Warison — War i*son, n. [OF. warison safety, supplies, cure, F. gu[ e]rison cure. See {Warish}, v. t.] [1913 Webster] 1. Preparation; protection; provision; supply. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] 2. Reward; requital; guerdon. [Obs. or Scot.] [1913 Webster] Wit and… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
warison — [war′ə sən] n. [ME < NormFr, for OFr garison: see GARRISON] 1. Obs. a reward or gift given by a superiora reward or gift given by a superior 2. [from such an erroneous use by SCOTT2 Sir Walter] a note sounded as a signal to attack … English World dictionary
warison — /war euh seuhn/, n. a bugle call to assault. [1805; Walter Scott s misinterpretation of now obs. waryson reward, wealth, possessions, ME < AF warison defense, possessions, OF garison; see GARRISON] * * * … Universalium
warison — war•i•son [[t]ˈwær ə sən[/t]] n. mil a bugle call to assault • Etymology: 1805; Walter Scott s misinterpretation of now obs. waryson reward, wealth, ME < AF warison defense, possessions, OF garison; see garrison … From formal English to slang
warison — ˈwarəsən noun ( s) Etymology: probably a misunderstanding by Sir Walter Scott in the Lay of the Last Minstrel (1805) of waryson in “minstrels, play up for your waryson” in the “Battle of Otterbourne”, which is from Middle English warison reward,… … Useful english dictionary
warison — sb. == reward. Alys. 2512. Fr. guerison … Oldest English Words
warison — war·i·son … English syllables
warison — A musical note used to signal the start of an attack … Grandiloquent dictionary
warison — n. bugle call ordering the attack … Dictionary of difficult words
warison — the stomach. Cumb … A glossary of provincial and local words used in England