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KJV
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In my view, the Christian religion is the most important and one of the first things in which all children, under a free government ought to be instructed... No truth is more evident to my mind than that the Christian religion must be the basis of any government intended to secure the rights and privileges of a free people. Preface to 1828 Dictionary
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TWIG, n. [L. vigeo, with a prefix.] A small shoot or branch of a tree or other plant, of no definite length or size.
To twitch] to pull; to
tweak.
[Obs. or Scot.] To understand the meaning of; to comprehend; as,
do you twig me?
[Colloq.] Marryat. To observe slyly; also, to perceive; to
discover.
"Now twig him; now mind him." Foote.
As if he were looking right into your eyes and twigged something there which you had half a mind to conceal. Hawthorne. A small shoot or branch of a tree or other plant,
of no definite length or size.
The Britons had boats made of willow twigs, covered on the outside with hides. Sir T. Raleigh. Twig borer (Zoöl.), any one of several species of small beetles which bore into twigs of shrubs and trees, as the apple-tree twig borer (Amphicerus bicaudatus). -- Twig girdler. (Zoöl.) See Girdler, 3. -- Twig rush (Bot.), any rushlike plant of the genus Cladium having hard, and sometimes prickly-edged, leaves or stalks. See Saw grass, under Saw. To beat with
twigs.
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