Nesbit
[nez-bit] /ˈnɛz bɪt/
noun
1.
E(dith) 1858–1924, English children’s author, novelist, and poet.
/ˈnɛzbɪt/
noun
1.
E(dith). 1858–1924, British writer of children’s books, including The Phoenix and the Carpet (1904) and The Railway Children (1906)
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[nesh-uh ns, nesh-ee-uh ns, nes-ee-] /ˈnɛʃ əns, ˈnɛʃ i əns, ˈnɛs i-/ noun 1. lack of knowledge; ignorance. 2. . /ˈnɛsɪəns/ noun 1. a formal or literary word for ignorance n. “ignorance,” 1610s, from Late Latin nescientia, from nesciens (see nescient).
- Nescient
[nesh-uh ns, nesh-ee-uh ns, nes-ee-] /ˈnɛʃ əns, ˈnɛʃ i əns, ˈnɛs i-/ noun 1. lack of knowledge; ignorance. 2. . /ˈnɛsɪəns/ noun 1. a formal or literary word for ignorance adj. 1620s, from Latin nescientem (nominative nesciens) “ignorant, unaware,” present participle of nescire “not to know, to be ignorant,” from ne “not” + scire “to […]
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- Nesh
/nɛʃ/ adjective (dialect) 1. sensitive to the cold 2. timid or cowardly adj. “tender, delicate, weak,” now a Northern England dialect word, from Old English hnesce “soft in texture” (cognate with early modern Dutch nesch, Gothic hnasqus), of unknown origin.