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Antonyms for quat


Grammar : Verb



Definition of quat

  • As in hunker : verb crouch
  • As in crouch : verb stoop low; cringe
Example sentences :
  • The words are often associated, as And quat for luue and quat for age, GE 3632.
  • Extract from : « Selections from Early Middle English 1130-1250: Part II: Notes » by Various
  • But, Dan,—I say, could ye no contrive to get quat o' thae English?
  • Extract from : « The Three Perils of Man, Vol. 1 (of 3) » by James Hogg
  • They seem to our ears indeed to have "quat their roaring play."
  • Extract from : « Recreations of Christopher North, Volume 2 » by John Wilson
  • Quat oget nu at for-bode o wold, GE 324, what now was the import of that prohibition; And vndernam him at it agte awold, id.
  • Extract from : « Selections from Early Middle English 1130-1250: Part II: Notes » by Various
  • There it is, sir—Im blythe to be quat of it; pitch it from ye furder than I can see.
  • Extract from : « The House on the Moor, v. 1/3 » by Mrs. Oliphant
  • When the deer lay down he was quat, when he stood still in covert he was stalling.
  • Extract from : « The Master of Game » by Second Duke of York, Edward
  • Crimen quos inquinat, quat—Crime puts those on an equal footing whom it defiles.
  • Extract from : « Dictionary of Quotations from Ancient and Modern, English and Foreign Sources » by James Wood
  • A quat in the midland counties is a pimple, which by rubbing is made to smart, or is rubbed to sense.
  • Extract from : « Notes to Shakespeare, Volume III: The Tragedies » by Samuel Johnson
  • Roderigo is called a quat by the same mode of speech, as a low fellow is now termed in lay language a scab.
  • Extract from : « Notes to Shakespeare, Volume III: The Tragedies » by Samuel Johnson

Synonyms for quat

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