Spaniolise

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English

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Verb

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Spaniolise (third-person singular simple present Spaniolises, present participle Spaniolising, simple past and past participle Spaniolised)

  1. Alternative form of Spaniolize
    • 1853, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Derwent Coleridge, Notes: Theological, Political and Miscellaneous, page 143:
      But when they come hither and see a tympany of Spaniolised bishops, swaggering in the foretop of the state, and meddling to turn and dandle the royal ball with unskilful and pedantic palms, no marvel though they think it as unsafe to commit religion and liberty to their arbitrating as to a synagogue of Jesuites.
    • 1871, Oliver Cromwell, Thomas Carlyle, Oliver Cromwell's Letters and Speeches:
      And truly he hath an interest in your bowels ; he hath so. The Papists in England, — they have been accounted, ever since I was born, Spaniolised.
    • 1965, Great Britain. Public Record Office, List and Analysis of State Papers, Foreign Series, →ISBN, page 511:
      The Spaniolised men sent to Spain a letter, signed by four persons, by a renegade Spaniard named Ramadan who knew the language.
    • 2010, J. Harris, E. Scott-Baumann, The Intellectual Culture of Puritan Women, 1558-1680, →ISBN, page 78:
      A 1621 letter from her mentions 'our Spaniolised papists'.