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Old French, Old | the earliest form of the French language; 9th to 15th century | |
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sure-enough, old, honest-to-god, honest-to-goodness | (used informally especially for emphasis); | |
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old | of long duration; not new | |
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old | past times | |
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Old | [in linguistics] of a very early stage in development | |
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old | very familiar | |
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Old English, Anglo-Saxon, Old | English prior to about 1100 | |
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previous, old | just preceding something else in time or order | |
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disused, obsolete, old, neglected, archaic, antique, old-fashioned, antiquated, ancient, out of date | no longer in use | |
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Old Irish, Old | Irish Gaelic up to about 1100 | |
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former, onetime, old, erstwhile, one-time, quondam, sometime, previous, past, ex-, once | belonging to some prior time | |
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old | (used especially of persons) having lived for a relatively long time or attained a specific age | |
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Old High German, Old | High German prior to 1200 | |
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Old Norse, Old | the extinct Germanic language of medieval Scandinavia and Iceland from about to 700 to 1350 | |
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old, older | skilled through long experience |