10 BÜCHER, DIE MIT «FROUGHY» IM ZUSAMMENHANG STEHEN
Entdecke den Gebrauch von
froughy in der folgenden bibliographischen Auswahl. Bücher, die mit
froughy im Zusammenhang stehen und kurze Auszüge derselben, um seinen Gebrauch in der Literatur kontextbezogen darzustellen.
1
Dictionary of Americanisms: A glossary of words and phrases, ...
fv , , FROUGHY \ trough is provincial in the north of England, and means anything
loose, spongy, or easily broken ; often applied to wood, as brittle is to mineral
substances. — Brockett's Glossary. 'Froughy butter,' is rancid butter. The latter of ...
John Russell Bartlett, 1848
2
Dictionary of Americanisms, 2nd ed. enlarged
Froughy. Frough is provincial in the north of England, and means any thing loose,
spongy, or easily broken ; often applied to wood, as " brittle " is to mineral
substances. — Brockett's Glossary. " Froughy butter " is rancid butter. This word is
in ...
John Russell Bartlett, 1859
3
The English dialect dictionary, being the complete ...
Yks. Froughy, unscasoned oake, BEST Rur. Emn. (1641) 3a. (2) thIid. (\V.P.ltl.) (3)
Hrt. Such an ash . . . grows flowy, short and spongy, ELLts filed. llrlsb. (1750- V“. ii
. (4) l\'th [Oft fair foullis ar fundin faynt, and als french, R. Coil)e'ar (e. 1480) 23 ...
4
English Language Word Builder
... FLANGER FLAPPER FLASKET FLAUNCH FLINGER FLOPPER FLUBBER
FLUNKER FLUTIST FORPINE FOULDER FRABBIT FRAILLY FRANGER
FRAPPEE FRIGGER FRIPPERy FRONTES FROTHERy FROUGHY* FROUNCE
FRUMPLE ...
... made me quite froughy and brash to what I was, so that I should take two good
blows of my fist to bring down a beef-cretur ; which doosn't ought to be, when a
man 's only sixty. Now, you see, as I can't go to get in my debits and plunder from
...
Charles Dickens, William Harrison Ainsworth, Albert Smith, 1837
6
A Vocabulary; Or, Collection of Words and Phrases: Which ...
Frough and Froughy. The latter of these words is in very common use in many
parts of New England ; but I do not find it in the English glossaries. It is doubtless
a corruption of Frough, which is sometimes used here, and which is provincial in
...
7
Murray's system of English grammar: improved, and adapted to ...
Froughy, for rancid, fetid, &c. Guardeen, for guardian. Guess, for suppose,
believe, think. We should never guess about things which we well know. Had
rather, for should or would rather ; as, 'I had rather go.' Had go is a singular
combination.
Lindley Murray, Enoch Pond, 1835
... 's Anthony Spanker Pendleton Pokehorn, but he always shorts it, — ' Son-in-
law Spanker P. Pokehorn, I 'll tell you what it is, — I guess I 'm getting ould now,
and more than that, I 've a desp'ut ugly ague, what has made me quite froughy ...
9
Virginia Literary Museum and Journal of Belles Lettres, Arts, &c
How's your/ocfc?" perhaps from Anglo Saxon, folc, family. Frough ov Froiv, "brittle
, loose, spungy" — also froughy, This word is used by Evelyn. " That f timbei
Jwbich grows in gravel is subject to be /row (us they term it, and brittle." It is now
not ...
10
The Chambers Dictionary
[Fr] frou-frou frSS'frf/o, n the rustling of silk; elaborate trimmings, eg frills; fussy
decoration. [Fr] froughy. Same as frowy frounc^ frowns, (obs) vt to plait; to curl; to
wrinkle up. — vi to wrinkle; to frown. — n a wrinkle, plait or curl; affected ornament
.