"Rewel Bone" is a word in ENGLISH
An obsolete phrase of disputed meaning, -- perhaps,
smooth or polished bone.
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.
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How to you tell the difference between an elephant and a mouse ?Try picking them up !
(Lat without such cause.) Formal words in the now obsolete replication de injuria. Steph. Pl. 191
Read the complete definitionAn obsolete form of admiral.
Read the complete definitionána - Information, news. (Now obsolete; see pakiána—to inquire, ask).
Read the complete definitionTo make old, or obsolete; to make antique; to make old in such a degree as to put out of …
Read the complete definitionGrown old. Hence: Bygone; obsolete; out of use; old-fashioned; as, an antiquated law.
Read the complete definitionAntiquity of style or use; obsoleteness.
Read the complete definitionbádwan - From the obsolete baló. See nabádwan—inkling, understanding.
Read the complete definitionbálà - Fortune, good luck. Pabálà—to risk, trust to one’s good luck, venture. Nagapabálà gid lámang siá. He has confidence …
Read the complete definitionbaló - To know, etc. Now obsolete. See hibaló. (cf. nabádwan).
Read the complete definitionIn old English law. A form of trlal anciently used In mlli-tary cases, arising in the court of chlvalry and …
Read the complete definitionIn Eng-lish law. An obsolete writ addressed to a corporation for the carrying of weights to such a haven, there …
Read the complete definitionA buffet; a blow; -- obsolete except in the phrase \"Blindman's buff.\"
Read the complete definitionbúla - Fortune, luck. (Obsolete; buláhan, etc. are derived from it), (cf. bálà).
Read the complete definitionAn obsolete name for certain fungi composed of slender threads.
Read the complete definitionAn obsolete writ that lay where a house was within a borough, for rent issuing out of the same, and …
Read the complete definitionIn prac-tice. An obsolete writ, which could formerly have been sued out when the defendant had for two years ceased …
Read the complete definitionBlind and absurd devotion to a fallen leader or an obsolete cause; hence, absurdly vainglorious or exaggerated patriotism.
Read the complete definitionIn English law. An obsolete writ which anciently lay for the lord, whose tenant, holding by knight’s service, died, nnd …
Read the complete definitionAn obsolete rude reed instrument (Ger. Zinken), of the oboe family.
Read the complete definitionAn obsolete name for the cornet-a-piston.
Read the complete definition