droke n174. Mr. Thomas speculated that this term comes from "drook", meaning a long narrow valley which has steep, wooded sides. My mother says that if drouch is pronounced as drok, she would define it as a furrow. example: "I placed the potato seeds down in the droke."DNE-citW. J. KIRWIN APR 1973JH APR 1973Used I and SupUsed I and SupNot use
droke nn. A cluster of fir or spruce. Also _droke_, _drogue_, _drove_.PRINTED ITEMG.M.Story July ...
droke nMr Munn's identification of "droke" as a Devonshire usage is "a valley with sides so steep as...
droke ndown the appo/site hill-sde pusehd the deer for cover at the head of the _droke_ (Newfoundla...
droke n174. Mr. Thomas speculated that this term comes from "drook", meaning a long narrow valley w...
droke n174. drouch. "droke" probably - a droke is frequenly a steep sided valley or ravine but a ...
droke n1. A narrow wooded valley. 2. A belt or clump of trees. 3. A narrow valley or gultch * 4. A...
droke nIt denotes a sloping valley between two hills. When wood extends across it, it is called a ...
droke na wooded narrow valley (probably same as the old English word _drock_).a wooded narrow valley...
droke nDrong: a path or lane between two gardens. [check] Droke: a path through a little valley. ...
droke n[check] _Drong_: a path or lane between two gardens.) Old English words found ...
droke nvalley, a low area between hills. Neither of them could give a description of _droke_ which ...
droke na place where trees grow densely and a good place to cut a lot of woodUsed I and SupUsed I an...
droke nCONTEXT: ...DOWN IN THE DROAK BEHIND MCGRATH'S MEANING: A VALLEY BETWEEN TWO HILLS.YesJ....
droke n'DROKE' In a poem submitted by a writer in Grand Falls, Newfoundland, and published in...
droke n"A Droke of Birches" - refers to a small clump of birches found in a small valley.JH 1/70Used...
droke nn. A cluster of fir or spruce. Also _droke_, _drogue_, _drove_.PRINTED ITEMG.M.Story July ...
droke nMr Munn's identification of "droke" as a Devonshire usage is "a valley with sides so steep as...
droke ndown the appo/site hill-sde pusehd the deer for cover at the head of the _droke_ (Newfoundla...
droke n174. Mr. Thomas speculated that this term comes from "drook", meaning a long narrow valley w...
droke n174. drouch. "droke" probably - a droke is frequenly a steep sided valley or ravine but a ...
droke n1. A narrow wooded valley. 2. A belt or clump of trees. 3. A narrow valley or gultch * 4. A...
droke nIt denotes a sloping valley between two hills. When wood extends across it, it is called a ...
droke na wooded narrow valley (probably same as the old English word _drock_).a wooded narrow valley...
droke nDrong: a path or lane between two gardens. [check] Droke: a path through a little valley. ...
droke n[check] _Drong_: a path or lane between two gardens.) Old English words found ...
droke nvalley, a low area between hills. Neither of them could give a description of _droke_ which ...
droke na place where trees grow densely and a good place to cut a lot of woodUsed I and SupUsed I an...
droke nCONTEXT: ...DOWN IN THE DROAK BEHIND MCGRATH'S MEANING: A VALLEY BETWEEN TWO HILLS.YesJ....
droke n'DROKE' In a poem submitted by a writer in Grand Falls, Newfoundland, and published in...
droke n"A Droke of Birches" - refers to a small clump of birches found in a small valley.JH 1/70Used...
droke nn. A cluster of fir or spruce. Also _droke_, _drogue_, _drove_.PRINTED ITEMG.M.Story July ...
droke nMr Munn's identification of "droke" as a Devonshire usage is "a valley with sides so steep as...
droke ndown the appo/site hill-sde pusehd the deer for cover at the head of the _droke_ (Newfoundla...