MediaWiki API result

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{
    "batchcomplete": "",
    "continue": {
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    "query": {
        "searchinfo": {
            "totalhits": 21
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        "search": [
            {
                "ns": 0,
                "title": "Language",
                "snippet": "...from the O.E. &#039;&#039;dun&#039;&#039; <span class='searchmatch'>meaning</span> hill; &#039;&#039;Wickham&#039;&#039; from the O.E. &#039;&#039;wic-ham&#039;&#039; <span class='searchmatch'>meaning</span> a Romano-British village; and many more besides (the Oxford Dictionary of E\n...used their word to mean a way through a settlement, so it came to have the <span class='searchmatch'>meaning</span> of street e.g. Coppergate - &#039;The Street of the cup makers&#039;.\n",
                "size": 13063,
                "wordcount": 2186,
                "timestamp": "2018-10-26T17:34:00Z"
            },
            {
                "ns": 0,
                "title": "Who were the Huscarles?",
                "snippet": "...ubject of Huscarls is to decide whether you are looking at the traditional <span class='searchmatch'>meaning</span> of the word in Old Norse, or whether you are talking about the English mili\n...ilar to that of the English, although earlier on it had had a more general <span class='searchmatch'>meaning</span>. For the purposes of this article we will be looking at the English Huscarl\n",
                "size": 7670,
                "wordcount": 1303,
                "timestamp": "2018-10-31T18:08:25Z"
            },
            {
                "ns": 0,
                "title": "Life in the Clergy",
                "snippet": "...eacons were replaced by &#039;suffragan&#039; bishops, from the latin &#039;suffragator&#039;, <span class='searchmatch'>meaning</span> &#039;supporter&#039;.\n...st, the priests were called &#039;secular clergy&#039;, from the latin &#039;saecularis&#039;, <span class='searchmatch'>meaning</span> &#039;of the world&#039; - in other words, they were not shut up in a monastery all t\n",
                "size": 5004,
                "wordcount": 830,
                "timestamp": "2018-01-14T09:22:53Z"
            },
            {
                "ns": 0,
                "title": "Anglo-Saxon Military Organisation",
                "snippet": "...led the fyrd (literally <span class='searchmatch'>meaning</span> &#039;journey&#039;, and it came to have the special <span class='searchmatch'>meaning</span> of &#039;armed expedition or force&#039;). The fyrd was raised by selective recruitme\n",
                "size": 21128,
                "wordcount": 3638,
                "timestamp": "2018-10-31T18:07:21Z"
            },
            {
                "ns": 0,
                "title": "Living History",
                "snippet": "The LHE is organized in \u201cWics\u201d (an Old English word <span class='searchmatch'>meaning</span> a dwelling place, a lodging, habitation, camp, castle or house).\n",
                "size": 3007,
                "wordcount": 476,
                "timestamp": "2021-10-27T10:54:42Z"
            },
            {
                "ns": 0,
                "title": "The Anglo-Saxon Fyrd AD 400 - 878",
                "snippet": "...rm the word &quot;fyrd&quot; had meant &quot;a journey or expedition&quot;. However, the exact <span class='searchmatch'>meaning</span> of the word, like the nature of the armies it is used to describe, changed \n",
                "size": 28554,
                "wordcount": 4934,
                "timestamp": "2018-08-27T14:13:36Z"
            },
            {
                "ns": 0,
                "title": "Norman Social Organisation and Feudalism",
                "snippet": "...military service. The term of such land holding is called &#039;fief&#039; literally <span class='searchmatch'>meaning</span> &#039; in fee&#039;, a system of land holding that was popular throughout Europe unti\n",
                "size": 9820,
                "wordcount": 1709,
                "timestamp": "2018-08-27T15:46:51Z"
            },
            {
                "ns": 0,
                "title": "Who Were the Anglo-Saxons?",
                "snippet": "...e Britons or &#039;waelas&#039; as they were known in the Old English tongue, a word <span class='searchmatch'>meaning</span> slave or foreigner. Much of the settlement seems to have been quite peacefu\n",
                "size": 14891,
                "wordcount": 2459,
                "timestamp": "2018-08-27T15:57:41Z"
            },
            {
                "ns": 0,
                "title": "Who Were the Celts?",
                "snippet": "...the1st century BC. The word Welsh is derived from the Saxon word &#039;waelas&#039; <span class='searchmatch'>meaning</span> &#039;foreigner&#039; or &#039;slave&#039; and was applied to all the native British. Despite a\n",
                "size": 5903,
                "wordcount": 1007,
                "timestamp": "2018-08-27T15:58:22Z"
            },
            {
                "ns": 0,
                "title": "The Cymry",
                "snippet": "...ritons, the Irish thought of themselves as Gael, etc.. But ultimately, the <span class='searchmatch'>meaning</span> meant the same, &#039;us&#039;, or &#039;the people&#039;.\n",
                "size": 8559,
                "wordcount": 1425,
                "timestamp": "2018-08-27T16:06:01Z"
            }
        ]
    }
}