chosen manner of proceeding.
 * 3) Any ordered process or sequence of steps.

---
 * slip

+++

@@ -111,7 +111,7 @@

#: Profits have slipped over the past six months. -#*{{RQ:Shakespeare Shrew|V|ii|passage=Lucento slipped me like his greyhound.}} +#* {{RQ:Shakespeare Shrew|V|ii|passage=Lucento slipped me like his greyhound.}}
 * 1) * {{quote-journal|en|date=December 28, 2010|author=Marc Vesty| title=Stoke 0 - 2 Fulham| work=BBC| url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/eng_prem/9306533.stm| passage=The Cottagers had previously gone eight games without a win and had slipped into the relegation zone over Christmas, with boss Hughes criticised by fans after their 3-1 home defeat by fellow basement battlers West Ham on Boxing Day.}}
 * 2) {{lb|en|transitive|falconry}} To release (a dog, a bird of prey, etc.) to go after a quarry.
 * 1) {{lb|en|transitive|cooking}} To remove the skin of a soft fruit, such as a tomato or peach, by blanching briefly in boiling water, then transferring to cold water so that the skin peels, or slips, off easily.
 * 2) {{lb|en|obsolete}} To omit; to lose by negligence.
 * 3) * {{rfdatek|en|Ben Jonson}}

---
 * pirate

+++

@@ -358,6 +358,7 @@

* {{desc|nrf|pirate}} * {{desc|enm|pirate|bor=1}} ** {{desc|en|pirate}} + ===References=== * {{R:Godefroy|supplement=1}}

---
 * Reconstruction:Proto-Slavic/tęti

+++

@@ -1,5 +1,4 @@

{{reconstructed}} - ==Proto-Slavic== ===Etymology===

---
 * less

+++

@@ -216,9 +216,9 @@

-#*:What he will make lesse, he lesseth. +#*: What he will make lesse, he lesseth. -#*:Som of the wiser sort, divining upon this vission, attrebute to the pen-knyves the lenth of tym before this should com to pass, and it hath been observed by sindrie that the earles of that hous befor wer the richest in the kingdom, having treasure and store besyde them, but ever since the addittion of this so great a revenue, they have lessed the stock by heavie burdens of debt and ingagment. +#*: Som of the wiser sort, divining upon this vission, attrebute to the pen-knyves the lenth of tym before this should com to pass, and it hath been observed by sindrie that the earles of that hous befor wer the richest in the kingdom, having treasure and store besyde them, but ever since the addittion of this so great a revenue, they have lessed the stock by heavie burdens of debt and ingagment. #*: The protracted term of life, and the lingering illness through which this gentleman had passed, had neither impaired the original vigour of his mind, nor lessed the uncommon warmth of his affections. @@ -251,8 +251,8 @@
 * 1) {{lb|en|archaic}} To make less; to lessen.
 * 2) * 1386-90, {{w|Gower}}, {{w|Confessio Amantis}}
 * 1) * c. 1650, Patrick Gordon of Ruthven, A short Abridgement of Britane's Distemper, from the yeares of God 1639 to 1649, printed 1844 for the Spalding Club
 * 1) * 1816, "Joseph Wharton" [obituary notice], Poulson's Advertiser, quoted in Genealogy of the Wharton Family of Philadelphia: 1664 to 1880, Anne Hollingsworth Wharton (1880)
 * 1) * {{quote-book|en|year=1852| title=The revolt of Tartarus, a poem| author=Charles Heavysege |page=116| passage=Soon as I lessed the tree of this, it waned — Less cause, gave less effect}}

===References=== * {{R:OneLook}} -*{{R:Merriam Webster Online|less}} -*{{R:Online Etymology Dictionary|less}} +* {{R:Merriam Webster Online|less}} +* {{R:Online Etymology Dictionary|less}} ===Anagrams=== * {{anagrams|en|a=elss|ELSS|SLEs}} @@ -334,7 +334,7 @@

{{sv-adj|peri}} -#:{{ux|sv|Jag är less på hand jävla tjat!|I'm fed up with his god damn nagging!}} +#: {{ux|sv|Jag är less på hand jävla tjat!|I'm fed up with his god damn nagging!}} ====Declension==== Only used with the common gender singular, comparated periphrastically, only used predicatively.
 * 1) fed up, done

