IPA(key): /<span class="searchmatch">ˈorˌrest</span>/ <span class="searchmatch">orrest</span> m battle Strong ō-stem: Joseph Bosworth, T. Northcote Toller (1898) “<span class="searchmatch">orrest</span>”, in An Anglo-Saxon Dictionary, second edition...
IPA(key): /ˈorˌres.te/ orreste inflection of <span class="searchmatch">orrest</span>: nominative plural accusative singular/plural genitive/dative singular...
earnest þēnest ― service ofost ― haste <span class="searchmatch">orrest</span> ― battle, combat Strong ō-stem: Old English terms suffixed with -est <span class="searchmatch">orrest</span> -aist IPA(key): /ɛsd/, [ɛst] -est...
Swedish oro (“unrest”), Icelandic órói (“unrest”). Compare also Old English <span class="searchmatch">orrest</span> (“battle”), Old Norse orrosta, orresta (“battle”). IPA(key): /ʌnˈɹɛst/ Rhymes:...
America, the name is still used by the Pennsylvania Dutch. 2000, E[ugene] F[<span class="searchmatch">orrest</span>] Shelby, “The Antisanta”, in Gothic Alaskan and Other Stories: Bad Horror...
were the pastime of the châtelaines of the middle ages. 1895, G[eorge] F[<span class="searchmatch">orrest</span>] Browne, “The Château in the Ardennes”, in Off the Mill: Some Occasional...
illative ortee orsii, orsiloihe inessive orrees orsiis, orsilois elative <span class="searchmatch">orrest</span> orsist, orsiloist allative orrelle orsille, orsiloille adessive orreel orsiil...
America, the name is still used by the Pennsylvania Dutch. 2000, E[ugene] F[<span class="searchmatch">orrest</span>] Shelby, “The Antisanta”, in Gothic Alaskan and Other Stories: Bad Horror...
Northern goldsmith familiar with the early auricular style. 1976, J[ohn] F[<span class="searchmatch">orrest</span>] Hayward, Virtuoso Goldsmiths and the Triumph of Mannerism, 1540-1620, London:...