Definition of "overthwart"
overthwart
adverb
comparative more overthwart, superlative most overthwart
Quotations
[...] they are ioyned by two and two together, and every couple sustaineth a third stone lying overthwart, gatewise, which is fastened by the meanes of tenons that enter into mortaises of those stones not closed with any cement.
1876, William Long, Esq., Stonehenge and its Barrows. From the Wiltshire Archæological and Natural History Magazine, etc. [With maps and wood-engravings.], page 25
adjective
comparative more overthwart, superlative most overthwart
(obsolete) Having a transverse position; placed or situated across; hence, opposite.
Quotations
By and by after his iumping vppon them, the Saxons for that Garianonum, or Yarmoth that had giuen vp the ghoſt, in thoſe ſlymie plaſhie fieldes of Gorlſtone trowled vp a ſecond Yarmouth, abutting on the Weſt ſide of the ſhore of this great Yarmouth, that is, but feeling the ayre to be vnholſome and diſagreeing with them, to the ouerwhart brink or verge of the flud, that writ all one ſtile of Cerdicke ſands, they diſlodged with bagge and baggage, and there layde the foundatiõ of a third Yarmouth Quam nulla poteſt abolere vetuſtas, that I hope will holde vp her head till Doomeſday.
1599, [Thomas] Nashe, Nashes Lenten Stuffe, […], London: […] [Thomas Judson and Valentine Simmes] for N[icholas] L[ing] and C[uthbert] B[urby] […], page 9
(obsolete) Crossing in kind or disposition.
Quotations
He had pass’d two or three Acts of Parliament, which had much lessen’d the Authority and Dependence of the Nobility, and great Men, and incens’d, and dispos’d them proportionably to cross, and oppose any Proposition, which would be most grateful; and that overthwart humour was enough discover’d to rule in the breasts of many, who made the greatest professions.
1702, Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of Clarendon, The History of the Rebellion and Civil Wars in England, Oxford, published 1717, Volume 1, Part 1, p. 83
noun
plural overthwarts
(obsolete) That which is overthwart; an adverse circumstance; opposition.
Quotations
We thinke the heavens enjoy their SphericallTheir round proportion embracing all.But yet their various and perplexed course,Observ’d in divers ages doth enforceMen to finde out so many Eccentrique parts,Such divers downe-right lines, such overthwarts,As disproportion that pure forme. […]
1611, John Donne, An Anatomy of the World, London: Samuel Macham