The 15,767 occurrences of ass
View the definition of "ass" on The Online Slang Dictionary
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~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,612 ~ ~ ~
And Stuyvesant wondered how it was, in all the years he had known Farquhar and envied him his being a West Pointer and in the cavalry, he had never really discovered what a bore, what a wearisome ass, Farquhar could be.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,866 ~ ~ ~
I dare say he'll be ass enough to go in for a commission now and sell out his ranch for a song.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,438 ~ ~ ~
_1st Prophet._ Neither in halls, nor yet in bowers, Born would he not be, Neither in castles, nor yet in towers, That seemly were to see, But at his Father's will, The prophecy to fulfil, Betwixt an ox and an ass Jesu this king born he was; Heaven he bring us till!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,483 ~ ~ ~
An ox knoweth its lord, an ass its master's duty, But Israel will not know me, nor my conditions.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,693 ~ ~ ~
_Tylers._--Mary, Joseph, a midwife, the child born lying in a manger betwixt an ox and an ass, and the angel speaking to the shepherds.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,727 ~ ~ ~
_Vestment-makers, Skynners._--Jesus upon an ass with its foal; twelve Apostles following Jesus; six rich and six poor men, with eight boys with branches of palm trees, constantly saying blessed, etc., and Zaccheus ascending into a sycamore tree.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 96 ~ ~ ~
"That ass, Blossom, of the Higginsville Thunderbolt and Battle-Cry of Freedom , is down here again sponging at the Van Buren.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 284 ~ ~ ~
What did that drivelling ass of a Schuyler stand in the wake of a runaway horse for, with his shouting and gesticulating, if he wanted to stop him?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,093 ~ ~ ~
To such as were amazed that the son of the Devil should have received the gift of prophecy they replied that the Holy Ghost is able to reveal his secrets to whomsoever he pleases, for had he not caused the Sibyls to speak, and opened the mouth of Balaam's ass?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 9,906 ~ ~ ~
Is it not still more wonderful that Samson should have slain so many Philistines with the jaw-bone of an ass?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 21,472 ~ ~ ~
355 Bailiet, i. lvii Balaam's Ass, i.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 7,590 ~ ~ ~
"What a stupid ass I am!" was his comment on himself.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 322 ~ ~ ~
Why, I never yet Left a poor dog in the _strada_ hard beset, Or ass o'erladen!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 323 ~ ~ ~
Must I rate man less Than dog or ass, in holy selfishness?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 8,837 ~ ~ ~
"What an ass you are," said the Captain after a pause; "just you listen to me.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 10,342 ~ ~ ~
"He is a vulgar ass," said George, "with no more pretensions to rank himself a gentleman than your footman."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 12,553 ~ ~ ~
"What an ass!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,142 ~ ~ ~
Then Sumter and Stannard came in, tumultuous, and _ordered_ him down, and Blake and Curbit, and the rest of the card party, came tearing after them, and berated him for an absurdity, and implored him not to be an ass.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,413 ~ ~ ~
"Ennis, if you can quit being an ass long enough to tell me what you mean, and where you've been, I'll thank you.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,451 ~ ~ ~
"Try not to be an ass, Gordon.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,179 ~ ~ ~
"By censuring his preceptor, though justly, he will be born an ass; by falsely defaming him, a dog; by using his goods without leave, a small worm; by envying his merit, a larger insect or reptile."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,177 ~ ~ ~
"I regard him as a brainless ass," he exclaimed.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,759 ~ ~ ~
The subjoined was one of the many incidents which occurred on his assuming the reins of the establishment: 'The company was both extensive and excellent; a stud of thirty-three horses, four ponies and a jack-ass, all so admirably selected and educated, that for beauty and utility they could not be equalled any where.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,281 ~ ~ ~
But he added, that if he did write such a treatise, he should sum it up in one sentence: "Never have an ass in the chair."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,949 ~ ~ ~
15. z, oö, öa, is, iss, es, ass, th (English), ith (Engl.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,103 ~ ~ ~