---
 * stale

+++

@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@

#*: New freshe blood to ouersprinkle their stale mete that it may seme...newly kylled. -#*:To her surprise, Abe did not come to collect her for the usual morning inhabitation session with Azure. She did not see him until almost noon, when he personally delivered lunch to her tent. Another stale roll and cup of water sat on the tray he carried. Abe hung his head, as abashed as Honorato had been. “This is all I could sneak in for now. I'll try to get more later.” +#*: To her surprise, Abe did not come to collect her for the usual morning inhabitation session with Azure. She did not see him until almost noon, when he personally delivered lunch to her tent. Another stale roll and cup of water sat on the tray he carried. Abe hung his head, as abashed as Honorato had been. “This is all I could sneak in for now. I'll try to get more later.” #*: Better is...be it new or stale, A harmelesse lie, than a harmefull true tale. @@ -33,7 +33,7 @@
 * 1) * {{circa|1550}} Wyll of Deuill, C 2 b:
 * 1) * 2012, Stephen Woodworth, In Golden Blood: Number 3 in series
 * 1) No longer fresh, new, or interesting, in reference to ideas and immaterial things; cliche, hackneyed, dated.
 * 2) * 1562, in J. Heywood, Proverbs & Epigrams (1867), 95:

#*: A two-days-old newspaper. You resent the stale thing as an affront. -#*:Rick would comment on the fact that he'd never had such bad coffee, not even the mud at his precinct. Mark would tell him to quit with the stale joke, already +#*: Rick would comment on the fact that he'd never had such bad coffee, not even the mud at his precinct. Mark would tell him to quit with the stale joke, already #*: Rosimunda...hathe an vncle a stale batcheler. @@ -49,7 +49,7 @@
 * 1) * 1822 March, {{w|Charles Lamb}}, London Magazine, 284 1:
 * 1) * 2002, Mark Lawson, And They Rose Up: Days of Retribution
 * 1) No longer nubile or suitable for marriage, in reference to people; past one's prime.
 * 2) * {{circa|1580}} J. Jeffere, Bugbears, I ii 108:

#*: The jury will rarely give credit to a stale complaint. -#*:In most states, you can be ticketed for failing to clear the intersection, even if you are hemmed in by traffic. One good clue to a stale green light is the pedestrian signal. +#*: In most states, you can be ticketed for failing to clear the intersection, even if you are hemmed in by traffic. One good clue to a stale green light is the pedestrian signal. #*: By this means the [horse's] legs are not made more stale than necessary. @@ -348,6 +348,7 @@
 * 1) Taking a long time to change
 * 2) * 2014, David L. Hough, Street Strategies for Motorcyclists
 * 1) Worn out, particularly due to age or over-exertion, in reference to athletes and animals in competition.
 * 2) * 1856, "Stonehenge", Manual of British Rural Sports, II i vi §7 335:

=====Hypernyms===== * See Thesaurus:urinate + =====See also===== * {{l|en|piss like a racehorse}} {{qualifier|vulgar idiom}}

---
 * agent

+++

@@ -337,7 +337,7 @@

{{nl-noun|m|-en|agentje|f=agente}} -#:{{ux|nl|Toen confisceerde de agent de wiet en rookte het in één keer op.|Then the police officer confiscated the weed and smoked it all in one go.}} +#: {{ux|nl|Toen confisceerde de agent de wiet en rookte het in één keer op.|Then the police officer confiscated the weed and smoked it all in one go.}}
 * 1) a police officer
 * 1) an undercover {{l|en|agent}}
 * 2) an {{l|en|agent}}, a surrogate (one who acts on behalf of another)

---
 * ugly

+++

@@ -19,7 +19,7 @@

#*: the ugly view of his deformed crimes -#*{{RQ:Shakespeare Richard 3|I|iv|passage=O, I have passed a miserable night, / So full of ugly sights, of ghastly dreams.}} +#* {{RQ:Shakespeare Richard 3|I|iv|passage=O, I have passed a miserable night, / So full of ugly sights, of ghastly dreams.}} @@ -210,6 +210,7 @@
 * 1) Displeasing to the eye; not aesthetically pleasing.
 * 2) * {{rfdatek|en|Spenser}}
 * 1) Displeasing to the ear or some other sense.
 * 2) Offensive to one's sensibilities or morality.
 * 3) * {{quote-book|en|year=1918|author={{w|W. B. Maxwell}}|chapter=12

#: {{rfquotek|en|Charles Kingsley}} + ====Translations==== {{trans-top|ugly person or thing}} * Danish: {{t|da|øjebæ|c}}
 * 1) {{lb|en|slang}} An ugly person or thing.
 * 2) {{lb|en|UK|informal|dated}} A shade for the face, projecting from a bonnet.

