A Dictionary of the Older Scottish Tongue (up to 1700)
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First published 1983 (DOST Vol. V).
This entry has not been updated since then but may contain minor corrections and revisions.
Quotation dates: 1622, 1678-1690
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Pan-, Pane-crach(e, -crats, n. [Pan n.1 6 and Cratch(e n. Also in the later (18th c.) Sc. dial. and cf. mod. Eng. panscratch (also -scale).] Appar., the scale that formed on the bottom of a salt-pan and which was scraped off and used for making rough-cast and for filling up joints. —1622 Master of Works Accounts (ed.) II. 142.
For furneishing of lyme sand hair and panecrache for bigging and making watterticht of the tua grit tarrassis 1678 Sc. Ant. IX. 107.
Pan crach 1683–90 Proceedings of Society of Antiquaries LIV. 239.
For pan-crats to the church walls and the steeple, and for the portage thereof from Pittinweeme to St Andrews