Another case is reported by Eduard Schulte: A boy of a year and three quarters applied the joyous outcry _ei_ (which may be an imitated interjection), modifying it first into _eiz_, into _aze_, and then into _ass_, to his wooden goat on wheels, and covered with rough hide; _eiz_, then, became exclusively a cry of joy; _ass_, the name for everything that moved along--e. g., for animals and his own sister and the wagon; also for everything that moved at all; finally, for everything that had a rough surface.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,104 ~ ~ ~
Now, as this child already called all coverings of the head and covers of cans _huta_, when he saw, for the first time, a fur cap, he at once christened it _ass-huta_.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,109 ~ ~ ~
There was in this case an extension of the narrower concept, after it had itself experienced previously a differentiation, and so a limitation, by means of the suffix _ass_.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,446 ~ ~ ~
When I said to him "warm," _ass_ was pronounced with an effort and distinctly, although the syllable _wa_ belonged to the child's stock of words.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,697 ~ ~ ~
At this period she said, _Bertha will_; also _paren_ (for fahren, drive), _pallen_ (fallen, fall), _bot_, (Brot, bread), _atig_ (artig, good, well-behaved), _mal_ (noch einmal, once more), _muna_ (Mund, mouth), _aujen_ (Augen, eyes), _ol_ (Ohr, ear), _tirn_ (Stirn, forehead), _wanne_ (Wange, cheek, and Wanne, bath-tub), _aua_ (August), _dute_ (gute) _mama_, _päsche_ (Equipage), _wasar tinken_ (Wasser trinken, drink water) _dabel_ (Gabel, fork), _lüssel_ (Schlüssel, key), _is nits_ (ist nichts, is nothing), _mula_ (Milch, milk), _ass_ (heiss, hot).
~ ~ ~ Sentence 446 ~ ~ ~
Equus onager ( Wild Ass of Kutch ) 427.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 447 ~ ~ ~
Equus hemionus ( Kiang or Wild Ass of Thibet ) F AMILY T APIRIDÆ -T HE T APIR Genus Tapirus - 428.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 8,431 ~ ~ ~
Apart from the decided external differences between the horse and ass, they have one marked divergence, viz.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 8,448 ~ ~ ~
The Wild Ass of Kutch ( Jerdon's No.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 8,465 ~ ~ ~
"This wild ass is very shy and difficult to approach, and has great speed.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 8,469 ~ ~ ~
It is closely allied to, if not identical with, the wild ass of Assyria ( Equus hemippus ).
~ ~ ~ Sentence 8,477 ~ ~ ~
I do not know whether this species is ever known to bray like the ordinary domestic ass.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 8,482 ~ ~ ~
The Kiang or Wild Ass of Thibet .
~ ~ ~ Sentence 8,493 ~ ~ ~
Captain (now General) R. Strachey wrote of it: "My impression as to the voice of the kyang is that it is a shrieking bray and not a neigh;" and again: "the kyang , so far as external aspect is concerned, is obviously an ass and not an horse."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 8,497 ~ ~ ~
It is perhaps more of an ass than a horse, but its ears are shorter, and it is certainly not the gur-khor or wild ass of Sind."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 8,504 ~ ~ ~
From all I have seen of the animal I should pronounce him to be neither a horse nor an ass.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 8,508 ~ ~ ~
The form, from the fore to the hind leg and feet to a level with the back is more square than that of an ass.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,808 ~ ~ ~
'"[29] [Footnote 29: "Wer nie sein Brot mit Thränen ass, Wer nie die kummervollen Nächte Auf seinem Bette weinend sass, Der kennt euch nicht.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 10,603 ~ ~ ~
"[49] [Footnote 49: "Wer nie sein Brot mit Thränen ass, Wer nie die kummervollen Nächte Auf seinem Bette weinend sass, Der kennt Euch nicht, Ihr himmlischen Mächte!"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,280 ~ ~ ~
Only a very special kind of an ass tries that twice: but still, I did hope----" "Yes, there's that 'but still' feeling, isn't there?"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 477 ~ ~ ~
"I object to him because he's a meddlesome ass, and keeps the whole place in continual hot water."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 511 ~ ~ ~
"When you've finished making that mess worse than it is," said Meldon, "and covering your own fingers all over with ink in such a way that it will take days of careful rubbing with pumice-stone to get them clean, perhaps you'll go on telling me why you call this fellow Simpkins a meddlesome ass.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 525 ~ ~ ~
Tell me plainly and straightforwardly why you call Simpkins a meddlesome ass."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 529 ~ ~ ~
