Emily Dickinson Lexicon
Dictionary: RY'AL – RY'OT
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RY'AL, n.
A coin. [See Rial.]
RY'DER, n.
A clause added to a bill in parliament. [See Rider and Ride.]
RYE, n. [Sax. ryge; D. rogge; G. rocken; Dan. rog or rug; Sw. råg or rog; W. rhyg. This word is the English rough.]
- An esculent grain of the genus Secale, of a quality inferior to wheat, but a species of grain easily cultivated, and constituting a large portion of bread stuff.
- A disease in a hawk. Ainsworth.
RYE-GRASS, n.
A species of strong grass of the genus Hordeum. Also Bromus secalinus. Encyc.
RY'OT, n.
In Hindoostan, a renter of land by a lease which is considered as perpetual, and at a rate fixed by ancient surveys and valuations. Asiat. Res. Encyc.