An Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language - LightNovelsOnl.com
You're reading novel online at LightNovelsOnl.com. Please use the follow button to get notifications about your favorite novels and its latest chapters so you can come back anytime and won't miss anything.
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.