"Simpkins--meddlesome ass--pokes his nose into everybody's business.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 585 ~ ~ ~
"You started out to prove that Simpkins is a meddlesome ass.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 587 ~ ~ ~
He's certainly an ass.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 590 ~ ~ ~
"Then he's an ass.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 591 ~ ~ ~
No one who wasn't an ass could possibly expect Doyle to pass a vote of censure on the doctor for not prosecuting him about his drains.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 872 ~ ~ ~
Not that I'm the least afraid of making an ass of myself.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,919 ~ ~ ~
That silly ass Simpkins has actually flung away a priceless opportunity.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,824 ~ ~ ~
In reality he was the worst kind of ass; and I wouldn't like to think of your getting embalmed as he did, and being dug out afterwards by an antiquary with a chisel.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,948 ~ ~ ~
Then I must look up that doddering old ass Callaghan, and tell him to precipitate matters a bit if I succeed in hunting Simpkins up to Ballymoy House.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,394 ~ ~ ~
"Don't be an ass, J. J.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 249 ~ ~ ~
To the mill, naturally, has been added a miller--who is riding down the road on an ass, with a sack of flour across his saddle-bow that he is carrying as a gift to the Holy Family.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 401 ~ ~ ~
A gigantic figure of wicker-work--called Melchior, after one of the three Kings of the Epiphany--clothed in a grotesque fashion and with a huge pannier strapped to his back, was mounted upon an ass and so was taken from door to door to gather for the poor whatever the generous would give of food.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 347 ~ ~ ~
"You're a colossal ass, Hollie!" said Hawker.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 348 ~ ~ ~
"You----" "Yes, yes, I know," replied the other peacefully; "a colossal ass.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 734 ~ ~ ~
If he were only an ass!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 735 ~ ~ ~
If he were only an ass, now, you could feel easy in your mind.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,247 ~ ~ ~
Cartwright Prize of the Alumni Ass'n of the College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York City.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,500 ~ ~ ~
As to diet, the Archbishop was ordered to take nothing but light and cooling food, two to four pints of asses' milk in the early morning, drawn from an ass fed on cooling herbs, and to use all such foods as had a fattening tendency; tortoise or turtle-soup,[149] distilled snails, barley-water and chicken-broth, and divers other rich edibles.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,164 ~ ~ ~
In like manner, if animals breed freely _inter se_ before our eyes, as for example the horse and ass, the fact was to be noted, but no animals were to be classed as capable of interbreeding until they had asserted their right to such classification by breeding with tolerable certainty.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,333 ~ ~ ~
"The true method," he writes, "is the complete description and exact history of each particular object," {164a} and later on he asks, "is it not more simple, more natural and more true to call an ass an ass, and a cat a cat, than to say, without knowing why, that an ass is a horse, and a cat a lynx?"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,196 ~ ~ ~
In the ages of faith, an ass dressed in sacerdotal robes was gravely conducted to the cathedral choir at a certain season, and mass was said before him, and hymns chanted discordantly.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,646 ~ ~ ~
The fact that Jesus finds the she-ass bound to a vine (Justin, Apol.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,248 ~ ~ ~
Silly little ass--just the way to rot his nerves.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 287 ~ ~ ~
(41) Long's naturalists found the horse, ass, and mule in use among the Kansa and other tribes,(42) and described the mode of capture of wild horses by the Osage;(43) yet when, two-thirds of a century after Carver, Catlin (1832-1839) and Prince Maximilian (1833-34) visited the Siouan territory, they found the horse established and in common use in the chase and in war.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,086 ~ ~ ~
Knowest thou the secret of the wild goat or the wild ass on the desert?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,208 ~ ~ ~
That time the two halves of the door were closed, an' any ass could see that the letters stood for 'No Smoking.'
