wunst

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English

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Adverb

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wunst

  1. Obsolete spelling of once., Pronunciation spelling of once.
    • 1842–44, Charles Dickens, Life And Adventures Of Martin Chuzzlewit[1]:
      "Mrs Harris," I says to her, "none on us knows what we can do till we tries; and wunst, when me and Gamp kept 'ouse, I thought so too.
    • 1866, George Alfred Townsend, Campaigns of a Non-Combatant,[2]:
      Wouldn't they let him and Sam off this wunst?
    • 1895, Barlow Jane, Strangers at Lisconnel[3]:
      "If it was just for wunst," she had begun, when Tishy tweaked her sleeve viciously and interpolated a rapid whisper, "It wont be; there'll be no ind to it if you begin humourin' them," so the sentence was badly dislocated.
    • 1906, Mark Twain, Chapters from My Autobiography[4]:
      By way of an incident: a pair of these primitives were overheard chatting about the resorters, one day, and in the course of their talk this remark was dropped: "I was a-drivin' a passel of 'em round about yisterday evenin', quiet ones, you know, still and solemn, and all to wunst they busted out to make your hair lift and I judged hell was to pay.
    • 1908, Edith Van Dyne, Aunt Jane's Nieces at Millville[5]:
      "Skim, you 'member in thet las' book we read, 'The Angel Maniac's Revenge,' there was a sayin' that fate knocks wunst on ev'ry man's door.
    • 1911, Holman Day, The Skipper and the Skipped[6]:
      "Well, ma'am," remarked the Cap'n, dryly, as he seated himself in another chair, "I've waded across a cove wunst or twice at low water."

Synonyms

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