| James Orchard Halliwell-Phillipps - English language - 1852 - 502 pages
...To spawn. Suffolk. (2) A company of horsemen. (3) Complexion. (A.-S.) (4) A harbour for ships. (5) To go to rode means, late at night or early in the morning, to go out to, shoot wild-fowl which pass over head on the wing. RODED. Lean mingled with fat. West. RODEDE. Rotted. Hearne.... | |
| James Orchard Halliwell-Phillipps - English language - 1868 - 542 pages
...spawn. Suffolk. (2) A company of horsemen. (3) Complexion. (A.-S.) (4) A harbour for ships. (5) To i/ii to rode means, late at night or early in the morning, to go out to shoot wild-fowl which pass over head on the wing. RODED.. Lean mingled with fat. West. RODEDE. Rotted. Hearne.... | |
| James Jennings - English language - 1869 - 256 pages
...origin of Demirip. Robin- Riddick. s. A redbreast. [Also Itabbin Hirddick ; the r and i transposed.] Rode. s. To go to rode, means, late at night or early...wild fowl which pass over head on the wing. To Rose. v n. To drop out from the pod, or other seed vessel, when the seeds are over-ripe. To Rough. va To... | |
| Somersetshire Archaeological and Natural History Society - Archaeology - 1874 - 586 pages
...redbreast Roddicks, Roddocks *. ex. Off' the roddocks, as a cart off the grooves of the axle Rode rn to go out to shoot wild fowl which pass over head on the wing early at night or in the morning ; also applied to the passage of the birds themselves, ex. The woodcocks'... | |
| James Orchard Halliwell-Phillipps - English language - 1901 - 492 pages
...spawn Suffolk. (2) A company of horsemen. (.'5 ) Complexion. (si.-S.) (4) A harbour for ships. (5) Togo to rode means, late at night or early in the morning, to go out to shoot wild-fowl which pass over head on the wing. KODED. Lean mingled with fat. ll'etii RODEDE. Rotted. Iharne.... | |
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