~ ~ ~ Sentence 861 ~ ~ ~
But he cannot quite stand Homer's downright comparison of Ajax to an ass, and speaks of him in gingerly fashion as-- The slow beast with heavy strength endued.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 862 ~ ~ ~
Pope himself thinks the passage "inimitably just and beautiful;" but on the whole, he says, "a translator owes so much to the taste of the age in which he lives as not to make too great a compliment to the former [age]; and this induced me to omit the mention of the word _ass_ in the translation."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 864 ~ ~ ~
"Ass" is the vilest word imaginable in English or Latin, but of dignity enough in Greek and Hebrew to be employed "on the most magnificent occasions."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,422 ~ ~ ~
let the secret pass, That secret to each fool--that he's an ass!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,497 ~ ~ ~
Through his mouthpiece, Savage, he described the scene on the day of publication; how a crowd of authors besieged the shop and threatened him with violence; how the booksellers and hawkers struggled with small success for copies; how the dunces formed clubs to devise measures of retaliation; how one wrote to ministers to denounce Pope as a traitor, and another brought an image in clay to execute him in effigy; and how successive editions, genuine and spurious, followed each other, distinguished by an owl or an ass on the frontispiece, and provoking infinite controversy amongst rival vendors.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 782 ~ ~ ~
Don't be a bloomin' ass an' sell it fer a packet o' fags like I did!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,354 ~ ~ ~
The _Star_ raised him during the presidential campaign, when he was quite happy in caricaturing the Democratic ass and the wide-mouthed Democratic candidate.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 740 ~ ~ ~
You wander on and think: "What an ass I was to think he was following me!" and meet him at the next corner.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 663 ~ ~ ~
_Luc._ Preposterous ass, that never read so far To know the cause why music was ordained!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,024 ~ ~ ~
_Sir To._ Welcome, ass.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,276 ~ ~ ~
"You are a colossal ass," he growled.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 7,267 ~ ~ ~
In this work a vicious young man is transformed into an ass, under which form he goes through many amusing adventures, but is at last changed to a new man through the influence of the mysteries.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,272 ~ ~ ~
Chris, Chris," she screamed through her hands--"you sodden ass; be quieter with the poor beast--soothe him, soothe him.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 502 ~ ~ ~
DIVISION OF MEDICAL INSPECTION and PHYSICAL EDUCATION CLEVELAND Dr. E. A. Peterson Director Mr. H. P. Kimmel Secretary Henry W. Luther Supervisor of Physical Training Louise Klein Miller Curator of School Gardens Anna L. Stanley Supervisor of School Nurses Charlotte Steinbach Examiner of Atypical Children Lola Barnard Ass't."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 69 ~ ~ ~
then the remaming part of the word Asbri, n. skill; trick; mischief Asbriol, a. full of tricks Asdell, n. a plank; a shingle Asdelliad, n. a planking Asdyllen, n. a plank, a board Asdyllodi, v. to plank, to board Asen, n. a rib; a she ass.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 70 ~ ~ ~