---
 * step

+++

@@ -2,6 +2,7 @@

==English== {{wikipedia|dab=step}} + ===Etymology=== From {{etyl|enm|en}} {{m|enm|steppen}}, from {{etyl|ang|en}} {{m|ang|steppan||to step, go, proceed, advance}}, {{m|ang|stepe||step}}, from {{etyl|gem-pro|en}} {{m|gem-pro|*stapjaną||to step}}, {{m|gem-pro|*stapiz||step}}, from {{der|en|ine-pro|*stab-||to support, stomp, curse, be amazed}}. Cognate with {{cog|fy|stappe||to step}}, {{cog|frr|stape||to walk, trudge}}, {{cog|nl|stappen||to step, walk}}, {{cog|wa|steper||to walk away, leave}}, {{cog|de|stapfen||to trudge, stomp, plod}} and further to Slavic {{cog|pl|stąpać||to stomp, stamp, step, tread}}, {{cog|ru|ступать}} and {{cog|pl|stopień||step, stair, rung, degree}}, {{cog|ru|степень}}. Related to {{l|en|stamp}}, {{l|en|stomp}}. @@ -653,6 +654,7 @@

====Noun==== {{id-noun|head=stèp|}} + ===Etymology 2=== @@ -664,6 +666,7 @@
 * 1) {{l|en|step}}; pace, gait.

====Noun==== {{id-noun|head=stèp|}} + #: {{syn|id|setip}} #: {{syn|id|sawan|kejang}}
 * 1) {{lb|id|colloquial|medicine}} {{l|en|convulsion}}.

---
 * clog

+++

@@ -131,7 +131,7 @@

#*: The commodities are clogged with impositions. -#*{{RQ:Shakespeare Macbeth|III|vi|passage=You'll rue the time / That clogs me with this answer.}} +#* {{RQ:Shakespeare Macbeth|III|vi|passage=You'll rue the time / That clogs me with this answer.}} #*: For centuries it has been the rule that a mortgagor’s equity of redemption cannot be clogged and that he cannot, as a part of the original mortgage transaction, cut off or surrender his right to redeem. Any agreement which does so is void and unenforceable {{sic}} as against public policy.
 * 1) To burden; to trammel; to embarrass; to perplex.
 * 2) * {{rfdatek|en|Addison}}
 * 1) {{lb|en|legal}} To enforce a mortgage lender right that prevents a borrower from exercising a right to redeem.
 * 2) * 1973, Humble Oil & Refining Co. v. Doerr, 123 N.J. Super. 530, 544, 303 A.2d 898.

---
 * bagazo

+++

@@ -1,5 +1,6 @@

==Galician== + ===Etymology=== From {{suffix|gl|baga|t1=berry|azo}}. Compare {{cog|pt|bagaço}} and {{cog|es|bagazo}}. @@ -11,7 +12,7 @@

#: {{syn|gl|bagaño|bagullo|bullo}} -# bagasse +# bagasse ====Related terms==== * {{l|gl|baga}} @@ -25,6 +26,7 @@
 * 1) pomace, marc {{gloss|grape pulp and residues after being pressed}}

==Spanish== + ===Etymology=== From {{suffix|es|baga|t1=berry|azo}}. Compare {{cog|gl|bagazo}} and {{cog|pt|bagaço}}.

