"Hlafordsocna" is a word in LAW AND LEGAL
Sax. A lord’s protection. Du Cange
Writers have come to master nearly every trade. They are inventors and entrepreneurs of character, plot, and dialogue. They are the eager scientists that can’t wait to try out their new experiment. They are the maestros of the symphony that plays in their head, conducting what happens, where, and at what precise moment. They are engineers and architects that design the structure of their piece so it stands the test of time and continues to fire on all cylinders. They play mechanics and doctors in their revisions, hoping they prescribe the correct diagnosis to fix the piece’s 'boo boos'. They are salesmen who pitch not an idea or a product, but themselves, to editors, publishers, and more importantly, their readers. They are teachers who through their craft, preach to pupils about what works and what doesn’t work and why. Writers can make you feel, can make you think, can make you wonder, but they can also grab your hand and guide you through their maze. Similar to what Emerson stated in 'The Poet,' writers possess a unique view on life, and with their revolving eye, they attempt to encompass all. I am a writer.
WORD SUGGESTIONS
When is an English teacher like a judge? When she hands out long sentences.
(From Sax. abere, apparent, notorious; and mord, murder.) Plain or downright murder, as distinguished from the less heinous crime of …
Read the complete definitionSax. The true master or owner of a thing. Spelman
Read the complete definitionA collection of Sax-on laws, published during the reign of Queen Elizabeth, iu the Saxon language, with a* Latin version …
Read the complete definitionSax. Bearing upon the back or about the person. Applied to a thief taken with the stolen property in his …
Read the complete definitionSax. A scribe, notary, or chancellor among the Saxons
Read the complete definitionIn Sax-on and old English law. Castle work. Serv-ice and labor done by Inferior tenants for the bulldlng and upholding …
Read the complete definitionSax. Known, knowing. Uncuth, unknown. See Couthutlauuh, Uncvni
Read the complete definitionSax. A wound. Spelman
Read the complete definition(Sax. From dom, judgment, and bec, boc, a book.) Dome-book or doom-book. A name given among the Saxons to a …
Read the complete definition(Sax.) Doom; sentence; judg-fnent. An oath. The homager's oath in the black book of Hereford. Blonnt
Read the complete definition(Sax.) An ancient record made in the time of william the Conqueror, and now remain-ing in the English exchequer, consisting …
Read the complete definition(Sax.) An inferior kind of judges. Men appointed to doom (judge) in matters in controversy. Cowell. Suitors in a court …
Read the complete definitionSax. A contribution of tenants, in the time of the Saxons, towards a potation, or ale, provided to entertain the …
Read the complete definitionSax. A quit rent, or yearly payment, formerly made by some tenants to the king, or their landlords, for driving …
Read the complete definitionSax. The metropolis; the chief dty. obsolete
Read the complete definition(Fr. eale, Sax., ale, and bus, house.) An ale-house
Read the complete definitionSax. The privllege of asslslng and selling beer, obsolete
Read the complete definitionSax. A fee or rent paid by a tenant to his lord for leave to fold his sheep on hls …
Read the complete definitionSax. The liberty or privi-iege of foldage
Read the complete definitionSax. A summons to serve-in the army. An acquittance from going into-the army. Fleta, lib. 1, c. 47, ( 23
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