Observations on Some of the Dialects in the West of England, Particularly Somersetshire:: With a Glossary of Words Now in Use There; and Poems and Other Pieces, Exemplifying the Dialect |
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Page vii
... 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 - Teddy Band - a Zong - Hunting for Sport The Churchwarden - The Fisherman and the ...
... 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 - Teddy Band - a Zong - Hunting for Sport The Churchwarden - The Fisherman and the ...
Page 5
... commonly converted into the thick or obtuse sound of the same let- ters as heard in the words this , these , & c .; and this , too , very often whether the letters be in- ceptive or final . Notwithstanding our lexicographers have ...
... commonly converted into the thick or obtuse sound of the same let- ters as heard in the words this , these , & c .; and this , too , very often whether the letters be in- ceptive or final . Notwithstanding our lexicographers have ...
Page 8
... commonly supposed . Certain it is , that it would not be difficult to select many words which may , for their modulation , compete with others of gallic extraction ; and , perhaps , in many respects , would be found superior to num ...
... commonly supposed . Certain it is , that it would not be difficult to select many words which may , for their modulation , compete with others of gallic extraction ; and , perhaps , in many respects , would be found superior to num ...
Page 14
... commonly supposed . I incline , indeed , to think that the present language and pro- nunciation of Somersetshire were , some centuries past , general in the South portion of our island . Before I close these observations , I am de ...
... commonly supposed . I incline , indeed , to think that the present language and pro- nunciation of Somersetshire were , some centuries past , general in the South portion of our island . Before I close these observations , I am de ...
Page 18
... of the demon- strative pronoun thic for that ; as , thic house , that house ; thic man , that man , & c . Chaucer uses the word very often , but he spells it thilk . A GLOSSARY OF WORDS COMMONLY USED IN THE COUNTY OF 18 OBSERVATIONS .
... of the demon- strative pronoun thic for that ; as , thic house , that house ; thic man , that man , & c . Chaucer uses the word very often , but he spells it thilk . A GLOSSARY OF WORDS COMMONLY USED IN THE COUNTY OF 18 OBSERVATIONS .
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Common terms and phrases
a-mâ-be âll tha Amangst Anglo-Saxon applied âter athin auver avaur awâ awld bezides bird bwile bwye ta thee called cattle cawch Chaucer cheaks cood cood'n corrupted dear Jane desperd dialect droo dwon't dwont ye eese Fieldfare gennelmen GLOSSARY GOOL gwon haup hence hired hitch Huntspill ichè interj Jerry Nutty jist jitch knaw lessin letter lewth look'd Luck in tha Maester Mary Puddy meaning mooäst moor moril niver oten person pirty pleonasm polished dialect prep pron pronounced rawd rawze River Parret Rookery Rooks sholl shood Somerset Somersetshire sound storry TEDDY BAND thâ thawt theäze thee Cot thenk ther thic Todd's Johnson try yer twar UTCHY v. n. To go vawk verb vooäth vrom vust West of England word zeed zong zoon zorry zummet zumtime zunz
Popular passages
Page 45 - But touch me, and no minister so sore. Whoe'er offends, at some unlucky time Slides into verse, and hitches in a rhyme, Sacred to ridicule his whole life long, And the sad burthen of some merry song.
Page 11 - I've a be To dreave our bull to bull tha parson's kee.' It is to be observed, that this whole dialogue is formed upon the passion of jealousy; and his mentioning the parson's kine naturally revives the jealousy of the shepherdess Cicily, which she expresses as follows : 'Cicily. Ah...
Page 7 - Jennings, in his Observations on the Western Dialects, says, "Another peculiarity is that of attaching to many of the common verbs in the infinitive mode, as well as to some other parts of different conjugations, the letter y. Thus it is very common to say, / can't sewy, I can't nursy, he can't reapy, he can't sawy, as well as to sewy, to nursy, to renpy, lo sainj, &c. ; but never, I think, without an auxiliary verb , or the sign of the infinitive lo.
Page 150 - I sholl not stap ta tell what zed Tha man in ooman's clawze ; Bit he, an all o'm jist behine, War what you mid suppawze, Thâ cust, thâ swaur, tha drealen'd too, An âter Mr.
Page 84 - The larva of the gadfly growing under the skin of the back of cattle. WOROWE. To choke. See Worry. WORRA. A small round moveable nut or pinion, with grooves in it, and having a hole in its centre, through which the end of a round stick or spill may be thrust. The spill and worra are attached to the common spinning-wheel, which, with those and the turnstring, form the apparatus for spinning wool, &c.
Page 180 - I'm glad o't. I'll hirn auver an zee where I can't help 'em; bit I han'ta bin athin tha drashel o' Maester Boord's door vor a longful time, bin I thawt that missis did'n use Hester well; but I dwon't bear malice, an zaw I'll goo. Farmer Bennet.
Page 64 - Hirddick; the r and i transposed.] Rode. s. To go to rode, means, late at night or early in the morning, to go out to shoot wild fowl which pass over head on the wing. To Rose. vn To drop out from the pod, or other seed vessel, when the seeds are over-ripe. To Rough. va To roughen; to make rough. Round-dock. s. The common mallow; malva sylvestris. Called round-dock from the roundness of its leaves. CHAUCER has the following expression which has a good deal puzzled the glossarists: "But canst...
Page 66 - Scud. s. A scab. Sea-Bottle. s. Many of the species of the sea-wrack, or fucus, are called sea-bottles, in consequence of the stalks having round or oval vesicles or pods in them; the pod itself. Sea-crow. s. A cormorant. Seed-lip. s. A vessel of a particular construction, in which the sower carries the seed.
Page 64 - The round-dock leaves are used at this day as a remedy, or supposed remedy or charm, for the sting of a nettle, by being rubbed on the stung part; and the rubbing is accompanied, by the more superstitious, with the following words— In dock, out nettle...
Page xxiv - This small section throws considerable light upon the mode of deposition of these tongues in the larger section, and is well worthy the attention of those who take an interest in the deposits of the valley.