---
 * Reconstruction:Proto-Turkic/daŋ

+++

@@ -18,14 +18,14 @@

*** {{desc|ota|طاك|tr=taŋ}} **** {{desc|tr|tan}} ** {{desc|tk|daň}} -* Kipchak +* Kipchak ** West-Kipchak *** {{desc|crh|tañ}} *** {{desc|kum|танг}} *** {{desc|krc|танг}} ** North Kipchak *** {{cog|ba|таң}} -*** {{cog|tt|таң}} +*** {{cog|tt|таң}} ** South Kipchak *** Caspian **** {{cog|kk|таң}}

---
 * mazinigwaaso

+++

@@ -6,7 +6,7 @@

* /-gwaaso/ : he/she sews ===Verb=== -{{head|oj|verb|cat2=verb animate intransitive}} +{{head|oj|verb|cat2=verb animate intransitive}} #: {{usex|oj|Mazinigwaasowag igi ikwewag|The women are doing embroidery.}}
 * 1) to embroider, bead something

---
 * fikir

+++

@@ -1,5 +1,4 @@

{{also|Fikir}} - ==Azerbaijani== {{az-variant|c=фикир|r=fikir|a=فیکیر}} @@ -13,15 +12,15 @@

===Noun=== {{az-head-noun|i|c|stem=fikr}} -# thought -#: {{ux|az|Başımda min dənə fikir fırlanır.|There are thousand thoughts spinning in my head.}} -#: {{syn|az|düşüncə}} +# thought +#: {{ux|az|Başımda min dənə fikir fırlanır.|There are thousand thoughts spinning in my head.}} +#: {{syn|az|düşüncə}} -#: {{ux|az|Yeni filmin haqqında fikriniz nədir?|What is your opinion on the new film?}} -#: {{syn|az|rəy}} +#: {{ux|az|Yeni filmin haqqında fikriniz nədir?|What is your opinion on the new film?}} +#: {{syn|az|rəy}} -#: {{uxi|az|yeni fikirlər  |new ideas }} -#: {{syn|az|ideya}} +#: {{uxi|az|yeni fikirlər  |new ideas }} +#: {{syn|az|ideya}} ====Spelling notes==== {{az-latin-note|noun-v}}
 * 1) opinion
 * 1) idea

---
 * morto

+++

@@ -11,12 +11,12 @@

{{en-adj}} -#*2007 March 21, Kilian Doyle, "An iconic parade" The Irish Times (Dublin) Motoring p.3 +#* 2007 March 21, Kilian Doyle, "An iconic parade" The Irish Times (Dublin) Motoring p.3 #*: I was, to use the vernacular, bleedin' morto. My shame notwithstanding, the whole day was a blast. -#*2013 February 21, Louise McSharry, "Robbie Williams’ most morto moments of all time" Daily Edge: -#*:Robbie’s had some pretty embarrassing moments over the years. What better time than now to take a stroll down memory lane? Here are his most morto moments. -#*2013 May 20 "Early trouble" The Irish Times (Dublin) Sport p.2 -#*:Yes, Dan left the game early because he "wanted to miss the traffic and get a kebab on the way home" - after which Coventry scored twice. Morto. +#* 2013 February 21, Louise McSharry, "Robbie Williams’ most morto moments of all time" Daily Edge: +#*: Robbie’s had some pretty embarrassing moments over the years. What better time than now to take a stroll down memory lane? Here are his most morto moments. +#* 2013 May 20 "Early trouble" The Irish Times (Dublin) Sport p.2 +#*: Yes, Dan left the game early because he "wanted to miss the traffic and get a kebab on the way home" - after which Coventry scored twice. Morto. ===Anagrams=== * {{anagrams|en|a=moort|motor}} @@ -59,6 +59,7 @@
 * 1) {{lb|en|Ireland|slang}} Very {{m|en|embarrassed}} or {{m|en|embarrassing}}.

==Galician== + ===Etymology=== From Old Galician and {{inh|gl|roa-opt|morto}}, from {{inh|gl|VL.|*mortus|*mortu(s)}}, from {{inh|gl|la|mortuus|mortuum}}, perfect active participle of {{m|la|morior||I die}}. Corresponds to {{inh|gl|ine-pro|*mr̥twós}}, {{m|ine-pro|*mr̥tós||dead, mortal}}, {{m|ine-pro|*mr̥tó-}}, ultimately from {{m|ine-pro|*mer-||to die}}. Cognate with {{cog|pt|morto}} and {{cog|es|muerto}}.