Asen y fran, spare rib of pork Asgell, n. a wing Asgellhaid, n. wing-swarm Asgellog, a. winged Asgellu, v. to wing; to fly Asgellwrych, n. spray Asgellwynt, n. side-wind Asgen, n. harm, damage Asgethru, v. to splinter Asglinen, n. a stem, a lineage Asglod, n. a chip Asgre, n. the heart; the bosom Asgri, n. a tremour Asgwn, a. depressed, debased Asgwrn, n. a bone Asgyrneiddio, v. to become bone Asgyrniad, n. ossification Asgyrnig, a. bony, large boned Asgyrnog, a. bony, full of bone Asgyrnu, v. to ossify Asiad, n. a joining, a soldering: or cementing Asio, v. to join, to solder Astrus, a. perplexed Astrusi, n. perplexity, trouble Asur, n. the blue sky, azure Aswy, n. the left, the sinister Aswyniad, n. a craving Asyn, n. a male ass At, prep.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 256 ~ ~ ~
from, out of Hanaeth, n. procedure Hanawdd, n. derivation Hanbwyll, n. consideration Hanbwylliad, n. a considering Hanbwyllo, v. to consider Hanbwyllog, a. considerate Handden, a. being attractive Handdeniad, n. an attraction Handdenol, a. attractive Handdenu, to derive attraction Handdyfod, v. to be, to become Hanedig, a. derived, descended Hanedigaeth, n. derivation Hanes, n. relation, history Hanesai, n. historiographer Hanesgerdd, n. an epic poem Hanesiad, n. a narration Hanesiaeth, n. a narration Hanesol, a. historical Hanesu, v. to narrate Haneswr, Hanesydd, a historian Hanesyddiaeth, n. historiography; history in the abstract Hanesyn, n. an anecdote Hanfod, n. existence, being: v. to become existent; to proceed; to exist Hanfodiad, n. an existing Hanfodol, a. existent; essential Hanfodoldeb, n. hypostasis Hanfodoli, v. to become existent Haniad, n. a proceeding Hanner, n. a moiety: a. half Hannerog, n. moiety: a half share or part; a flitch Hannergrwn, n. a hemisphere Hannergylch, n. a semicircle Hanneriad, n. a halving Hannerob, n. a flitch of bacon Hannerog, a. having a moiety Hannerol, a. relating to half Hannersain, n. a semitone Hanneru, v. to half Hanred, parting off; recession Hanredoli, v. to render separate Hanredoliaeth, a separate state Hanredu, v. to separate Hanu, v. to proceed, to be derived Hap, n. luck, chance, fortune Hapiad, n. a happening Hapio, v. to happen Hapiol, a. happening, eventual Hapus, a. fortunate, happy Hapusrwydd, n. happiness Har, n. aptness to over-top Hardd, a. towering; handsome Harddedd, n. handsomeness Harddiad, n. a rendering handsome Harddiant, n. a rendering comely Harddineb, n. handsomeness Harddu, v. to adorn Harddwch, n. handsomeness Haredd, n. calmness; peace Hariad, n. an appeasing Hariannu, v. to render calm Hariant, n. quietness Harl, n. a jangling, a wrangling Harlach, n. a jangling Harlu, v. to jangle, to wrangle Harnais, n. harness Harneisiad, n. a harnessing Harneisio, v. to harness Hatriad, n. a covering Hatru, v. to cover, to dress Hau, v. to strew over, to sow Haul, n. the sun Hauwr, n. a sower Haw, n. what is full; an ass Hawcaid, n. a hod-ful Hawd, n. a whisk, a sweep Hawdd, a. feasible, easy, facile Hawddammawr, n. a welcome Hawddammori, v. to welcome Hawddammoriad, n. a welcoming Hawddfryd, n. ease of mind Hawddfyd, n. happiness Hawddgar, a. amiable; lovely Hawddgarwch, n. amiableness Hawddineb, n. a facility, easiness Hawes, n. a female ass Hawg, n. fullness; perfection; space; while; an age; a hod Hawg, ad.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 334 ~ ~ ~
