An Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language - BestLightNovel.com
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1. Meeting.
_Wallace._
2. A parliament, an a.s.sembly.
_Kennedy._
_To_ MUTE, _v. n._
1. To plead; an old law term.
_Baron Courts._
2. To treat of.
_Barbour._
A. S. _mot-ian_, tractare, discutere.
~Mute~, ~Mote~, _s._
1. A plea.
_Reg. Maj._
2. A quarrel.
_Rutherford._
_To_ MUTE, _v. n._
1. To articulate.
_Lyndsay._
2. To mention what ought to be kept secret, S.
_G.o.dscroft._
3. To complain, S.
_Wallace._
Lat. _mut-ire_, to mutter.
Used also as a _v. a._
_Kennedy._
MUTH, _adj._ Exhausted with fatigue.
V. ~Mait~.
_Wyntown._
N
NA, NAE, NE, _adv._ No, not, S.
A. S. _na_, _ne_, id.
_Barbour._
NA, NE, _conj._
1. Neither.
_Douglas._
2. Nor.
_Barbour._
3. Used both for neither, and nor.
A. S. _na_, _ne_, neque, nec.
_Douglas._
NA, _conj._ But.
_Douglas._
NA, _conj._ Than.
_Wallace._
C. B. Gael. Ir. _na_, id.