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Found 11 hits - Term: say, Database: *, Strategy: exact
[1] : The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
say \say\ s=a, obs. imp. of see.
   saw. --chaucer.
   1913 webster
see also:
see 
[2] : The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
say \say\ s=a, n. aphetic form of assay.
   1. trial by sample; assay; sample; specimen; smack. obs.
      1913 webster

            if those principal works of god . . . be but certain
            tastes and says, as it were, of that final benefit.
                                                  --hooker.
      1913 webster

            thy tongue some say of breeding breathes. --shak.
      1913 webster

   2. tried quality; temper; proof. obs.
      1913 webster

            he found a sword of better say.       --spenser.
      1913 webster

   3. essay; trial; attempt. obs.
      1913 webster

   to give a say at, to attempt. --b. jonson.
      1913 webster
see also:
to give a say at 
[3] : The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
say \say\, v. t.
   to try; to assay. obs. --b. jonson.
   1913 webster

[4] : The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
say \say\, n. oe. saie, f. saie, fr. l. saga, equiv. to sagum,
   sagus, a coarse woolen mantle; cf. gr. sa`gos. see sagum.
   1. a kind of silk or satin. obs.
      1913 webster

            thou say, thou serge, nay, thou buckram lord
                                                  --shak.
      1913 webster

   2. a delicate kind of serge, or woolen cloth. obs.
      1913 webster

            his garment neither was of silk nor say. --spenser.
      1913 webster
see also:
sagum 
[5] : The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
say \say\, v. t. imp.  p. p. said se^d, contracted from
   sayed; p. pr.  vb. n. saying. oe. seggen, seyen, siggen,
   sayen, sayn, as. secgan; akin to os. seggian, d. zeggen, lg.
   seggen, ohg. sag=en, g. sagen, icel. segja, sw. saumga,
   dan. sige, lith. sakyti; cf. ol. insece tell, relate, gr.
   'e`nnepe for 'en-sepe, 'e`spete. cf. saga, saw a
   saying.
   1. to utter or express in words; to tell; to speak; to
      declare; as, he said many wise things.
      1913 webster

            arise, and say how thou camest here.  --shak.
      1913 webster

   2. to repeat; to rehearse; to recite; to pronounce; as, to
      say a lesson.
      1913 webster

            of my instruction hast thou nothing bated
            in what thou hadst to say?            --shak.
      1913 webster

            after which shall be said or sung the following
            hymn.                                 --bk. of com.
                                                  prayer.
      1913 webster

   3. to announce as a decision or opinion; to state positively;
      to assert; hence, to form an opinion upon; to be sure
      about; to be determined in mind as to.
      1913 webster

            but what it is, hard is to say.       --milton.
      1913 webster

   4. to mention or suggest as an estimate, hypothesis, or
      approximation; hence, to suppose; -- in the imperative,
      followed sometimes by the subjunctive; as, he had, say
      fifty thousand dollars; the fox had run, say ten miles.
      1913 webster

            say, for nonpayment that the debt should double,
            is twenty hundred kisses such a trouble? --shak.
      1913 webster

   it is said, or they say, it is commonly reported; it is
      rumored; people assert or maintain.

   that is to say, that is; in other words; otherwise.
      1913 webster
see also:
said saying saga saw it is said they say 
that is to say 
[6] : The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
say \say\, v. i.
   to speak; to express an opinion; to make answer; to reply.
   1913 webster

         you have said; but whether wisely or no, let the forest
         judge.                                   --shak.
   1913 webster

         to this argument we shall soon have said; for what
         concerns it us to hear a husband divulge his household
         privacies?                               --milton.
   1913 webster

[7] : The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
say \say\, n. from say, v. t.; cf. saw a saying.
   a speech; something said; an expression of opinion; a current
   story; a maxim or proverb. archaic or colloq.
   1913 webster

         he no sooner said out his say, but up rises a cunning
         snap.                                    --l'estrange.
   1913 webster

