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Scots Language Centre Centre for the Scots Leid

Dowie

DOWIE, adj

 

This week’s Mental Health Awareness week should, perhaps, remind us to think of those of us who have been feeling a wee bit dowie during these past months. Dowie, as the Dictionaries of the Scots Language (DSL) remind us, means:

 

“Sad, melancholy, dreary, dismal; dull, dispirited; used both of persons and of places, weather, etc. Sad, melancholy, dreary, dismal; dull, dispirited; used both of persons and of places, weather…”.

 

Burns captures the mood of a lovelorn lass in Highland Harry Back Again (1789) with:

 

“When a’ the lave [others] gae to their bed, I wander dowie up the glen”.

 

One of the earliest references we have describes a place and it comes from the poems of Robert Sempill (1581):

 

“Out of his dowie den Maist lyke a fox thay fyrit [set on fire] him in his nest”.

 

It can also mean, “ailing, sickly, weak”, as in the description of this unfortunate from Watson’s 1903 Auld Lang Syne:

 

“He was a cripple from infancy, and was known in the district as a ‘peer, dowie breet’”.

 

The poet and novelist Sheena Blackhall used it to describe language in Wittgenstein’s Web from 1996:

 

“Nae Inglis wird alane can convoy the multiplicity o thocht ahin thon ae wird dreichDreich is a cauld, mochy, jeelin, dowie wird”.

 

More recently, a journalist from the Press and Journal of December 2019 records his own sadness at the loss of friends throughout the year:

 

“Lookin back throwe the columns I hae screiv’t es past eer, I get dowie bein remindit on mony weel-kent freens o’s aa nae langer wi’s…”.

 

 

Scots Word of the Week is written by Pauline Cairns Speitel, Dictionaries of the Scots Language https://dsl.ac.uk.