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accinge
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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English
Etymology
Pronunciation
Verb
accinge (third-person singular simple present accinges, present participle accinging, simple past and past participle accinged)
- (reflexive, archaic) To prepare oneself for action.
- 1657, Joannes Renodæus [i.e., Jean de Renou], translated by Richard Tomlinson, “Of Wine”, in A Medicinal Dispensatory, Containing the Whole Body of Physick: […], London: […] Jo[hn] Streater and Ja[mes] Cottrel, page 219:
- Æſchylus alſo never accinged himſelf to write Tragedies, unleſs he had firſt imbibed himſelf with Wine.
- 1829, Thomas Love Peacock, The Misfortunes of Elphin,
- "Friend Seithenyn," said the abbot, when, having passed the castle gates, and solicited an audience, he was proceeding to the presence of Melvas, "this task, to which I have accinged myself is arduous, and in some degree awful;
- 1831, Thomas Love Peacock, Crotchet Castle,
- He accinged himself to the task with his usual heroism, and having finished it to his entire satisfaction, reminded his host to order in the devil.
- 1855, James John Garth Wilkinson, War, Cholera, and the Ministry of Health, p. 58
- [...]but we must now accinge ourselves to other less agreeable considerations.
- 1898, Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch, The Astonishing History of Troy Town,
- Peter, instead of adjuring Miss Limpenny to fear no more the heat o' the sun, accinged himself to the practical difficulty.
- 1943, Sir Arthur Thomas, Cambridge Lectures, J.M. Dent; E.P. Dutton, page 241,
- when those doors had been re-opened as sluíces to admit the mud and garbage of Restoration drama, the old man gallantly accinged himself to his old task and wrote Samson Agonistes'.
Translations
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Italian
Pronunciation
Verb
accinge
Anagrams
Latin
Pronunciation
- (Classical Latin) IPA(key): [akˈkɪŋ.ɡɛ]
- (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): [atˈt͡ʃin̠ʲ.d͡ʒe]
Verb
accinge
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