The Dialect of the West of England; Particularly Somersetshire;

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n. To root ; to become fixed by. rooting.
More. s. A root.
Mought. V. aux. Might.
Mouse-snap. s. A mouse trap.
Mug'gets. s. pi. The intestines of a calf or sheep.
Derived, most probably, from maw and guts.
To Mult. V. To melt.
Mus' goo. must go.
'Mus'd. Amused.
N.
Many words beginniag with a vowel, following the ar- ticle am, take the n from an ; as, an inch, pro- nounced a niTich.
Na'atal. adj. natural.
Na'atally. adv. naturally.
Naise. s. noise.
Nan. interjec. Used in reply, in conversation o
...r ad- dress, the same as Sir, when you do not understand.
N4nt. s. Aunt.
Nap. s. A small rising ; a hillock.
44 GLOSSAEY.
Nation, a&o. Very, extremely : as nation good ; waiioj} bad.
Nawl. a. Au awl.
Nawl. s. The navel.
Nawl-cut. s. A piece cut out at the navel : a term used by butchers.
N'eet.| -, ^ , ^ N'it. I Not yet.
Nestle Tripe, s. The weakest and poorest bird in the nest ; applied, also, to the last-born, and usually the -weakest child of a family ; any young, weak, and puny chUd, or bird New-qut-and-jerkin.


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