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Dictionary of the Scots Language

The Historical Language of the Scottish Lowlands

 

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Terms 1 to 15 of 126    next »
VADMELL n. A species of woollen cloth manufactured and worn in the Orkneys.
VAGEIT part. pa. Mercenary, waged.
VAGEOURE n. A mercenary soldier. See also: VAGER.
VAGEOURE n. A mercenary soldier. See also: WAGEOUR, VAGER.
VAGER n. A mercenary soldier. See also: VAGEOURE.
VAGER n. A mercenary soldier. See also: WAGEOUR, VAGEOURE.
VAICK v. To be vacant, to be unoccupied. See also: VAIK, WAKE.
VAIG v. 1. To wander, to roam. “Vagit”, pret. 2. Metaphor, Metaphorical. applied to discourse.
VAIGER n. A stroller.
VAIK v. To be vacant, to be unoccupied. See also: VAICK, WAKE.
VAIL v. To make obeisance, to bow. See also: VALE.
VAILYE QUOD VAILYE expr. At all adventures, be the issue as it will.
VAIT v. To know, Scotland. “wat”. See also: WAIT, WATE.
VAKE v. To watch, to observe.
VALE n. The gunwale of a vessel.
 
Old English 'word lottery' pick

Semivitrification : n. The quality or state of being semivitrified.; n. A substance imperfectly vitrified.

 
A Dictionary of the Scots Language derived from “An Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language By John Jamieson, D.D.” published in 1818.
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