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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Eath

Eath \Eath\ ([=e]th), a. & adv. [AS. e['a][eth]e.] Easy or easily. [Obs.] ``Eath to move with plaints.''
--Fairfax.

Wiktionary
eath

a. (label en Now chiefly dialectal) easy; not hard or difficult. adv. (context Now chiefly dialectal English) easily.

Usage examples of "eath".

Man on a Horse, near the end of a long, long journey in which he had talked to no one but animals for days and days, cold and wet and tired almost tod eath, was truly seeing that great vision, the battle between the Sky and the Earth.

Evry body feels sorry at the factery and I dont want that eather so Im going someplace where nobody knows that Charlie Gordon was once a genus and now he cant even reed a book or rite good.

Who so in pompe of proud estate (quoth she)Does swim, and bathes himselfe in courtly blis,Does waste his dayes in darke obscuritee,And in obliuion euer buried is:Where ease abounds, yt's eath to doe amis.

With her, who so will raging Furor tame,Must first begin, and well her amenage:First her restraine from her reprochfull blame,And euill meanes, with which she doth enrageHer franticke sonne, and kindles his courage,Then when she is withdrawen, or strong withstood,It's eath his idle furie to asswage,And calme the tempest of his passion wood.

Let us swop hats and excheck a few strong verbs weak oach eather yapyazzard abast the blooty creeks.

Let us swop hats and excheck a few strong verbs weak oach eather yapyazzard.