edgrow

English

Alternative forms

  • edgrew

Etymology

From Middle English edgrow, edgrowe, from Old English *edgrōwe (regrowth), from edgrōwan (to grow back), suggested by derivative edgrōwung (a regrowing, a growing again), equivalent to ed- + grow.

Noun

edgrow (uncountable)

  1. (obsolete) Aftergrass; eddish.
    • 1699 July 29, a letter published in 1894 in the reports of Great Britain's Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts:
      1699, July 29 — This week has produced much rain here; if the same be at Brampton, will not you please to order the grounds to be watered, which may produce good "edgrow."
    • (Can we date this quote?), a record published in 1988 in The Great Awakening in Wales, page 99:
      Similarly, Thomas Bowen of Tyddyn, Llanidloes, complained to Harris about the 'careless sayings' of a brother called Jones who at a society meeting in Montgomeryshire uttered words like the following:
      You shall be turn'd into the Clover, and afterwards into the Edgrow which was brought [= ? bought] with the blood of the Lamb: the Sun circulateth in the Blood of the Lamb.

Synonyms

Anagrams

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