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Definition of Aneath
1. prep. & adv. Beneath.
Definition of Aneath
1. beneath [adv]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Aneath
Literary usage of Aneath
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Ballad Book by Edmund Goldsmid (1885)
"O my dear, how may this be, That ye're sae blae aneath the ee,* That yere sae
blae aneath the ee ? Ye hae na lain your leen. Why did ye mock the merchant, ..."
2. A Complete Word and Phrase Concordance to the Poems and Songs of Robert by J. B. Reid (1889)
"... forlorn, S. The small birds rejoiced All friendless, forsaken, forlorn ! . S.
The sun he is sunk^ When I forlorn, aneath an aik sat moaning, ..."
3. The Scottish Gallovidian Encyclopedia by John Mactaggart (1876)
"O that he was aside me now; what tales wad I no tell him, and sing him scores o'
auld sangs, that maun a' sink aneath the sod \vi' auld ..."
4. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine (1828)
"... spin roun' till it becomes nearly invisible ; no content wi' that, up wi' a
ladder aneath his lip, wi' a laddie on't, as easily as if it were a ..."
5. An English Grammar: Methodical, Analytical, and Historical. With a Treatise by Eduard Adolf Ferdinand Maetzner (1874)
"The dialectical form aneath, which may be compared with atween, ahint, ayant,
does not diverge in mean ing: Jenny, pit the cod aneath my head (Scorr, ..."