Scottish National Dictionary (1700–)
Hide Quotations Hide Etymology
About this entry:
First published 1974 (SND Vol. IX).
This entry has not been updated since then but may contain minor corrections and revisions.
V, n., letter of the alphabet.
The twenty-second letter of the alphabet, now called vee, as in Eng., but previously vow, vau, vaou [vʌu], from Lat. vau, Hebr. vav (cf. Ger. vau) (Fif. c.1830 G. Gourlay Our Old Neighbours (1887) 70; Crm. 1854 H. Miller Schools ii.; †Kcd. 1911 W. MacGillivray Cotbank 23), ev, iv [ɪv] (Ayr. c.1770 D. Landsborough Contributions to Local History (1879) 16; Bnff. 1836 Ellis E.E.P. V. 777; †Abd. 1910). In O.Sc. u, v, and w are used almost indiscriminately in spelling, but u and v are usually distinguished by the 18th c. according to modern usage with u as a vowel and v as a consonant. v has the same phonetic value as in Eng., that of the voiced lip-teeth fricative, but differs from Eng. in certain usages:
1. v is replaced by f in the pl. of many nouns with sing. in f, as halfs (Half), knifes (Knife), leafs (Leaf), sheafs (Sheave), thiefs (Thief), wifes (Wife), though now rather obsol. See P.L.D. § 70.
2. v disappears through previous unvoicing or vocalisation: (1) finally in monosyllables as Braw, Doo, Gie, v.1, Hae, v.1 (though gen. retained in emphatic or interrogative forms), lea (Leave), lue, loe (Luve), O, prep., 1., Pree, v.1; (2) finally in unstressed syllables, as in shirra; (3) after l and r, as Dell, v., Saw, n.1, Sel, Siller, Twal; Hairst, Ser, v.1, Ser, v.2; (4) medially between vowels, as in Abune, Deil, E'en, adv., n., Faur, neer (Naer); oer (Ower); but in many words doublet forms with and without v are frequent, as in Gavel, n.1, gael; Gavelock, n.2, Gellock; Laverock, lairock; Raivel, ra'el; Syver, syer. Cf. also Shuil, and Shuffle, n., where the v has been unvoiced.
3. v, as orig. a bilabial sound, and w freq. interchange: (1) v appears for w (i) initially before r, esp. in Ork. and ne.Sc., now obsol., as in Vrang, Vrapper, Vratch, Vreet, Vricht, Vrocht, etc. See also W, letter, P.L.D. § 137, and cf. Scott Diary (3 Feb. 1826); (ii) in Melvie, Mervie, Skiver, Syver, Thieveless; (iii) in ne.Sc. finally from an orig. O. or Mid.Eng. -aw-, as in blyaave (Blaw, v.1), Gnyauve, lavyer (Lawer), shaave (Saw, v.1), snyauve (Snaw), Tyauve, Yavin; (iv) occas. in I.Sc. as in Velter, Vender; (v) for w < v, See W, letter.
4. An excrescent v develops in Cruive, Reeve, n.1, Ruive, Spave, Spaiver, q.v., and in div (see Dae, v.1, A. I. 1. (2)).
You may wish to vary the format shown below depending on the citation style used.
"V n.". Dictionary of the Scots Language. 2004. Scottish Language Dictionaries Ltd. Accessed 26 Dec 2024 <http://www.dsl.ac.uk/entry/snd/v>