Scots is the Germanic language, related to English, spoken in Lowland Scotland and Ulster, not the Celtic language Gaelic!
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Page 43 of 59 for the letter T
thram, tram, trammel, trammil, trammle, trams, trams,
tram [tram]
n. A long beam, bar or shaft of wood. The shaft of a barrow or cart. An upright gallow post etc. col. A leg, a long unshapely leg, a wooden leg. A very tall, thin, ungainly person.
dim. trammle
pl. trams
fit-stramp, stram, stramp, strampit, trammel, trammle, tramp, trampan, trampel, trampin, trampit, trample, trump, trumpin, trumpit,
tramp [tramp]
also with prothetic s stramp [tramp]
n. A tread or stamp of the foot, a planting of the foot in walking. A trampling on something. A vagrant, vagabond.
v. To stamp, step or tread heavily upon, to trample on. To tread, press down, squeeze or crush by treading or stamping with the feet or hands. To go about with a firm or heavy step.
pt. pp. trampit, strampit
trample
v. Trample.
Compounds and phrases etc.
fit-stramp: A footstep.
trampin: Stamping. (the feet).
trance, transe,
trance [trans]
n. A narrow outside passage between houses. An alley or lane. A passage within a house or other building. A lobby or corridor.
transac, transack, transact,
transact [tranˈzak(t)]
n. A transaction, negotiation, matter of business.
pl. transacts
v. To deal with, dispose of a business matter.
transeetion, transeition,
transeetion [ˈtranziʃən]
n. Transition.
transitor,
transitor [ˈtransɪtər]
adj. Transitory.
translate,
translate [ˈtranslet]
v. Translate. To remove a church minister from one pastoral charge to another.
pt. pp. translatit
Compounds and phrases etc.
translation: Translation.
transmogrification, transmogrified, transmogrify, transmugrifee, transmugrifee$d, transmugrifie, transmugrified, transmugrify, transmugrify$d,
transmugrifee [ˈtransmʌgrəfiː]
v. To metamorphose. To astonish, astound, confound.
pt. pp. transmugrifee'd
transport,
transport [ˈtranpoːrt]
n. Transport. A transferred church minister.
v. Transport. To transfer a church minister from one charge to another. To remove the site of a church to a different part of the parish.
transpose,
transpose [ˈtranzpoːz]
v. To transpose.
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