ppl. a. Obs. rare. [implies a vb. aborder, apparently due to confusion between BORDER v. and ABORD v., Fr. aborder, in Cotgr. ‘to lye neere vnto.’] Bordering, neighboring, contiguous.

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1566.  Drant, Horace, Sat., II. i. Leste people nygh aborderyng, myght wyn the same. Ibid. (1567), Ep., I. iii. Twixt towers, abordringe next [Lat. vicinas].

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