Scots is the Germanic language, related to English, spoken in Lowland Scotland and Ulster, not the Celtic language Gaelic!
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Page 34 of 53 for the letter F
flum-gum, flumgummerie, flumgummery, flummergummery, flummer-gummery,
flumgummerie [ˈflʌmgʌmərɪ]
n. A foolish or frivolous thing. Fanciful ornaments or trimmings.
flounsless, flunce, flunceless, flunse, flunsless,
flunce [flʌns]
v. To flounce, flop down.
Compounds and phrases etc.
flunceless: Flounceless, stripped of all frills and finery.
floonder, flooner, floonner, flounder, flouner, flounner,
flunder [ˈflʌn(d)ər]
n. The flounder Platichthys flesus.
v. To flounder.
flunge,
flunge [flʌn(d)ʒ]
v. To skip, to caper.
flinkie, flinky, flunkey, flunkie, flunky,
flunkie [ˈflʌŋkɪ]
n. A liveried servant.
flunkset, flunksit,
flunkset [I.Sh. ˈflʌŋksɛt]
adj. To describe wide unbecoming clothes.
fluorine,
fluorine [ˈflu(ː)(ə)rin]
n. Fluorine.
flash, flass, flosh, floshan, floshen, floshin, floshin, floss, flush, flushin,
flush [flʌʃ, flɔʃ]
n. Boggy ground with surface water.
Compounds and phrases etc.
flushin [ˈflʌʃən, ˈflɔʃən]: A large shallow puddle.
flither, flother, fludder, fluther,
fluther [ˈflʌðər]
n. N. U. A boggy piece of ground, a marsh. SN. A slight rise or turbidity in a river.
fleh, fly,
fly [flae]
n. Wile, astuteness.
adj. Shrewd. Sly, furtive.
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