- V.
- v is taken for f as the heading of some purely English words, as vall, fall, vind, find.
- Veag, Vēg (2), a strong fit of anger.
- Vern, fern.
- Ve'se, vess, a verse.
- Vinny cheese, cheese with fen or blue-mould.
- Vitty, nice in appearance.
- Vlanker, a flake of fire.
- Vlee, fly.
- Vo'k, folk.
- Vooty, unhandily little.
- Vuz, Vuzzen, furze, gorse.
- W.
- wo (8, 4), for the long o, 7, as bwold, bold; cwold, cold.
- Wag, to stir.[page 467]
- Wagwanton, quaking grass.
- Weäse, (1, 4) a pad or wreath for the head under a milkpail.
- Weäle (1, 3), a ridge of dried hay; see Haÿmeäkèn.
- Welshnut, a walnut.
- Werden, were not or was not.
- Wevet, a spider's web.
- Whindlèn, weakly, small of growth.
- Whicker, to neigh.
- Whiver, to hover, quiver.
- Whog, go off; to a horse.
- Whur, to fling overhanded.
- Wi', with.
- Widdicks, withes or small brushwood.
- Wink, a winch; crank of a well.
- Withwind, the bindweed,
- Wont, a mole.
- Wops, wasp.
- ps, not sp, in Anglo-Saxon, and now in Holstein.
- Wotshed, Wetshod, wet-footed.
- Wride, to spread out in growth.
- Wride, the set of stems or stalks from one root or grain of corn.
- Writh, a small wreath of tough wands, to link hurdles to the sowels (stakes).
- Wrix, wreathed or wattle work, as a fence.
- Y.
- Yop, yelp.
- Z.
- z for s as a heading of some, not all, pure Saxon words, nor [or?] for s of inbrought foreign words.
- Zand, sand.
- Zennit, Zennight, seven night; "This day zennit."
- Zew, azew, milkless.
- Zoo, so.
- Zive, a scythe.
- Zull a plough to plough ground.
- Zwath, a swath.
Turnbull & Spears, Printers.