anorn
English
Etymology
From Old French aorner, aourner, from Latin adornare (“to adorn”).
Verb
anorn (third-person singular simple present anorns, present participle anorning, simple past and past participle anorned)
- (obsolete) To adorn.
- 1882, Thomas Ainge Devyr, The Odd Book of the Nineteenth Century:
- proclamation anorned the walls
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References
- anorn in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913
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