Now available! 17th c. Eng. Hide Quotations Hide Etymology Cite this entry. You may wish to vary the format shown below depending on the citation style used. Ane other litle compas. ; to give the strappado"e;Whare - "e;where"e; Whare'er "e;wherever"e;Whase - "e;whose"e;Whatreck - "e;nevertheless"e;Wheep - "e;to fly nimbly, jerk"e; Penny-wheep "e;small beer"e;Whid - "e;the motion of a hare, running but not frighted; a lie"e;Whiddin' - "e;running as a hare or cony"e;Whigmeleeries - "e;whims, fancies, crotchets"e;Whingin' - "e;crying, complaining, fretting"e;Whirligiums - "e;useless ornaments, trifling appendages"e;Whisht - "e;silence"e; To hold one's whisht "e;to be silent"e;Whiskin' - "e;sweeping"e;Whiskit - "e;lashed"e;Whissle - "e;a whistle; to whistle"e;Whitter - "e;a hearty draught of liquor"e;Whittle - "e;a knife"e;Whunstane - "e;a whinstone"e;Whyles - "e;Whiles, sometimes"e;Wi' - "e;with"e;Wicht - "e;wight, powerful, strong; inventive, of a superior genius"e;Wick - "e;to strike a stone in an oblique direction; a term in curling"e;Wicker - "e;willow"e; (the smaller sort)"e;Widdifu - "e;twisted; one who deserves hanging"e;Wifie - "e;a diminutive or endearing term for wife"e;Wilyart - "e;bashful and reserved; avoiding society, or appearing awkward in it; wild, strange, timid"e;Wimple - "e;to meander"e;Whimpl't - "e;meanered"e;Wimplin' - "e;waving, meandering"e;Win - "e;to win, to winnow"e;Win't - "e;winded as a bottom of a yard"e;Win' - "e;wind"e; Win's "e;winds"e;Winna - "e;will not"e;Winnin' thread - "e;putting thread into hanks"e;Winnock - "e;a window"e;Winsome - "e;hearty, vaunted, gay"e;Wiss - "e;to wish"e;Withouten - "e;without"e;Wizen'd - "e;hide-bound, dried, shrunk"e;Wons - "e;dwells"e;Woo' - "e;wool"e;Woo - "e;to court, to make love to"e;Woodie - "e;a rope, more properly one made of withes or willows"e;Wordy - "e;worthy"e;Worset - "e;worsted"e;Wow - "e;an exclamation of pleasure or wonder"e;Wraith - "e;a spirit or ghost; an apparition exactly like a living person, whose appearance is said to forbode the person's approaching death"e;Wrang - "e;wrong; to wrong"e;Wreeth - "e;a drifted heap of snow"e;Wud - "e;mad, distracted"e;Wumble - "e;"e;wimble"e;Wyle - "e;to beguile"e;Wyliecoat - "e;a flannel vest"e;Wyte - "e;blame, to blame"e; Yad - "e;an old mare, a worn-out horse"e;Yearlings - "e;born in the same year, coevals"e;Yearn - "e;earn; an eagle, an osprey"e;Yerk - "e;to lash, to jerk"e;Yerkit - "e;jerked, lashed"e;Yestreen - "e;yesternight"e;Yett - "e;a gate, such as is usually at the entrance into a farmyard or field"e;Yill - "e;ale"e;Yin - "e;lively"e;Yird - "e;earth"e;Yokin' - "e;yoking; a bout"e;Yont - "e;beyond"e;Yoursel - "e;yourself"e;Yowe - "e;a ewe"e;Yowie - "e;diminutive of yowe"e;Yule - "e;Christmas"e; E'e - "e;the eye"e; E'e bree "e;eyebrow"e; Ha'Bible - "e;the great Bible that lies in the hall"e; Jad - "e;jade; also a familiar term among country folks for a giddy young girl"e; Kail - "e;colewort; a kind of broth"e; Pack - "e;twelve stone of wool"e; Tackets - "e;a kind of nails for driving into the heels of shoes"e; Wa' - "e;wall"e; Wa's "e;walls"e; Yad - "e;an old mare, a worn-out horse"e; Most Common Surnames by Country with their coat of arms or family crest, © 2020 Family Crests & Coats of Arms from Family-crests.com. A' - "e;all"e; Aboon - "e;above, up, over"e; Abread - "e;abroad, in sight, asunder"e; Abreed - "e;in breadth"e; Addle - "e;foul, putrid"e; Aff - "e;off"e; Aff-loof - "e;extempore, without premeditation"e; Afore - "e;before"e; Ane scallie broad. Ane great timber sphære, etc. — [In the testament of a skipper] Item ane litill paper broad pryce therof xii s. … Item ane skellie broad pryce thairof xii s.; 1648 Edinb. [In the testament of a skipper] Item ane litill paper broad pryce therof xii s. … Item ane skellie broad pryce thairof xii s.; 1648 Edinb. Appar. Scottish Language Dictionaries Ltd. Accessed 29 Nov 2020 . 