| bedlam |
Bethlehem was shortened to Bedleem and Bedlem in Middle English. The hospital was nicknamed Bedlam from early on. From the early 16th century, bedlam also came to mean `mad'. Shakespeare, in Henry 6th, speaks of "the bedlam brain-sick duchess" (1590s?). This use lasted to the early 18th century, but the late 16th century was already using bedlamite.
Ãâó: www.mdx.ac.uk/www/study/mhhglo.htm
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| bed |
In geology the term bed refers to a individual layer of the rock, which is distinguishable from the beds above and below it.
Ãâó: palaeo.gly.bris.ac.uk/Palaeofiles/Triassic/glossar...
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| bed |
That area of the Stock onto which the Iron rests.
Ãâó: www.supertool.com/etcetera/wplanes/wterms.htm
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| bed |
A vault supported by or decorated with arched diagonal ribs (rib: one of the curved pieces of an arch)
Ãâó: ah.bfn.org/a/DCTNRY/ch/
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| bed |
Bachelor of Education, first degree
Ãâó: www.mathsinquiry.org.uk/report/appendix-3.html
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