husbandmen
111BAMBAR`RA — (2,000), a Soudan state on the banks of the Upper Niger, opened up to trade; the soil fertile; yields grain, dates, cotton, and palm oil; the natives are negroes of the Mohammedan faith, and are good husbandmen …
112SILVANUS — an Italian divinity, the guardian of trees, fields, and husbandmen; represented as a hale, happy, old man …
113WALSTON, ST. — patron saint of husbandmen, of British birth; gave up wealth for agriculture, and died at the plough; is represented with a scythe in his hand and cattle near him …
114parables — Teaching [[➝ teaching]] by means of a comparison; stories of varying length containing a meaning or message over and above the straightforward and literal, with an element of metaphor. In the teaching of Jesus brief aphorisms (e.g. Matt. 24:28)… …
115Shaftesbury, Anthony Ashley Cooper, Seventh Earl of — (1801–85) British reformer. Lord Shaftesbury was regarded as the representative Englishman of the early Victorian period, a devout Christian and a social reformer. Like the Puritan leaders in CROMWELL’S time, he believed that the second advent …
Who’s Who in Jewish History after the period of the Old Testament
116husbandman — noun (plural husbandmen) archaic a farmer. Origin ME: from husband in the obs. sense farmer + man …
117vindictive — vindictive, revengeful, vengeful are close synonyms often used interchangeably to mean showing or motivated by a desire for vengeance. Distinctively vindictive tends to stress this reaction as inherent in the nature of the individual and,… …
118husbandman — /ˈhʌzbəndmən/ (say huzbuhndmuhn) noun (plural husbandmen) → farmer (def. 1) …
119clericus et agricola et mercator, tempore belli, ut oret, colat, et commutet, pace fruuntur — /klerakas et agrikala et markeytar, tempariy belay, at orat kowlat et komyatat, peysiy fruwantar/ Clergymen, husbandmen, and merchants, in order that they may preach, cultivate, and trade, enjoy peace in time of war …
120cotuchans — A term used in Domesday for peasants, boors, husbandmen …