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Examples
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"Please, Lady Odila," said Gerard, "if you can be serious for once, there must be someone here who knows the name uth Mondar.
Dragons Of A Lost Star Weis, Margaret 2001
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"The ostler says 'light airs from the s'uth'ard,' sir."
Hornblower And The Hotspur Forester, C. S. 1962
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We'll stand to the s'uth'ard under easy sail until midnight.
Hornblower And The Hotspur Forester, C. S. 1962
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"Light airs from the s'uth'ard — that means south, does it not?"
Hornblower And The Hotspur Forester, C. S. 1962
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With the ` Vanguard 'leading s'uth'ard in the haze --
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In the drear autumn weather a cloud of sail went to the s'uth'ard -- doughty little schooners, decks awash: beating up to the home ports.
Doctor Luke of the Labrador Norman Duncan 1893
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The fleet will smell around here till they wears their noses out, 'says he;' but Cap'n Sam Small is off t 'the s'uth'ard t' get his load o 'fat.'
Harbor Tales Down North With an Appreciation by Wilfred T. Grenfell, M.D. Norman Duncan 1893
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Off shore, the schooners of the great fleet crept by day to the s'uth'ard, harbouring by night: taking quick advantage of the variable winds, as chance offered.
Doctor Luke of the Labrador Norman Duncan 1893
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"'Tis t 'the s'uth'ard, zur," one of the men put in.
Doctor Luke of the Labrador Norman Duncan 1893
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"But if," said Bax, "Long Orrick said he would run to Pegwell Bay, which is three or four miles to the nor'ard o 'this, and resolved that he would _not_ go to Fiddler's Cave, which is six miles to the s'uth'ard, why should you go to the very place he's not likely to be found at?"
The Lifeboat 1859
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