OSD Banner
 The Online Scots Dictionary

Read the Scots Dictionary

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 24 of 147 for the letter S

foresait, foreseat, forseat, saet, sait, sait, saitit, sate, sated, seat, seatit, seit, seyt,
seat [sit, set, NN.b. seɪt]
n. A seat.
v. To seat.
pt. pp. seatit.
 
Compounds and phrases etc.
 
foreseat: A front seat (in a church).
saek, saekit, saick, saickfu, saickit, saik, saiket, saikit, sake, sakit, seck, seckfu, seckie, seckit, seck-lifter, sehk, sehkit, sek, sekit, sekk, sekkit,
seck [sek, sɛk]
n. A sack or bag.
v. To put in a sack, to bag, to stuff.
pt. pp. seckit adj. Sacked.
 
Compounds and phrases etc.
 
seckfu [-fə S. -fɛ, -fɪ, EC. -fe, WC. -fɑ, N. -fɛ, U. I. -fu]: A sackful.
seck-lifter: A hand-barrow.
saicretary, secatrie, secretar, secretarie, seekitar,
secretar [ˈsɛkrətər]
n. A secretary.
sec, seck, sect, sek,
sect [sɛk]
n. Sect, used occassionally to refer to the sex or gender.
saiction, section,
section [ˈsɛkʃən]
n. Section.
secter, sectir, sector, sectur,
sector [ˈsɛktɪr]
n. An area or division.
sedarin, sederount, sederunt,
sederunt [səˈderənt]
n. The list of those present at meeting. A meeting or sitting of an informal or social nature. A sitting at work or talk, a drinking-bout etc. An unpleasant interview. A scolding, a severe rebuke, a dressing-down,
faar-seen, far_seen, far-seein, far-seeing, far-seen, faur-seen, fawr-seen, fer-seen, onseen, owersee, owresee, sa, sa$, saa, saana, saaw, sade, saean, saen, sah, saw, sawna, see, see$d, see$d, see$er, see$t, seear, seed, seed, seein, seeir, seen, seer, seestu, sei, seiin, sein, sein, sene, sey, sie, sied, unseen,
see [siː, S. səi]
v. To see. To look at, behold, examine, inspect.
pt. saw [sɑː, sɔː, N. I. saː], see'd [siːd, S. səid], seen [siːn, S. səin]
pp. seen
 
neg. sawna Did not see, didn't see.
 
Compounds and phrases etc.
 
faur-seen: Far-sighted, erudite, well skilled, having second sight.
lat see: To show, produce. To pass, hand over.
leuk see: Look here!
owersee: To oversee, look after. To overlook, tolerate.
owerseen: Overseen. Cursed.
see at: To consult, observe, look at.
see efter: To look after someone, attend to the wants of, care for. To take steps to obtain, make inquiries for.
seer: One who sees.
seein: Looking.
see me: A request to pass me something.
see it contracted see't [siːt, səit, E. -d]: See it.
seestu: A nickname for Paisley delived from the obsolete seest thoo.
unable tae see past: Obsessed with.
unseen: Unseen.
weel seen: Well seen, evident.
seed, seedack, seed-bird, seedin, seedock, seeds, seedy, seid, seids, sid, sidd, siddie, siddy, sidi, sids,
seed [sid, N. I. sɪd]
n. A seed, The time of sowing. I.Sh. A small particle or amount of some granulated substance.
pl. seeds The husks of grain separated by grinding. A bran particle.
v. To sow seed. To swell in the udder as an indication of advanced pregnancy.
 
seedy
adj. Containing husks.
 
Compounds and phrases etc.
 
seed-bird: WC. The grey wagtail Motacilla cinerea.
seedin [ˈsidɪn, N. I. ˈsɪdɪn]: Seeding. To swell in the udder as an indication of advanced pregnancy.
seedock: WC. The dunnock Prunella modularis.
Seedlaw_Hills, Seedlies, Seidlaw_Hills, Seidlies,
Seedlaw Hills [ˈsidlɑː, -lɔː hɪlz, N. ˈsidlaː-]
pn. The Sidlaw Hills (Perthshire and Angus).
dim. The Seedlies

[ Start | Previous | Next ]