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 The Online Scots Dictionary

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Scots is the Germanic language, related to English, spoken in Lowland Scotland and Ulster, not the Celtic language Gaelic!
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Page 89 of 147 for the letter S

sarra, soaroo, soarra, sorra, sorra, sorrae, sorraefu, sorraes, sorrafu, sorraful, sorras, sowro,
sorrae [ˈsoːrə, -o, -u, -ɪ]
n. Sorrow. The Devil.
 
Compounds and phrases etc.
 
sorraefu [-fə S. -fɛ, -fɪ, EC. -fe, WC. -fɑ, N. -fɛ, U. I. -fu]: Sorrowful.
sorrae ither: What other?
haesna sorraes tae seek: Has plenty of trouble to deal with.
assort, assortit, soart, soartit, soort, sort, sort_o, sorta, sortae, sortay, sorted, sortet, sortin, sortit,
sort [soːrt]
n. A considerable number, a fair amount. A setting to rights. A repair, a tidying up.
v. To put in order, arrange, tidy up, attend to. To tidy oneself, arrange one's clothing etc. To restore to proper or working order, to put to rights, to repair, mend, fix up, to heal. To deal effectively with a person, by rebuke or punishment, to put someone in his place, to drub, to scold. To select, to choose. To bring together, to pair, match. To come together, to consort socially, keep company, get on, live in harmony with. With wi: to suit, be agreeable to.
pt. pp. sortit adj. Sorted, dealt with, supplied, satisfactorily furnished.
 
Compounds and phrases etc.
 
assort: to distribute into groups or classes. arch. To agree together. pt. assortit: Consisting of selected kinds arranged in sorts. SN. Dressed up, over-dressed.
aw sort: Every sort.
sortin: Putting in order, arranging, tidying up etc. A scolding. A repair, renovation, overhaul.
sort o ..: Sort of ...
soss, sus,
soss [sɔs, sos]
n. A heterogeneous mixture of badly cooked food or drink, a wet, soggy or unpalatable mess of food. A wet state, sopping condition, a dirty wet mess, a slop. A state of dirt and disorder, a muddle, chaos, confusion.
v. To eat incongruous, sloppy or messy food, to eat in an uncouth, slovenly manner. To mix in a messy, incongruous way. To make wet and dirty, to make a mess of. With up: to spoil, to ruin. To make a mess, to work in a dirty disorderly way or in dirty conditions. To nurse over-tenderly, to act over-protectively, to fuss, pester, be troublesome. To take one's ease, to rest, to do nothing, to lie or remain idle. Of a pot: to cook slowly, to stew, simmer.
soat, sot, sote,
sot [sɔt, sot]
n. A fool, a simpleton, a stupid person. A drunkard.
soddle, soitl, sother, sotl, sottar, sotter, sottered, sottert, sottle,
sotter [ˈsotər]
n. An eruptive disease. A rash. A mess or muddle.
v. To boil, cook slowly, simmer. To be slightly scorched. To soak. To idle, loaf or potter about.
pt. pp. sottert, sottered
 
sottle
v. To boil, cook slowly, simmer. I.Sh. To slurp, splash, slop, gurgle.
soo, sou, sow,
sou [suː]
n. An ache, a throbbing, a tingling.
v. To ache, throb, smart, tingle, thrill.
sea-soo, sea-sou, see_soo, soo, soofish, sooie, sookie-soo, soo-moo$t, sooshell, sou, souie, soukie-sou, sou-mou$t, sow,
sou [suː]
n. A sow, a female pig. A house-shaped stack of hay or straw. N. I.Sh. The ballan wrasse Labrus bergylta.
dim. souie A lump of oatmeal dough trimmed off the edges of the round before it is baked, and given as a morsel to children.
 
Compounds and phrases etc.
 
sea-sou: The small-mouthed wrasse Centrolabrus exoletus, the ballan wrasse Labrus bergylta.
sou-mou't: Having a projecting upper jaw, chinless.
soukie-sou: A clover flowerhead.
sou shell: I.Ork. The blunt gaper softshell Mya truncata.
soo, sou,
sou [suː]
n. An old French coin.
a_calm_sough, a_caum_souch, caum_souch, saugh, sigh$t, soach, soachin, soagh, soaghin, soch, sogh, soghin, sooch, sooched, soochin, soocht, soof, soogh, sooghin, souch, souched, souchin, soucht, souff, souffin, sough, soughin, sugh, sughin,
souch [sux, sjux, ʃux, NN.b. sɔx, S. sʌux]
n. The sound of the wind, a light breeze, the rushing, roaring or murmuring of water. A whizzing blow. A deep sigh or gasp, heavy breathing, panting. A song, strain, tune, melody. Gossip, rumour, report, scandal. A hubbub, uproar, fuss, to-do.
v. Of the wind: to make a rushing, moaning, murmuring sound. To blow or drive like the wind, to speed on one's way. Of leaves or water etc. Moved by the wind: to rustle, whisper, ripple, gurgle, lap, make a slapping sound. To breathe heavily, sigh, puff, pant, wheeze, splutter, choke, bubble, gurgle. To sing softly, to hum, to whistle.
pt. pp. soucht
 
Compounds and phrases etc.
 
caum souch: Peace, quiet, stillness, silence.
souchin [-ɪn]: Sighing. Making a soft whistling noise.
sooder, soother, sother, soud, souder, soudert, souther, sowd, sowder, sowther, suther,
souder [ˈsudər]
also souther [ˈsuːðər], sowder [ˈsʌudər], sowther [ˈsʌuðər]
v. To solder, to unite metal firmly. To melt, be welded. To unite in matrimony, to marry, to make a marriage. To settle, to patch up a quarrel, disagreement, to reconcile. To mitigate, appease. Alleviate sorrow, pain or anger etc. To make a bargain with.
pt. pp. soudert
 
sowd [sʌud]
v. To arrange or settle matters.

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