Menyg ellyllon, foxglove Maneilio, v. to plat fine work Manfrith, a. finely variegated Manfritho, v. to stripe finely Manfriw, a. finely crumbled Man-galed, a. of a hard grasp Man-gan, n. fine white flour Man-gaw, n. delicate work Man gawiau, n. trifles, toys Man geinion, n. delicate jewels Man gerdded, to take short steps Man-goed, n. brushwood, shrubs Man-gor, n. a membrane Man-gre, n. a recess; a tangle Manhedion, n. flying motes Maniad, n. a placing, a spotting Madion, n. small things, empty grains among corn Manleidr, n. a petty thief Manlo, n. small coals Manllwyn, n. mutton flesh Manod, n. small or fine snow Manog, a. having space; spotted Manogen, n. a speckled one Manol, a. local; spotting; delicate; accurate, exact, minute, particular, fine Manoli, v. to make nice Manoliad, n. a making nice Manolosg, n. small coal Manon, n. paragon of beauty Manrinion, n. trifling charms Manro, n. small pebbles Manswyddau, n. petty offices Mant, n. a mandible; a mouth Mantach, n. a toothless jaw Mantachu, v. to expose the jaw Mantai, n. a mumbler Mantais, n. an advantage Mantawl, n. a balance Manteisiad, n. a taking advantage Manteisio, v. to take advantage Manteisiol, a. advantageous Mantell, n. a mantle a cloak Mantelliad, n. a mantling Mantellu, v. to mantle Mantoli, v. to turn scales Mantoliad, n. a balancing Manu, v. to make a space, to spot; to impress Manus, n. husk of corn, chaff Manw, a. of subtile quality Manwedd, n. a subtile texture Manweddu, v. to render fine Manwg, n. spottedness, pimples Manwl, a. accurate; nice; careful Manwlaw, n. a small rain Manwy, a. fine; rare; subtile Manwydd, n. brushwood, shrubs Manwyedd, n. exility, fineness Manwyn, n. the king's evil, scrofula Manwynau, n. strumae Manwynog, a. strumous Manwyo, v. to refine, to subtilise Manwythi, n. capillary veins Manyd, n. small grain of corn Manyglawg, n. the bitter-sweet Manyglion, n. small particles, of spots; empty grains of corn Manyledd, n. exactness, nicety Manyliant, n. refinement Manylrwydd, n. exactness, minuteness Manylu, v. render accurate; to become accurate Manylwch, n. accuracy, nicety Maon, n. a people, a multitude; inhabitancy; subjects Mapwl, n. a knob on the middle of a thing; a mop Mar, n. what is laid flat Maran, n. a holme; a strand; a spawning salmon Marc, n. impression, a mark Marciad, n. a marking Marcio, v. to mark, to observe March, n. a horse, a stallion Marchalan, n. elecampane Marchasyn, n. a male ass Marchau, v. to ride a horse Marchbren, n. a main beam Marchdaran, n. a loud thunder clap Marchdy, n. a stable Marchfaen, n. a horse block Marchfiaren, n. a white brier Marchforgrugyn, n. a large winged ant Marchforion, n. winged ants Marchgen, n. a horse's skin Marchgod, n. a saddle bag Marchiad, n. a horsing Marchlan, n. a stable Marchlu, n. cavalry, horse soldiers Marchnad, n. a market, a mart Marchnadfa, n. a market-place Marchnadiad, n. a marketing Marchnadol, a. of a market Marchnadu, v. to market, to buy at market Marchnadydd, n. a market-man Marchnatad, n. a marketing Marchnatty, n. a market-house Marchnatwr, n. a market-man Marchocad, n. riding a horse Marchocau, v. to ride a horse Marchog, n. a knight: a jug.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 357 ~ ~ ~
how, so, as; how much Mora, n. motion of the sea Moradar, n. sea fowls Moran, n. a whale Morben, n. a promontory Morbryf, n. a sea animal Morbysg, n. sea fish Morchwain, n. insects on the seashore Morchwydd, n. swell of the sea Mordaith, n. a sea voyage Mordir, n. maritime land Mordon, n. a sea breaker Mordrai, n. ebb of the sea Mordwy, n. a seafaring Mordwyaeth, n. a seafaring life Mordwyn, n. an ant hill Mordwyo, v. to go by sea Mordwyol, a. seafaring; sailing Mordwys, n. waying corn Mordwywr, n. a mariner Morddanadl, n. horehound Morddarluniad, n. hydrography Morddraenog, n. sea urchin Morddwr, n. estuary of the sea Morddwyd, n. the thigh Moreryr, n. an ospray Morfa, n. sea brink Morfalwen, n. a sea snail Morfan, n. sea shore strand Morfar, n. rage of the sea Morfarch, n. a sea horse Morfil, n. sea animal, whale Morfin, n. sea brink Morflaidd, n. the base Morfochyn, n. the grampus Morforwyn, n. the mermaid Morfran, n. a cormorant Morfrwryn, n. the sea rushes Morfuwch, n. the