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Wordbook com
Wordbook com






|etymology=compound of ''wort'' 'plant, herb' + -CRAFT |meaning=the growing of plants and flowers, the craft and lore about growing plants Here is the true input brooked for the byspel near the top of the leaf: The meaning and wordlore can be given in any way you find fitting, whether that be a sore starchy wordbookway or something more offhand. Hopefully, the knowledge needed in each one is selfreckoning the only thing is that the meaning and likewords are sundered, as both are called for to shun the wordbook onefold becoming a likewordlist, which is not of as much brookness in the long run.

wordbook com

The ash brooked looks like this (you can cut and stick this to brook):Īs you can see, there are rooms left after the samenesstokens for keying the input. It may look overwhelming at first, but if you follow the short reckoning below, it is not too hard. To make a standhard input, like the one above, you need to brook an outlay, which is mainly a forewritten shard of ash (code, they're kinwords) which shapes and lays out your input right. A good way to mete this is to fathom brooking it in talk and thinking about what the backdeed of the other wight would be. This can be anything from wholly new words made up outfoldly for Anglish/New English to seldseen, byledish words. The only law is that the word must be in some way onelike to Anglish/New-English, that is, not found in Ancwe (Ancillary World English).

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If you feel like the wordbook is missing a word or a meaning, kindly feel free to put it in, for the wordbook will only grow with forthwarded bestowings from all Anglish/New-English brookers. If the word is already in the wordbook, it will have the offshortening OED or CED (Oxford or Cambridge). The last bit, in four-sided hooks, is the wordlore, giving some knowledge of its birth. The main body of the input is a bewriting of what the word means and also, if needed, how it is brooked. The wordbook brooks mean offshortenings from wordbooks for these, such as n for nameword, vb for deedwords, adj for markwords, and so forth. First comes the word itself, in bold rune, followed by the deal of speech, slant-runed (italics).






Wordbook com