10 LIBROS DEL INGLÉS RELACIONADOS CON «REARMOUSE»
Descubre el uso de
rearmouse en la siguiente selección bibliográfica. Libros relacionados con
rearmouse y pequeños extractos de los mismos para contextualizar su uso en la literatura.
1
Wordsworth Dictionary of Phrase and Fable
Rearmouse or Reremouse. The bat (A.8., hrere-tnus, probably the flutter- ing-
raouse, from hrere-an, to move or flutter.) Of course, the " bat " is not a winged
mouse. Reason. It stands to reason. It is logically manifest ; this is the Latin
constat ...
Ebenezer Cobham Brewer, 2001
2
A New Voyage to Carolina
These Mice resort not to Houses. Dormouse The Dormouse is the same as in
England; and so is the Weasel, which is very scarce. Rearmouse The Bat or
Rearmouse, the same as in England. The Indian Children are much addicted to
eat Dirt, ...
3
A Concise Etymological Dictionary of the English Language
Rearmouse,. a. bat. (E.) A.S. hriremüs, a bat; from the flapping of its wings. — A. S
, krimn, to agitate, allied to hrSr, adj., stirring, quick; müs, a mouse. Cf. pro?. tl.
ßimr.meuse, a fliitter-monse or bat And cf. Uproar, Щ Perhaps a popular
etymology ...
Walter W. Skeat, Walter William Skeat, 2005
4
Remarkable Providences: Readings on Early American History
There is the sort that poisons a cat as soon as she eats of them, which has
sometimes happened. These mice resort not to houses. The dormouse is the
same as in England, and so is the weasel, which is very scarce. The bat or
rearmouse [is] ...
5
A new collection of voyages and travels [ed. by J. Stevens]. ...
The Dormouse is the fame as in England; and so is the Dormouse. Weasel,
which is very scarce. The Bat or Rearmouse, the same as in England. The
gedrnm&, Indian Children are much addicted to eat Dirt, and so are ' some of the
Christians.
New Collection, John Stevens, 1711
Child Discipline The Bat or Rearmouse, the same as in England. The Indian
Children are much addicted to eat Dirt, and so are some of the Christians. But
roast a Bat on a Skewer, then pull the Skin off, and make the Child that eats Dirt,
eat the ...
7
The Synonymous, Etymological, and Pronouncing English ...
(in stohgg) an animal having the body of a mouse, and the wings of a bird, a
rearmouse. BVra-blc, a. (bate) disputable : batabk ground. Batch, t. (bake) the
quantity of bread baked at onetime; a quantity of anything made at once. Bat?, s.
William Perry (lecturer in the Academy at Edinburgh.), William Perry (of Kelso, Scotland.), Samuel Johnson, 1805
8
South Carolina Naturalists: An Anthology, 1700-1860
There is one sort that poisons a Cat, as soon as she eats of them, which has
sometimes happen'd. These Mice resort not to Houses. The Dormouse is the
same as in England; and so is the Weasel, which is very scarce. The Bat or
Rearmouse ...
David Taylor, Frances Wallace Taylor, Catherine Taylor Matthews, 1998
9
Natural Histories: Stories from the Tennessee Valley
In his A New Voyage to Carolina, published in England in 1709, John Lawson
reported: "The Bat or Rearmouse, the same as in England. The Indian Children
are much addicted to eat Dirt, and so are some of the Christians. But roast a Bat
on ...
10
Bats: Biology, Behavior And Folklore
John Lawson, however, in his History of North Caroliua (1714), speaks of the "Bat
or Rearmouse" as the same there as in England. "The Indian Children are much
addicted to eat Dirt, and so are some of the Christians. But roast a Bat on a ...