twifaced
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English
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[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adjective
[edit]twifaced (comparative more twifaced, superlative most twifaced)
- (archaic, poetic) Having two faces.
- 1860, B. P., Alice: and other poems, by B.P., page 2:
- These two of whom I tell, from their first hours.
Or, like a twi-faced urn, which doth outflow With the same spring, […]
- 1876, Publius Vergilius Maro, The Æneids of Virgil, done into English verse by W. Morris, page 353:
- “E'en so, Æneas, do I swear by Stars, and Sea, and Earth,
By twi-faced Janus, and the twins Latona brought to birth, […]
- (obsolete) Two-faced; deceitful.
- 1861, Francis Quarles, Quarles' emblems:
- There is no time to measure motion by, There time is swallowed in eternity: Wry-mouth'd disdain, and corner-hunting lust, And twy-fac'd fraud, [...]