Show Search Results Show Browse

Scottish National Dictionary (1700–)

Hide Quotations Hide Etymology

Abbreviations Cite this entry

About this entry:
First published 1974 (SND Vol. IX).
This entry has not been updated since then but may contain minor corrections and revisions.

STUG, n.2, adj., v.2 Also stugg; stog, stoag, stogue; stewg, styogue, styug, ¶stuog (ne.Sc.). [stʌg; stog; ne.Sc. + stj-]

I. n. 1. A jagged or uneven cut, anything left rough and stumpy by careless cutting; specif. in pl., unevenly-cut stubble (Kcd. 1825 Jam.: ‡Rxb. 1923 Watson W.-B.); the stump of hair left by roughly cropping a horse. Adj. stuggy, stoggy, uneven, with an irregular outline, of cut corn (Sc. 1808 Jam.), and transf.: in a more gen. sense, rough, and specif. of cloth: of a coarse rough texture (Cld. 1825 Jam.).m.Lth. 1722 Caled. Mercury (19 Feb.):
A dark gray Geldin, the Hair on the far Side of the Neck being shorn by the Stug.
Rxb. 1808 A. Scott Poems 98–101:
Let's sleely gie't [corn] a stug . . . Awfu' stugs are seen to cock Their birse ahind them now, Knee-height this day.
Cld. 1880 Jam.:
A comb is said to be stuggy, when some of its teeth are broken, and it therefore rugs the hair.

Used attrib. in combs. with adj. force = cut short, docked, stumpy: (1) stug-horned, with short stumpy horns. Cf. n., 3.; (2) stug rump, a docked tail, of a horse; (3) stug-tail, id. Ppl.adj. stug-tailed.(1) Ayr. 1780 I. Pagan Songs 40:
In comes Watty Bell, he was something fou' He . . . bought a stug-horned cow.
(2) Sc. 1766 Caled. Mercury (22 Oct.) 507:
An old healed wound over her shoulder, with a stug rump.
(3) Edb. 1699 Edb. Gazette (30 Oct.):
A brown stou'd Horse, stug Tail'd.
Abd. 1758 Abd. Journal (28 Nov.):
Very short lugs, stug-tailed, and has never been shod.
Clc. 1772 Edb. Ev. Courant (27 July):
Stug-tail'd, and clipped in the manes.

2. A short backward-bent irregular horn on an animal's head, “as used in this sense freq. pronounced stook” (n.Sc. 1825 Jam.), and prob. more correctly belonging with Stook, n.2

3. A stump, of a tree, or bush (n.Sc. 1825 Jam.; †Rxb. 1923 Watson W.-B.; Lth. 1971); a lump, a stiff congealed mass.Gall. 1822 R. Trotter Lowran Castle 127:
The brain, the stugs of clotted blood, and the shattered skull.
Knr. 1925 H. Haliburton Horace 197:
But there are caulds an' yawkin' stogs.
Sc. 1936 J. G. Horne Flooer o' Ling 57:
A stog will gether nocht but fog.

4. A stocky coarse-built person, one whose movements are stiff and awkward, occas. applied to animals; a stout masculine woman (Bnff. 1948), also in derivs. stuggal (Ork. 1971), stugger; fig. an obstinate, intractable person (Abd. 1915, stewg). Adj. stuggie, sturdy, stocky.Abd. 1880 G. Webster Crim. Officer 14:
I was a gey grown styog o' a loon fan I left Mr. Barnett's employment.
Fif. 1895 S. Tytler Macdonald Lass ix.:
Oh! the big ungainly woman? (Was she not a stugger?).
Abd., Kcd. 1921 T.S.D.C.:
He's awa' to an aul' stogue o' a horse — said of a farmer on the downgrade.
Sc. 1937 J. Bridie Tedious and Brief (1944) 104:
[Hugh McDiarmid] is also in some sense a Scottish character himself. He might be listed as a totey, pernicketty, sometimes rigwoodie, stug.
Abd. 1955 W. P. Milne Eppie Elrick iii.:
A fine canny humoursome styogue.
Ork. 1971:
A fine stuggie beast. A stuggie peerie fellow.

II. adj. “Stiff and not well set up” (Abd. 1921 T.S.D.C.). Also in deriv. form styuggal (Ib.).

III. v. 1. To cut with a rough, stumpy edge, esp. in harvesting grain with a sickle: to cut the stubble unevenly (Kcd., Fif., Slk. 1825 Jam., stog, stug); to crop (a horse's mane or tail). Ppl.adj. stugged, cropped.Sc. 1699 Edb. Gazette (7 Sept.):
A light Bay Naig black cut tailed and stug'd main.

2. To walk in a blundering heavy-footed manner, to plod or stump, of a clumsy or aged or infirm person (Gall., Slk. 1825 Jam.; Dmf. 1894 Trans. Dmf. and Gall. Antiq. Soc. 155; Rxb. 1923 Watson W.-B.; Sh. 1971).Slk. 1818 Hogg B. of Bodsbeck iii.:
I slings aye on wi' a gay lang step; . . . Stogs aye on.
Gall. 1824 MacTaggart Gallov. Encycl. 398:
How angry did he hotch and stog.
Lnk. a.1832 W. Watt Poems (1860) 234:
Sae ben the hoose he stugs bedeen.
Dmf. 1875 A. Anderson Two Angels 206:
Mony a san' man ane could name Stogs an' slings aboot.
Sh. 1899 J. Inkster Mansie's Röd (1922) 136:
I stugg'd up ower da station ta get a half o' gill.
Rxb. 1925 E. C. Smith Mang Howes. 7:
A stoaggeet-on on the shadeet seide.

[O.Sc. stug-tailit, 1575. Orig. somewhat doubtful but prob. a variant (with onomat. alteration) of Stock, n.1, and poss. with influence from Stug, v.1 N.E.D. quotes Mid.Eng. stuk, stug, stuckkyd, cut short, stumpy.]

You may wish to vary the format shown below depending on the citation style used.

"Stug n.2, adj., v.2". Dictionary of the Scots Language. 2004. Scottish Language Dictionaries Ltd. Accessed 23 Nov 2024 <http://www.dsl.ac.uk/entry/snd/stug_n2_adj_v2>

26121

snd

Hide Advanced Search

Browse SND:

    Loading...

Share: