well and wellsome, II, 159, 16: should probably be wae and waesome (sad and woful).

well o Spa, IV, 286, 6: a spring to the west of Aberdeen.

well or wae, was he well or was he wae, I, 80, 8: whether he liked or disliked. (The passage is variously corrupted, and the original reading probably nowhere preserved.)

well-a-woo, III, 77, 438: a variety of well-a-way. (A. S. wá-lá-wá.)

well-bespoke, V, [149], 9-11: well spoken.

well-strand, I, 165, M 4; IV, 172, 15; 174, 16: stream from a spring.

well-wight, III, 3 f., 12, 16, 21; 487, 5, 7; IV, 165, 7; 222, 9 (wiel-wight); 428, 4: very strong, sturdy, stalwart; but, sometimes, brave, see III, 4, 16. See wall-wight.

welt, pret. of wield, III, 74, 366: disposed of.

welth(e), III, 77, 436: either, simply, his money, or, more probably, his well-being, his palmy days; so III, 287, 65. III, 295, 5, 6; 296, 15, (rich) booty.

weme (of ring), III, 412, 21: belly, hollow. See weame.