run vA gale o' wind down from the nor' west, an' a burnin' tide runnin' up.AN' we left. We runned her for Norther Head.YesJ. D. A. WIDDOWSONUsed I and SupUsed I and SupWithdrawnthis use of the word "run" is not in the DNE
run nNaut 'trough for water' Place for rope to slide through.I _think_ Withdraw ? [check]...
run nWe bored and chopped holes in the floor [of the forecastle] and let the water down in the "r...
run n. . . We goin' to blast an' pull troo wid de winches. Dis is young ice - a night's work ...
run vHenry Murray an' they runned in here one time. (ie came in by boat, brought his boat in )(...
run vThat's all they got before they_ they. . . .runned in over the banks. An' they runned her_ ...
run vSteamships as well as sailing vessels are very often, owing to the gales of wind, obliged to...
run vYes, Henry an' they run for the harbour - a bad natch to run for here, you know, unless ...
run n". . . Let's get to work and free the water out of the forecastle." We bored and chopped ...
run nthe nights . . . When we took our Bob for a run, Maggie,Used I and SupUsed I and SupWithd...
run nThe hard and the aisey we take as it comes, / And when ponds freeze over we short- en our r...
run n'spell of sailing'WithdrawJUN 1980Used I and SupUsed I and SupWithdrawn"run n" appears in ...
run nA run,a run stitch; up an' down lke this. (type of stitch used in making quilts)(type of s...
run nmy chum andI were enjoying the "run" on our slides over Long's Hill,PRINTED ITEMOCT 7 196...
run n. . . a small stream of water not big enough to be called a river . . .PRINTED ITEMG. ...
run nHe took a run out on the Hall's Bay line an' was deloited wud the country.PRINTED ITEM [-]BR...
run nNaut 'trough for water' Place for rope to slide through.I _think_ Withdraw ? [check]...
run nWe bored and chopped holes in the floor [of the forecastle] and let the water down in the "r...
run n. . . We goin' to blast an' pull troo wid de winches. Dis is young ice - a night's work ...
run vHenry Murray an' they runned in here one time. (ie came in by boat, brought his boat in )(...
run vThat's all they got before they_ they. . . .runned in over the banks. An' they runned her_ ...
run vSteamships as well as sailing vessels are very often, owing to the gales of wind, obliged to...
run vYes, Henry an' they run for the harbour - a bad natch to run for here, you know, unless ...
run n". . . Let's get to work and free the water out of the forecastle." We bored and chopped ...
run nthe nights . . . When we took our Bob for a run, Maggie,Used I and SupUsed I and SupWithd...
run nThe hard and the aisey we take as it comes, / And when ponds freeze over we short- en our r...
run n'spell of sailing'WithdrawJUN 1980Used I and SupUsed I and SupWithdrawn"run n" appears in ...
run nA run,a run stitch; up an' down lke this. (type of stitch used in making quilts)(type of s...
run nmy chum andI were enjoying the "run" on our slides over Long's Hill,PRINTED ITEMOCT 7 196...
run n. . . a small stream of water not big enough to be called a river . . .PRINTED ITEMG. ...
run nHe took a run out on the Hall's Bay line an' was deloited wud the country.PRINTED ITEM [-]BR...
run nNaut 'trough for water' Place for rope to slide through.I _think_ Withdraw ? [check]...
run nWe bored and chopped holes in the floor [of the forecastle] and let the water down in the "r...
run n. . . We goin' to blast an' pull troo wid de winches. Dis is young ice - a night's work ...