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The word for today is…

sward (noun) – 1. Land covered with grassy turf.
2. A lawn or meadow.

Source : The Free Dictionary

Etymology : “Grass-covered ground,” circa 1300, from Old English sweard “skin, hide, rind” (of bacon, etc.), from Proto-Germanic *swarthu- (source also of Old Frisian swarde “skin of the head,” Middle Dutch swarde “rind of bacon,” Dutch zwoord “rind of bacon,” German Schwarte “thick, hard skin, rind,” Old Norse svörðr “walrus hide”). Meaning “sod, turf” developed from the notion of the “skin” of the earth (compare Old Norse grassvörðr, Danish grønsvær “greensward”).

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A jury at the Auckland High Court has found Dr Philip Polkinghorne not guilty of killing his wife, Pauline Hanna, in their Remuera home in April 2021. 

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