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--- ../../gcide-0.44-orig/cide.y Sat May 26 17:30:19 2001
+++ cide.y Mon Jun 4 16:47:39 2001
@@ -79,7 +79,7 @@
<p><hw>Y</hw> <pr>(<imac/)</pr>, <pos>pron.</pos> <def>I.</def> <mark>[Obs.]</mark> <rj><au>King Horn. Wyclif.</au></rj><br/
[<source>1913 Webster</source>]</p>
-<p><mhw>{ <hw>Y-</hw> <pr>(?)</pr>, <it>or</it> <hw>I-</hw> }</mhw>. <ety>[OE. <ets>y-</ets>, <ets>i-</ets>, AS. <ets>ge-</ets>, akin to D. & G. <ets>ge-</ets>, OHG. <ets>gi-</ets>, <ets>ga-</ets>, Goth. <ets>ga-</ets>, and perhaps to Latin <ets>con</ets>-; originally meaning, together. Cf. <er>Com-</er>, <er>Aware</er>, <er>Enough</er>, <er>Handiwork</er>, <er>Ywis</er>.]</ety> <def>A prefix of obscure meaning, originally used with verbs, adverbs, adjectives, nouns, and pronouns. In the Middle English period, it was little employed except with verbs, being chiefly used with past participles, though occasionally with the infinitive <xex>Ycleped</xex>, or <xex>yclept</xex>, is perhaps the only word not entirely obsolete which shows this use.</def><br/
+<p><mhw>{ <hw>Y-</hw> <pr>(?)</pr>, <it>or</it> <hw>I-</hw> }</mhw>. <ety>[OE. <ets>y-</ets>, <ets>i-</ets>, AS. <ets>ge-</ets>, akin to D. & G. <ets>ge-</ets>, OHG. <ets>gi-</ets>, <ets>ga-</ets>, Goth. <ets>ga-</ets>, and perhaps to Latin <ets>con</ets>-; originally meaning, together. Cf. <er>Com-</er>, <er>Aware</er>, <er>Enough</er>, <er>Handiwork</er>, <er>Ywis</er>.]</ety> <def>A prefix of obscure meaning, originally used with verbs, adverbs, adjectives, nouns, and pronouns. In the Middle English period, it was little employed except with verbs, being chiefly used with past participles, though occasionally with the infinitive. <xex>Ycleped</xex>, or <xex>yclept</xex>, is perhaps the only word not entirely obsolete which shows this use.</def><br/
[<source>1913 Webster</source>]</p>
<p><q>That no wight mighte it see neither <qex>y</qex>heere.</q> <rj><qau>Chaucer.</qau></rj><br/
@@ -341,10 +341,10 @@
[<source>1913 Webster</source>]</p>
<p><sn>2.</sn> <fld>(Naut.)</fld> <def>The portion of a yard{6} outboard of the slings, often called the <altname>outer quarter</altname>.</def><br/
-[<source>RH</source>]</p>
+[<source>RDH</source>]</p>
<p><note> A yard{6} is considered to have four unequal quarters, two quarters extending from the mast to the slings on each side, and two smaller outer quarters outboard of the slings.</note><br/
-[<source>RH</source>]</p>
+[<source>RDH</source>]</p>
<p><hw>Yard"ful</hw> <pr>(?)</pr>, <pos>n.</pos>; <plu><it>pl.</it> <plw>Yardfuls</plw> <pr>(<?/)</pr>.</plu> <def>As much as a yard will contain; enough to fill a yard.</def><br/
[<source>1913 Webster</source>]</p>
@@ -461,7 +461,7 @@
[<source>1913 Webster</source>]</p>
<p><sn>2.</sn> def>A fore-and-aft-rigged vessel with two masts, a mainmast carrying a mainsail and jibs, taller than the mizzenmast and stepped a little farther forward than in a <contr>sloop</contr>, and with the mizzenmast, or jiggermast far aft, usually placed aft of the water line or aft the rudder post. The mizzenmast of a yawl is smaller, and set further aft, than that of a <contr>sloop</contr>.</def><br/
-[<source>Webster 1913 Suppl.</source> <source>+RH</source>]</p>
+[<source>Webster 1913 Suppl.</source> <source>+RDH</source>]</p>
<p><hw>Yawl</hw>, <pos>v. i.</pos> <ety>[OE. <ets>\'f4aulen</ets>, <ets>\'f4oulen</ets>, <ets>gaulen</ets>, <ets>goulen</ets>, Icel. <ets>gaula</ets> to low, bellow. Cf. <er>Gowl</er>.]</ety> <def>To cry out like a dog or cat; to howl; to yell.</def> <rj><au>Tennyson.</au></rj><br/
[<source>1913 Webster</source>]</p>
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