Scots is the Germanic language, related to English, spoken in Lowland Scotland and Ulster, not the Celtic language Gaelic!
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Page 134 of 147 for the letter S
subjeck, subject, subjict,
subject [n. ˈsʌbdʒɪk, v. sʌbˈdʒɛk]
n. Subject. Property, a piece of heritable property.
v. To subject.
subscreeve, subscreive, subscribe, subscrieve, subscrive,
subscribe [ˈsʌbskrəib]
v. To subscribe.
subside,
subside [ˈsʌbsəid]
v. To subside.
subsistance, subsistence,
subsistence [ˈsʌbsɪstəns]
n. Subsistence.
substancious, substantious,
substantious [sʌbˈstanʃəs]
adj. Substantial. Solid, firmly built or constructed.
substitute,
substitute [sʌbˈstɪt(ʃ)ut]
n. A person who is to succeed to an estate in entail in the event of the first heir or his line failing, one in the named succession of heirs of entail.
v. To substitute
pt. substitutit
pp. substitute adj. Nominated in place of another, as a deputy or in order to replace a pre-deceasing person in an inheritance or the like.
subtrac, subtrack, subtract,
subtract [ˈsʌbtrak(t)]
v. To subtract.
subvene,
subvene [ˈsʌbvin]
v. To help, assist, to rescue.
shooger, showgar-aaly, shugar, shuggar, shuggared, shuggart, shugger, soocer, sucar, succar, succared, succart, sucker, suckered, suckert, sugarallie, sugarallie, sugarally, sugar-ally, sugaraullie, sugarelli, sugarellie, sugarelly, sugarollie, sugarolly, sugerallie, suggar,
succar [ˈsʌkər]
n. Sugar.
v. To sugar.
pt. pp. succart, succared adj. Sprinkled with sugar. Spoilt, pampered.
Compounds and phrases etc.
black succar, black sugar: Liquorice or liquorice juice.
sugarallie: Liquorice, usually made up as a sweet.
succession,
succession [ˈsʌksɛʃən]
n. Succession.
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