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THRISSEL n a thistle

on 30th Nov 2009

 

In anticipation of St Andrew's Day, this sober woman looks at a thistle. The plant appears in accounts for heraldic embroidery and metalwork from the late fifteenth c...

POOCH, POUCH n a pocket

on 23rd Nov 2009

This word of French origin has been around in Scots since at least the sixteenth century. It appears earlier in English but in the sense of a bag rather than a receptacle built into a...

GLACK n a hollow

on 16th Nov 2009

GLACK n a hollow

Older Scots has a glak as a deep glen. In Gaelic, ‘glac’ has several senses which reflect later Scots usage: the palm of the hand, a handful, a hollow; a ...

CRUISIE n an iron oil lamp

on 09th Nov 2009

A cruisie is not a diminutive ocean voyage but an old-fashioned iron lamp, typically with a rush wick, although strips of cloth were also used. One typr described in the Dictionary of the Scots ...

Draft article

on 09th Nov 2009

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