A Concise Dictionary of Middle English - From A.D. 1150 to 1580 by Walter William Skeat;A. L. Mayhew
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page 1 of 1116 (00%)
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This book uses a variety of special characters, some of which are
easily representable in a text font, some of which are not. ð (eth) and þ/à (thorn/Thorn) are as-is. Yough is represented as the two-character sequence 3*. The special characters æ/à (ae/AE) do not have accented forms in the standard text font, so when accented have been written as æ* and Ã*. Long marks over Latin vowels have been marked as u*, etc. End-of-line hyphens present a significant problem in this book, as many different languages are used, some of which hyphenate many words. For the most part these end-of-line hyphens have been joined; on occasion they are marked as -*. Greek words are transliterated using the standard Gutenberg scheme. Italics are marked _thus_, and boldface ~thus~. Finally, the "additions and corrections" at the end have been added into the main text, marked by [Addition] or [Correction] after the entry. Images of this book are available at http://www.pbm.com/~lindahl/concise/ Corrections are welcome. ] |
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