hause-bane, hase-bane, hass-bane, hals-bane, I, 394, 8; 395, B 3; II, 146, 14; 147, 15; IV, 165, 15; 447 b, after 13; 448 a, 2d stanza; V, [204] b: neck-bone.
have, ellipsis of. would been, I, 169, 7. I wad taen, I, 356, 54, 55. shuld I slain, II, 169, 7. ye widna kept, III, 390, 10. I woud not swum, III, 489, 42. I should, might, enjoyd, IV, 135, 23; 137, 32. he woud guarded me, IV, 148, 55. they taen, IV, 221, D 7. as muckle as wald bocht, IV, 386, 18. I seen’t, IV, 465, 31. euer I seene, V, [53], 105. seem[d] to worn, V, [55], 26. he’ll learned, V, [196], 53. had rather lost, V, [302], 17.
have==proceed, go. have in (to water), have over, III, 128, 76, 77.
have==provide or procure that a thing is done. hae me hame, II, 82, 54; hae me to the town, II, 122 f., 4, 28: take.
have in, had him in, II, 216, 8: had him in my possession (Germ. innehaben)?
have (on the skynne), III, 127, 60: get a blow.
haw, green haw sea, II, 28, 21; IV, 379, 10, 14; 380, 19: bluish. “azure; pale, wan;” Jamieson. (A. S. hæwen, glaucus, caeruleus. Old Eng. hawe, haa.) green raw sea, II, 30, 6, is a corruption; I have been lately informed that the singer ordinarily gave haw. In haw bayberry kame, IV, 471 f., 2, 4, there is again corruption; as in the same passage of other versions.
hawd. See haud.
hay, II, 160, 18: for hae, has.
hay, went forth to view the hay, IV, 233, 1; 238, 1: to see how the hay was coming on, as a way of taking the air.