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Scottish National Dictionary (1700–)

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About this entry:
First published 1934 (SND Vol. I).
This entry has not been updated since then but may contain minor corrections and revisions.

BASK, adj. [bɑsk]

1. Of weather: dry, withering.Sc. 1914 R. B. Cunninghame Graham Sc. Stories 55:
We'll gie ye a braw hurl back to the farm, syne the bask air, ye ken, and the milk.
Kcb. 1893 S. R. Crockett Stickit Minister (1895) i.:
It was a bask blowy day in the end of March . . . a snell, Scotch, but not unfriendly day.
w.Dmf. 1899 J. Shaw A Country Schoolmaster 339:
“Bask weather” means the weather's dry and airy.

2. Of fruit: sharp, bitter, rough to the taste.Rxb. 1923 Watson W.-B. 49:
Bask, dry and rough to the taste.

[O.Sc. bask, adj., unpleasant, distasteful (D.O.S.T.). Beȝȝsc, baisk spellings occur in Mid.Eng. which would point to O.N. beisk, acrid, bitter. For the more common a forms cf. Norw. dial. (Aasen) bask, proud, Sw. bask, barsk, stern, L.Ger. basch, bask, barsk, rough, harsh to the taste (Berghaus), E.Fris. barsk, rough, severe (Koolman). See Barsk.]

1985

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