Front | thew \THOO\ |
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Back | noun 1. Usually, thews. muscle or sinew. 2. Thews, physical strength. ["Thew" has had a long, difficult past during which it discovered its strengths and weaknesses. In Middle English it carried a number of meanings, referring to a custom, habit, personal quality, or virtue. The word began to tire in the 16th century but was soon revitalized with a new meaning: it began to be used specifically for the quality of physical strength and later for the muscles demonstrating that quality. In time, the word buddied up with "sinew" in both literal and figurative turns of phrase, as in "the thews and sinews of my body ached" and "their love affair was the thew and sinew of the story."] thewless /THYOO-lis/ adjective 1. Cowardly. 2. Lacking energy. [From thew (muscle, strength), from Old English theaw (custom, usage). Earliest documented use: before 1327.] "The devil, the heathen, the apostate will be awe-struck, thewless before our superior metal." - Irv C. Rogers; Motoo Eetee: Shipwrecked at the Edge of the World; McBooks Press; 2002. |
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