         that strange palmer's boding say,
         that fell so ominous and drear
         full on the object of his fear.          --sir w.
                                                  scott.
   1913 webster
see also:
say saw 
[8] : WordNet (r) 2.0
say
     n : the chance to speak; "let him have his say"
     v 1: express in words; "he said that he wanted to marry her";
          "tell me what is bothering you"; "state your opinion";
          "state your name" syn: state, tell
     2: report or maintain; "he alleged that he was the victim of a
        crime"; "he said it was too late to intervene in the war";
        "the registrar says that i owe the school money" syn: allege,
         aver
     3: express a supposition; "let us say that he did not tell the
        truth"; "let's say you had a lot of money--what would you
        do?" syn: suppose
     4: have or contain a certain wording or form; "the passage
        reads as follows"; "what does the law say?" syn: read
     5: state as one's opinion or judgement; declare; "i say let's
        forget this whole business"
     6: utter aloud; "she said `hello' to everyone in the office"
     7: give instructions to or direct somebody to do something with
        authority; "i said to him to go home"; "she ordered him to
        do the shopping"; "the mother told the child to get
        dressed" syn: order, tell, enjoin
     8: speak, pronounce, or utter in a certain way; "she pronounces
        french words in a funny way"; "i cannot say `zip wire'";
        "can the child sound out this complicated word?" syn: pronounce,
         articulate, enounce, sound out, enunciate
     9: recite or repeat a fixed text; "say grace"; "she said her
        `hail mary'"
     10: communicate or express nonverbally; "what does this painting
         say?"; "did his face say anything about how he felt?"
     11: indicate; "the clock says noon"
     also: said
see also:
state tell allege aver suppose read 
order enjoin pronounce articulate enounce 
sound out enunciate said 
[9] : Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0
436 moby thesaurus words for "say":
   australian ballot, hare system, parthian shot, about,
   absolute power, absolutism, acknowledge, acme, address, affirm,
   affirmance, affirmation, after-dinner speech, allegation, allege,
   allocution, almost, animadvert, announce, announcement, annunciate,
   annunciation, answer, answer back, apostrophe, approximately,
   approximatively, argue, articulate, ascendancy, assert, assertion,
   assever, asseverate, asseveration, assume, authority,
   authorization, aver, averment, avouch, avouchment, avow, avowal,
   aye, ballot, be afraid, be-all and end-all, believe, blue ribbon,
   bout, break silence, breathe, bring out, canvass, canvassing,
   casting vote, chalk talk, championship, chance, charisma, charm,
   chime, chime in, choice, chorus, cite, clout, come back,
   come out with, command, comment, communicate, competence,
   competency, conceive, conclude, conclusion, consequence, consider,
   constituted authority, contend, control, convey, counting heads,
   crack, credit, creed, cumulative voting, daresay, debate,
   deciding vote, decision, declamation, declaration, declare, deduce,
   deem, delegated authority, deliver, diatribe, dictum, directorship,
   disclose, discretion, divine, divine right, division, dominance,
   domination, dominion, dream, echo, effect, effectiveness, eminence,
   emit, enchantment, enfranchisement, enunciate, enunciation, esteem,
   eulogy, exclamation, exhortation, expect, express, expression,
   faculty, fagot vote, fancy, favor, feel, filibuster, first place,
   first prize, flash back, fling off, for practical purposes, force,
   forensic, forensic address, formal speech, formulate, franchise,
   free choice, free decision, free will, full consent,
   funeral oration, gather, generally, generally speaking, give,
   give acknowledgment, give answer, give expression, give out with,
   give tongue, give utterance, give voice, go, good feeling, grant,
   graveyard vote, greeting, hand vote, harangue, have, headship,
   hegemony, height, highest, hold, hortatory address, imagine,
   impart, imperium, importance, in round numbers, inaugural,
   inaugural address, incidental power, indicate, indirect authority,
   infer, influence, influentiality, inherent authority, inning,
   innings, insinuation, insist, interjection, invective, ipse dixit,
   issue a manifesto, jeremiad, jurisdiction, jus divinum, just,
   kingship, lawful authority, lay down, leadership, legal authority,
   legitimacy, let, let be, let out, leverage, lip, list system,
   lordship, magnetism, maintain, management, manifesto, mark,
   mastership, mastery, maximum, mention, moment, more or less, most,
   nay, ne plus ultra, new high, no, noncontingent free will,
   nontransferable vote, note, observation, opine, opportunity,
   option, oration, out with, palms, paramountcy, pep talk,
   peroration, personality, persuasion, philippic, phonate, phrase,
   pipe up, pitch, place, plebiscite, plebiscitum, plumper,
   plural vote, poll, polling, position, position paper,
   positive declaration, potency, pour forth, power, practically,
   predicate, predication, predominance, preferential voting,
   prefigure, prepared speech, prepared text, preponderance,
   prerogative, present, presidency, pressure, prestige, presume,
   presuppose, presurmise, primacy, proclaim, proclamation, profess,
   profession, pronounce, pronouncement, proportional representation,
   proposition, protest, protestation, provisionally accept, proxy,
   public speech, purchase, put, put forth, put in words, put it,
   question, quote, raise, react, read, reading, recital, recitation,
   recite, reckon, record, record vote, reecho, referendum,
   reflection, regality, register, reign, rejoin, relief, remark,
   repeat, reply, representation, repute, respond, retort, return,
   return answer, return for answer, reverberate, right,
   right to vote, rightful authority, riposte, rising vote, roughly,
   roughly speaking, round, roundly, royal prerogative, rule,
   sales talk, salutatory, salutatory address, say in reply, say out,
   say-so, saying, screed, secret ballot, sentence, set down,
   set forth, set speech, shoot back, show of hands, single vote,
   snap vote, sound, sovereignty, speak, speak out, speak up, speech,
   speechification, speeching, spell, stance, stand, stand for,
   stand on, state, statement, straw vote, suasion, subjoinder,
   submit, subtle influence, suffrage, suggestion, suppose, supremacy,
   surmise, suspect, sway, take, take for, take for granted, take it,
   take the floor, take to be, talk, talk back, talkathon, tell,
   the say, the say-so, think, thought, throw off, throw out, time,
   time at bat, tirade, top spot, transferable vote, turn, understand,
   upper hand, utter, utterance, valediction, valedictory,
   valedictory address, verbalize, vested authority,
   vicarious authority, viva voce, vocalize, voice, voice vote, vote,
   voting, voting right, vouch, weight, whack, whip hand, whisper,
   word, write-in, write-in vote, yea, yeas and nays, yes, zenith




[10] : Jargon File (4.3.1, 29 Jun 2001)
say vt. 1. to type to a terminal. "to list a directory verbosely, you
   have to say `ls -l'." tends to imply a newline-terminated command a
   `sentence'. 2. a computer may also be said to `say' things to you, even
   if it doesn't have a speech synthesizer, by displaying them on a
   terminal in response to your commands. hackers find it odd that this
   usage confuses mundanes.


see also:
newline mundane 
[11] : The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (27 SEP 03)
say
     
        a human may "say" things to a computer by typing them on a
        terminal.  "to list a directory verbosely, say "ls -l"."
        tends to imply a newline-terminated command a "sentence".
     
        a computer may "say" things to you, even if it doesn't have a
        speech synthesiser, by displaying them on a terminal in
        response to your commands.  this usage often confuses
        mundanes.
     
        jargon file
     
     
see also:
newline mundane jargon file 

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