Produced by Miranda van de Heijning, David Starner,
and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
"Goo little Reed!
Aforn tha vawk, an vor me plead:
Thy wild nawtes, mâ-be, thâ ool hire
Zooner than zâter vrom a lâre.
Zâ that thy Maester's pleas'd ta blaw 'em,
An haups in time thâ'll come ta knaw 'em
An nif za be thâ'll please ta hear,
A'll gee zum moor another year."—The Farewell.
THE Dialect of the West of England
PARTICULARLY SOMERSETSHIRE;
WITH A GLOSSARY OF WORDS NOW IN USE THERE; ALSO WITH POEMS AND OTHER PIECES EXEMPLIFYING THE DIALECT.
BY JAMES JENNINGS,
HONORARY SECRETARY OF THE METROPOLITAN LITERARY INSTITUTION, LONDON.
BASED ON THE SECOND EDITION,
THE WHOLE REVISED, CORRECTED, AND ENLARGED, WITH TWO DISSERTATIONS ON THE ANGLO-SAXON PRONOUNS, AND OTHER PIECES,
BY JAMES KNIGHT JENNINGS, M.A.,
Late Scholar and Librarian, Queens' College, Cambridge; Vicar of
Hagbourn, Berkshire; and Minister of Calcott Donative,
Somersetshire.
TO THA DWELLERS O' THA WEST,
Tha Fruit o' longvul labour, years,
In theäze veo leaves at last appears.
Ta you, tha dwellers o' tha West,
I'm pleas'd that thâ shood be addresst:
Vor thaw I now in Lunnan dwell,
I mine ye still—I love ye well;
And niver, niver sholl vorget
I vust drâw'd breath in Zummerzet;
Amangst ye liv'd, and left ye zorry,
As you'll knaw when you hire my storry.
Theäze little book than take o' me;
'Tis âll I hâ just now ta gee
An when you rade o' Tommy Gool,
Or Tommy Came, or Pal at school,
Or Mr. Guy, or Fanny Fear,—
I thenk you'll shod vor her a tear)
Tha Rookery, or Mary's Crutch,
Tha cap o' which I love ta touch,
You'll vine that I do not vorget
My naatal swile—dear Zummerzet.
JAS. JENNINGS.
PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION.
In preparing this second edition of my relative's work, I have incorporated the results of observations made by me during several years' residence in Somersetshire, in the centre of the district. I have also availed myself by kind permission, of hints and suggestions in two papers, entitled "Somersetshire Dialect," read by T. S. Baynes in 1856, and reprinted from the Taunton Courier, in London, in 1861.
During the forty years which have elapsed since the first edition, very much light has been thrown on the subject of Provincial Dialects, and after all much remains to be discovered. I consider with Mr. Baynes that there is more of the pure Anglo-Saxon in the west of England dialect, as this district was the seat of classical Anglo-Saxon, which first rose here to a national tongue, and lasted longer in a great measure owing to its distance from the Metropolis, from which cause also it was less subject to modern modification.
I shall be happy to receive any suggestions from Philological scholars, which may increase the light thrown on the subject, and by which a third edition may be improved.
Hagbourn Vicarage, August, 1869.
PREFACE.
The usefulness of works like the present is too generally admitted to need any apology for their publication. There is, notwithstanding, in their very nature a dryness, which requires relief: the author trusts, therefore, that, in blending something imaginative with the details of philological precision, his work will afford amusement to the reader.
The Glossary contains the fruit of years of unwearied attention to the subject; and it is hoped that the book will be of some use in elucidating our old writers, in affording occasional help to the etymology of the Anglo-Saxon portion of our language, and in exhibiting a view of the present state of an important dialect of the western provinces of England.
A late excursion through the West has, however, induced the Author to believe that some valuable information may yet remain to be gathered from our Anglo-Saxon dialect—more especially from that part of it still used by the common people and the yeomanry. He therefore respectfully solicits communications from those who feel an interest in this department of our literature; by which a second edition may be materially improved.
