An Exmoor Scolding: In the Propriety and Decency of Exmoor Language, Between Two Sisters, Wilmot Moreman and Thomasin Moreman, as They Were Spinning. Also, An Exmoor CourtshipJ.R. Smith, 1839 - 57 ページ |
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... thou found ? So - ho ! Mer . No hare , Sir , unless a hare , Sir , in a lenten pie , That is somewhat stale and hoar e'er it be spent.- An old hare hoar , and an old hare hoar , is very good meat in Lent ; But a hare that is hoar , is ...
... thou found ? So - ho ! Mer . No hare , Sir , unless a hare , Sir , in a lenten pie , That is somewhat stale and hoar e'er it be spent.- An old hare hoar , and an old hare hoar , is very good meat in Lent ; But a hare that is hoar , is ...
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... thou sayest ? What a great lye is that ! The man who told thee that story , though he might say this and that thing when he held a parley ( or conference ) with thee , the better to connect and embellish his tale , could not believe it ...
... thou sayest ? What a great lye is that ! The man who told thee that story , though he might say this and that thing when he held a parley ( or conference ) with thee , the better to connect and embellish his tale , could not believe it ...
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... Min or mun , for them ; as P. 12 , " When tha dest zey mun ; " i . e . when thou dost say them ; -and P. 22 " a puss to put min in , " i . e . a purse to put them in . -Mun is also used vocatively for man , and some- 42.
... Min or mun , for them ; as P. 12 , " When tha dest zey mun ; " i . e . when thou dost say them ; -and P. 22 " a puss to put min in , " i . e . a purse to put them in . -Mun is also used vocatively for man , and some- 42.
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... Thou hast no stroil nor docity , " ( p . 10. ) i . e . no activity nor docility ; no more agility or motion than a person disabled from striving or struggling . Stroil is also a denomination of the long roots of weeds and grass , in ...
... Thou hast no stroil nor docity , " ( p . 10. ) i . e . no activity nor docility ; no more agility or motion than a person disabled from striving or struggling . Stroil is also a denomination of the long roots of weeds and grass , in ...
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... thou wert godmother ( and may hanging await thee ! ) to Robin . Veaking , ( quasi feiging , carping ) ; fretful and peevish . Vigging , ( see Potee ) , vig , vig , vig ; used to express the action of dogs digging with their feet , in ...
... thou wert godmother ( and may hanging await thee ! ) to Robin . Veaking , ( quasi feiging , carping ) ; fretful and peevish . Vigging , ( see Potee ) , vig , vig , vig ; used to express the action of dogs digging with their feet , in ...
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agen ANDREW arrant avore baarge banes bed-blonket Bezides Bone-shave borst Challacomb cham Charles Clark chave chell tell tha chell warndy chockling cozen Magery dedst thee Devon Devonians Devonshire DIALECT disyease drow drow vore e'er eart edition enny EXMOOR EXMOOR SCOLDING fump Glossary grammer gurt hare hire Horry Hosegood Jibb keendest kiss lick Lock MARGERY marl me-an means meend MOREMAN mulligrub muxy nif tha OLD COMPTON STREET olweys Parracomb perhaps person Pistering podger post 8vo Saxon signifies Spalls stertling strat Stroil tack tether tha art tha com'st tha dest Tha hast tha wut tha young thate thee art thee wut theng thenk THOMASIN thou vath vauther vella vitty vore Vulch vurst Vuzz wag-tail whan tha Whetstone whistering whot whot's WILMOT wone word wou'd wull yeet yess zess Zester zitch zome zure
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4 ページ - BIBLIOTHECA CANTIANA.— A Bibliographical Account of what has been published on the History, Topography, Antiquities, Customs, and Family Genealogy of the County of Kent, with Biographical Notes. By John Russell Smith. In a handsome 8vo volume (pp. 370), with two plates of facsimiles of Autographs of 33 eminent Kentish Writers.
2 ページ - The patient must lie upon his back on the bank of the river or brook of water, with a straight staff by his side, between him and the water; and must have the following words repeated over him, viz.: " Boneshave right, Boneshave straight, As the water runs by the stave, Good for the Boneshave.
1 ページ - The utility of a Provincial Glossary to all persons desirous of understanding our ancient Poets is so universally acknowledged, that to enter into a proof of it would be entirely a work of supererogation. Grose and Pegge are constantly referred to in Todd's
4 ページ - V. A Chronological List of all the LOCAL, PERSONAL, and PRIVATE ACTS of Parliament (upwards of 600, ) which have been passed on the County, from Edward I. to Queen Victoria. VI. Works relative to the County in general. VII. Particular Parishes, Seats, Customs, and Family Genealogy, in alphabetical order. The work also comprises a notice of every Paper which has been written on the County, and published in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society...
1 ページ - The Westmorland Dialect, in four Familiar Dialogues: in which an attempt is made to illustrate the Provincial Idiom.
15 ページ - ... Exmoor Scolding; in the Propriety and Decency of Exmoor Language, between two Sisters, Wilmot Moreman and Thomasin Moreman, as they were spinning.
v ページ - Humour ; and tho' his Skill and Dexterity as a Musician is said to have recommended him to the Notice of the Great, his more common Converse with the lower Class of People, gave him frequent Opportunities of hearing and observing their Phrases and Diction ; and, as Persons deprived of Sight have generally a good Memory, he was thereby the better enabled to retain and repeat them. This attracted the Notice...
v ページ - ... class of people gave him frequent opportunities of hearing and observing their phrases and diction; and as persons deprived of sight have generally a good memory, he was thereby the better enabled to retain and repeat them. This attracted the notice of a neighbouring clergyman, who by the fidler's assistance put the
3 ページ - Errors of Pronunciation and Improper expressions used frequently and chiefly by the Inhabitants of London ; to which are added those in similar use chiefly by' the Inhabitants of Paris. Post 8vo, pp. 84. London, 1817. THACKERAY, "WM Ballads ; London, Bradbury and Evans, 1855. See Ballads of Policeman X, p. 106 ; and other Specimens. See also ' The Pickwick Papers,' ' Oliver Twist,' ' Sketches by Boz,' &c., &c., by CHARLES DICKENS.
4 ページ - The industrious compiler of the volume before us has shown how largely the history and antiquities of Kent have already occupied the attention of Topographers and Antiquaries ; and, by exhibiting in one view what is now before the public, he has at once facilitated the researches of future writers, and has pointed out how ample a field still remains for their labours. The volume contains a complete catalogue of all the printed works relative to the county, including, with respect to the most important,...