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Hame

Page 50

by Annalena McAfee


  lowsin loose

  lugs ears

  luim loom

  lum chimney

  lumber a date, as in “lookin fer a lumber”

  lum-scutcher chimney sweep

  M

  machair low-lying land covered with wild grasses next to seashore

  mair more

  mairchlessness infinity

  makar a poet

  mak-on impostor

  malafoustert destroyed

  mane moan, grieve

  marrae equal

  mauchtless powerless

  maumie ripe, mellow

  maun must

  mense honour, dignity

  merk mark

  messages shopping

  midden dunghill, rubbish dump, compost heap

  mind remember

  mindin memory

  mirk dark, black, gloomy

  mishanter misfortune, disaster

  mixter-maxter motley, jumble

  mizzle vanish

  moch moth

  molligrants grumbles, small complaints

  moue mouth

  mozin decay

  muckle much, large, great

  murgeon mock

  murl mould, decay

  myndin remembering

  mynt aim

  N

  ned lout

  neshie tender, soft, fragile

  neuk corner

  nieve fistful

  nipscart a crabbed, bad-tempered person

  nocht nothing

  numpty idiot, eejit (see bampot)

  nyaff a puny, worthless person

  O

  oan on

  ochenin dawning

  onie any

  onwith onwards

  oor (1) our (2) hour

  oorit cold, tired

  ootby outwards, a little way off

  ootwith outside, beyond

  orra other

  orra man odd-job man

  ort waste

  ower over

  owersettin translation

  oxter armpit

  P

  pap touch

  pattle spade

  pawkies gloves, mittens

  pech breath, pant, gasp

  pechan stomach

  peelie-wallie sickly, pallid

  peerie little

  pelf possessions, plunder, wealth

  perjink neat, trim, fussy

  perlustrin surveying

  pewlie seagull

  piece sandwich, snack

  pilked shelled

  pirlin twisted, crooked, twirling

  plack cash, money

  pleuch plough

  pliskie trick, practical joke

  pluff puff, plump up

  plype soft, sudden sound

  poost strength

  pouk pluck

  powl pole

  pree kiss, taste

  prink wink

  puckle small quantity, a little

  puddock frog, toad

  puddock-stuils toadstools

  pudgetie dumpy

  pug to hide, play truant

  purvey church tea

  pushion poison

  pynes pains

  Q

  quaich shallow drinking cup with two handles

  qued vile

  queir choir

  quine young woman

  R

  rack stretch

  racket rotten branch, firewood

  radge rage, fury, wrath

  rael true, honest, genuine

  rairie roaring, as in drunk

  raivelment muddle, disorder, tangle

  rammie fight, scuffle

  rammish impetuous, wanton

  ramsh to munch, chew noisily

  rath early, premature

  rauchle loose, untidy, disorder

  raucle bold, rash in speech or action

  redd up to tidy, clear away

  reeshelt rustled

  reiver robber, thief

  rissle twig

  rive tear, rip

  roch rough

  roo quiet, peace, rest

  routhie profuse, abundant

  ruchelt strong, rough

  ruise praise, flatter

  rumballiach tempestuous

  S

  saorsa freedom

  saucht peace, tranquillity

  saul soul

  saut salt

  scabbit bare

  scart trace, track

  scaum burn, scorch

  scheme housing project

  sclim climb

  scob willow or hazel cane

  scodge drudgery, menial labour

  scoosh gush, splash

  scowe flat-bottomed boat

  scran food, scraps

  scriddan torrent

  scrieve write

  scrimpit meagre, scanty

  scud naked, nude, as in “in the scud/scuddie”

