IPA(key): /ˈtɜː(ɹ)ʍɪt/ English Wikipedia has an article on: <span class="searchmatch">Tyrwhitt</span> Wikipedia <span class="searchmatch">Tyrwhitt</span> A surname. ^ Jespersen, Otto (1909) A Modern English Grammar...
(obsolete) paronomasia; punning (obsolete) alliteration 1775–1778, Thomas <span class="searchmatch">Tyrwhitt</span>, The Canterbury Tales of Chaucer: Giraldus Cambrensis speaks of Annomination...
Clarke, Charles Cowden, The Canterbury tales of Chaucer, with notes by T. <span class="searchmatch">Tyrwhitt</span>, Cassell Petter & Galpin, page 288: I say not that if thou be assigned...
Walpole, The Letters of Horace Walpole: Earl of Orford[3], page 319: Mr. <span class="searchmatch">Tyrwhitt's</span> book on the Rowleian controversy, which is reckoned completely victorious...
that phrase is suspicious in its own right. It was bracketed long ago by <span class="searchmatch">Tyrwhitt</span>, and the Arabic version translates it strangely if at all. […] In short...
To remain, stay. 1843 (original date: 1475), Geoffrey Chaucer, Thomas <span class="searchmatch">Tyrwhitt</span>, The Poetical Works of Geoffrey Chaucer - Page 321: [...] God helpe me...
Charles Cowden Clarke, The Canterbury tales of Chaucer, with notes by T. <span class="searchmatch">Tyrwhitt</span>., page 196: And therefore saith Job to God, ' Suffer, Lord, that I may...
Phoenician, Aramaic, Hebrew, Syriac, and Arabic. 1847, Richard Edmund <span class="searchmatch">Tyrwhitt</span>, Sermons Chiefly Expository, volume I, Oxford: John Henry Parker; F[rancis]...
Charles Cowden Clarke, The Canterbury tales of Chaucer, with notes by T. <span class="searchmatch">Tyrwhitt</span>., page 196: And therefore saith Job to God, ' Suffer, Lord, that I may...
represent the mormal, or gangrene, on his shin; a circumstance, as Mr. <span class="searchmatch">Tyrwhitt</span> has observed, by which Jonson, in his Sad Shepherd, has also described...