To a native of the west of England this volume will be found a vade-mecum of reference, and assist the reminiscence of well-known, and too often unnoted peculiarities and words, which are fast receding from, the polish of elegance, and the refinement of literature.
In regard to the Poetical Pieces, it may be mentioned that most of them are founded on West Country Stories, the incidents in which actually occurred. If some of the subjects should be thought trifling, it must not be forgotten that the primary object has been, to exemplify the Dialect, and that common subjects offered the best means of effectuating such an object. Of such Poems as Good Bwye ta thee Cot; the Rookery; and Mary Ramsey's Crutch, it may be observed, that had the Author felt less he might, perhaps, have written better.
Metropolitan Literary Institution, London, March 25, 1825.
CONTENTS
- Dedication
- Preface to the Second Edition
- Preface to the First Edition
- OBSERVATIONS on some of the Dialects of the West of England, particularly Somersetshire
- A GLOSSARY of Words commonly used in Somersetshire
- POEMS and OTHER PIECES, exemplifying the Dialect of the County of Somerset
- Good Bwye ta Thee Cot
- Fanny Fear
- Jerry Nutty
- Legend of Glastonbury
- Mr. Guy
- The Rookery
- Tom Gool
- Teddy Band—a Zong—Hunting for Sport
- The Churchwarden
- The Fisherman and the Players
- Mary Ramsey's Crutch
- Hannah Verrior
- Remembrance
- Doctor Cox
- The Farewell
- Farmer Bennet an Jan Lide, a Dialogue
- Thomas Came an Young Maester Jimmy, a Dialogue
- Mary Ramsay, a Monologue
- Soliloquy of Ben Bond
- Two Dissertations on Anglo-Saxon Pronouns
- Miss Ham on the Somerset Dialect
- Concluding Observations
OBSERVATIONS, &c.
The following Glossary includes the whole of Somerset, East of the River Parret, as well as adjoining parts of Wiltshire and Gloucestershire. West of the Parret many of the words are pronounced very differently indeed, so as to mark strongly the people who use them. [This may be seen more fully developed in two papers, by T. Spencer Baynes, read before the Somersetshire Archaeological Society, entitled the Somersetshire Dialect, printed 1861, 18mo, to whom I here acknowledge my obligations for several hints and suggestions, of which I avail myself in this edition of my late relative's work].
The chief peculiarity West of the Parret, is the ending of the third person singular, present tense of verbs, in th or eth: as, he lov'th, zee'th, &c., for he loves, sees, &c.
In the pronouns, they have Ise for I, and er for he. In fact the peculiarities and contractions of the Western District are puzzling to a stranger. Thus, her is frequently used for she. "Har'th a doo'd it," is, "she has done it," (I shall occasionally in the Glossary note such words as distinguishingly characterise that district).
Two of the most remarkable peculiarities of the dialect of the West of England, and particularly of Somersetshire, are the sounds given to the vowels A and E. A, is almost always sounded open, as in fäther, räther, or somewhat like the usual sound of a in balloon, calico, lengthened; it is so pronounced in bäll, cäll. I shall use for this sound the circumflex over the a, thus â_ or ä_. E, has commonly the same sound as the French gave it, which is, in fact, the slender of A, as heard in pane fane, cane, &c. The hard sound given in our polished dialect to the letters th, in the majority of words containing those letters [as in through, three, thing, think_], expressed by the Anglo-Saxon ð, is frequently changed in the Western districts into the sound given in England to the letter d:
as for three, we have dree
for thread, dread, or dird,
through, droo, throng, drong, or rather drang;
thrush, dirsh, &c. The consonant and vowel following d, changing places. The slender or soft sound given to th in our polished dialect, is in the West, most commonly converted into the thick or obtuse sound of the same letters as heard in the words this, these &c., and this too, whether the letters be at the beginning or end of words. I am much disposed to believe that our Anglo-Saxon ancestors, used indiscriminately the letters Ð and ð for D only, and sounded them as such, as we find now frequently in the West; although our lexicographers usually have given the two sounds of th to Ð and ð respectively. The vowel O is used for a, as hond, dorke, lorke, hort, in hand, dark, lark, heart, &c., and other syllables are lengthened, as voote, bade, dade, for foot, bed, dead. The