Haint y marchogion, or Clwyf y marchogion, the hœmorrhoids Marchogaeth, n. horsemanship, v. to ride Marchogaethu, v. to practise horsemanship Marchoges, n. a riding woman; a female chevalier Marchoglu, n. cavalry, horse soldiers Marchogwisg, n. riding-habit Marchogwr, n. a rider, a horseman Marchol, a. belonging to a horse Marchon, n. the male ash Marchonen, n. a male ash tree Marchrawd, n. troop of horse Marchredyn, n. the polypody Marchridyll, n. a sifter, a skreen Marchwas, n. a horseman Marchwiail, n. saplings Marchwraint, n. tetters Marchwreinyn, n. a tetter Marchwriaeth, n. jockeyship Marchwrio, v. to ride, to jockey Marchysgall, n. Scotch thistle Mardon, n. dead skin, scurf Margan, n. a goddess feigned to conduct a soul on parting from the body Marian, n. holme; a strand Mariandir, n. holme land Marianedd, n. a holme Marl, n. a rich clay, marl Marliad, n. a marling Marm, n. dead earth; chalk Marmor, n. chalky earth: marble Marmoraidd, a. like marble Marmori, v. to form marble Marth, n. what is flat, plain, or open; sadness; what is sure Marw, meirw, n. the dead; mortality: v. to die, to become dead, a. dead, mortal, deceased Marwâd, n. a mortifying Marwaidd, a. deadish, lifeless Marwaol, a. mortifying, deadening Marwâu, v. to deaden, to mortify Marwdom, n. scurf, dandriff Marwdy, n. an escheat by death Marwdyst, n. a dead evidence Marwdywarchen, n. a death clod Marwddwfr, n. a dead water Marwddydd, n. mortal day Marwedd, n. a deadness Marweiddiad, n. a deadening Marweiddio, v. to deaden, to benumb Marweiddiol, a. deadening Marwerydd, n. delirium, distraction Marwgoel, n. a death omen Marwgwsg, n. legarthy; a dormouse Marwhaint, n. a mortal disease Marwhun, n. death sleep, trance Marwlanw, n. turn of a tide, high water Marwnad, n. death cry; elegy Marwnadu, v. to mourn the dead Marwol, a. deadly, mortal Marwolâd, n. a deadening Marwolaeth, n. death, decease; mortality Marwolaethu, v. to put to death Marwoldeb, n. mortality Marwolu, v. to deaden, to grow dead Marwolus, a. of a dead nature Marwor, n. burning cinders Marworyn, n. ember Marw-wystl, n. a mortgage Marwydos, n. embers Marwysgafn, n. death-bed song Marwysgar, n. a death parting Mas, n. a swoon; ecstacy Masaidd, a. tending to faint Masarn, n. the sycamore Masarnen, n. a sycamore Masawd, n. a swooning, a fainting Masg, n. a mesh, a net-work, lattice Masgiad, n. a reticulation, netting Masgl, n. a mesh; a pod Masgliad, n. a reticulating; podding Masglog, a. reticulated; podded Masglu, v. to reticulate; to pod Masgnach, n. concern, business, trade Masgnachu, v. to do business, to trade Masgnachwr, n. a tradesman, a dealer, a chapman Masgol, a. reticulated, meshed Masgu, v. to reticutate, to lattice Masu, v. to swoon, to faint Masw, a. fluttering; wanton; soft; languishing Maswedd, n. languor: levity, wantonness Masweddiad, n. a wantoning Masweddu, v. to languish; to wanton Maswy, a. wanton, sportive, light Mat, n. a mat, plaited work Mater, n. exigency, matter Matog, n. a mattock, a hoe Matras, n. a mattress; a matting Matrasu, v. to form a mattress Mâth, n. what is flat or spread Math, n. a sort, a kind Mathr, n. a strew, a spread Mathrach, Mathriad, n. a trampling down Mathru, v. to trample down Mau, n. what is owned by one’s-self: pron. — from A Pocket Dictionary: Welsh-English by William Richards
not a military man and do
I am not a military man, and do not profess to know anything about bombs technically, but it seems to me, considering that it is their object to burst, and considering the number of scientific persons who have devoted their time to make them burst, it is very strange how very few do burst. — from Diary of the Besieged Resident in Paris by Henry Labouchere
night and makin me Ah did
And what you told us last night about them there shoals that’s supposed to be somewheres ahead of us have been stickin’ in my mind all night and makin’ me— Ah! did ye hear that, sir?” — from Overdue: The Story of a Missing Ship by Harry Collingwood
You don't mind my telling the truth, do you, because I hope you will write another, and if you like you may stand in the first class of novelists and make money and do good too, but put your beasts a little further in towards the end of the first volume. — from The Life of Sir Richard Burton by Thomas Wright
,” said the count to the two notaries and Messieurs Margueron and de Reybert, “let us go into the next room and conclude this business before dinner, because, as my friend Mistigris would say: ‘Qui esurit constentit.’ — from A Start in Life by Honoré de Balzac
nothing and my mind also during
"When these revolutions had continued for some few moments, I became about every alternate second, as it were, blind, seeing nothing, and my mind also during the same period became a blank; then pictures alternately flashed across the darkness, so rapidly that I could not perfectly grasp them. — from The Chariot of the Flesh by Hedley Peek
Now a man may arbitrarily decide
Now, a man may arbitrarily decide that he will use the word "reality" to indicate only that which can never in its turn be regarded as appearance, a reality which must remain an ultimate reality; and he may insist upon our telling him about that. — from An Introduction to Philosophy by George Stuart Fullerton
nearly a million miles a day
Earth was now past the point of conjunction with M-387, and moved nearly a million miles a day along its orbit, with nearly half of them away from the fortress. — from The Wailing Asteroid by Murray Leinster
This tab, called Hiding in Plain Sight,
shows you passages from notable books where your word is accidentally (or perhaps deliberately?)
spelled out by the first letters of consecutive words.
Why would you care to know such a thing? It's not entirely clear to us, either, but
it's fun to explore! What's the longest hidden word you can find? Where is your name hiding?