Sunday, March 2, 2008

Alice In Wonderland Infant

O

Octant [adj. num. inv.]
Eighty; the use of this word has become rare.
(...) he was Swiss and said "eighty", it was a bit shocking (...) (On the Web).

order, order [adj.]
Switzerland: ordered that order.
In stores, they put the ticket dispenser to the tail or order. (On the Web).

filthy [nf]
Neuchâtel shovel garbage [Pierrehumbert].

Dare [v. intr.]
Switzerland: often used in place of power. It's a Germanism.
Mom, we dare to go out and play?

Ouaffe [nf]
Savoy slush. The
Ouaffe meaning "slush" in the Savoyard dialect, and that's good because at those times is what will surely be good Ouaffe ... (On the Web).

OUATT! [Interj.]
Negation casual interjection of disgust.
had much worry? - OUATT!

Ouiste [nf]
Verge, flexible stick.

Ouister [v. tr.]
Threatening with a stick.

Worker [nm]
Neuchâtel surface Vine worked by a person in one day.
arrived in his few workers on the red rocks, Porret turns bitterly to work weeding the yellow earth, dry as a brick. (On the Web).

Ovaille [nf]
Landslide, mudflow gushing into a slope and tear resulting from supersaturated soil at the outlet of a temporary source, such ovaille Gondo, 14 October 2000. Old French orvaille, ovaille, Orval, "disaster, disaster," former French Orval, Orval, 'storm, hurricane ", Orval," hurricane devastation, disaster, accident, Saxon's Ordell, who gave the English and French ordeal ordeal. Looking through the
ovaille, [Rene Leyvraz] observed that even in a land ravaged and covered with a mass of debris, life is supreme, and that over time, vines and trees can regrow. (On the Web). (...)
burst order and filth, and living the orvaille orgy. (On the Web).

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