roomer
English
Pronunciation
- Homophones: rumor
Noun
roomer (plural roomers)
Adverb
roomer (not comparable)
- (obsolete) At a greater distance; farther off.[1]
- 1581, Richard Madox, A Learned and a Godly Sermon, to be read of all men, but especially for all marryners, captaynes and passengers, which trauell the seas, London:
- The Captaine in a Shippe of warre, is a iollie fellowe, and thinketh himselfe a lyttle God, because hee speaketh prowdlie to the Souldiors, and maketh them quayle at the shaking of his lockes: […] If any be vnrulie, hee casteth him ouerboorde, or if any be fearefull, hee bindes him to the Maste: if hée crie aloofe, the Helmes man dares not goe roomer: and if hée bidde shoote, the gunner dares not but giue fyre.
- 1607, John Harington (translator), Orlando Furioso by Ludovico Ariosto, London: John Norton and Simon Waterson, Book 41, stanza 17, p. 343,
- Yet did the master by all meanes assay,
- To steare out roomer, or to keepe aloofe,
- Or at the least to strike sailes if they may,
- As in such danger was for their behoofe.
References
- “roomer”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC.
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