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Etymologies
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Examples
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From Colchester I took another step down to the coast; the land running out a great way into the sea, south and south-east makes that promontory of land called the Naze, and well known to seamen using the northern trade.
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From Colchester I took another step down to the coast; the land running out a great way into the sea, south and south-east makes that promontory of land called the Naze, and well known to seamen using the northern trade.
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This point called the Naze, and the north-east point of
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This point called the Naze, and the north-east point of
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Olaf, with some twelve little ships, all he now had, lay quiet in some safe fjord, near Lindenaes, what we now call the Naze, behind some little solitary isles on the southeast of Norway there; till triumphant Knut had streamed home again.
Early Kings of Norway Thomas Carlyle 1838
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This point called the Naze, and the north-east point of Kent, near Margate, called the North Foreland, making what they call the mouth of the river and the port of London, though it be here above sixty miles over.
Tour through Eastern Counties of England, 1722 Daniel Defoe 1696
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From Colchester I took another step down to the coast; the land running out a great way into the sea, south and south-east makes that promontory of land called the Naze, and well known to seamen using the northern trade.
Tour through Eastern Counties of England, 1722 Daniel Defoe 1696
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a right line to the point called the Naze, beyond the Gunfleet upon the coast of Essex, and so continued westward throughout the river
Tour through Eastern Counties of England, 1722 Daniel Defoe 1696
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A short distance further we came off Walton-on-the-Naze, the "Naze" being a nose or promontory, with the sea on one side and a shallow backwater on the other.
A Yacht Voyage Round England William Henry Giles Kingston 1847
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They were all stalking seaward, as if to intercept the escape of the multitudinous vessels that were crowded between Foulness and the Naze.
The War of The Worlds H. G. Wells 2009
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