rival lovers; rival claims or pretensions
Ow, he is just a wood harum-scarum creature, that wad never take to his studies;—daft, sir, clean daft. / […] / [W]owff—a wee bit by the East-Nook or sae; it's a common case—the ae half of the warld thinks t'other daft. I have met with folks in my day, that thought I was daft mysell;[…] / I cannot make out a word of his cursed brogue, said the Cumbrian justice; can you, neighbour—eh? What can he mean by deft? / He means mad, said the party appealed to, thrown off his guard by impatience of this protracted discussion.
Ow, he is just a wood harum-scarum creature, that wad never take to his studies;—daft, sir, clean daft.
[W]owff—a wee bit by the East-Nook or sae; it's a common case—the ae half of the warld thinks t'other daft. I have met with folks in my day, that thought I was daft mysell;[…]
I cannot make out a word of his cursed brogue,
can you, neighbour—eh? What can he mean by deft?
He means mad
Tracks of the Armies portrayed more than suggestive bodice ripping: Volck's subject here was the aftermath of a rape (fig. 8).
Babushkaed Royalty At Tree-Planting Ceremony
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