Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- verb Present participle of
chace .
Etymologies
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Examples
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Stores have such a pull with the public is becuase the man behine the counter is not all the time jilting you in the middle of your order & chacing off to be sweet to some sosciety dame with a dog 4 miles away.
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Hither fled part of the Parliamentary garrison, after being driven by the royalists from their fortress in the Newark; making a citadel of a church, which, on the arrival of the enemy to storm the hold was polluted with the bleeding bodies of Englishmen slain by Englishmen, who pursued their victory by chacing the defeated into the Market-Place, where the stragglers were slaughtered.
A Walk through Leicester being a Guide to Strangers Susannah Watts 1805
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The chacing ships no sooner returned, than the privateer was in company again.
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Our boat was so far distanced, in chacing the canoe which had taken the thief on board, that he had time to make his escape into the country.
A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels, Volume 16 Robert Kerr 1784
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But the wind would not suffer the other Bark in chacing to come up with us.
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I think bumrash and catflap have a gentle, subtle appeal for those who are c.unts. hippocrockodillofrog a very asthetically challenged female. and you have a face like youve been chacing to many parked cars. fuckingcuntyshittycuntyfuckingfuckityfuckfuck as said by beloved eldest daughter at my leaving do when she was asked not to swear by Mrs Fang when daughter got the microphone off the band's singer.
Army Rumour Service 2009
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And when the false moon steals away, Or e’er the chacing morn doth rise, Oft, fearless, we our gambols play By the fire-worm’s radiant eyes.
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In which time, the ling of Cyprus took two of king Richard's ships, and peremptorily denied their deliveryr For which he invaded the kingdom of Cypnis, making sbarp war therein, chacing the king from city to city, insomuch that he was compelled to yield, upon condition that he should not be laid in bonds of iron; whereof tlie Ung accepted, and kept his promise, causing him to be frttered in chains of silver, verifying that part of the pro* phccy:
The Life of Merlin: Surnamed Ambrosius; His Prophecies and Predictions Interpreted, and Their ... Thomas Heywood 1812
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