¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Tathing
1. tath [v] - See also: tath
Lexicographical Neighbors of Tathing
Literary usage of Tathing
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. An Economical History of the Hebrides and Highlands of Scotland by John Walker (1808)
"Water-tathing needs but a very small degree of labour, and only requires the
farmer to suffer the water to run on his ground in a proper manner. ..."
2. Publications by English Dialect Society (1894)
"tathing, manuring by the droppings of cattle fed on a piece of land. " Tath, rich
soft grass without seed stalks."—Hodgson MS. TATIE (a long), TETTY, ..."
3. A General Collection of the Best and Most Interesting Voyages and Travels in by John Pinkerton (1809)
"... the farmers manure with fea ware or weeds, which produces •richly ; in other
parts they ufe marie, lime, dung of cattle, and in the Highlands tathing, ..."
4. Northern France from Belgium and the English Channel to the Loire, Excluding by Karl Baedeker (Firm) (1899)
"... small) is another ¡tathing-resort, also served by a diligence from Lannion (8 M.
5 1 fr.). The railway traverses an undulating country, and beyond two ..."
5. The Encyclopaedia Britannica: “a” Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature edited by Hugh Chisholm (1911)
"... of the tathing in this way the tendency for the plaster to crack along the
line of joints is diminished and л better key a ..."
6. Elementary Treatise on Physics, Experimental and Applied: For the Use of by Adolphe Ganot, E. Atkinson (1886)
"tathing on the plate, and then holding a hot steel poms against it. When a space
free from moisture 'a* been found about the point, the whole plate is . ..."