letter O in no, gold, &c., is sounded like aw in awful; I have therefore spelt it with this diphthong instead of a. Such word as jay for joy, and a few others, I have not noted. Another remarkable fact is the disposition to invert the order of some consonants in some words; as the r in thrush, brush, rush, run, &c., pronouncing them dirsh, birsh, hirsh, hirn; also transposition of p and s in such words as clasp, hasp, asp, &c., sounded claps, haps, aps, &c. I have not inserted all these words in the Glossary, as these general remarks will enable the student to detect the words which are so inverted. It is by no means improbable that the order in which such sounds are now repeated in the West, is the original order in which they existed in our language, and that our more polished mode of expressing them is a new and perhaps a corrupt enunciation. Another peculiarity is that of joining the letter y at the end of some verbs in the infinitive mood, as well as to parts of different conjugations, thus, "I can't sewy, nursy, reapy, to sawy, to sewy, to nursy, &c. A further peculiarity is the love of vowel sound, and opening out monosyllables of our polished dialect into two or more syllables, thus:
ay-er, for air; boo-äth, for both; fay-er, for fair; vi-ër for fire; stay-ers for stairs; show-er for sure; vröo-rst for post; boo-ath for both; bre-ash for brush; chee-ase for cheese; kee-ard for card; gee-ate for gate; mee-ade for mead; mee-olk for milk; &c.
Chaucer gives many of them as dissyllables.
The verb to be retains much of its primitive form: thus I be, thou, or thee, beest, or bist, we be, you be, they be, thä be, are continually heard for I am, &c., he be is rarely used: but he is. In the past tense, war is used for was, and were: I war, thou or thee wart, he war, &c., we have besides, we'm, you'm, they'm, for we, you, they, are, there is a constant tendency to pleonasm in some cases, as well as to contraction, and elision in others. Thus we have a lost, agone, abought, &c., for lost, gone, bought, &c., Chaucer has many of these prefixes; but he often uses y instead of a, as ylost. The frequent use of Z and V, the softened musical sounds for S and F, together with the frequent increase and multiplication of vowel sounds, give the dialect a by no means inharmonious expression, certainly it would not be difficult to select many words which may for their modulation compete with others of French extraction, and, perhaps be superior to many others which we have borrowed from other languages, much less analogous to the polished dialect of our own. I have added, in pursuance of these ideas, some poetical and prose pieces in the dialect of Somersetshire, in which the idiom is tolerably well preserved, and the pronunciation is conveyed in letters, the nearest to the sound of the words, as there are in truth many sounds for which we have neither letters, nor combinations of letters to express them. [I might at some future period, if thought advisable, go into a comparison between the sound of all the letters of the alphabet pronounced in Somersetshire, and in our polished dialect, but I doubt if the subject is entitled to this degree of criticism]. The reader will bear in mind that these poems are composed in the dialect of Somerset, north east of the Parret, which is by far the most general.
In the Guardian, published about a century ago, is a paper No. 40, concerning pastoral poetry, supposed to have been written by Pope, to extol his own pastorals and degrade those of Ambrose Phillips. In this essay there is a quotation from a pretended Somersetshire poem. But it is evident Pope knew little or nothing about the Somersetshire dialect. Here are a few lines from "this old West country bard of ours," as Pope calls him:
"Cicely. Ah Rager, Rager, cher was zore avraid,
When in yond vield you kiss'd the parson's maid:
Is this the love that once to me you zed,
When from tha wake thou broughtst me gingerbread?"
Now first, this is a strange admixture of dialects, but neither east, west, north, nor south.
Chez is nowhere used; but in the southern part utche or iche, is sometimes spoken contractedly che. [See utchy in the Glossary].
Vield for field, should be veel.
Wake is not used in Somersetshire; but revel is the word.
Parson, in Somersetshire, dealer, is pâson.
In another line he calls the cows, kee, which is not
Somersetian; nor is, be go for begone: it should, be
gwon; nor is I've a be; but I've a bin,
Somersetian.
