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Webster's 1913 Dictionary

TYND

Tynd, v. t. Etym: [See Tine to shut in. ]

 

Defn: To shut; to close. [Obs. ] Wyclif.

 

New American Oxford Dictionary

Tyndale, William

Tyndale, William |ˈtɪnd (ə )l | ( c. 1494 –1536 ), English translator and Protestant martyr. Faced with ecclesiastical opposition to his project for translating the Bible into English, Tyndale left England in 1524. His translations of the Bible later formed the basis of the Authorized Version. He was burnt at the stake as a heretic in Antwerp.

 

Tyndall, John

Tyn dall, John |ˈtindəl ˈtɪndl | (1820 –93 ), Irish physicist. He is best known for his work on heat but he also worked on the transmission of sound and the scattering of light by suspended particles.

 

Oxford Dictionary

Tyndale, William

Tyndale, William |ˈtɪnd (ə )l | ( c. 1494 –1536 ), English translator and Protestant martyr. Faced with ecclesiastical opposition to his project for translating the Bible into English, Tyndale left England in 1524. His translations of the Bible later formed the basis of the Authorized Version. He was burnt at the stake as a heretic in Antwerp.

 

Tyndall, John

Tyndall, John |ˈtɪnd (ə )l | (1820 –93 ), Irish physicist. He is best known for his work on heat but he also worked on the transmission of sound and the scattering of light by suspended particles.

 

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