Part 20 (2/2)
Q. an _anchorite's_ stock, or supply; or from some fancied resemblance to the _stock_ of an _anchor_.
ANLAS, _s._ Properly ”a kind of knife or dagger usually worn at the girdle,” as the term occurs in Chaucer; but used to denote a pike fixed in the cheveron of a horse.
_Sir Gawan._
Franc. _anelaz_, _a.n.a.leze_, adlaterale telum, from _lez_ latus, the side; C. B. _anglas_, a dagger; L. B. _anelac-ius_, id.
ANN, _s._ A half-year's salary legally due to the heirs of a minister, in addition to what was due expressly according to the period of his inc.u.mbency, S.
_Acts Cha. II._
Fr. _annate_, L. B. _annata_.
ANMAILLE, _s._ Enamel.
V. ~Amaille~.
_To_ ANORNE, _v. a._ To adorn.
_Douglas._
L. B. _inorn-are_, Tertullian.
ANSE, ANZE, ENSE, _conj._ Else, otherwise, Ang.
Allied perhaps to Su. G. _annars_ alias.
_To_ ANTER, _v. n._
1. To adventure, S. B.
_Ross._
2. To chance, to happen, S. B.
_Journ. Lond._
3. In the form of a participle, as signifying occasional, single, rare.
An _antrin ane_, one of a kind met with singly and occasionally, or seldom, S.
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