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

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About this entry:
First published 2002 (DOST Vol. XII).
This entry has not been updated since then but may contain minor corrections and revisions.

Quotation dates: 1499-1628

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Wowar, -e(i)r, n.1 Also: wawar. [ME and e.m.E. woware (Ancr. R.), wower (1377), wooer (1546), OE wóᵹere.] a. A wooer, chiefly a man who woos a woman. Also proverb. See Owar n. for a further example. b. comb.a. a1500 Henr. Bludy Serk 104.
Woweir
1513 Doug. iv Prol. 196 (Ruddim.).
Traist not all talis that wantoun wowaris [Sm. wower] tellis, Ȝou to defloure purposyng and not ellis
1540 Lynd. Sat. 2152 (B).
Fair dame gif ȝe wald be a wowar To pairt ȝow twa I haif a powar
a1568 Scott xxxiv 89.
Ȝe wantoun wowaris [M. wowarris] waggis With thame that hes the cunȝe
c1600 Montg. Suppl. xxvii 2.
Antinous, vith monie wowaris, than Did preis for to suppryse, & bring to schame, Penellope
(b) a1500 Peblis to Play 233.
Quhen the winklottis and the wawaris twynnit
proverb. a1628 Carmichael Prov. No. 156.
Aples and new aile quo the wower, drownit mice and cald kaile quo the maid
a1628 Carmichael Prov. No. 1541.
There was never a pure wower nor a rich deid man
b. 1513 Doug. xii Prol. 300.
Gentill dow … So pryklyng hyr greyn curage forto crowd In amorus voce and wowar soundis lowd

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