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Etymologies
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Examples
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We coafled certain iflets where we noticed the fea covered with herbs,, notwithflanding it was here of very confiderable depth: we feemed to be in. another 'fea*.
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Those who came into his presence could rarely recall his feaÂtures, but they never forgot his eyes: dark, roving, all-seeing, without pity, without compassion.
Dragons Of Summer Flame Weis, Margaret 1995
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A Sea is a fmaller colleftipn of waters, when underftood in a flrift fenfe, as the Irifh Sea; but, in general, every part of the ocean may be called the fea; and it is ftill more general, when the terraqueous globe is faid to cdnfift of land and fea.
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The country round Surat is fertile, ex - derS for the. edge of the country on all cept toward the fea, which is fandy atod lides has a rich foil, extremely fruitful barren.
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On failing from hence you will fee a fmall city near the fea, which is called Tipha.
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In the afternoon we obferved a great quantity of fcum, or rather fpawn, up - on the water, which the failors ludi - croufly called fea faw-dufl; and the fea appeared remarkable light-coloured..,
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57 12 N. Jordan, a river of Palcftinc, which riles in Mount Libanus, and runs from N.to s, forming two lakes, the one for - merly called the fea of Galilee, or the Jake of Tiberias, and the other, the DeaA Sra.
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The caverns and crevices of the rocks were inhabited by phoca and morfes, a kind of fea-calves and lea-lions.
Sporting Magazine 1795
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A kind of fea-dog, with a large head, and a jaw like a warming pan; it is marked on the back with a crofs, and is fo large that a lingle fifli loads two or three boats.
Theory of tides, tr. [extr. from Études de la nature]. Jacques Henri Bernardin de Saint Pierre 1795
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Yesterday, Frank Gaffney penned an op-ed for the Washington Times in which he claimed that "Barack Hussein Obama would have to be considered America's first Muslim president" and alleged that "the man now happy to have his Islamic-rooted middle name fea Tom Watson | The Huffington Post
Blogrunner 2009
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