<span class="searchmatch">mere</span> <span class="searchmatch">pools</span> plural of <span class="searchmatch">mere</span> pool...
<span class="searchmatch">mere</span> pool (plural <span class="searchmatch">mere</span> <span class="searchmatch">pools</span>) A <span class="searchmatch">mere</span> or pond. 1922, Eleanour Sinclair Rohde, The Old English Herbals, London: Longmans, Green and Co., page 3: A supernatural...
typologically Russian пруд пруди́ (prud prudí) (< пруд (prud)). pool (plural <span class="searchmatch">pools</span>) A small and rather deep area of (usually) fresh water, as one supplied...
Scott O'Dell, The Mark of the Horse Lord, page 102: [...] sky-reflecting <span class="searchmatch">pools</span> like tarnished silver buckles, and winding burnlets that wandered down from...
were simply a succession of lumps, as slippery as a greasy pole, with huge <span class="searchmatch">pools</span> everywhere. (figurative) The work and scheming that leads to the position...
• Ternate • Venda • Venetan • Zazaki Page categories From Middle English mare, <span class="searchmatch">mere</span>, from Old English mīere (“female horse, mare”), from Proto-West Germanic...
modern English for bodies of water with varying emphasis on them being "<span class="searchmatch">pools</span>" or "marshes". It is not entirely clear whether these constitute a single...
beaded on tin lanterns, drops fanfared from sprinklers, minnows fluted in <span class="searchmatch">pools</span>. 2010, Gudmundina Haflidason, Amid The Rubble of World War II, →ISBN, page...
those terrific corduroy paths (my bones ache at the <span class="searchmatch">mere</span> recollection!) and deep holes and <span class="searchmatch">pools</span> of rotted vegetable matter, mixed with water, black,...
Ballads, Old and New, page 87: Spluttersmash and splatterdash! In the shallow <span class="searchmatch">pools</span> they splash, Like two wrestlers closing! Long they fight and twist and turn...