---
 * -gwaaso

+++

@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@

==Ojibwe== ===Particle=== -{{head|oj|particle|cat2=bound morphemes|cat3=bound morpheme finals|final}} +{{head|oj|particle|cat2=bound morphemes|cat3=bound morpheme finals|final}}
 * 1) he/she sews

---
 * šipak

+++

@@ -1,5 +1,4 @@

{{also|sipak}} - ==Serbo-Croatian== ===Etymology===

---
 * sipi

+++

@@ -52,6 +52,7 @@

+ ==Mobilian== ===Alternative forms===
 * 1) sheep

---
 * sipo

+++

@@ -17,4 +17,4 @@

{{sn-noun|sipo|9}} -#:{{syn|sn|murota|q1=Zezuru}} +#: {{syn|sn|murota|q1=Zezuru}}
 * 1) soap

---
 * pico

+++

@@ -49,6 +49,7 @@

==Galician== + ===Etymology=== From Old Galician and {{inh|gl|roa-opt|pico}}, from {{inh|gl|VL.|*piccus}}, ultimately of {{der|gl|gem|-}} origin or either from {{der|gl|cel-pro|*bekkos|t=beak}}.

---
 * milk

+++

@@ -18,11 +18,11 @@

{{en-noun|~}} -#*2007 September 24, Chris Horseman (interviewee), Emily Harris (reporter), “Global Dairy Demand Drives Up Prices”, Morning Edition, National Public Radio +#* 2007 September 24, Chris Horseman (interviewee), Emily Harris (reporter), “Global Dairy Demand Drives Up Prices”, Morning Edition, National Public Radio #*: {{...}}there's going to be that much less milk available to cover any other uses. Which means whether it's liquid milk or whether it's [milk that's been turned into] cheese or yogurt, the price gets pulled up right across the board. -#*:{{ux|en|Got milk?}} -#*:{{ux|en|Skyr is a product made of curdled milk.}} +#*: {{ux|en|Got milk?}} +#*: {{ux|en|Skyr is a product made of curdled milk.}} #*: For to make Soupys dorry. Nym onyons {{...}} Nym wyn {{...}} toste wyte bred and do yt in dischis, and god Almande mylk. @@ -191,7 +191,7 @@
 * 1) {{lb|en|uncountable}} A white liquid produced by the mammary glands of female mammals to nourish their young. From certain animals, especially cows, it is also called dairy milk and is a common food for humans as a beverage or used to produce various dairy products such as butter, cheese, and yogurt.
 * 1) * {{quote-book|en|title=A Brief History of Everyone Who Ever Lived|author={{w|Adam Rutherford}}|year=2017|ISBN=9781615194049|publisher=The Experiment|passage=In the West it's' fairly normal to drink milk in various forms into adulthood.|page=75}}
 * 1) {{lb|en|uncountable}} A white (or whitish) liquid obtained from a vegetable source such as almonds, coconuts, oats, rice, and/or soy beans. Also called non-dairy milk. {{defdate|from circa 1200}}
 * 2) * 1381, Pegge Cook. Recipes, page 114, quoted in 1962, {{w|Hans Kurath}} and Sherman M. Kuhn (editors), {{w|Middle English Dictionary}}, Ann Arbor, Mich.: {{w|University of Michigan Press}}, ISBN 978-0-472-01044-8, page 1242, entry "dorrẹ̅":

#: The farmer milked his cows. -#*{{RQ:Shakespeare Macbeth|I|vii|passage=I have given suck, and know / How tender 'tis to love the babe that milks me.}} +#* {{RQ:Shakespeare Macbeth|I|vii|passage=I have given suck, and know / How tender 'tis to love the babe that milks me.}} #: to milk wholesome milk from healthy cows
 * 1) {{lb|en|transitive}} To express milk from (a mammal, especially a cow).
 * 1) {{lb|en|transitive}} To draw (milk) from the breasts or udder.
 * 1) {{lb|en|transitive}} To express any liquid (from any creature).

---
 * conceit

+++

@@ -45,7 +45,7 @@

#*: Plumed with conceit he calls aloud. -#*{{RQ:Shakespeare Lear|act=IV|scene=vi|passage=And yet I know not how conceit may rob the treasury of life when life itself yields to the theft;}} +#* {{RQ:Shakespeare Lear|act=IV|scene=vi|passage=And yet I know not how conceit may rob the treasury of life when life itself yields to the theft;}} ====Derived terms==== {{der4|en|conceited|conceitedly|conceitedness|self-conceit}}
 * 1) * {{rfdatek|en|Cotton}}
 * 1) Design; pattern.

