DOG-SNOOT—Gurt hard apples. Cauld as a dog-snoot.
DODD’T—Without horns, lacking some usual part, as a dodd’t coo. It liuks varra dodd’t; i.e. unfinished.
DOBBIN—A melder o’ drink.
DODDER, DODDERY, DODDERY-GERSE—Tremble; vibrate; shake. A man’s hand ’ll dodder when he’s hed a lal drop—just a lal drop mair ner he thowt o’ hevin, but fer t’ company an’ t’ hoose; iv’rything i’ t’ hoose ’ll dodder when a gurt rough lad gahs clointeren up an’ doon in his clogs; an’ when a body’s time’s gitten short t’ first sign on’t is t’ dodderen limbs. Doddery-gerse, er doddery, iv’rybody knows what it is—it’s trembling grass.
DOFF—To undress. Doff thi wet clias off.
DOGBERRY—Mountain ash, cherry, an’ some mair macks o’ things o’ that sooart.
DOG-NOPER—Ah nivver saw yan. Dud ye? A fellow wi’ a lang stick nopin fooak asleep i’ t’ kirk, er t’ cooaly cur ’at hed croppen in efter t’ gaffer, peur thing.
DOLDRUM—T’ siam as dildrum.
DOLLOCK—An unsightly mess.
DOLLOP—Aboot as nasty an’ unpleasant as dollock, but this is aboot a body, an’ aboot a peur sooart ov a body if she’s a dollop. Mucky, idle, shiftless.