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Lammas
[ lam-uhs ]
noun
- a former festival in England, held on August 1, in which bread made from the first harvest of corn was blessed.
- a festival Feast of St. Peter's Chains observed by Roman Catholics on August 1, in memory of St. Peter's imprisonment and his miraculous deliverance.
Lammas
/ ˈlæməs /
noun
- RC Church Aug 1, held as a feast, commemorating St Peter's miraculous deliverance from prison
- Also calledLammas Day the same day formerly observed in England as a harvest festival. In Scotland Lammas is a quarter day
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Word History and Origins
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Word History and Origins
Origin of Lammas1
Old English hlāfmæsse loaf mass
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Example Sentences
If you time your visit between Maunday and Lammas, you obtain fourteen thousand years' pardon.
From Project Gutenberg
The red and white lammas, and the Cape or bearded wheat, are the species generally cultivated.
From Project Gutenberg
The lammas meadows are divided into strips like the arable land for the purpose of the hay crop.
From Project Gutenberg
Grass-yrth may be the gafol for the share in the Lammas meadows, and the gafol-yrth for the arable in the yard-land.
From Project Gutenberg
These open arable fields were originally divided off from the village by a stretch of Lammas land.
From Project Gutenberg
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