Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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a new library at his house at Hodnet, which is said to be full.
The Book-Hunter A New Edition, with a Memoir of the Author John Hill Burton
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Wright had certainly gone to a great deal of expense and trouble to set his trail of clues, the last of which was a large stained-glass window that he designed and paid to have installed in the parish church of Hodnet, a Shropshire village some twelve miles east of Whittington.
The Mike Arrington Web 2.0 Aussie Quiz Ben Barren 2006
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Over in the tamer country of the hundred of Hodnet the soil was fat and well-farmed, and the gleaned grain-fields full of plump, contented cattle at graze, at once making good use of what aftermath there was in a dry season, and leaving their droppings to feed the following year's tilth.
An Excellent Mystery Peters, Ellis, 1913- 1985
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Over in the tamer country of the hundred of Hodnet the soil was fat and well-farmed, and the gleaned grain-fields full of plump, contented cattle at graze, at once making good use of what aftermath there was in a dry season, and leaving their droppings to feed the following year's tilth.
An Excellent Mystery Peters, Ellis, 1913- 1985
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Hodnet, and to the beautiful scenery of Hawkstone Park, and Iscoyd
The Seventeenth Highland Light Infantry (Glasgow Chamber of Commerce Battalion) Record of War Service, 1914-1918 John W. [Editor] Arthur
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A few days elapsed and the stranger was almost forgotten; for there was to be a subscription assembly in Hodnet, which engrossed entirely the minds of all.
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Instantly every eye was turned towards him, for a new face was too important an object in Hodnet to be left unnoticed.
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But speculation was busily at work, and at more than one tea-table that evening in Hodnet conjectures were poured out with the tea and swallowed with the toast.
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They were married in Hodnet; and immediately after the ceremony they stepped into a carriage and drove away, nobody knew whither.
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It was the custom in Hodnet for the gentlemen to employ the morning of the succeeding day in paying their respects to the ladies with whom they had danced on the previous evening.
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