lawing

See also: Lawing

English

Etymology

law + -ing

Noun

lawing (plural lawings)

  1. Going to law; litigation.
    (Can we find and add a quotation of Holinshed to this entry?)
  2. Money owed for a service rendered.
    • 1824, Sir Walter Scott, St. Ronan's Well, page 9:
      A shilling for breakfast, three shillings for dinner, including a pint of old port, eighteen-pence for a snug supper — such were the charges of the inn of Saint Ronan's under this landlady of the olden world, even after the nineteenth century had commenced ; and they were ever tendered with the pious recollection, that her good father never charged half so much, but these weary times rendered it impossible for her to make the lawing less.
    • 1925, George Wharton Edwards, The Book of Old English Ballads, →ISBN:
      Late at e'en, drinking the wine, And ere they paid the lawing, They set a combat them between, To fight it in the dawing.
    • 2012, Jacob Grimm, Teutonic Mythology, →ISBN, page 1024:
      A Spanish legend has it, that there was a cave at Salamanca, where he constantly maintained seven scholars, on condition that when they had finished their studies, the seventh should pay the lawing.

Verb

lawing

  1. present participle of law

Anagrams


Tagalog

Noun

lawíng

  1. tatters; rags hanging down

Synonyms

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