Volume
1 II| hedgehog. ~wood, woodness, n., mad, madness. ~ ~END OF VOL.
2 III| prison. Then said S. Blase: O mad man, weenest thou by thy
3 III| but anon they became so mad that one of them lost forthwith
4 III| And when a Saracen, being mad, is brought thither, and
5 III| judge lost his mind and was mad, because they strove against
6 III| mouth of them that were mad and vexed, which were burnt
7 III| men which kept their wives mad; they went to the church
8 III| scarcely. ~wood. add., mad.~END OF VOL. III ~
9 IV| covetise, and the fifth of a mad woodness. The quenching
10 IV| n., spring. ~wood, ady., mad. ~END OF VOL. IV~
11 V| deemed him a heretic were mad. He was all in lessons,
12 V| people, and said that he was mad, and when he understood
13 V| n., octave. ~wood, adj., mad.~END OF VOL. V ~
14 VI| looking upward to heaven as a mad man or one from himself,
15 VI| named Steven, and was all mad from himself, that she should
16 VI| of S. Clare.~Of one being mad that she healed.~A man born
17 VI| mocked him as he had been mad or out of his wits, and,
18 VI| or fretted.~wood, adj., mad. ~END OF VOL. VI ~
19 VII| began to roar and bray as a mad man, and cried, saying:
20 VII| Fabricius heard that, he was mad for anger, and commanded
21 VII| covetously, and anon he waxed mad.~In that time was Bede the
22 VII| said S. Ives ten demoniacs, mad folk, or filled with wicked
23 VII| voice like as he had been mad, and said: This is the devil,
24 VII| a pimple. ~wood, adj., mad.~
25 VII| lamb, iii. 162.~—though mad, obeys S. Martin, vi. 152.~
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