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Definition of Jutish
1. Noun. One of the major dialects of Old English.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Jutish
Literary usage of Jutish
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Arts in Early England by Gerard Baldwin Brown (1915)
"Ramsgate, Kent, jutish, 699. Reading, Berks, W. Saxon, 642 ; late use of cemetery,
118. ... Strood, Kent, jutish, 741; Christian object found at, 115. ..."
2. Consuetudines Kanciae: A History of Gavelkind, and Other Remarkable Customs by Charles Sandys (1851)
"We may, however, safely infer, that in the Saxon or jutish kingdom of Kent, the
prerogatives, attributes, and authority of the king—the rights and ..."
3. Rural Denmark and Its Schools by Harold Waldstein Foght (1915)
"and the lighter Fredriksborg bays; likewise, the fine black and white jutish cows
and the smaller red ..."
4. The Antiquary by Edward Walford, John Charles Cox, George Latimer Apperson (1894)
"As regards the jutish physiognomy, Mr. Park Harrison is of opinion that traces
... He considers that the peculiarity of the jutish features consists in the ..."
5. The Races of Europe: A Sociological Study (Lowell Institute Lectures) by William Zebina Ripley (1899)
"... last of the Germanic series, came to the islands after thev had become so
infiltrated with Teutonic jutish ..."
6. English Towns and Districts: A Series of Addresses and Sketches by Edward Augustus Freeman (1883)
"We here probably find the key to the fact of a jutish settlement under Saxon
supremacy. The jutish chieftains were doubtless the sisters' sons of the Saxon ..."