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==English== |
==English== |
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===Etymology 1=== |
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====Adjective==== |
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#* {{RQ:Dictionary of the Scottish Language|title=Supplement|entry=Wurlie|smallcaps=on|page=700|column=2|passage='''{{smallcaps|Wurlie}}''', 1. Contemptibly puny, or small in size; as "a '''''wurlie''''' bodie," an ill-grown person, Fife, Loth.|en=1|brackets=on}} |
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#* {{RQ:English Dialect Dictionary|entry=WIRL|pos=sb|page=515|column=1|passage=''WIRL'', ''sb.'' Sc. Yks. {{...}} A small and harsh-featured person; an ill-grown child; a stunted animal. {{...}} Hence (1) ''Wirly'', ''adj.'' puny, small; (2) ''Wirly-bit'', ''sb.'' a short time; a little way; a small portion. (1) Sc. There's nae a pilchard in my creel, Nor '''wurlie''' sprat … They're firm and fat (Jam.).|brackets=on}} |
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# {{lb|en|Scotland}} [[gnarled#Adjective|gnarled]], [[knotted#Adjective|knotted]]; [[wizened#Adjective|wizened]], [[wrinkled#Adjective|wrinkled]]. |
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#* {{RQ:Dictionary of the Scottish Language|title=Supplement|entry=Wurlie|smallcaps=on|page=700|column=2|passage='''{{smallcaps|Wurlie}}''', {{...}} 2. Rough, knotted; as, "a '''''wurlie''' rung''," a knotted stick, S. It is applied to a stick that is distorted, Lanarks. As this sense, however, is considerably remote from the other, the term may have had a different origin. 3. Wrinkled, applied to a person; as, ''a '''wurly''' body'', Lanarks.|en=1|brackets=on}} |
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=====Synonyms===== |
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* {{sense|derisorily small}} {{l|en|dinky}}, {{l|en|petty}}, {{l|en|puny}}; see also [[Thesaurus:small]] or [[Thesaurus:tiny]] |
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* {{sense|gnarled|knotted}} {{l|en|gnarly}}, {{l|en|knobbly}}, {{l|en|knobby}}, {{l|en|knotty}} |
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* {{sense|wizened|wrinkled}} {{l|en|bewrinkled}}, {{l|en|rugose}}, {{l|en|wrinkly}}; see also [[Thesaurus:wrinkled]] |
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===Etymology 2=== |
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{{en-noun}} |
{{en-noun}} |
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# {{alternative spelling of| |
# {{alternative spelling of|en|wurley}}. |
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#* {{quote-book|en|author=E. Lloyd|chapter=Biographical Sketch|title=A Visit to the Antipodes: With Some Reminiscences of a Sojourn in Australia|location=London|publisher=[[w:Smith, Elder & Co.|Smith, Elder, and Co.]], 65, [[w:Cornhill, London|Cornhill]]|year=1846|page=165|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=_MopAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA165|oclc=80380528|passage=But latterly they came in good numbers, and commenced a nightly system of annoyance by dancing their corroberies:{{nb...}}. Finding remonstrance of no avail, one evening, when they were all seated quietly at the '''wurlie''' [''footnote'': Encampment.], I fired a charge of small shot into the midst of them, and retired to the hut: in the morning they had all disappeared.}} |
Latest revision as of 21:41, 7 February 2024
English
[edit]Etymology 1
[edit]Adjective
[edit]wurlie (comparative wurlier or more wurlie, superlative wurliest or most wurlie)
- (Scotland) Alternative spelling of wurly (“derisorily small”).
- [1825, John Jamieson, “Wurlie”, in Supplement to the Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language: […], volume II (K–Z) (in Scots), Edinburgh: […] University Press; for W[illiam] & C[harles] Tait, […]; London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green, →OCLC, page 700, column 2:
- Wurlie, 1. Contemptibly puny, or small in size; as "a wurlie bodie," an ill-grown person, Fife, Loth.
- (please add an English translation of this quotation)]
- [1905, “WIRL, sb.”, in Joseph Wright, editor, The English Dialect Dictionary: […], volumes VI (T–Z, Supplement, Bibliography and Grammar), London: Henry Frowde, […], publisher to the English Dialect Society, […]; New York, N.Y.: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, →OCLC, page 515, column 1:
- WIRL, sb. Sc. Yks. […] A small and harsh-featured person; an ill-grown child; a stunted animal. […] Hence (1) Wirly, adj. puny, small; (2) Wirly-bit, sb. a short time; a little way; a small portion. (1) Sc. There's nae a pilchard in my creel, Nor wurlie sprat … They're firm and fat (Jam.).]
- (Scotland) gnarled, knotted; wizened, wrinkled.
- [1825, John Jamieson, “Wurlie”, in Supplement to the Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language: […], volume II (K–Z) (in Scots), Edinburgh: […] University Press; for W[illiam] & C[harles] Tait, […]; London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green, →OCLC, page 700, column 2:
- Wurlie, […] 2. Rough, knotted; as, "a wurlie rung," a knotted stick, S. It is applied to a stick that is distorted, Lanarks. As this sense, however, is considerably remote from the other, the term may have had a different origin. 3. Wrinkled, applied to a person; as, a wurly body, Lanarks.
- (please add an English translation of this quotation)]
Synonyms
[edit]- (derisorily small): dinky, petty, puny; see also Thesaurus:small or Thesaurus:tiny
- (gnarled, knotted): gnarly, knobbly, knobby, knotty
- (wizened, wrinkled): bewrinkled, rugose, wrinkly; see also Thesaurus:wrinkled
Etymology 2
[edit]Noun
[edit]wurlie (plural wurlies)
- Alternative spelling of wurley.
- 1846, E. Lloyd, “Biographical Sketch”, in A Visit to the Antipodes: With Some Reminiscences of a Sojourn in Australia, London: Smith, Elder, and Co., 65, Cornhill, →OCLC, page 165:
- But latterly they came in good numbers, and commenced a nightly system of annoyance by dancing their corroberies: […]. Finding remonstrance of no avail, one evening, when they were all seated quietly at the wurlie [footnote: Encampment.], I fired a charge of small shot into the midst of them, and retired to the hut: in the morning they had all disappeared.