What is the meaning of SAXON. Phrases containing SAXON
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SAXON
SAXON
SAXON
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SAXON
SAXON
SAXON
n.
An idiom of the Saxon or Anglo-Saxon language.
a.
Anglo-Saxon.
n.
A native or inhabitant of modern Saxony.
n.
The quality or sentiment of being Anglo-Saxon, or English in its ethnological sense.
n.
One of the race or people who claim descent from the Saxons, Angles, or other Teutonic tribes who settled in England; a person of English descent in its broadest sense.
a.
Of or pertaining to the Saxons, their country, or their language.
n.
The language of the Saxons; Anglo-Saxon.
n.
One versed in the Saxon language.
n.
The Teutonic people (Angles, Saxons, Jutes) of England, or the English people, collectively, before the Norman Conquest.
n.
The Anglo-Saxon domain (i. e., Great Britain and the United States, etc.); the Anglo-Saxon race.
a.
Half Saxon; -- specifically applied to the language intermediate between Saxon and English, belonging to the period 1150-1250.
n.
A Saxon of Britain, that is, an English Saxon, or one the Saxons who settled in England, as distinguished from a continental (or "Old") Saxon.
a.
Of or pertaining to Saxony or its inhabitants.
a.
Of or pertaining to the Anglo-Saxons or their language.
n.
Also used in the sense of Anglo-Saxon.
n.
See Mountain soap, under Mountain.
a.
Relating to the Saxons or Anglo- Saxons.
n.
Same as Tsetse. U () the twenty-first letter of the English alphabet, is a cursive form of the letter V, with which it was formerly used interchangeably, both letters being then used both as vowels and consonants. U and V are now, however, differentiated, U being used only as a vowel or semivowel, and V only as a consonant. The true primary vowel sound of U, in Anglo-Saxon, was the sound which it still retains in most of the languages of Europe, that of long oo, as in tool, and short oo, as in wood, answering to the French ou in tour. Etymologically U is most closely related to o, y (vowel), w, and v; as in two, duet, dyad, twice; top, tuft; sop, sup; auspice, aviary. See V, also O and Y.
n.
A characteristic of the Anglo-Saxon race; especially, a word or an idiom of the Anglo-Saxon tongue.
n.
The language of the English people before the Conquest (sometimes called Old English). See Saxon.
SAXON
SAXON