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A Dictionary of the Older Scottish Tongue (up to 1700)

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About this entry:
First published 2001 (DOST Vol. X).
This entry has not been updated since then but may contain minor corrections and revisions.

Quotation dates: 1582-1700+

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Tar(r)it, Tarred, Tarr'd, Tar(r)d, ppl. adj. [17th c. Eng. tar'd (1615), tarr'd (1688).] Covered in or impregnated with tar.1582 Edinb. D. Guild Acc. 125.
vii faddonnis greit tarit tow
1593 Edinburgh Testaments XXV 255.
Of towis tarrit & vntarrit
1608–9 Glasg. Univ. Mun. III 562.
For thrie gritt tarrit towis to the bell … xxiiij s.
1612–13 Ayr B. Acc. 256.
[For] tarrit [and] quhyte [rope]
1633 Aberd. Sheriff Ct. II 368.
[Apprised from him] ane hornit broun bellit kow with ane calf at her fuitt pryce thairof tuentie merkis [which was] tarrit with his tar
1641 Acts V 658/1.
Whyt cleane wooll, tarred or layd wooll [etc.]
1684 Symson Descr. Galloway 73.
Moor-wool … the best of the three sorts, being very cleane, because not tarr'd, and consequently much whiter
1707 Rec. Convention of Royal Burghs IV 435.
That each of the saids burghs shall imploy the sum received be them in manufactoring tarrd or laid wooll

b. (Ane) tard ledder, = Tarledder n., in transf. use.1589 Crail B. Ct. 25 Nov.
Thomas [said] … be Goddis wondis he suld tak ane tard ledder off the said James from neck to heill

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