  scug shade

  sculdered ruined, smashed

  scunner sicken

  scurrivaig vagabond

  seabhag falcon

  seannachie storyteller, bard

  seelent silent

  seendil seldom

  seggie flooers yellow-flag irises

  seil happiness, good fortune

  ser serve

  shaikle icicle

  shaw wood

  sheilin remote summer hut near grazing cattle or sheep

  sheuch trench, to dig, to sink, to plant

  shilpit puny, thin, ill-looking

  shoogle shake

  shoon shoes

  shot turn, as in a game

  sic such

  siccan such

  siccar certain, safe, cautious

  sidhe fairies

  siller silver, money, wealth

  simmen rope made of straw

  simmer summer

  simmet vest

  skair share

  skaithe hurt, injure

  skellum rogue, scoundrel

  skep basket

  skiftin wainscot, skirting board

  skiggan bright

  skilderin soft glaze

  skink to pour

  skirl shriek, scream, sound of bagpipes

  skoosh spray, squirt

  skyce slip away unnoticed

  skyre glitter, brightness

  slaister splashy mess, smear, daub

  sleekit sly

  slig lie, deception

  slinge to lounge or loaf

  sloch to drink, quench thirst

  sloonge to idle

  smattert shattered

  smeddum spirit, drive, resourcefulness, energy

  smeeg kiss

  smoch smoke

  smoorach kiss, cuddle

  smouch secret smile

  smue smile, smirk

  smuir (1) to extinguish a fire (2) a covering of smoke

  smurach fine dust, dross

  sneist gibe, taunt

  sneith polished, smooth

  snellit sharp

  sneuter weep, blubber

  snig pilfer, cut

  snod trim, spruce

  snoke hunt

  sonse good fortune, prosperity

  sonsie fine, buxom (f) handsome (m), cheerful

  sook sycophant, to suck

  sottlin cooking

  souch sigh, breeze, wind

  sowans oatmeal soaked in water

  sowe shroud

  sowf doze, slumber, snore, whistle softly

  spaes prophecies, predictions

  spaewife woman fortune-teller

  spairge spray, dash, sprinkle

  spang pace, stride

  speal a spell of t
ime

  speeach stick, log

  speir to ask, enquire

  spiel a game

  spirlie slender, spindly

  splairge splash, spatter

  spoot spring, spout

  sprattle contest

  sprauchelt climbed, clambered

  starn star

  stech to stuff, cram

  steek stitch, sew

  steg prowl, stalk

  stell place, position

  stentless boundless

  stieve firm, fixed, stable

  stocious drunk

  strae straw

  straigly straggly

  straik streak

  stramash row, uproar, commotion

  stravaig wander, roam, stroll

  streeks stretches

  sturken restore

  stushie argument, uproar, brawl

  stychelt stifled, suffocated

  suith truth, veracity

  swallae (1) drink, esp. alcohol (2) fork-tailed songbird

  swee swing

  swith fleeting, brief

  syne since

  syple an impertinent, large-bellied person

  syte grief, sorrow

  sythment recompense, compensation

  syver a gutter

  T

  tack lease

  tap top

  tapsalteerie topsy-turvy, chaotic

  tapster innkeeper

  tapteed passionate, eager

  tashit tarnished

  taury sailor

  telt told

  teuk chicken

  thirlt bound

  thole suffer, bear, put up with

  thon that

  thonder yonder

  thoog a poog a lie, a hoax, a leg-pull

  thortout utterly

  thrain lament

  thrapple throat

  thrawartlie contrary

  thrawn stubborn, contrary

  threep to argue assertively

  thrie three

  throstle thrush

  tinkie gypsy, member of the travelling community (respectful rather than derogatory)

  tirl spin

  tirran brawling

  toosht loose bundle

  trailach trailing

  trinnlin rolling

  tuim empty, vacant, a tomb

  tulzie skirmish, fight

  twa two

  tyne lose

  U

  unco strange, unfamiliar, unusual

  undeemous enormous

  ungrutten unmourned

  ungubbed sober

  untashit untarnished

  unvinkishable invincible

  upby up the way, up there, heaven

  V

  vauntie jaunty, proud, showy

  vieve (1) life (2) bright, quick

  virr energy, vigour, force

  voar spring (the season)

