geazon
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English
[edit]Adjective
[edit]geazon (comparative more geazon, superlative most geazon)
- Alternative form of geason
- 1821, Robert Laneham, Laneham's Letter[1], Digitized edition, published 2007, page 29:
- One had a saddle, another a pad or a pannel fastened with a cord, for girths were geazon.
- 1937, George Puttenham, quotee, edited by George Gregory Smith, Elizabethan Critical Essays[2], Digitized edition, published 2008, page 119:
- … ye shal finde many other word to rime with him, bycause such terminations are not geazon, …
- 1969, George Gascoigne, “Weedes”, in John William Cunliffe, editor, The Complete Works of George Gascoigne[3], Digitized edition, published 2009, page 370:
- Why live I wretch alas (quoth he) where all good luck is geazon?