mone, I, 326, 1: moan, lamentation, complaint. See meen.

monie, IV, 437, 2: menie, company, suite. See menë.

montenans. See mountnaunce.

monty, IV, 42 a, note §: staircase. (Fr. montée.)

mood, giue me, III, 105, 23: though give me my God looks like a bold change, it is not improbable. We have, yeve me my savyour, in the Romaunt of the Rose, 6436, le cors nostre Seigneur, 12105, Michel. And again: For it was about Easter, at what times maidens gadded abrode, after they had taken their Maker, as they call it. Wilson, Arte of Logike, fol. 84 b. “In 1452 John Bulstone (of Norwich) bequeathed to the church of Hempstede ‘j pyxte, to putte owre lord god in.’” Academy, XL, 174. (These last two citations furnished by Prof. J. M. Manly.) Again, the Breton ballad, Ervoan Camus, Revue Celtique, II, 496, st. 6, has ‘she has received my God.’ (Dr F. N. Robinson.) See V, [297] a.

moody-hill, moudie-hill, mould-hill, IV, 148 f., 48; 150, g, h 48: mole-hill.

mool, mools. See moul.

morn, morrow. the morn, III, 480, 18; 482, 14; 488, 19; 489, 11; IV, 517, 18: to-morrow. the morn’s morning, IV, 373, 8.

mornin’s gift, morning gift, II, 132, 32; 135, 28: gift made the morning after marriage.

mort, III, 307, 8; IV, 26, 8: note on the horn to announce the death of deer.