  vowtit vaulted

  W

  wabbit weak, feeble, exhausted

  wae woe

  wally dug porcelain dog

  wampler a rake, reprobate

  ware spend, pass

  waucht drink, quaff

  waws waves

  wean child

  wechtie heavy

  ween to guess, surmise, think

  whase whose

  whaul whale

  wheech whisk

  wheen a small amount

  wheer odd, quiet

  wheesht quiet, often used in the imperative

  whids lies, as in Black Donald of the Whids (the devil, or deil)

  whigmaleerie a fancy, whim

  whilk which

  whilli-wha highwayman

  whin broom, gorse

  whumgee frivolous

  whumleeries hopes, desires

  whummel to empty

  whurl wheel

  wicht valiant, bold

  wid (1) wood (2) would

  willie-waught a hearty swig, copious draught

  windlestrae thin stalks of meadow grass

  winze curse, swear

  wiss wish, desire

  wraith wrath, anger

  wynd narrow winding lane

  wyteless blameless

  Y

  yairn (1) wool (2) story

  yask dust, ash

  yauks aches

  yetts gates

  yin one

  yink dedication

  yird earth

  yowes ewes

  yowt roar

  yowtherin plodding

  Select Bibliography

  GRIGOR MCWATT

  Knox-Cardew, Charles, A Vulgar Eloquence (Glenton University Press, 1987)

  McPhail, Mhairi, A Granite Ballad—The Reimagining of Grigor McWatt (Thackeray College Press, 2016)

  McWatt, Grigor, The Fascaray Compendium, ed. Mhairi McPhail (to be published in seven volumes by Cumlin Press, 2017)

  COLLECTED JOURNALISM

  Frae Mambeag Brae: Selected Columns and Essays of Grigor McWatt (Stravaigin Press, 1980)

  Wittins: Mair Selected Columns and Essays of Grigor McWatt (Stravaigin Press, 2011)

  MEMOIR

  Forby (Virr Press, 1962)

  Ootwith (Smeddum Beuks, 1994)

  POETRY

  Kenspeckelt (Virr Press, 1959)

  Kowk in the Kaleyard (Virr Press, 1975)

  Wappenshaw (Virr Press, 1986)

  Warld in a Gless: The Collected Varse of Grigor McWatt (Smeddum Beuks, 1992)

  Teuchter’s Chapbook (Smeddum Beuks, 1998)

  Thoog a Poog (Smeddum Beuks, 2010)

  That’s Me Awa (Smeddum Beuks, 2013)

  The Whigmaleerie’s Ower—The Complete Collected Verse of Grigor McWatt, ed. Ailish Mooney (Smeddum Beuks, 2015)

  CULTURE

  Bold, Alan, MacDiarmid (John Murray, 1988)

  Carmichael, Alexander, Ortha Nan Gaidheal: Carmina Gadelica (Floris Books, six-volume facsimile, 2006)

  Fergusson, Maggie, George Mackay Brown, The Life (John Murray, 2007)

  Green, Stanley Roger, A Clamjamfray of Poets (Saltire Society, 2008)

  MacDiarmid, Hugh, Lucky Poet (Jonathan Cape, 1972)

  Nic a’ Phi, A., The Fascaray Songbook (Gartcosh Press, 2015)

  Shaw, Margaret Fay, From the Alleghenies to the Hebrides (Birlinn, 2008)

  ETHNOGRAPHY

  Grant, Isabel, Highland Folk Ways (Routledge, 1961) and The Making of Am Fasgadh (NMSE, 2007)

  McPhail, Mhairi, The But’n’Ben Baroness (Aikenhead Press, 2010)

  Webster, Joseph, The Anthropology of Protestantism: Faith and Crisis Among Scottish Fishermen (Palgrave Macmillan, 2014)

  HISTORY

  Allan, Stuart, Commando Country (National Museums Scotland, 2007)

  Devine, T. M., The Scottish Nation: A Modern History (Penguin, 2012)

  Goring, Rosemary, Scotland the Autobiography (Viking, 2007)

  Hunter, James, On the Other Side of Sorrow: Nature and People in the Scottish Highlands (Birlinn, 2014)

