10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «SUCKENER»
Discover the use of
suckener in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
suckener and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Decisions of the Court of Session: from the year 1733 to the ...
A suckener in constant use of coming to the mill, if he abstracts, and in the issue
is found astricted, he is liable for his bygone abstractions, however probable his
plea of immunity might have been, and though for that very reason he should not
...
Scotland. Court of Session, Patrick Grant Elchies (Lord.), William Maxwell Morison, 1813
It proceeds upon the assumption that the suckener, but for an agreement to pay
dry multures, is bound to take his grain to the mill. That is not so. So long as the
suckener pays the insucken multures and sequels he is certainly free to take his ...
3
Oats: their cultivation and use from ancient times to the ...
Even if a suckener did not send his grain to be ground at the mill to which he was
thirled, he had still to pay the multure and the sequels. In Aberdeenshire as
recently as 1935 a miller sued a farmer who was thirled to his mill but who sent
his ...
William Maitland Findlay, 1956
4
Aberdeen University Studies
Even if a suckener did not send his grain to be ground at the mill to which he was
thirled, he had still to pay the multure and the sequels. In Aberdeenshire as
recently as 1935 a miller sued a farmer who was thirled to his mill but who sent
his ...
5
The Works of Walter Scott, Esq
... knave— ship. The mnlture was the regular exactions for grinding the meal. The
lock, (signifying a small quantity,) and the goupen a handful, were additional
perquisites demanded by the miller , and submitted to or resisted by the
Suckener ...
6
An etmological dictionary of the scottish language
Pop. Ball. A. S. soc, Su. G. sokn, exactio, juris- dictio. Suckener, s. One who is
bound to grind his grain at a certain mill, S. SUCKIES, s.pl. The flowers of clover,
S. V Souks. A. Douglas. SUCKUDRY, SUKUDRY, SUC- QUEDRY, s.
Presumption.
7
An Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language
Bail. A. S. soc, Su. G. sokn, exactio, juris- dictio. Suckener, s. One who is bound to
grind bis grain at a certain mill, S. SUCKIES, s.pl. The flowers of clover, S. V.
Souks. A. Douglas. SUCKUDRY, SUKUDRY, SUC S UL QUE DRY, s.
Presumption.
8
The Waverly Novels: The Monastery
The lock, signifying a small quantity, and the goupen, a handful, were additional
perquisites demanded by the miller, and submitted to or resisted by the Suckener
as circumstances permitted. These •nd other petty dues were called in general ...
9
Historical Romances of the Author of Waverley
The lock, (signifying a small quantity,)and thegovpen, ahandful, were additional
perquisites demanded by the miller, and submitted to or resisted by the Suckener
as circumstances permitted. These and other petty dues were called in general ...
10
The Novels, Tales and Romances of the Author of Waverley
The lack, (signifying a small quantity,) and thegoupen a handful, were additional
perquisites demanded by the miller, and submitted to or resisted by the Suckener
as circumstances permitted. These and other petty dues were called in general ...