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Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Posted: 28 Mar 2021, 03:33
by Marilyn
I used the word “Skullduggery” this morning. My son found it very funny :laugh5:

Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Posted: 12 Apr 2021, 05:46
by Stanley
Just fired the stove. Why is the hod I use for carrying the smokeless fuel called a 'scuttle'? I went for a furtle....
"Result for Coal scuttle etymology Origin. The word scuttle comes, via Middle English and Old English, from the Latin word Scutula, meaning a shallow pan. An alternative name, hod, derives from the Old French hotte, meaning "basket," and is also used in reference to boxes used to carry bricks or other construction materials"

Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Posted: 12 Apr 2021, 11:28
by Tripps
The bag that on course bookies put the cash in is also known as the 'hod'. I think it's a touch ironic. :smile:

PS I heard the phrase 'recreational rioting' with reference to Ulster, used today.

Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Posted: 13 Apr 2021, 03:34
by Stanley
'Recreational Rioting'... That's a new one on me David.

Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Posted: 15 Apr 2021, 09:12
by Tizer
Wendy referred to `Vivary Way' in Colne this morning in the Attention thread. Why is it called Vivary? I ask because we have Vivary Park here in Taunton but the name is supposed to be derived from the fact that the stream and lake are the remains of the Bishop of Winchester's `vivarium' (fish pond) which provided him with carp. The fish were taken live by boat and cart from Taunton to Winchester.

Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Posted: 15 Apr 2021, 09:24
by Wendyf
Tizer wrote: 15 Apr 2021, 09:12 Wendy referred to `Vivary Way' in Colne this morning in the Attention thread. Why is it called Vivary? I ask because we have Vivary Park here in Taunton but the name is supposed to be derived from the fact that the stream and lake are the remains of the Bishop of Winchester's `vivarium' (fish pond) which provided him with carp. The fish were taken live by boat and cart from Taunton to Winchester.
Same here Tiz, there was a fish pond in that area.

Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Posted: 15 Apr 2021, 11:47
by Stanley
Image

Vivary Bridge Mill in Colne in 1979.

Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Posted: 15 Apr 2021, 15:28
by Tizer
How interesting! It's always satisfying when you find confirmation of old names and their meanings. :smile:

Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Posted: 16 Apr 2021, 03:44
by Stanley
It's why I love local history Peter. It is the foundation of all the rest. The same can be said of local politics, all politics is local.

Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Posted: 16 Apr 2021, 11:10
by Tripps
Tizer wrote: 15 Apr 2021, 09:12 we have Vivary Park here in Taunton
I spent a very pleasant afternoon there once. We stayed in the 'Vicar's cottage' at South Petherton. He bought it for his pending retirement, and let it to friends (and friends of friends) at mate's rates to pay the outgoings. I think it was £50 for the week.

I still have the thank you letter from Mrs Vicar - for leaving it such a good condition. She may have been influenced by the fact that - after discreet enquiries that it would be welcomed - I left them a bottle of Cognac.

I don't think they ever lived there. Looks to have been sold - and from Streetview, extended beyond recognition.

Nice memory though. :smile:

Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Posted: 17 Apr 2021, 03:03
by Stanley
"I left them a bottle of Cognac. "
Typical! Just what I would expect a gentleman like you to do....

Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Posted: 26 Apr 2021, 12:22
by Tripps
Cometh the hour - cometh the word. . . .

Susie Dent
Word of the day is 'snollygoster' (19th century): an individual guided by personal gain rather than by principles.

snollygoster /ˈsnɒlɪɡɒstə/
nouninformal•US
noun: snollygoster; plural noun: snollygosters
a shrewd, unprincipled person, especially a politician. "snollygosters must be thrown out of political office and other positions of power"

Example - "David Cameron is a failed snollygoster". Other examples are readily available. :smile:

Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Posted: 27 Apr 2021, 02:35
by Stanley
"Cometh the hour....."
Indeed David. Never come across that word before.

Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Posted: 29 Apr 2021, 05:31
by Cathy
I used the word ‘flibbertigibbet’ today, I was thinking of a frivolous person.
In Yorkshire it can refer to an excessively talkative person.

Tripps - have you heard of these 2 words?
Impignorate - it refers to pledge, pawn or mortgage.
Nudiustertian - it refers to ‘Of or relating to the day before yesterday’.

😊

Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Posted: 29 Apr 2021, 07:33
by Stanley
I don't know about David Cathy but I wouldn't have known what they meant....

Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Posted: 29 Apr 2021, 09:50
by Tripps
Cathy wrote: 29 Apr 2021, 05:31 Tripps - have you heard of these 2 words?
In a word - no. Can't imagine how I've managed without them. :smile:

Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Posted: 01 May 2021, 03:57
by Stanley
I was thinking about running the mobile shop from Sough round the farms and two words came to mind, sweets were always 'spice' and animal feed was 'provender' or more usually 'proven'. Another old word you came across a lot was agistment. This was the letting out of grazing to other farmers if you had any to spare. Commonly shortened to 'giste'.

Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Posted: 14 May 2021, 03:57
by Stanley
The word 'sausage' leapt out at me today so I looked it up. See THIS Wikipedia article.
"The word "sausage" was first used in English in the mid-15th century, spelled "sawsyge". This word came from Old North French saussiche (Modern French saucisse)". The French word came from Vulgar Latin salsica (sausage), from salsicus (seasoned with salt)."

Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Posted: 14 May 2021, 09:13
by PanBiker
Have we discussed or do we have any origin for the naming of Esp Lane in Barlick?

Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Posted: 14 May 2021, 12:29
by Stanley
I've looked at all the usual sources.... All of the references I found, including the use of 'Esp' as a surname, refer ultimately back to the Aspen tree. So the best I can suggest is that there were Aspen Trees up that lane.

Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Posted: 14 May 2021, 14:16
by Tizer
Reading about a quarry that was sold in the early 1900s I saw that the assets including a scabbling machine. That was a new word for me. Collins says scabbling is the rough sawing of stone and it's derived from French escapier, which referred to rough sawing of wood.

Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Posted: 14 May 2021, 15:16
by PanBiker
Stanley wrote: 14 May 2021, 12:29 I've looked at all the usual sources.... All of the references I found, including the use of 'Esp' as a surname, refer ultimately back to the Aspen tree. So the best I can suggest is that there were Aspen Trees up that lane.
Thanks Stanley it's regarding something that Jack Parsons, (Moor Close) has mentioned regarding a historical pathway in the lea of Weets. I wondered if there were any more hints in the name of the lane.

Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Posted: 14 May 2021, 17:34
by plaques
Try this.

Espinal is a name of ancient Anglo-Saxon origin and comes from a family once having lived in the settlement of Aspinwall, which was in the parish of Aughton in Lancashire county. The name Aspinwall literally means the aspen-well, referring to a well near a grove of aspen trees.

Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Posted: 15 May 2021, 02:58
by Stanley
With regard to Peter's scabbling, I always thought it was the rough surfacing of a stone by knocking off the high points with a points chisel and that the name came from the scabs they knocked off.
For 'scab', see THIS Wiktionary entry.
"From Middle English scabb, scabbe (also as shabbe, schabbe > English shab), from Old English sċeabb and Old Norse skabb, both from Proto-Germanic *skabbaz (“scab, scabies”), from Proto-Indo-European *skabʰ- (“to cut, split, carve, shape”). Cognate with German Schabe (“scabies”), Danish skab (“scab, scabies”), Swedish skabb (“scab, scabies”), Latin scabies (“scab, itch, mange”). Related also to Old English scafan (“to scrape, shave”), Latin scabere (“to scratch”), English shabby."

Re: DIALECT AND WORD MEANINGS

Posted: 15 May 2021, 14:03
by Tizer
That sounds a more likely derivation. I see there were scabbling hammers and the notice I read only referred to a `scabbling machine' not a saw.