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tyne
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Tyne

Tyne \Tyne\, v. t. [Icel. t?na.] To lose. [Obs. or Scot.] ``His bliss gan he tyne.''
--Piers Plowman.
--Sir W. Scott.

Tyne

Tyne \Tyne\, v. i. To become lost; to perish. [Obs.]
--Spenser.

Tyne

Tyne \Tyne\, n. [See Tine a prong.] (Zo["o]l.) A prong or point of an antler.

Tyne

Tyne \Tyne\, n. [See Teen, n.] Anxiety; tine. [Obs.] ``With labor and long tyne.''
--Spenser.

Wiktionary
tyne

Etymology 1 n. (context obsolete English) anxiety; teen vb. (context obsolete English) To become lost; to perish. Etymology 2

n. (alternative form of tine nodot=yes English) (prong or point of an antler)

Wikipedia
Tyne

Tyne is an Irish surname.

Tyne may also refer to:

  • River Tyne, England
  • The Port of Tyne comprises the commercial docks in and around the River Tyne in Tyne and Wear in the northeast of England.
  • River Tyne, Scotland
People
  • Edward Tyne, fl. 1906, New Zealand rugby player
  • Tyne Daly
  • Tyne O'Connell
Other
  • HMS Tyne
  • Rolls-Royce Tyne
  • Tyne, a sea area in the British Shipping Forecast
  • Tyne class lifeboats have been operated by the RNLI since 1982

Usage examples of "tyne".

Francis Tyne was a thin, earnest youth with a biggish head and fine colorless hair.

Hatch, Gid, young Francis Tyne, who was going to study for the ministry, an iron-faced older man who had once been a labor organizer, and David Traub, a handsome, precise lad from New York, forerunner of the eager and rather heroic caravan who were later to escape from too much racial discussion in New York, and emigrate like their fathers.

I canna help bein glaid that I had him, and to tyne him has gien me an unco sair hert!

The ayr quha wad kythe a bastard and carena, The mayd quha wad tyne her man and her bairn, Lift the neck, and enter, and fearna.

The Merdeka had been the nearest equivalent to home for Allan, Tyne and Murray.

Tyne had asked us again and again to suggest to him who might be the individual to whom Rait would direct a letter for delivery to me.

To the left, further down the road, was the lamppost that stood near the entrance to the alleyway leading into Tyne Street, beyond this and on the other side of the road, the Austin Tourer outside the wash-house.

The carriage bounced and wobbled and shook and when after crossing the Tyne they took the road to Wark by way of Chollerford she was well into her third and fourth thoughts about the advantages of broughams.

From the Channel to the Tyne they call us the Spoonbills, and on Cumbrian moors they know us as the Bog-blitters.

Duke of Summerfield, was in the Great Hall as well, along with most of the rest of the Kings CouncilNynor the castellan, last of Brones original allies, the twins first cousin Rorick, Earl of Dalers Troth, Tyne Aldritch, Blueshores earl, and a dozen other nobles, all wearing their best clothes.

Tyne saw several emotions juxtaposed on his face, all at war with each other.

He was just between the tyning and the winning, as the saying is, when the playactors, before spoken off, came to the town, being then in his eighteenth year.

Tyne Street and the usefully positioned No 26 after my first run-in with the Blackshirts when I was looking for safe havens.

The next affair was with Col. Tynes, who had been defeated by Marion some time before, made prisoner and sent to North Carolina.

The Counts of Flanders, of Boulogne, and of Blois, joined the young king in Paris, and did homage to him for fiefs which he bestowed on them--Kent, Dover, Eochester, lands in Lincolnshire, and domains and castles in Normandy--while he won the aid of the Scot king by granting him all Northumberland to the Tyne.