american english - How to use the prepositions apud and chez . . . Apud is also not included in most professionally compiled dictionaries of English For instance, OneLook shows no examples of such dictionaries containing the word And the resources you have cited in your question are also not professionally compiled dictionaries (such as Merriam-Webster, Oxford, American Heritage, Collins, Websters, but not
Where did the expression have at it come from? The OED dates "have at" to the 14th century: V 27 b intransitive With at To go at, esp aggressively or forcefully; to tackle or attack; (also) to make an attempt at, ‘have a go at’
orthography - Czar vs tsar - origins and pronunciation - English . . . Czar Rhutenica lingua regem significat cum autem communi Slavonica lingua, apud Polonos, Bohemos, alios omnes sumpta quadam consonantia, ab ultima, ea gravi quidem syllaba Czar, Imperator seu Caesar intelligatur -p18