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Scots_snaps - Dictious

10 Results found for " Scots_snaps"

Scots snaps

<span class="searchmatch">Scots</span> <span class="searchmatch">snaps</span> plural of <span class="searchmatch">Scots</span> <span class="searchmatch">snap</span>...


Scots snap

<span class="searchmatch">Scots</span> <span class="searchmatch">snap</span> (plural <span class="searchmatch">Scots</span> <span class="searchmatch">snaps</span>) Alternative form of Scotch <span class="searchmatch">snap</span>....


Scotch snap

From its use in Scottish dances such as the strathspey. Scotch <span class="searchmatch">snap</span> (plural Scotch <span class="searchmatch">snaps</span>) Synonym of Lombard rhythm. <span class="searchmatch">Scots</span> <span class="searchmatch">snap</span>...


snap

teeth, beak, etc. A dog <span class="searchmatch">snaps</span> at a passenger. A fish <span class="searchmatch">snaps</span> at the bait. (intransitive) To attempt to seize with eagerness. She <span class="searchmatch">snapped</span> at the chance to appear...


snyster

snyster (obsolete) a snack 1832, The Day (issue 1, part 112, page 121) […] a bit sugar baik, ginger-bread <span class="searchmatch">snaps</span>, queenscake, or some sic snyster […]...


ryke

rykande, imperative ryk) to smoke, steam to break, <span class="searchmatch">snap</span>, tear Tauet ryk der det er tynnast The rope <span class="searchmatch">snaps</span> there it is tinnest to fall (suddenly) ryka, rjuka...


snaip

(third-person singular simple present snaips, present participle snaipin, simple past snaipt, past participle snaipt) to snub snaip genitive singular of <span class="searchmatch">snap</span>...


brittle

brittle, superlative brittlest or most brittle) Inflexible; liable to break, <span class="searchmatch">snap</span>, or shatter easily under stress, pressure, or impact; crackly. Cast iron...


hike

Middle English hytchen, hichen, icchen (“to move, jerk, stir”). Cognate with <span class="searchmatch">Scots</span> hyke (“to move with a jerk”), dialectal German hicken (“to hobble, walk...


folden

English. 2 Sometimes used as a formal 2nd-person singular. English: fold <span class="searchmatch">Scots</span>: fald, fauld “fōlden, v.(2).”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University...