gists
English
Noun
gists
- (rare) plural of gist
- 1601, Philemon Holland's translation of Pliny's Natural History, 1st ed., book X, chapter XXIII “Of Swallowes, Ousles, or Merles, Thrushes, Stares or Sterlings, Turtles, and Stockdoves.”, p. 282:
- These Quailes have their set gists, to wit, ordinarie resting and baiting places. [These quails have their set gists, to wit, ordinary resting and baiting places.]
- 1960, P[elham] G[renville] Wodehouse, chapter XIX, in Jeeves in the Offing, London: Herbert Jenkins, OCLC 1227855:
- He was handing her something in an envelope, and she was saying “Oh, Jeeves, you've saved a human life,” and he was saying “Not at all, miss.” The gist, of course, escaped me, but I had no leisure to probe into gists.
- 2004, Paul Dehn Carleton, Concepts: A Prototheist Quest for Science-minded Skeptics of Catholic, and Other Christian, Jewish & Muslim Backgrounds:
- There's evidence that even our unconscious efficiently only stores the gists of memories.
- 2010, Baruch Halpern, The First Historians: The Hebrew Bible and History:
- The gists of the reports, however, their logic, their structural coherence, are molded by a concern to reconstruct the past.
- 1601, Philemon Holland's translation of Pliny's Natural History, 1st ed., book X, chapter XXIII “Of Swallowes, Ousles, or Merles, Thrushes, Stares or Sterlings, Turtles, and Stockdoves.”, p. 282:
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