*Trip. A brood or flock, as 'A vine trip o' vowels (fowls).' In a MS. in the Bodleian a herd of tame swine is defined as a trip, while one of wild swine is a sounder.—S.W. (Deverill.)
*Tucky. Sticky.—S.W.
*Turning-the-barrel. A game in which two children stand back to back, locking their arms behind them, and lifting each other by turns from the ground.—S.W. (Deverill.)
Under-creep. v. To get the upper hand of by deceit, to overreach any one.—S.W. (Britford and Harnham.)
*Underground Shepherd. Orchis mascula, L., Early Purple Orchis.—S.W. (Charlton.)
Unhealed. See Heal.
Vitty. Close, closely. Cp. fitly, Eph. iv. 16.—N.W.
*Warning-stone. Add:—
'The bakers take a certain pebble, which they put in the vaulture of their oven, which they call the warning-stone: for when that is white the oven is hot.'—Aubrey's Nat. Hist. Wilts, p. 43, ed. Brit.