The idiomatic expressions in this dialect are numerous, many will be found in the Glossary; the following may be mentioned. I'd 'sley do it, for I would as lief do it. I have occasionally in the Glossary suggested the etymology of some words; by far the greater part have an Anglo-Saxon, some perhaps a Danish origin; [and when we recollect that Alfred the Great, a good Anglo-Saxon scholar, was born at Wantage in Berks, on the border of Wilts, had a palace at Chippenham, and was for some time resident in Athelney, we may presume that traditional remains of him may have influenced the language or dialect of Somersetshire, and I am inclined to think that the present language and pronunciation of Somersetshire were some centuries past, general in the south portion of our island.]
In compiling this Glossary, I give the fruits of twenty-five years' assiduity, and have defined words, not from books, but from actual usage; I have however carefully consulted Junius, Skinner, Minshew, and some other old lexicographers, and find many of their definitions correspond with my own; but I avoid conjectural etymology. Few dictionaries of our language are to be obtained, published from the invention of printing to the end of the 16th century, a period of about 150 years. They throw much light on our provincial words, yet after all, our old writers are our chief resource, [and doubtless many MSS. in various depositories, written at different periods, and recently brought to light, from the Record and State Paper Office, and historical societies, will throw much light on the subject]; and an abundant harvest offers in examining them, by which to make an amusing book, illustrative of our provincial words and ancient manners. I think we cannot avoid arriving at the conclusion, that the Anglo-Saxon dialect, of which I conceive the Western dialect to be a striking portion, has been gradually giving way to our polished idiom; and is considered a barbarism, and yet many of the sounds of that dialect are found in Holland and Germany, as a part of the living language of these countries. I am contented with having thus far elucidated the language of my native county. I have omitted several words, which I supposed provincial, and which are frequent to the west, as they are found in the modern dictionaries, still I have allowed a few, which are in Richardson's Johnson.
Thee is used for the nominative thou; which latter word is seldom used, diphthong sounds used in this dialect are:
uai, uoa, uoi, uoy, as guain, (gwain), quoat, buoil, buoy;
such is the disposition to pleonasm in the use of the demonstrative pronouns, that they are very often used with the adverb there. Theäze here, thick there, [thicky there, west of the Parret] theäsam here, theazamy here, them there, themmy there. The substitution of V for F, and Z (Izzard, Shard, for S, is one of the strongest words of numerous dialects.)
In words ending with p followed by s, the letters change places as:
hasp—haps; clasp—claps, wasp—waps;
In a paper by General Vallancey in the second volume of the Transactions of the Royal Irish Academy, read Dec. 27, 1788, it appears that a colony of English soldiers settled in the Baronies of Forth Bargie, in the county of Wexford, in Ireland, in 1167, 1168, and 1169; and that colony preserved their customs, manners, and language to 1788. There is added in that paper a vocabulary of their language, and a song, handed down by tradition from the arrival of the colony more than 600 years since. I think there can be no question that these Irish colonists were from the West of England, from the apparent admixture of dialects in the vocabulary and song, although the language is much altered from the Anglo- Saxon of Somersetshire. [Footnote: This subject has been more fully treated in the following work: A Glossary, with some pieces of verse of the old dialect of the English colony in the Baronies of Forth and Bargy, Co. Wexford, Ireland. Formerly collected by Jacob Poole, of Growton, now edited with Notes and Introduction by the Rev. W. Barnes, author of the Dorset Poems and Glossary, fcap. 8vo, 1867.] The words nouth, knoweth; zin, sin, vrast, frost; die, day; Zathardie, Saturday; Zindii, Sunday; and a few others, indicate an origin west of the Parret. There are many words which with a trifling alteration in spelling, would suit at the present time the north eastern portion of the county: as blauther, bladder: crwest, crust; smill, smell; skir, to rise in the air [see skeer]; vier, fire; vier, a weasel; zar, to serve; zatch, such, &c. From such words as ch'am, and ch'uh, the southern part of the county is clearly indicated. I think the disposition to elision and contraction is as evident here as it is at present in Somersetshire. In the song, there are marks of its having undergone change since its first introduction.
