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Ouse
[ ooz ]
noun
- Also called Great Ouse. a river in E England, flowing NE to the Wash. 160 miles (260 km) long.
- a river in NE England, in Yorkshire, flowing SE to the Humber. 57 miles (92 km) long.
- a river in SE England, flowing S to the English Channel. 30 miles (48 km) long.
Ouse
/ uːz /
noun
- Also calledGreat Ouse a river in E England, rising in Northamptonshire and flowing northeast to the Wash near King's Lynn; for the last 56 km (35 miles) follows mainly artificial channels. Length: 257 km (160 miles)
- a river in NE England, in Yorkshire, formed by the confluence of the Swale and Ure Rivers: flows southeast to the Humber. Length: 92 km (57 miles)
- a river in S England, rising in Sussex and flowing south to the English Channel. Length: 48 km (30 miles)
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Example Sentences
Imagine the resolve of Virginia Woolf filling her coat pockets with stones and walking straight into the River Ouse.
From The Daily Beast
King Harald was lying in the Ouse when the host of the Earls swooped down against him.
From Project Gutenberg
I 'aven't come to sharin' my butler's 'ouse,' said Mrs Clay, bridling.
From Project Gutenberg
Your mon didna get t'our 'ouse afore one o'clock, an' we wor on the way afore ha'f-past.
From Project Gutenberg
In the evening Marian was taking her accustomed walk along a beech avenue beside the Ouse.
From Project Gutenberg
Just what I did, but 'e got worse, and the Organization lady said as we must go to the 'Ouse, or she'd have the cruelty man on us.
From Project Gutenberg
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