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doughty
1[ dou-tee ]
Doughty
2[ dou-tee ]
noun
- Charles Mon·ta·gu [mon, -t, uh, -gyoo], 1843–1926, English traveler and writer.
doughty
1/ ˈdaʊtɪ /
adjective
- hardy; resolute
Doughty
2/ ˈdaʊtɪ /
noun
- DoughtyCharles Montagu18431926MEnglishWRITING: writerTRAVEL AND EXPLORATION: traveller Charles Montagu. 1843–1926, English writer and traveller; author of Travels in Arabia Deserta (1888)
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Derived Forms
- ˈdoughtily, adverb
- ˈdoughtiness, noun
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Other Words From
- doughti·ly adverb
- doughti·ness noun
- un·doughty adjective
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Word History and Origins
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Word History and Origins
Origin of doughty1
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Example Sentences
As Doughty explains, no one really knows what the rules are when it comes to death.
Caitlin Doughty is certainly not the first person to publish a book about the funeral industry.
I believe an archetype was born in those years, that of the doughty British woman—proud, opinionated, but with a heart of gold.
But Doughty-Wylie was married, and as long as the war occupied them both neither could see a way out.
She fell in love with Colonel Charles Doughty-Wylie, a soldier with a record of derring-do with appropriate movie star looks.
At the mention of the doughty Scot I pounded the floor with my crutch and repeated "Dug—dug—dug."
The twain of them were doughty men, and noble in England, and both were very sage and well-beloved by the King.
It was a dismal hour for the proud court of the doughty governor.
If you only knew of all Galeazzo's doughty deeds on the journey!
The men refused this wager of battle, but fortune favored this doughty little cavalier, for presently a great storm arose.
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