---
 * confess

+++

@@ -15,8 +15,8 @@

#: I confess to spray-painting all over that mural! #: I confess, that I am a sinner. -#*{{RQ:Shakespeare Othello|act=V|scene=ii|passage=I never gave it him. Send for him hither, / And let him confess a truth.}} -#*{{RQ:Milton PL|book=9|passage=And there confess / Humbly our faults, and pardon beg.}} +#* {{RQ:Shakespeare Othello|act=V|scene=ii|passage=I never gave it him. Send for him hither, / And let him confess a truth.}} +#* {{RQ:Milton PL|book=9|passage=And there confess / Humbly our faults, and pardon beg.}} #*: I must confess I was most pleased with a beautiful prospect that none of them have mentioned.
 * 1) {{senseid|en|to admit to the truth}} To admit to the truth, particularly in the context of sins or crimes committed.
 * 1) * {{rfdatek|en|Addison}}
 * 1) To acknowledge faith in; to profess belief in.

---
 * strike

+++

@@ -818,7 +818,7 @@

===Pronunciation=== * {{IPA|es|/stɹaɪk/|/stɾaɪk/}} - + ===Noun=== {{es-noun|m}}

---
 * ratha

+++

@@ -1,6 +1,7 @@

{{also|raða|raþa|ráða}} ==Irish== https://en.wiktionary.org/w/index.php?title=ratha&action=edit + ===Noun=== {{head|ga|noun form}}

---
 * speak

+++

@@ -41,8 +41,8 @@

#*: And they will deceive every one his neighbour, and will not speak the truth: they have taught their tongue to speak lies, and weary themselves to commit iniquity. #: {{ux|en|I was so surprised that I couldn't speak a word.}} -#*1785, {{w|Frances Burney}}, Journals & Letters, Penguin 2001, p. 226: -#*:Their behaviour to each other speaks the most cordial confidence and happiness. +#* 1785, {{w|Frances Burney}}, Journals & Letters, Penguin 2001, p. 226: +#*: Their behaviour to each other speaks the most cordial confidence and happiness. #*: There he sat, his very indifference speaking a nature in which there lurked no civilized hypocrisies and bland deceits.
 * 1) {{lb|en|transitive}} To communicate (some fact or feeling); to bespeak, to indicate.
 * 1) * 1851, {{w|Herman Melville}}, {{w|Moby-Dick}}:
 * 1) {{lb|en|informal|transitive|sometimes|humorous}} To understand (as though it were a language).

---
 * makak

+++

@@ -56,6 +56,7 @@

* https://ojibwe.lib.umn.edu/main-entry/makak-ni + ==Polish==

---
 * Reconstruction:Proto-Iranian/θráyah

+++

@@ -46,7 +46,7 @@

*** {{desc|ira-zgr-pro}} **** {{desc|hac|یەرێ|tr=yarɛ}} **** {{desc|zza|hîrê|tr=hīrē}}, {{l|zza|hîrî|tr=hīrī}} -* Southwestern Iranian: +* Southwestern Iranian: ** {{desc|peo|𐏂|tr=çi-}} *** {{desc|pal|-|ts=sē}} ***: {{desc|pal|𐫘𐫆|sc=Mani|sclb=1}}

---
 * burlar

+++

@@ -40,6 +40,7 @@

+ ====Conjugation==== {{es-conj-ar|burl|combined=1}} {{es-conj-ar|burl|ref=1}}
 * 1) {{lb|es|reflexive}} to make fun of, to poke fun at, to mock, to ridicule, to jeer {{gloss|+ de}}
 * 2) {{lb|es|reflexive}} to taunt, to tease {{gloss|often uses de}}
 * 3) {{lb|es|reflexive}} to scoff, to scoff at {{gloss|+ de}}

---
 * luce

+++

@@ -14,6 +14,7 @@

#: {{rfquotek|en|Halliwell}} + ====Translations==== {{trans-top|Esox lucius}} * Bulgarian: {{t|bg|щука|f}}
 * 1) The pike, Esox lucius, when fully grown.
 * 2) * {{RQ:Florio Montaigne Essayes|chapter=12|book=II|passage=As wee hunt after beasts, so Tygers and Lyons hunt after men, and have a like exercise one upon another: Hounds over the Hare; the Pike or Luce over the Tench{{nb...}}.}}