Scots is the Germanic language, related to English, spoken in Lowland Scotland and Ulster, not the Celtic language Gaelic!
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Page 44 of 45 for the letter H
heather-range, heather-reenge, hedder-range, hedder-reenge, hydrangea,
hydrangea [hɛdˈrɪndʒiə]
n. A hydrangea such as Hydrangea macrophylla.
hydrogen,
Hydrogen [ˈhəidrədʒən]
n. Hydrogen.
haik, hike, hyke,
hyke [həik]
int. A call to a horse to go.
v. SW. To move with a jerk, sway.
heen, hine, hyne, hyne_awa, hyne_faur_awa,
hyne [həɪn]
adv. Of place: hence, away, far off, at a distance. Of time: far on, late.
Compounds and phrases etc.
hyne (faur) awa: Far away, at a great distance.
hyne tae/til: As far as, to the distance of.
merry go hyne: MN. Off you go and a good riddance to you.
hjog, hjogs, hyog, hyogs,
hyog [hjog]
usually pl. hyogs I.Sh. The loops of straw from which a basket is made.
heipalt, hyfal, hypal, hypalt,
hypal [həipl, MN. həifl]
n. An uncouth, unkempt, broken-down or good-for-nothing person or animal.
hypalt
adj. Good-for-nothing, broken-down, tawdry.
apothec, apotheck, apothick, hypothec, hypothecate, hypotheck, hypothic, hypotick, the_hail_hypothec, the_hale_hypothec,
hypothec [ˈhɪpɔθɪk]
n. leg. The right of a creditor to hold as security for a claim the effects of a debtor without taking possession of them.
Compounds and phrases etc.
hypothecate [hɪˈpɔθəket]: leg. To give, take or pledge as security, mortgage.
the hale hypothec: Whole of something, the whole concern.
h$ist, heis, heist, heisted, heistie, heistit, heyst, hist, histe, hoiss, hyst, hyste, hyste, hysted, hystie, hystin, hystit,
hyst [həist]
n. A lift, a helping hand with a heavy burden. The throwing out of pennies at a wedding for children to scramble for.
dim. hystie
v. To hoist, lift up, to raise one's spirits. To scatter money to be scrambled for at a wedding.
pt. pp. hystit
Compounds and phrases etc.
hystin: Hoisting, lifting.
hite, hoit, hyte,
hyte [həit]
n. Mad, crazy, in a highly excited state, enraged. Excessively or madly keen.
heiter, hiter, hyter,
hyter [ˈhəitər]
n. MN. A lurch, a stumble. A state of confusion or ruin. Arrant nonsense. A stupid person, an oaf, the act of working in a confused, feeble manner.
adj. MN. Down and out.
adv. MN. With weak or uncertain stumbling step, in a state of ruin.
v. MN. To walk with lurching, unsteady movement, to stumble, trip, to work feebly and unskilfully, to stammer, talk confusedly.
[ Start |
Previous
| Next ]