222. also a pitchfork"e;Frae - "e;from, off"e;Frammit - "e;strange, estranged from, at enmity with"e;Frien' - "e;friend"e;Fu' - "e;full"e;Fud - "e;the scut or tail of the hare, cony, etc."e;Funnie - "e;full of merriment"e;Fur - "e;a furrow"e;Fur-ahin - "e;the hindmost horse on the right hand when ploughing"e;Furder - "e;farther"e;Furm - "e;a form, bench"e;Fyke - "e;trifling cares, to peddle, to be in a fuss about trifles"e; Gaberlunzie - "e;an old man"e;Gadsman - "e;a plough boy, the boy that drives the horses in the plough"e;Gae - "e;to go."e; Gaed "e;went"e; Gaen or gane "e;gone"e;Gaun "e;going"e;Gailie - "e;pretty well"e;Gairs - "e;triangler pieces of cloth sewed on the bottom of a gown, etc."e;Gang - "e;to go, to walk"e;Gangrel - "e;a wandering person"e;Gar - "e;to make, to force to"e;Gart - "e;forced to"e;Garten - "e;garter"e;Gashin - "e;conversing"e;Gawsie - "e;jolly, large"e;Gaud - "e;a plough"e;Gaudsman - "e;one who drives the horses in ploughing"e;Gaunted - "e;yawned, longed"e;Gear - "e;riches, goods of any kind"e;Ged - "e;a pike"e;Gentles - "e;great folks, gentry"e;Genty - "e;elegantly-formed, neat"e;Geordie - "e;a guinea"e;Get - "e;a child, a spoiled, petted young one"e;Ghaist - "e;a ghost"e;Gie - "e;to give"e; Gied "e;gave"e; Gien "e;given"e;Giftie - "e;diminutive of gift"e;Giglets - "e;playful girls"e;Gillie - "e;diminutive of gill"e;Gimmer - "e;a ewe from one to two years old"e;Gin - "e;if, against"e;Gipsey - "e;a young girl"e;Girdle - "e;a-round iron plate to toast cakes"e;Girn - "e;to grin, to twist the features in rage, agony, etc."e;Girning - "e;grinning"e;Gawky - "e;half-witted, foolish, romping"e;Glaiket - "e;inattentive, foolish"e;Glaive - "e;a sword"e;Glaum - "e;to snatch greedily"e;Glaum'd - "e;aimed, snatched"e;Gleck - "e;sharp, ready"e;Gleg - "e;sharp, ready"e;Gleib - "e;glebe"e;Glen - "e;a dale, a deep valley"e;Gley - "e;a squint; to squint."e; A-gley "e;off at a side, wrong"e;Gleyde - "e;an old horse"e;Glib-gabbet - "e;smooth and ready in speech"e;Glinted - "e;peeped"e;Glintin - "e;peeping"e;Gloamin - "e;the twilight"e;Glowr - "e;to stare, to look; a stare, a look"e;Goavan - "e;looking round with a strange, inquiring gaze, staring stupidly"e;Gorcocks - "e;redgame, or moorcock"e;Gowan - "e;the flower of the wild daisy, hawkweed, etc."e;Gowany - "e;daisied, abounding with daisies"e;Gowd - "e;gold"e;Gowff - "e;the game of golf; to strike as the bat does the ball at golf"e;Gowff'd - "e;struck"e;Gowk - "e;a cuckoo; a term of contempt"e;Gowl - "e;to howl"e;Grain'd and Gaunted - "e;groaned and grunted"e;Graining - "e;groaning"e;Graip - "e;a pronged instrument for cleaning stables"e;Graith - "e;accoutrements, furniture, dress, gear"e;Grane or Grain - "e;a groan, to groan"e;Grannie - "e;grandmother"e;Grape - "e;grope"e;Grapit - "e;groped"e;Grat - "e;wept, shed tears"e;Great - "e;intimate, familiar"e;Gree - "e;to agree."e; To bear the gree"e;to be decidedy victor"e;Gree't - "e;agreed"e;Greet - "e;to shed tears, to weep"e;Greetin - "e;crying, weeping"e;Grien - "e;longing"e;Grieves - "e;stewards"e;Grippet - "e;catched, seized"e;Groanin'-maut - "e;drink for gossips at a lying-in"e;Groat - "e;to get the whistle of one's groat, to play alosing game"e;Grozet - "e;a gooseberry"e;Grumph - "e;a grunt, to grunt"e;Grumphie - "e;a sow"e;Grun' - "e;ground"e;Grunstane - "e;a grindstone"e;Grunzie - "e;mouth"e;Gude - "e;the Supreme Being; good"e;Guid - "e;good"e;Guidfather, Guidmother - "e;fater-in-law, mother-in-law"e;Guidman and guidwife - "e;the master and mistress of the house."e; Young guidman "e;a man newly married"e;Guid-willie - "e;liberal, cordial"e;Gumlie - "e;muddy"e;Gully or gullie - "e;a large knife"e;Gusty - "e;tasteful"e;Gutcher - "e;grandsire"e;Gut-scraper - "e;a fiddler"e; Ha'Bible - "e;the great Bible that lies in the hall"e;Haddin' - "e;home"e;Hae - "e;to haveHaen - "e;had (the participle)"e;Haet, fient haet - "e;a petty oath of negation, nothing"e;Haffet - "e;the temple, the side of the head"e;Hafflins - "e;nearly half, partly"e;Hag - "e;a scar, or gulf in mosses and moors"e;Haggis - "e;a kind of pudding boiled in the stomach of a cow or sheep"e;Hain'd - "e;spared"e;Hairst - "e;harvest"e;Haith - "e;a petty oath"e;Haivers - "e;nonsense, speaking without thought"e;Hale or haill - "e;whole, tight, healthy"e;Hallan - "e;a particular partition-wall in a cottage, or more properly, a seat of turf at the outside"e;Hallowmas, Hallow-eve - "e;the 31st of October"e;Haly - "e;holy"e;Hame - "e;home"e;Hamely - "e;homely, affable"e;Han' or haun' - "e;hand"e;Hansel - "e;the first money received"e;Hap - "e;an outer garment, mantle, plaid, etc.
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