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  2. Bastard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bastard

    Bastard of Winterfell, alias name of Jon Snow (character), in Game of Thrones; Bastardia, a genus of flowering plants; Bastardisation (disambiguation)

  3. List of people known as the Bastard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_people_known_as...

    The Bastard of Vaurus, defended the French town in the siege of Meaux in 1422; Corneille, bastard of Burgundy (1420–1452), illegitimate son of Philip the Good; Geoffrey, the Bastard, Geoffrey, Archbishop of York (c. 1152–1212), illegitimate son of Henry II, King of England; Harry the Bastard, from the British 1990s television series Bottom

  4. Bastardo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bastardo

    Bastardo is a proper noun for at least two referents, each of them probably cognate with the common noun bastardo, meaning bastard in several Romance languages. It may also refer to: It may also refer to:

  5. English and Welsh bastardy laws - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_and_Welsh_bastardy...

    Bastardy was not a status, like villeinage, but the fact of being a bastard had a number of legal effects on an individual.One exception to the general principle that a bastard could not inherit occurred when the eldest son (who would otherwise be heir) was born a bastard but the second son was born after the parents were married.

  6. Colonial American bastardy laws - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colonial_American_Bastardy...

    A bastard is defined as a "(child) born out of wedlock or of adultery, illegitimate". [1] In other words, a bastard is any child that is born from the result of a sexual encounter between a man and a woman who are not married to each other; if either party is married, the couple has committed adultery.

  7. Glossary of British terms not widely used in the United States

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_British_terms...

    Also compound nouns semiquaver (US: sixteenth note), demisemiquaver (US: thirty-second note), hemidemisemiquaver (US: sixty-fourth note); see note value. Also a variety of snack food potato crisp/chip. queue A sequence or line of people (maybe in vehicles or whatever) awaiting their turn for a service or activity (similar to US line). quid

  8. Bâtard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bâtard

    "Bâtard" (English: "Bastard" or "Mongrel") is a short story by Jack London, first published in 1902 under the title "Diable — A Dog" in The Cosmopolitan before being renamed "Bâtard" [1] in 1904. Story

  9. Illegitimi non carborundum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illegitimi_non_carborundum

    Illegitimi is presumably the nominative plural of illegitimus meaning "unlawful" or "outlaw" in Latin, but interpreted as English "illegitimate" in the sense of "bastard", in this case, used as a generic insult.