An Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel An Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language Part 908 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
_To_ TRODDLE, _v. n._ To walk with short steps, as a little child does, Ang.
_Morison._
Germ. _trottel-n_, tarde et pigre incedere.
TRODWIDDIE, _s._ The chain that fastens the harrow to what are called the _Swingle-trees_, S. B.
Isl. _troda_, terra, and _vijd-er_, vimen; q. the _withe_ which touches the earth.
TROGGERS, _s. pl._ The designation given to one species of Irish vagrants, q. _trokers_, Wigton.
_Statist. Acc._
TROISTRY, _s._ The entrails of a beast, offals, S. B.
Isl. _tros_, trash, Sw. _trastyg_, trumpery.
TROYT, _s._ An inactive person, S. B.
Su. G. _tryt-a_, pigere, taedere; _troett_, fessus, la.s.sus.
_To_ TROKE, _v. a._
1. To bargain in the way of exchange, to barter, S. _truck_, E.
Fr. _troqu-er_, to exchange.
_Ferguson._
2. To do business on a small scale, S.
3. To be busy about little, in whatever way, S.
~Trock~, ~Troque~, _s._
1. Exchange, barter, S.
Fr. _troc_, id.
2. _Troques_, pl. small wares, S. B.
_s.h.i.+rrefs._
3. Small pieces of business that require a good deal of stirring, S. B.
4. Familiar intercourse, S. B.
_Morison._
TROLY, TRAWLIE, _s._ A ring through which the _sowme_ pa.s.ses betwixt the two horses, or oxen, next the plough, Ang.
V. ~Sowme~.
Isl. _travale_, impedimentum; Teut. _traelie_, clathrus, a bar.
TROLOLLAY, _s._ A term which occurs in a rhyme used by young people, on the last day of the year, S.
It has been viewed as a corr. of Fr. _trois rois allois_, three kings are come.
TRONACH, _s._ The crupper used with a pack-saddle; formed of a piece of wood, connected with the saddle by a cord at each end; Mearns.
TRONE, _s._
1. An instrument, consisting of two horizontal bars crossing each other, beaked at the extremities, and supported by a wooden pillar; used for weighing heavy wares, S.
_Stat. Dav. II._
L. B. _trona_, statera publica; Isl. _tra-na_, a crane; rostrum longiusculum.
2. The pillory, S.
_Acts Sed._
~Trone-weight~, _s._ The standard weight used at the _Trone_, S.
~Tronare~, _s._ The person who had the charge of the _Trone_. L. B.
_tronar-ius_.
_Stat. Dav. II._
~Trone-men~, _s._ Those who carry off the soot sweeped from chimneys; denominated from their station at the _Trone_, Edinburgh.
_To_ ~Trone~, _v. a._ To subject to the disgraceful punishment of the pillory.
_Kennedy._
TRONE, _s._ A throne.