Lowthee is evidently derived from lewth [see Glossary] lewthy, will be, abounding in lewth, i. e. sheltered.
The line
"As by mizluck wus I pit t' drive in."
would in the present Somerset dialect stand thus:
"_That by misluck war a put ta dreav in."
That by mis-luck was placed to drive in.
In the line
"Chote well ar aim wai t' yie ouz n'eer a blowe."
the word chete is, I suspect, compounded of 'ch' [iche] and knew, implying I knew, or rather I knew'd, or knewt. [Footnote: The following is from, an amatory poem, written, in or about the reign of Henry II., during which the colony of the English was established in the county of Wexford.
"Ichot from heune it is me sent."
In Johnson's History of the English Language, page liii. it is thus translated—
"I wot (believe) it is sent me from heaven."
To an admirer of our Anglo-Saxon all the lines, twelve in number, quoted by M. Todd with the above, will be found a rich treat: want of space only prevents my giving them here.]
The modern English of the line will then be,
I knew well their aim was to give us ne'r a blow.
I suspect zitckel is compounded of zitch, such, and the auxiliary verb will. I view ame, is a veo o'm; that is, a few of them. Emethee, is emmtey, that is, abounding with ants. Meulten away, is melting away.
Th'ast ee pait it, thee'st a paid it; thou hast paid it.
In the English translation which accompanies the original song in General Vallancey's paper, some of the words are, I think, beyond controversy misinterpreted, but I have not room to go critically through it. All I desire should be inferred from these remarks is, that, although this Anglo-Saxon curiosity is well worthy the attention of those who take an interest in our early literature, we must be careful not to assume that it is a pure specimen of the language of the period to which, and of the people to whom, it is said to relate.
A GLOSSARY OF WORDS COMMONLY USED IN THE County of Somerset,
BUT WHICH ARE NOT ACCCEPTED AS LEGITIMATE WORDS OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE;
OR WORDS WHICH, ALTHOUGH ONCE USED GENERALLY, ARE NOW BECOME PROVINCIAL.
A.
A. adv. Yes; or pron. He: as a zed a'd do it; he said he'd do it.
Aa'th. s. earth.
Ab'bey. s. The great white poplar: one of the varieties of the populus alba.
Ab'bey-lubber. s. A lazy, idle fellow.
Abought. part. Bought. See VAUGHT.
Abrood'. adv. When a hen is sitting on her eggs she is said to be abrood.
Ad'dle. s. A swelling with matter in it.
Ad'dled. a. Having pus or corruption; hence
Ad'dled-egg. s. An egg in a state of putrefaction.
Affeard'. a. Afraid.
Afo're, Afo'rn. prep. and adv. Before; afore,
Chaucer.
Again. prep. Against.
Agon', Agoo'. adv. [these words literally mean gone.] Ago; agoo, Chaucer; from the verb to goo, i.e. to go; he is up and agoo; he is up and gone.
Alas-a-dây. interj. A-lack-a-day.
Ale. s. A liquor, brewed with a proportion of malt from about four to six bushels to the hogshead of 63 gallons; if it contain more malt it is called beer; if less, it is usually called small beer.
Al'ler. s. The alder tree.
Allès. adv. Always.
All'once. pron. [all ones] or rather (all o'n's) All of us; Let's go allonce; let us go all of us.
All o's. pron. All of us.
Alost'. part. Lost: ylost, Chaucer.
Amang. prep. Among.
Amawst', Amoo'äst adv. Almost.
Amper. s. A small red pimple.
Anby'. adv. Some time hence; in the evening.
Anear', Ane'ast, Aneoust'. prep. Nigh to; aneast en, near him.
Aneen. On end, upright.
An'passy. s. The sign &, corrupted from and per se.
Anty. adj. Empty.
Apast'. part. and prep. Past; apast. Chaucer.
A'pricock. s. An apricot.
Aps. s. The asp tree; populus tremula.
