An Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language Part 91

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An Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language



An Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language Part 91


Germ. _bot_, id. from _biet-en_, to offer. Isl. _bud_, a proffer, from _bioth-a_, offerre, exhibere, praebere.


BODE, _s._ Delay.


_Sir Egeir._


BODDUM, _s._


1. Bottom.


_Douglas._


2. Hollow, valley.


_Douglas._


Alem. _bodem_, Germ. Belg. _boden_, solum, fundus.


BODEN, _part. pa._ Proffered.


V. ~Bode~, _v._


BODEN, BODIN, BODYN, _part. pa._


1. Prepared, provided, furnished, in whatever way, S.


_Acts Ja. I._


_Weil-boden_, or _ill-boden_, well, or ill provided in whatever respect, S.


2. It seems to be used, in one instance, in an oblique sense, as signifying matched.


V. ~Boun~.


_Barbour._


Su. G. _bo_, Isl. _bo-a_, to prepare, to provide; _wael bodd_, well provided against the cold.


BODY, _s._ Strength, bodily ability.


_Barbour._


A. S. _bodig_ not only signifies the body in general, but stature.


BODLE, BODDLE, _s._ A copper coin, of the value of two pennies Scots, or the third part of an English penny.


_Rudd._


These pieces are said to have been denominated from a mint-master of the name of _Bothwell_.


BODWORD, BODWART, BODWORDE, _s._ A message, S. B.


_Wallace._


A. S. _boda_, a messenger, and _word_. Su. G. Isl. _bodword_ is edictum, mandatum.


BOETINGS, BUITINGS, _s. pl._ Half-boots, or leathern spatterdashes.


_Dunbar._


Teut. _boten schoen_, calceus rusticus e crudo corio; Kilian.


BOGGARDE, _s._ A bugbear.


_Rollocke._


A. Bor. _boggart_, a spectre. C. B. _bwg_, larva, terriculamentum.


BOGILL, BOGLE, _s._


1. A spectre, a hobgoblin, S. A. Bor.


_Douglas._


2. A scarecrow, a bugbear, S. synon. _doolie_, _cow_; being used in both senses.


C. B. _bugul_, fear, _bwgwly_, to frighten.


BOGILL _about the stacks_, or simply, _Bogle_, a play of children or young people, in which one hunts several others around the stacks of corn in a barn-yard, S.


_Ritson._


It seems the same game with that called _Barley-bracks_, q. v. The name has probably originated from the idea of the huntsman employed being a scarecrow to the rest.


BOGILL-BO, _s._


1. A hobgoblin or spectre, S.







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