Channel
Our neighbours on the other side of the Channel have a technical term for that sort of sufferer: they say of him that he is mcdade d'un discours rentri^ or ill of a speech which has gone into the pati
Our neighbours on the other side of the Channel have a technical term for that sort of sufferer: they say of him that he is mcdade d'un discours rentri^ or ill of a speech which has gone into the pati (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx, Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume II > Chapter X: Difficulties of the Folklorist)
Our neighbours on the other side of the Channel have a technical term for that sort of sufferer: they say of him that he is mcdade d'un discours rentri^ or ill of a speech which has gone into the pati (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx, Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume II > Chapter X: Difficulties of the Folklorist)
Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx
- attribution: It is to the effect ' that once when trending up the Channel, and passing Grasholm Island, in what he had always known as deep water, he was surprised to see to windward of him a large tract of land c (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter II: The Fairies' Revenge)
"It is to the effect ' that once when trending up the Channel, and passing Grasholm Island, in what he had always known as deep water, he was surprised to see to windward of him a large tract of land covered with a beautiful green meadow."
- attestation: Our neighbours on the other side of the Channel have a technical term for that sort of sufferer: they say of him that he is mcdade d'un discours rentri^ or ill of a speech which has gone into the pati (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume II > Chapter X: Difficulties of the Folklorist)
"Our neighbours on the other side of the Channel have a technical term for that sort of sufferer: they say of him that he is mcdade d'un discours rentri^ or ill of a speech which has gone into the patient's constitution, like the measles or the small-pox when it fails to come out."
- attestation: Our neighbours on the other side of the Channel have a technical term for that sort of sufferer: they say of him that he is mcdade d'un discours rentri^ or ill of a speech which has gone into the pati (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume II > Chapter X: Difficulties of the Folklorist)
"without finding his opportunity. Our neighbours on the other side of the Channel have a technical term for that sort of sufferer: they say of him that he is mcdade d'un discours rentri^ or ill of a speech which has gone into the patient's constitution"