Definitions
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun A Middle English form of
come .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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Kimes, then, are neither more nor less than a false print in the Edinburgh Review for knives; and from this blunder of the printer has Mr. Styles manufactured this Daedalean instrument of torture, called a kime!
Sydney Smith Rusell, George W E 1904
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Or from a Zen perspective, you're trying to reach that state of mushin where you are in total focus and concentration, where the mind and body have become one (which is also illustrated in "kime" where you unlock your ki/chi in a split second, but I digress yet again).
MSDN Blogs 2010
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Suheyl Gur 21 days ago müzik kime ait acaba öğrenebilir miyim çok merak ettim!
Binboa Kendi Şişeni Kendin Yarat Stop Motion Video on Vimeo 2010
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There's an old Turkish proverb: "Eschein koryonu kalabalikta kesme, kime uzun, der kime kiza" ... which means, "Never cut the donkey's tail in public ... someone will say you cut it too short, and someone will say you left it too long".
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December 21st, 2004 at 10:18 am hello all kime Says:
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The food, reduced by the action of the gastric juice to a grayish, soupy mass, called _chyme_ (kime), escapes through that jealously guarded door, the pylorus.
Hygienic Physiology : with Special Reference to the Use of Alcoholic Drinks and Narcotics Joel Dorman Steele
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Then, on Friday, jest as I was shootin 'at an' ole 'are what I see, up kime an orficer, one o' thim Staff gints.
Mud and Khaki Sketches from Flanders and France Vernon Bartlett 1938
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When I first kime aht ter fight the 'Uns, I was up at St. Eloi, an' they blew the 'ole lot of us up one night.
Mud and Khaki Sketches from Flanders and France Vernon Bartlett 1938
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A drawing of the kime was imperiously called for; and the want of it is a subtle evasion, for which Mr. Styles is fairly accountable.
Sydney Smith Rusell, George W E 1904
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When digestion is so far advanced as to convert the food into chyme, [pronounced kime,] it is poured into the duodenum, where it mixes with the panchreatic juice.
glypheme commented on the word kime
A fellow or a man.
"That at the last the sely kime" — Chaucer's "Plowman's Tale"
March 15, 2014