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Examples
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Ah weant be a farthing towards nae sic thing as that, that ah wean't, sea ah'l say it at yance.
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"Nay, but it wean't rain, and I can sit close to the fire and keep mysen warm."
Dick o' the Fens A Tale of the Great East Swamp George Manville Fenn 1870
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"The 'coy-ducks wean't be hungry and come for their food, so we'll wait for another time."
Dick o' the Fens A Tale of the Great East Swamp George Manville Fenn 1870
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"Nay, nay, we wean't do that," shouted one of the men.
Dick o' the Fens A Tale of the Great East Swamp George Manville Fenn 1870
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"I wish father wouldn't say _coot_ and _wean't_!" whispered Tom, whose school teaching made some of the homely expressions and bits of dialect of the fen-land jar.
Dick o' the Fens A Tale of the Great East Swamp George Manville Fenn 1870
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"Ay, I know all about that," said the man harshly; "but it wean't be much good to him if he dree-erns the fen."
Dick o' the Fens A Tale of the Great East Swamp George Manville Fenn 1870
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"Nay, I wean't say a word, sir; I don't want to get more scarred than I am sometimes now."
Cutlass and Cudgel George Manville Fenn 1870
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"You see, squire, it wean't be open enemies we shall have to fear --"
Dick o' the Fens A Tale of the Great East Swamp George Manville Fenn 1870
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"No; we can't do that, and we wean't," cried Hickathrift.
Dick o' the Fens A Tale of the Great East Swamp George Manville Fenn 1870
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"Nay, yow wean't catch them here," said Dave oracularly.
Dick o' the Fens A Tale of the Great East Swamp George Manville Fenn 1870
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