owdacious=?

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ostap77

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I've been trying to find the meaning of it but credible dictionaries don't give the slightest idea of what it might mean. I bet it's way out of date.

"What do you mean,Sir, by this owdacious conduct"?

I pulled up a couple of examples used in literature but could not find any meaning.

"'Because they' ave been goin 'on most owdacious before'and."
 
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birdeen's call

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It's a misspelling of "audacious", perhaps meant to render a mispronunciation.
 

Coolfootluke

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I am not a teacher.

You have been reading a book with what is sometimes called "eye dialect", misspellings that are intended to render an accent in speech. "Durn" is "darn", for instance. The speaker seems to be a hick.
 

ostap77

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It's a misspelling of "audacious", perhaps meant to render a mispronunciation.

I've come across a number of sentnces with this kind of spelling. It couldn't been misspelled many times. Did you get it from a dictionary?
 

bhaisahab

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I've come across a number of sentnces with this kind of spelling. It couldn't been misspelled many times. Did you get it from a dictionary?
As birdeen's call said it is a (probably intentional) misspelling of "audacious". There is no such word as "owdacious".
 

BobK

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Yes. The character is not well educated. He would normally use a more familiar word like bold/daring/cheeky/cocky [an abbreviation of 'cock-sure']/'sure of themselves'... or use an informal idiom such as 'they've got a nerve'. He learnt to spell out words, but not to read fluently. He has seen an unfamiliar word, and produced a mispronunciation.

b
 
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