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plunk v. to play truant, absent oneself (from school) without leave

on 26th May 2008

Plunk is a term of uncertain origin, though it may possibly have some connection with Dutch plenken, to play truant. It is first recorded in John Jamieson’s Etymological Dictionary of the Scotti...

tawse n. a leather punishment strap with thongs, formerly used in schools

on 19th May 2008

The tawse (also called the belt or strap) is now generally associated with bygone schooldays, given that corporal punishment has been outlawed from all Scottish schools. That said, such changes ...

darg n. (the result of product of) a day’s work

on 12th May 2008

Darg (also sometimes dark) is often used in contexts that hark back to an age when agriculture and manual labour engaged a larger proportion of the population than today. In his book, Riot, Reve...

braw adj. very good, excellent; handsome; splendid; brave

on 05th May 2008

Braw developed from a variant of the word brave, itself borrowed into Scots and English from French. Early uses of braw, noted in Scottish sources in the seventeenth century, often relate to phy...

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