Aps'en. a. Made of the wood of the asp; belonging to the asp.
To Arg. v. n. To argue.
To Ar'gufy. v. n. To hold an argument; to argue.
Ascri'de. adv. Across; astride.
Aslen'. adv. Aslope.
Assu'e. adj. When a cow is let up in order that she may calve, she is said to be assue—having no milk.
Ater. prep. After. Goo ater'n: go after him.
Athin. adv. Within.
Athout. prep. Without.
Auverdro. v. a. Overthrow.
Avaur', Avaur'en, Avaurn.prep. Before.
Avoordin. part. Affording.
Avraur'. adj. Frozen; stiff with frost.
Awakid. adj. Awake; awakid, Chaucer.
To Ax. v. a. To ask; ax, Chaucer.
Ax'en. s. pl. Ashes.
Axing. s. and part. Asking; axing, Chaucer.
Ay'ir. s. Air.
B.
Back'sid. s. A barton.
Back'y. s. Tobacco.
Bad. adv. Badly.
Bade. s. Bed.
Ba'ginet. s. Bayonet.
Bai'ly. s. A bailiff; a superintendent of an estate.
Ball. adj. Bald.
Bal'let. s. Ballad.
Ball'rib. s. A sparerib.
To Bal'lirag. v. a. To abuse with foul words; to scold.
To Ban. v. a. To shut out; to stop.
To Bane. v. a. To afflict with a mortal disease; applied to sheep. See to COATHE.
To Barenhond', To Banehond'. v. n. (used chiefly in the third person singular) to signify intention; to intimate.
These words are in very common use in the West of England. It is curious to note their gradation from Chaucer, whose expression is Beren hem on hond, or bare him on hand; implying always, it appears to me, the same meaning as I have given to the words above. There is, I think, no doubt, that these expressions of Chaucer, which he has used several times in his works, are figurative; when Chaucer tells us he beren hem, in hond, the literal meaning is, he carried it in, or on, his hand so that it might be readily seen. "To bear on hand, to affirm, to relate."—JAMIESON'S Etymological Scots Dictionary. But, whatever be the meaning of these words in Chaucer, and at the present time in Scotland, the above is the meaning of them in the west of England.
Banes. s. pl. The banns of matrimony.
Ban'nin. s. That which is used for shutting out or stopping.
Ban'nut. s. A walnut. [Only used in northern parts of county.]
Barrow-pig. s. A gelt pig.
Baw'ker, Baw'ker-stone. s. A stone used for whetting scythes; a kind of sand-stone.
To Becall'. v. a. To censure; to reprove; to chide.
Bee'äs, Bease. s. pl. [Beasts] Cattle. Applied only to Oxen not Sheep.
Bee-but, Bee-lippen. s. A bee-hive
Bee'dy. s. A chick.
Beedy's-eyes. s.pl. Pansy, love-in-idleness.
Beer. s. See ALE.
Befor'n. prep. Before.
To Begird'ge, To Begrud'ge. v. a. To grudge; to envy.
LORD BYRON has used the verb begrudge in his notes to the 2nd canto of Childe Harold.
Begor'z, Begum'mers. interj.
These words are, most probably, oaths of asseveration. The last appears to be a corruption of by godmothers. Both are thrown into discourse very frequently: Begummers, I ont tell; I cant do it begorz.
Begrumpled. part. Soured; offended.
To Belg. v. n. To cry aloud; to bellow.
Bell-flower. s. A daffodil.
To Belsh. v. a. To cut off dung, &c., from the tails of sheep.
Beneäpt. part. Left aground by the recess of the spring tides.
To Benge. v. n. To remain long in drinking; to drink to excess.
Ben'net. v. Long coarse grass.
Ben'nety. adj. Abounding in bennets.
Ber'rin. s. [burying] A funeral procession.
To Beskum'mer. v. a. To foul with a dirty liquid; to besmear.
To Bethink' v. a. To grudge.
Bettermost. adj. The best of the better; not quite amounting to the best.
Betwat'tled. part. In a distressing and confused state of mind.