  Lynch, Michael, The Oxford Companion to Scottish History (OUP, 2001)

  Rixson, Denis, Knoydart, A History (Birlinn, 1999)

  Struan, Jim, Silent Killing for Cubs and Scouts (Buirlie Books, 1973)

  ISLAND LIFE

  Brown, George Mackay, Portrait of Orkney (John Murray, 1988)

  Campbell, John Lorne, The Book of Barra (Routledge, 1936)

  Dressler, Camille, Eigg: The Story of an Island (Birlinn, 2014)

  Gordon, Seton, Hebridean Memories (In Pinn, 2013)

  Haswell-Smith, Hamish, An Island Odyssey (Canongate, 2015)

  Maclennan, Donald John, Dalmore—Tales of a Lewis Village (Create Space, 2013)

  McPhee, John, The Crofter and the Laird (House of Lochar, 1998)

  Rea, F. G., A School in South Uist (Birlinn, 1997)

  LANGUAGE
<
br />   Jamieson, John, Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language (Alexander Gardner, 1879 edition, 5 volumes)

  Macafee, Caroline, and Iseabail Macleod, eds., The Nuttis Schell: Essays on the Scots Language (Aberdeen University Press, 1987)

  MacLennan, Malcolm, Gaelic Dictionary (Acair and Mercat Press, 2001)

  Macleod, Iseabail, and Pauline Cairns, eds., Essential Scots Dictionary (Edinburgh University Press, 1996) and The Scots Thesaurus (Aberdeen University Press, 1990)

  NATURAL HISTORY

  Botting, Douglas, Gavin Maxwell: A Life (HarperCollins, 1994)

  Cunningham, Peter, A Hebridean Naturalist (Acair, 1979)

  Fish, J. D. and S. Fish, A Student’s Guide to the Seashore (Cambridge University Press, 2011)

  Maxwell, Gavin, Ring of Bright Water Trilogy (Penguin, 2001)

  Shepherd, Nan, The Living Mountain: A Celebration of the Cairngorms (Canongate, 2011)

  POLITICS

  Ascherson, Neal, Stone Voices (Granta, 2003)

  Brand, Jack, The National Movement in Scotland (Routledge, 1978)

  Harvie, Christopher, No Gods and Precious Few Heroes: Scotland 1914–1980 (Edward Arnold, 1981)

  McIntosh, Alastair, Soil and Soul (Aurum, 2001)

  Marr, Andrew, The Battle for Scotland (Penguin, 2013)

  Wightman, Andy, Who Owns Scotland? (Canongate, 1996) and The Poor Had No Lawyers (Birlinn, 2013)

  ONLINE RESOURCES

  Dictionair o the Scots Leid: http://www.dsl.ac.uk

  Historical Thesaurus of Scots: http://scotsthesaurus.org

  The Online Scots Dictionary: http://www.scots-online.org/​dictionary/​index.asp

  ScotlandsPeople: http://www.scotslandspeople.gov.uk

  Scots Language Centre: http://www.scotslanguage.com

  Scots Leid Associe: http://www.lallans.co.uk

  Scots Radio: http://www.scotsradio.com

  Appendix I

  Receipts, or Recipes, from The Fascaray Compendium

  Broth

  INGREDIENTS

  One nieve of barley

  One nieve of split peas

  One nieve of lentils

  Four leeks or onions

  Butter or lard

  Two nieves of chopped carrots

  One and a half nieves of neeps

  Three pints of mutton or chicken stock

  Nieve of parsley if available

  METHOD

  Soak barley, peas and lentils overnight. Boil for an hour in salted water then drain. Fry leeks or onions in butter or lard until soft. Add remaining vegetables. Fry for five minutes then add stock. Bring to boil then add drained barley, peas and lentils. Simmer for half an hour, add more stock as needed, then serve with parsley. Keeps for a week if kept outside in the cold in a skillet weighted with bricks to keep out rats, mice, pine martens, etc.

 

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