Scottish National Dictionary (1700–)
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First published 1952 (SND Vol. III). Includes material from the 1976 supplement.
This entry has not been updated since then but may contain minor corrections and revisions.
DODDIT, DODDED, ppl.adj.
1. Of cattle or sheep: hornless. Also dudded. Cf. Doddie. Also in n.Eng. dial.Sc. after 1714 Geordie Whelp's Testament in Jacobite Relics (ed. Hogg 1819) I. 118:
A rickle o' peats out-owre the knowe A gimmer, and a doddit yowe.Sc. 1846 Sc. Farmer (2 Oct.) 301:
5 Black Dodded Cows, Two and Three years old, in Calf to the First Prize Bull.Sc. 1938 Times (23 May) 21/4:
From time immemorial the native cattle of Angus and Aberdeenshire, and, indeed, of the north-east of Scotland generally, were black and hornless — “dodded” or “hummle,” hence the terms applied at times to representatives of the breed even to-day “Buchan Hummlies” and “Angus Doddies.”Ork. 1908 J. T. S. Leask in Old-Lore Misc. I. vi. 224:
I got bit ten pound . . . for a bony bit o' a twa yearald dudded whyoo fae a Caitness drover.Abd. 1909 C. Murray Hamewith 99:
Whiles fae a skep a dreepin' comb he steals, Or clips the doddit yowes for winter wheels.Slk. 1807 Hogg Mountain Bard 193:
A hunder pund i' honest hands, An' sax an' thretty doddit yowes.
†2. “Bald, without hair” (n.Sc. 1808 Jam.).
3. Fig. Of a church: without a tower or spire.Ags. 1899 C. Sievwright Garland 44:
Noo they've gotten a schule o' their ain, an' some day sune they may get a Kirk. Maybe it will be a dodit ane.
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"Doddit ppl. adj.". Dictionary of the Scots Language. 2004. Scottish Language Dictionaries Ltd. Accessed 23 Nov 2024 <http://www.dsl.ac.uk/entry/snd/doddit>