CĂRȚI ÎN ENGLEZĂ ÎN LEGĂTURĂ CU «DIRDUM»
Descoperă întrebuințarea
dirdum în următoarea selecție bibliografică. Cărți în legătură cu
dirdum și extrase din aceasta pentru a furniza contextul de întrebuințare al acestuia în literatura Engleză.
1
Scottish Dictionary and Supplement: In Four Volumes. Suppl. ...
DIRDUM, An uproar, S.] Add; " There is such a dirdum forsooth for the loss of your
gear and means ; the loss of one soul is more than to burn up the fabric of the
whole world." W. Guthrie's Serm. pi 17. Add, after Gl. Grose. — Dordum is used in
...
2
A Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language ...: ...
An uproar, S.] Add; " There is such a dirdum forsooth for the loss of your gear and
means ; the loss of one soul is more than to burn up the fabric of the whole world.
" W. Guthrie's Serm. p. 17. Add, after Gl. Grose. — Dordum is used in the same ...
3
An etymological dictionary of the Scottish language: ...
Deed, atchievement, S. B. M A dirdum of that," a mighty feat indeed ! used
ironically. A dirten dirdum ye brag o* Done on the Trojan shore, \Vi' mony ane to
help you ; I Had just ane an' no more. Poems in the Buchan Dialect, p. 34. This is
...
4
Jamieson's Dictionary of the Scottish Language: In which the ...
An uproar. Y. Dirddm. To D1RD00SE, v. a. To thump, Aberd.— A. 8. dtr- ian,
laedere, " to hurt or harm, to annoy ;" Somner; and douss, doyce, dutch, a stroke
or blow. DIRDUM, s. Deed ; achievement, S. B. DIRDÜM, ». 1. An uproar ; a
tumult, 8.
John Jamieson, John Johnstone (of Edinburgh.), John Longmuir,
1867
5
The English dialect dictionary, being the complete ...
Sc. Sic hirdum, dird-1m, and sic din, RAMsAY Tra-Table Illisr. (1724) l. 9. ed.
1871 ; The dirdum's a' about you man's pokmanty, Scor'r Rub Roy11817) xiv. Abd
. If I get o'er this dirdum richt, I'll ne'er hand sic a splore. Gnirlman Inglismaill (
1873) ...
6
An Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language: ...
It must be observed, however, that Su.G. dyrt denotes any thing of importance,
and dyrd, glory. DIRDUM, .r. Deed, atchievement, S. B. " A dirdum of that,” a
mighty feat indeed! used ironically. A dirten dirdum ye brag 0' Done on the Trojan
shore ...
7
The English dialect dictionary
Sc. Sic hirdum, dirdum, and sic din, RAMSAY Taa~Tal>lc Misc. (1724) l. 9, ed.
1873. e.F'1f. A lood reishil at the front door which.. .brochtoorhirdum-dirdum toa
premature stan'-still, LATTO Tam Bodkin (1864) xi. Edb. O a' ye hirdum-dirdum ...
8
Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine
Dirdum, noise, uproar: — " Humph ! it's juist because — juist that the dirdum's a'
about yon man's pockmanty." —Scott: Rob Roy. " Sic a dirdum about naothlng."
— Laird of Logan. "I'm no sae scant o' clean pipes'as to Doited, stupid, stupefied,
...
9
An etmological dictionary of the scottish language
A bankrupt. Dunbar. DIRD, s. An achievement; used ironically, S. B. Poems
Buchan Dial. Teut. dagh-vaerd, Isl. dagferd, a day's journey. Dirdum, s. Deed,
achievement, S.B. ibid. Dirdum-Dardum, s. A term, expressive of contempt for an
action.
10
A Dictionary of the Scottish Language: In which the Words ...
DIRDUM, i. Deed ; achievement, S. B. DIRDCM, >. 1. An uproar; a tumult, S. King
Hart.—C. B. dowrd, sonitus, strepitus. 2. Damage. " To dree the dirdum /' to do
penance, S. B. Old Mortality. 3. Passion ; ill humour, Pertns. 4. A great noise,
Roxb.