deasil

  • 11widdershins — also withershins adverb Etymology: Middle Low German weddersinnes, from Middle High German widersinnes, from widersinnen to go against, from wider back against (from Old High German widar) + sinnen to travel, go; akin to Old High German sendan to …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 12withershins — /widh euhr shinz /, adv. Chiefly Scot. in a direction contrary to the natural one, esp. contrary to the apparent course of the sun or counterclockwise: considered as unlucky or causing disaster. Also, widdershins. Cf. deasil. [1505 15; < MLG&#8230; …

    Universalium

  • 13clockwise — 1. adverb /ˈklɒkwaɪz/ in a circular fashion so as to be moving to the right at the top of the circle and to the left at the bottom, in the way that the hands of an analogue/analog clock move. Syn: CW, dextrorotatory, sunwise, deasil Ant: C …

    Wiktionary

  • 14widdershins — adverb /ˈwɪ.də.ʃɪnz/lang=en/ˈwɪ.dɚ.ʃɪnz/lang=en Anticlockwise, counter clockwise. It is unlucky to walk widdershins around a church. Ant: clockwise, deasil …

    Wiktionary

  • 15withershins — with•er•shins [[t]ˈwɪð ərˌʃɪnz[/t]] also widdershins adv. scot. in a direction contrary to the apparent course of the sun; counterclockwise Compare deasil Etymology: 1505–15; &LT; MLG weddersin(ne) s &LT; MHG widdersinnes &LT; wider (OHG widar)&#8230; …

    From formal English to slang

  • 16deiseal — variant of deasil …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 17dessil — variant of deasil …

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  • 18deisal — deisal, deisul varr. deasil …

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  • 19deisul — deisal, deisul varr. deasil …

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  • 20deishal — deishal, eal, deisul var. of deasil …

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