| |
| | Chapter Trammeler <i>to</i> Transcriber of T by Webster's Dictionary (1913 Edition) (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10) |
 | | Lying or being beyond the mountains; coming from the other side of the mountains; hence, foreign; barbarous. |
 | | The Italians sometimes use this epithet for ultramontane, and apply it to the countries north of the Alps, as France and Germany, and especially to their ecclesiastics, jurists, painters, etc.; and a north wind is called a tramontane wind. |
 | | The French lawyers call certain Italian canonists tramontane, or ultramontane, doctors; considering them as favoring too much the court of Rome. |
| www.bibliomania.com /2/3/257/1211/24332/1.html (286 words) |
|