Part 149 (2/2)
CATMAW, _s._ ”To tumble the _catmaw_,” to go topsy-turvy, to tumble, S.
B.
CATOUR, _s._ A caterer, a provider.
_Wallace._
O. Teut. _kater_, oeconomus.
V. ~Katouris~.
CAT-SILLER, _s._ The mica of mineralogists, S.; the _katzen silber_ of the vulgar in Germany.
CATTER, CATERR, _s._ Catarrh.
_b.e.l.l.e.n.den._
CATTLE-RAIK, _s._ A common, or extensive pasture, where cattle feed at large, S.
V. ~Raik~.
From _cattle_, and _raik_, to range.
CATWITt.i.t, _adj._ Harebrained, unsettled, q. having the _wits_ of a _cat_, S.
_To_ CAUCHT, _v. a._ To catch, to grasp.
_Douglas._
Formed from the pret. of _catch_.
_To_ CAVE, KEVE, _v. a._
1. To push, to drive backward and forward, S.
2. To toss. ”_To cave the head_,” to toss it in a haughty or awkward way, S.
_Cleland._
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