Part 22 (1/2)

_Teem_, _to_. To overflow or be full. ”He teems wi' jokes.” ”It teems wi' rain.”

_Thruff_. p.r.o.nunciation of ”through,” compare ”enough,” Linc. enew.

_Tidy_. A pinafore. ”Put on your tidy, my bairn.”

_Tray_. A hurdle.

_Trig_. Trim, neat, as trim as a pin.

_Tue_ or _tew_. To fret, chafe impatiently, tire oneself out.

_Undernean_. Underneath.

_Wakken_. Wide-awake, sharp, noticing everything.

_w.a.n.kling_. A weak child, also wreckling.

_Ware_, _to_. To spend. ”Are you going to ware anything on me at the fair?”

_Wath_. A ford. ”Kirkstead Wath,” ”Shearman's Wath.”

_Werrit_, _to_. To worry or fidget, in needless anxiety.

_Wopper_. Anything unusually large. ”That bairn of yourn is a wopper.”

_Yocks_. The two chains on which buckets are hung from the shoulder board, when carrying water from the well.

_Yon_. Yonder. ”Look at yon boy, what is he up to?”

_Yow_. Ewe, a female sheep.

_Yow-necked_. Of a horse with neck too thin.

_Yuck_, _to_. To jirk. ”Yuck the reins to check the horse.”

APPENDIX I. VERNACULAR NAMES OF WILD PLANTS.

Adam's Flannel Mullein

Alehoof Ground Ivy

Alexander's foot Pellitory

All-heal Valeriana officinalis

”Very precious”-Spikenard. ”The Box of Ointment,” Mark xiv., 35, worth ”300 pence.”

Ambrose Wild sage