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sagittary
[ saj-i-ter-ee ]
noun
, plural sag·it·tar·ies.
- a centaur with a bow, as Chiron.
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Word History and Origins
Origin of sagittary1
1425–75; late Middle English < Latin: Sagittarius
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Example Sentences
In the little hollow with stone cottages on the way thither a boy opened a gate for us whose name was Sagittary Clump.
From Project Gutenberg
Does she come to his bedroom at his private Lodgings, or his quarters at the Sagittary?
From Project Gutenberg
Othello brings Desdemona from her father's house to his residence in the "Sagittary."
From Project Gutenberg
A true Renaissance sign we find again in the “Sagittary,” cursorily mentioned in “Othello” (i, i).
From Project Gutenberg
Also blazoned as a sagittary, and supposed to have been a badge of King Stephen.
From Project Gutenberg
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