Do we say dean or dene

dean 2685 occurrences

On the restoration of Charles II., when church-properly was again secure, his lordship restored it to the cathedral; and there is now an inscription upon it, recording the gratitude of the Dean and Chapter for having so valuable a possession restored them.

The barber from Eton and his seven daughters elbowed the dean who rented his back parlour, when he was in the sixth form,and who now was crowding to the front rank for a smile of majesty, having heard that the Bishop of Chester was seriously indisposed.

We do not object to that milder form of philology of which the works of Dean Trench offer the readiest and most pleasing example, and which confines itself to the mere study of words, to the changes of form and meaning they have undergone and the forgotten moral that lurks in them.

Dean Farrar of Canterbury, concluding his glorification of the hell which I then saw enacted in South Africa, quoted with heartfelt approval the Archbishop of Armagh's poem: "And, as I note how nobly natures form Under the war's red rain, I deem it true That He who made the earthquake and the storm

He woke in the morning with a sense of profound tranquillity, and thought with admiration of the Dean of his College, whose one rule of life was never to allow anyone to call him.

His eldest brother was Master of Pembroke, Cambridge, and Dean of Norwich: his youngest son was Sir Charles Turner, a Lord Justice of Appeal; and Dawson Turner was his nephew.

This examination is followed by a public discussion in presence of the dean and professors of the faculty, held in Latin, on some thesis that has been treated and printed in the same language by the candidate.

That celebrated, though indelicate divine, Dean Swift, was, like Alexander Pope, deeply interested in the designing of this park.

In 1510, Dr. John Colet, dean of St. Paul's church, in London, appointed him the first high master of St. Paul's School, then recently founded by this gentleman's munificence.

The Dean and Spaniard must reproach ye."Swift.

Lord Kames commends Dean Swift for having done "all in his power to restore the syllable ed;" says, he "possessed, if any man ever did, the true genius of the English tongue;" and thinks that in rejecting these ugly contractions, "he well deserves to be imitated.

SEE Frisbie, Robert Dean.

SEE FISH, HELEN DEAN.

Winston W. Crouch & Dean E. McHenry (A); 22Jan73; R544660. CROW, CARL.

SEE CHRISTY, ARTHUR E., ed. DEAN, AMBER. SEE GETZIN, AMBER DEAN.

DEAN, GORDON.

Amber Dean Getzin (A); 7Mar73; R547596.

R90767, 15Feb52, Chester L. Dawes (A) DE ALARCÓN, PEDRO ANTONIO SEE Alarcón, Pedro Antonio de. DEAN, REGINALD SCOTT.

R88014, 26Dec51, Reginald Scott Dean (A) DEARBORN, NED, joint author Birds in their relations to man.

R118450, 7Oct53, Maria Martinez Sierra (W) Sol de la tarde; edited with direct-method exercises, notes, and vocabulary by Charles Dean Cool, with a critical introd.

SEE Baker, Clara B. BAKER, EDNA DEAN.

Edna Dean Baker (A); 7Jan55; R142012.

FALES, DEAN.

Dean Fales (A); 26Jan55; R143631.

MARSHALL, MARGUERITE MOOERS. SEE Dean, Marguerite Mooers Marshall.

dene 99 occurrences

Then, or ever Beltane could stay him, Walkyn o' the Dene laid by his axe, and, his soaked shoes soundless upon the stones, began to steal upon the unconscious singer, who yet lolled upon his spear some thirty paces away.

"Thus, then, saith Walkyn o' the Dene: That scarce had he stormed and set fire to yonder prison-keep, than from the south cometh a great company, the which he at the first did take for ye.

Al that gren me graueth grene, Nou hit faleweth al by-dene; grows yellow: speedily. Jhesu, help that hit be sene, seen.

Ohthere farther says, that he sailed in five days from Sciringes-heal to that port which is called Haethum , which lies between Winedum, Seaxun, and Anglen, and makes part of Dene.

When he sailed to this place from Sciringes-heal, Dene, or Denmark, was on his left, and on his right was a wide sea for three days; as were also on his right, two days before he came to Haethum, Gotland, Sillende, and many other islands, which were inhabited by the Angles before they came to Britain; and during these two days, the islands belonging to Denmark were on his left hand.

Weonothland was on his right; but Langaland, Laeland, Falster, and Sconeg, were on the left, all of which belong to Dene-mearkan.

Denmark obviously, called simply Dene, in the voyages of Ohthere.

Prom hence to the north-west is that land which is called Angle, with Sellinde, and some other parts of Dene.

To the south-west of Dene or Denmark, formerly mentioned, is that arm of the ocean which surrounds Brittania, and to the north is that arm which is called the Ostsea or East sea; to the east and north are the north Dene, or North Danes, both on the continent and on the islands.

To the south-west of Dene or Denmark, formerly mentioned, is that arm of the ocean which surrounds Brittania, and to the north is that arm which is called the Ostsea or East sea; to the east and north are the north Dene, or North Danes, both on the continent and on the islands.

The North Dene have to the north that arm of the sea which is called the East sea, and to the east is the nation of the Osti, and the Afdrede, or Obotrites, to the south.

Dene is Denmark in its most limited sense.

But suddenly a brilliant idea occurred to Miss Dene, who loved dramatic effects.

And seeing Miss Dene at Rushing River Camp she was almost inclined to be glad that Nick was not there.

If Carmen had committed the crime of sending the poison-oak, it must have been in a fit of madness, after hearing thingsstupid thingsfrom Miss Dene.

" "So do I you," Nick was glad to reply with truth; and his heart warmed to the wisp of a woman to whom Miss Dene had been catty and Mrs. May kind.

He alone in America (since Theo Dene was gone, and Kate merely suspected) knew that Mrs. May was the Princess di Sereno, who had never been a wife to Paolo di Sereno except in name.

And it was the very piece of news which had set Theo Dene wondering whether Angela "knew about the Prince.

It was about this time that Angela left Rome, and what Theo Dene wondered if Mrs. May "knew about the Prince," was his hope to break the record for distance in a new aeroplane.

Mr. Morehouse, who took one or two French and English illustrated weeklies as well as New York daily papers, saw these things as soon as Theo Dene saw them; and, when Angela returned to San Francisco from Bakersfield, he told her of the Prince's project.

A prettier bit of coursing I never did see!" "Ah! that was the country fellow that turned up when we sounded the mort by Col-Dene.

The title stood out with arresting clearness on the white paper jacket: Gold of the Desert by Dene Strange.

It's only that during the past few years some books have been published by one named Dene Strange that have attracted attention in certain quarters.

SEE Coolidge, Dene.

"Grainger Street" and "Jesmond Dene" give direct evidence of "Canny N'castle."

Do we say   dean   or  dene