To Betwit'. v. a. To upbraid; to repeat a past circumstance aggravatingly.
To Bib'ble. v. n. To drink often; to tope.
Bib'bler. s. One who drinks often; a toper.
Bil'lid. adj. Distracted; mad.
Billy. s. A bundle of wheat straw.
Bi'meby. adv. By-and-by; some time hence.
Bin. conj. Because; probably corrupted from, being.
Bin'nick. s. A small fish; minnow; Cyprinus phloxinus.
Bird-battin. s. The catching of birds with a net and lights by night. FIELDING uses the expression.
Bird-battin-net. s. The net used in bird-battin.
Birch'en. adj. Made of birch; relating to birch.
Bis'gee. s. (g hard), A rooting axe.
Bisky. s. Biscuit. The pronunciation of this word approximates nearer to the sound of the French cuit ["twice baked">[ the t being omitted in this dialect.
To Bi'ver. v. n. To quiver; to shake.
Black-pot, s. Black-pudding.
Black'ymoor. s. A negro.
Blackymoor's-beauty. s. Sweet scabious; the musk-flower.
Blanker. s. A spark of fire.
Blans'cue. s. Misfortune; unexpected accident.
Blather. s. Bladder. To blather, v. n. To talk fast, and nonsensically [to talk so fast that bladders form at the mouth]
Bleâchy. adj. Brackish; saltish: applied to water.
Blind-buck-and-Davy. s. Blind-man's buff. Blindbuck and have ye, is no doubt the origin of this appellation for a well-known amusement.
Blis'som. ad. Blithesome.
Blood-sucker. s. A leech.
Bloody-warrior. s. The wall-flower.
Boar. s. The peculiar head or first flowing of water from one to two feet high at spring tides, in the river Parret a few miles below and at Bridgewater, and in some other rivers.
[In Johnson's Dictionary this is spelt bore; I prefer the above spelling. I believe the word is derived from the animal Boar, from the noise, rushing, and impetuosity of the water, Todd gives it "a tide swelling above another tide." Writers vary in their opinions on the causes of this phenomenon. St. Pierre. Ouvres, tom vi., p. 234, Ed. Hamburgh, 1797, describes it not exactly the same in the Seine as in the Parret:—"Cette montagne d'eau est produite par les marèes qui entrent, de la mer dans la Seine, et la font refluer contre son cours. On l'appelle la Barre, parce-qu'elle barre le cours de la Seine. Cette barre est suivée d'une seconde barre plus elevèe, qui la suit a cent toises de distance. Elles courent beaucoup plus vîte qu'un cheval au galop." He says it is called Bar, because it bars the current. In the Encyclop. Metropol., art. Bore, the editor did not seem more fortunate in his derivation.]
Bobbish. adj. In health, and spirits. [Pirty bobbish, pretty well.] Bonk. s. Bank.
Booät. s. Boat.
Booäth. pron. Both. "Boo'äth o' ye; both of you.
Bor'rid. adj. A sow is said to be borrid when she wants the male.
Bote. part. Bought.
Bow. s. A small arched bridge.
Boy's-love. s. Southernwood; a species of mugwort; artemisia abrotonum.
Brave. adj. Well; recovering.
Bran. s. A brand; a stump of a tree, or other irregular and large piece of wood, fit only for burning.
Bran-viër. s. A fire made with brands.
Bran'dis. s. A semicircular implement of iron, made to be suspended over the fire, on which various things may be prepared; it is much used for warming milk.
Brash. s. Any sudden development; a crash.
Brick'le, Brick'ly. adj. Brittle; easily broken.
Brim'mle. s. A bramble.
To Bring gwain. v. a. [To bring going.] To spend; to accompany some distance on a journey.
To Brit. v. a. To indent; to make an impression: applied to solid bodies.
Brock. s. An irregular piece of peat dried for fuel; a piece of turf. See TURF.
Bruck'le, Bruck'ly. adj. Not coherent; easily separable: applied to solid bodies. "My things are but in a bruckle state." Waverley, v. 2, p. 328, edit. 1821. See BRICKLE.
