Twitching & Birdwatching5 mins ago
Natural History 15/06
5 Answers
stuck on last few
no27 i am poisonous and reputedly lilled emporer claudius 5-3 letters
no 30 i irritate people particulary in scotlqnd 5 letters
no 14 i am 15 cm long what is my medieval name which means earth thrower9 letters
no10 what was thw insane root that the witches in macbeth used 8 letters i can only find answers with 7 letters thanks for any help tiffy
no27 i am poisonous and reputedly lilled emporer claudius 5-3 letters
no 30 i irritate people particulary in scotlqnd 5 letters
no 14 i am 15 cm long what is my medieval name which means earth thrower9 letters
no10 what was thw insane root that the witches in macbeth used 8 letters i can only find answers with 7 letters thanks for any help tiffy
Answers
14. confirmation
https:/ /en.wik ipedia. org/wik i/Mole_ (animal )
In Middle English, moles were known as moldwarp. The expression "do not make a mountain out of a mole hill" – exaggerating problems – was first recorded in Tudor times.[3] By the era of Early Modern English, the mole was also known in English as mouldywarp, a word having cognates in other Germanic languages such as German (Maulwurf),[4] and Danish, Norwegian, Swedish and Icelandic (muldvarp, mullvad, moldvarpa), where the muld/mull/mold part of the word means soil and the varp/vad/varpa part means throw, hence "one who throws soil" or "dirt ***
https:/
In Middle English, moles were known as moldwarp. The expression "do not make a mountain out of a mole hill" – exaggerating problems – was first recorded in Tudor times.[3] By the era of Early Modern English, the mole was also known in English as mouldywarp, a word having cognates in other Germanic languages such as German (Maulwurf),[4] and Danish, Norwegian, Swedish and Icelandic (muldvarp, mullvad, moldvarpa), where the muld/mull/mold part of the word means soil and the varp/vad/varpa part means throw, hence "one who throws soil" or "dirt ***