4 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «SCURRIOUR»
Discover the use of
scurriour in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
scurriour and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Precursors of Knox: or, Memoires of Patrick Hamilton, ...
On Thursday, ye xi day of January, ye lord Hamylton set vi hundred men with
gons and artilery in way, as my lord of Anguss cum fra Glasgo fra the erl of
Lennox to sla hym, he not beyng advertiset yarof, bot be a scurriour of the L.
Hamyltons, ...
2
The Chambers Dictionary
See scurriour. scurril or scurrile skur'il, adj (archaic) like or worthy of a vulgar
buffoon; indecently opprobrious or jocular. [L scurr'ilis; see scurrilous] scurrilous
skur'i-hs, adj indecently abusive and unjustifiably defamatory; characterized by ...
3
Foyle's further philavery: a cornucopia of lexical delights
serendipity scuddick noun (dialect) something that is small in size or importance
scurriour or scurrier noun (obsolete) a scout scuttlebutt noun (US) rumour or
gossip $»>In the days of sailing ships, a scuttlebutt was a cask with a hole cut in it
for ...
4
Chambers English-Hindi Dictionary
... згсфтсгт, '»frát scurriour, scurrier я- (obs.) ^птаг, scurry, skurry vi- ^^T в ЧТТТТ;
5Tf ЗГТТТ, 4TT5ÎTTT, 4W ft ЗГТТТ; л- f?^ft, stfT-sbt ...
Sureśa Avasthī, Indujā Avasthī, 1981