Bruck'leness. s. The state of being bruckle.
To Buck. v. n. To swell out.
To Bud'dle. v. To suffocate in mud.
To Bulge. v. a. To indent; to make an irregular impression on a solid body; to bruise. It is also used in a neuter sense.
Bulge. s. An indentation; an irregular impression made on some solid body; a swelling outwards or depression inwards.
Bul'len. adj. Wanting the bull.
Bul'lins. s. pl. Large black sloes; a variety of the wild plum.
Bun'gee. s. (g hard), Any thing thick and squat.
Bunt, Bunting, s. Bolting cloth.
Bunt. s. A bolting-mill.
To Bunt. v. a. To separate flour from the bran.
Bur'cot. s. A load.
Buss. s. A half grown calf.
But. s. A conical and peculiar kind of basket or trap used in large numbers for catching salmon in the river Parret. The term but, would seem to be a generic one, the actual meaning of which I do not know; it implies, however, some containing vessel or utensil. See BEE-BUT. But, applied to beef, always means buttock.
Butter-and-eggs. s. A variety of the daffodil.
Bwile. v. Boil.
Bwye. interj. Bye! adieu. This, as well as good-bye and good-bwye, is evidently corrupted from God be with you; God-be-wi' ye, equivalent to the French à Dieu, to God. Bwye, and good-bwye, are, therefore, how vulgar soever they may seem, more analogous than bye and good-bye.
C.
Callyvan'. s. A pyramidal trap for catching birds.
Car'riter. s. Character.
Câs. Because.
Cass'n, Cass'n't. Canst not: as, Thee cass'n do it, thou canst not do it.
Catch corner. A game commonly called elsewhere puss in the corner.
Cat'terpillar. s. The cockchafer; Scarabeus melolontha.
West of the Parret this insect is called wock-web, oak-web, because it infests the oak, and spins its web on it in great numbers.
Chaíty. adj. Careful; nice; delicate.
To Cham. v. a. To chew.
Chámer. s. A chamber.
Change, s. A shift; the garment worn by females next the skin.
Chay'er. s. A chair; chayer—Chaucer.
Chick-a-beedy. s. A chick.
'Chill. I will.
Chim'ley. s. A chimney.
Chine. s. The prominence of the staves beyond the head of a cask. This word is well known to coopers throughout England, and ought to be in our dictionaries.
To Chis'som. v. n. To bud; to shoot out.
Chis'som. s. a small shoot; a budding out.
Chit'terlins. s. pl. The frills around the bosom of shirt.
Choor. s. A job; any dirty household work; a troublesome job.
Choor'er, Choor'-woman. s. A woman who goes out to do any kind of odd and dirty work; hence the term char-woman in our polished dialect; but it ought to be choor-woman.
To Choóry. v. To do any kind of dirty household work.
Chub'by. adj. Full, swelling; as chubby-faced.
Claps, s. A clasp.
To claps, v. a. To clasp.
Clávy and Clávy-piece. s. A mantel-piecce.
[Clavy was probably given to that piece of wood or other material laid over the front of the fireplace, because in many houses the keys are often hung on nails or pins driven into it; hence from clavis (Latin) a key, comes clavy, the place where the keys are hung.]
Clavy-tack. s. The shelf over [tacked on to] the mantel- piece.
Clear-and-sheer. adv. Completely; totally.
Cleve-pink. s. A species of Carnation which grows wild in the crannies of Cheddar-cliffs: a variety of the Dianthus deltoides; it has an elegant smell.
To Clim, to Climmer. v. a. To climb; to clamber.
Clin'kers. s.pl. Bricks or other earthy matter run into irregular shapes by action of heat.
Clinker-bell. s. An icicle.
Clint. v.a. To clench; to finish; to fasten firmly.
Cliver-and-Shiver. adv. Completely; totally.
Clit. v. n. To be imperfectly fermented: applied to bread.
Clit'ty. adj. Imperfectly fermented.
Clize. s. A place or drain for the discharge of water regulated by a valve or door, which permits a free outlet, but no inlet for return of water.