Find out about Scots dialects and Scots place names

Scots Language Centre

See awthin in Scots

CREESH n., v. grease

on 27th Oct 2008

Creesh is grease or fat in general, but the word is often specifically used to mean the fat of fowls, as in the Aberdeen Press and Journal of 21st March 1992: “Creesh was the lump of fat from th...

Kittle v. to tickle, to stimulate; adj. apt, problematic.

on 20th Oct 2008

This word should kittle your fancy. Hochmagandy is suggested by its earliest example in the Dictionary of the Scots Language (DSL): “Cum kyttil me naykyt vantounly”, from the Sir David Lindsay’...

Unco adjective, adverb, noun strange, unfamiliar; extremely; a marvel.

on 13th Oct 2008

Unco (earlier uncouth) has an interesting history. It comes from an Old English word, meaning ‘unknown’, a sense well attested in Older Scots. Bellenden (1531), in his translation of Boece’s The...

JAW n. a wave, a rush of water; v. to pour

on 06th Oct 2008

Jaw, meaning a wave or rush of water appears several times in Gavin Douglas’s translation of the Aeneid (1513), as in “Hir trimbling teiris did represent the jawis Of Neptunis raige quhilk rasit...

Archive

SLC, A K Bell Library, York Place, Perth, PH2 8EP P:(44) (0) 1738 440199 F:(44) (0) 1738 477010 E:info@scotslanguage.com | Terms & Conditions | Un-subscribe | Login

Scots Language Resource Centre Association Ltd. t/a Scots Language Centre, A.K. Bell Library, York Place, Perth, Scotland PH2 8EP
Registered in Scotland as an Industrial & Provident Society No. 2451R(S). Scottish Charity No. SCO21747

Shetland and Orcadian Scots dialect | Caithness Scots dialect | North East Doric Scots dialect | East central Scots dialects | Angus and Tayside Scots Dialect | Galloway Scots Dialect | West Central Scots Dialect | Borders Scots Dialect | Ulster Scots Dialect | Scotch language | Scots leid | Scottish Language | Ulster Scots Dialect |