Scots is the Germanic language, related to English, spoken in Lowland Scotland and Ulster, not the Celtic language Gaelic!
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Page 54 of 63 for the letter D
dhromack, drammach, drammock, drommack, drummock,
drummock [ˈdrəmək]
n. Oatmeal and cold water mixed.
#aj. Applied to anything savourless or insipid.
Darymple, Drumple,
Drumple [ˈdrʌmpl]
pn. Dalrymple (Ayrshire).
Drumra, Drumra$, Drumraa, Drumraw,
Drumraw [ˈdrʌmɑː]
pn. Drumraw (County Antrim).
Drumrey, Drumrye,
Drumrey [ˈdrʌmraɪ]
pn. Drumry (Clydebank).
Drumfinnle, Drumquindle, Drumwhindle,
Drumwhindle [ˈdrʌmʍɪn(d)l, -ʍʌn(d)l, MN. ˈdrʌmfʌnl]
pn. Drumquindle (Aberdenshire).
dhrunt, dhrunts, drunt, druntach, druntit, drunts, druntyach,
drunt [drʌnt]
n. usually pl. drunts The sulks, a fit of ill-humour.
v. To sulk.
pt. pp. druntit adj. Sulky, dissapointed.
Compounds and phrases etc.
druntach: [NN.a. drʌntjəx] Bad tempered.
Drontheim, Druntin, Druntun,
Druntin [drunˈtɪ, -ˈtʌn]
pn. Trondhjem/Trondheim (Norway).
n. A type of boat
droosh, drosh, dross, drush,
drush [drʌʃ]
n. Dross, small fragments, powdery dust or ashes.
v. To crumble or crush, fall to pieces, to spoil, to go wrong, fail.
dhry, dreh, drie, dried, driet, dry, dryachtie, dryachty, dryed, drystar, dryster,
dry [draɪ, DD. drɛ]
adj. Dry.
v. To dry.
pt. pp. dried
Compounds and phrases etc.
dryachty [ˈdraɪaxti]: adj. Of the weather: inclined to be dryish.
dryness: Dryness.
dryster: The person in charge of the drying of the grain in a kiln, a dryer of cloth.
Drybrough, Dryburgh,
Dryburgh [draɪˈbʌrə]
pn. Dryburgh (Borders).
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