Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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Four hours later he returned with a 2lb sea trout from the River Inny and a dozen and a half eggs from a farm on the way.
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Four hours later he returned with a 2lb sea trout from the River Inny and a dozen and a half eggs from a farm on the way.
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Four hours later he returned with a 2lb sea trout from the River Inny and a dozen and a half eggs from a farm on the way.
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He seems from infancy to have been compounded of two natures, one bright, the other blundering; or to have had fairy gifts laid in his cradle by the “good people” who haunted his birthplace, the old goblin mansion on the banks of the Inny.
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Sometimes he strolled along the banks of the river Inny, where, in after years, when he had become famous, his favorite seats and haunts used to be pointed out.
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They used to make excursions about the country on foot, sometimes fishing, sometimes hunting otter in the Inny.
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Maurice is “every way unprovided for”; living upon Cousin Jane and her husband, and, perhaps, amusing himself by hunting otter in the river Inny.
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He inhabited an old, half rustic mansion that stood on a rising ground in a rough, lonely part of the country, overlooking a low tract occasionally flooded by the river Inny.
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Cuircne -- _i. e._, in the north of Meath, to the south of the Ethne (Inny);
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Inncoin: the Dungolman, a river into which the Inny flows and which divides the barony of Kilkenny West from Rathconrath, in the County Westmeath
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