<span class="searchmatch">woo'd</span> (archaic) simple past and past participle of woo...
oppos'd against my heart, Unto a mad-brain rudesby, full of spleen; Who <span class="searchmatch">woo'd</span> in haste, and means to wed in leisure. 1601, William Shakespeare, Twelfth...
1139–1142: Her vertue and the conſcience of her worth, / That would be <span class="searchmatch">woo'd</span>, and not unfought be won, / Not obvious, not obtruſive, but retir'd, / The...
Central Scots) From Old Norse frá. frae from 1822, Joanna Baillie, Song: <span class="searchmatch">Woo'd</span> and Married and A': She's ta'en like a cout frae the heather, / Wi' sense...
in this wan and heartless mood / To other thoughts by yonder throstle <span class="searchmatch">woo'd</span> 1851 March, Alfred, Lord Tennyson, “To the Queen”, in The Works of Alfred...
Pickering […], 1873, →OCLC: Innocence and virgin Modestie […] / That would be <span class="searchmatch">woo’d</span>, and not unsought be won 1913, D[avid] H[erbert] Lawrence, Sons and Lovers...
and Francis Eglesfield, page 37: […] ye heare the Lamb by many a bleat <span class="searchmatch">Woo’d</span> to come suck the milkie Teat: (resembling milk): lacteous; see also Thesaurus:lacteous...
virgin bright:/ That had not yet felt Cupides wanton rage,/ Yet was she <span class="searchmatch">woo'd</span> of many a gentle knight […] (Mormonism) One of two prophets, the Elder and...
printing; republished 19th century), →OCLC, page 241: Young Strephon he has <span class="searchmatch">Woo'd</span> me long, / And Courted me with Pipe and Song; / But I a silly, silly peevish...