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    "source_title": "Encyclopaedia Britannica (1911)",
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    "chunk_id": "1911:combe:d867c008de1e",
    "title": "COMBE",
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    "verified_text": "combe, or coomb, a term particularly in use in south-western england for a short closed-in valley, either on the side of a down or running up from the sea. it appears in place-names as a termination, e.g. wiveliscombe, ilfracombe, and as a prefix, e.g. combemartin. the etymology of the word is obscure, but \"hollow\" seems a common meaning to similar forms in many languages. in english \"combe\" or \"cumb\" is an obsolete word for a \"hollow vessel,\" and the like meaning attached to teutonic forms _kumm_ and _kumme_. the welsh _cwm_, in place-names, means hollow or valley, with which may be compared _cum_ in many scots place-names. the greek [greek: kumbe] also means a hollow vessel, and there is a french dialect word _combe_ meaning a little valley.",
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