walrus Morgamlas, n. an estuary Morgant, n. a sea brink Morgaseg, n. a sea breaker Morgath, n. a skate, a ray Morgelyn, n. the eringo Morgerwyn, n. a sea gulf Morgi, n. shark Morgranc, n. the crab fish Morgrug, n. hill of ants; ants Morgrugyn, n. an ant Morgudyn, n. the polypus Morgyllell, n. the calamary Morhedydd, n. a sea lark Morhesg, n. the sea sedge Morhocys, n. mashmallows Morhwch, n. a grampus Moriad, n. a going by sea Mono, v. to live at sea; to sail Morionen, n. emmet, ant Moriwr, n. seaman, sailor Morladrad, n. a piracy Morlan, n. a sea brink, a beach Morlas, n. a sea-green colour Morleidr, n. a pirate Morlo, n. a sea calf, a seal Morlwch, n. a sea spray Morlwyau, n. scurvy grass Morlyffant, n. the frog fish Morlyswen, n. a conger eel Morneidr, n. a sea snake Mordnodwydd, n. needlefish Moron, n. plants with tapering roots; carrots Moronyn, n. a carrot Mortais, n. a mortise Morwennol, n. a sea swallow Morwerydd, n. the seashore Morwiail, n. grass wreck Morwiber, n. the aquatic viper Morwriaeth, n. seamanship Morwyf, n. a bubble Morwyn, n. a maid, a damsel Morwynaidd, a maidenly Morwyndod, n. virginity Morwynig, n. a little maid Morwynol, a. of a virgin Morwys, n. bubbles, bubbling Morwysiad, n. a bubbling Mory, n. morrow, to-morrow Moryd, n. inlet of sea water Morymdaith, n. sea voyage Mu, n. bulk, a mass; a muid Much, n. sable, gloom Muchiad, n. a growing sable Muchudd, n. a jet black; jet Mud, n. a remove; a mew; a making motion; mute Mudadwy, a. moveable Mudai, n. remover, mover Mudan, n. a mute, a dumb one Mudanaeth, n. a mute state Mudanes, n. a female mute Mudfa, n. a removal Mudiad, n. a removing Mudliw, n. motely colour Mudo, v. to remove Mudol, a. moving, moveable Mudsain, n. a mute letter Mudw, n. what is on the move Mudwg, n. state of removing Mul, n. an ass, a mule: a. bashful, modest, simple Muldra, n. bashfulness Mules, n. a she ass Mulfran, n. a cormorant Mulyn, n. a little ass Mun, n. what forms; a hand Munaid, n. a handful Muned, n. epithet for a hand Muneidio, v. to give handfuls Munud, n. a gesture; a nod Munudiad, n. a making gestures Munudio, v. to make gestures Mur, n. what is firm; a wall: a. firm, fixed, established Murdd, n. a foundation Murddyn, n. shell of a building Mugraid, n. a mighty spirit Murio, v. to fix; to wail Muriwr, n. wall-builder; maker of walls Murlysiau, n. pelitory of the wall Murnio, v. to hinder, to harm Murniol, a. annoying, harming Mursen, n. a coquette; a prude Mursendod, n. coquetry Mursenu, v. to act the coquette Mursyn, n. a coxcomb, a fop Musgrell, a. hobbling, halting Musgrellni, n. helplessness Mw, n. what is upon or about Mwci, n. a fog; a sprite Mwch, a. hasty, quick, swift Mwd, n. an arch, a cieling Mwdran, n. washbrew; gruel Mwdwl, n. a stack; a cock Mwdd, n. an arch, a vault Mwg, n. smoke, fume Mwgwd, n. a blind, a mask Mwng, n. a neck, a mane Mwngial, v. to speak gutturally: n. a muttering Mwl, n. a concretion, a lump Mwlwch, Mwlwg, n. refuse, sweepings Mwll, a. close, warm, sultry Mwn, n. what spires up; a particle; a mine, ore Mwnai, n. money, coin Mwndlws, n. neck ornament Mwn-gloddiad, n. a mining Mwn-gloddio, v. to mine Mwnt, n. a mound; a mount, a hundred thousand Mwnwg, n. a neck; a swivel Mwr, n. what tends to fall or happen Mwrl, n. a crumbling stone Mwrn, n. sultry weather: a. sultry, close, warm Mwrndra, n. sultriness Mwrno, v. to become sultry Mwrth, n. what tends forward Mwrthwyl, n. a hammer Mwrthwyliad, n. a hammering Mwrthwylio, v. to hammer Mws, n. what shoots out; effluvia: a. of strong scent, rank Mwsg, n. moscus, musk Mwstardd, n. mustard Mwswg, n. moss Mwswgl, n. moss Mwth, a. rapid, fleet, nimble Mwy, a. additional; more; larger: adv.
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