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Dictionaries of the Scots Language:: SND :: sheuch
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Includes material from the 2005 supplement.<br />This entry has not been updated since then but may contain minor corrections and revisions.</p><p id="first"><span class="form">SHEUCH</span>, <i>n</i>., <i>v</i>. Also <i>sheugh</i>, <i>shooch</i>, <i>sh(o)uch</i>, <i>sh(o)ugh</i>; <i>s(e)uch</i>, <i>seugh</i>, <i>sewch</i>, <i>sough</i>. <span class="pron">[n., em.Sc. (b) ʃux; em.Sc. (a), wm.Sc. ʃ(j)ʌx; s.Sc. ʃjux<sup>ʍ</sup>; Sh. ʃɔx; Ork. søx]</span></p><p><b>I</b>. <i>n</i>. <b>1</b>. A trench in the ground, esp. one cut for drainage, a ditch, open drain (Sc. 1808 Jam.; Uls. 1880 Patterson <i>Gl</i>.; Per., Fif., Lth., Ayr. 1915–26 Wilson; Bwk. 1942 Wettstein; Rxb. 1942 Zai; m. and s.Sc. 1970). Also in n.Eng. dial. Also <i>attrib</i>. and <i>fig</i>. Adj. <i>sheuchy</i>.<span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib015799"><span class="geo">Gall.</span> <span class="date">1702</span> <span class="citTitle">Session Bk. Minnigaff</span> (1939) 78: </span><br/><span class="quote">He caused his servants divert the water by a little shouch about his hous.</span></span><span class="cit even"><span class="cref ref-bib017990"><span class="geo">Edb.</span> <span class="date">1715</span> <span class="citTitle">Burgh Rec. Edb.</span> (1967) 292: </span><br/><span class="quote">Whosoever baits his horse or cow on his neighbours knows, dykes, baulks, or sheuchs.</span></span><span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib018259"><span class="geo">Sc.</span> <span class="date">1763</span> <span class="citTitle">Chrons. Atholl and Tullibardine Families</span> III. 503: </span><br/><span class="quote">The trees in the shough oposit to the Hermitage.</span></span><span class="cit even"><span class="cref ref-bib018108"><span class="geo">Ayr.</span> <span class="date">1786</span> <span class="citAuthor">Burns</span> <span class="citTitle">Twa Dogs</span> 72: </span><br/><span class="quote">A cotter howkin' in a sheugh.</span></span><span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib018247"><span class="geo">Sc.</span> <span class="date">1802</span> <span class="citTitle">Wife of Usher's Well</span> in </span><span class="cref ref-bib018247"><span class="citAuthor">Child</span> <span class="citTitle">Ballads</span> No. 79 A. vi.: </span><br/><span class="quote">It neither grew in syke nor ditch, Nor yet in ony sheugh.</span></span><span class="cit even"><span class="cref ref-bib015084"><span class="geo">Slk.</span> <span class="date">1818</span> <span class="citAuthor">Hogg</span> <span class="citTitle">Wool-Gatherer</span> (1874) 147: </span><br/><span class="quote">A deep dry seuch at the back of the garden.</span></span><span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib016632"><span class="geo">Fif.</span> <span class="date">1822</span> <span class="citTitle">Trans. Antiq. Soc. Scot.</span> II. 193: </span><br/><span class="quote">Sheuchy Dyke, so called, I suppose, for its being intersected with ditches, called <i>Sheuchs</i>.</span></span><span class="cit even"><span class="cref ref-bib016977"><span class="geo">Lnk.</span> <span class="date"><i>a</i>.1832</span> <span class="citAuthor">W. Watt</span> <span class="citTitle">Poems</span> (1860) 352: </span><br/><span class="quote">Thir get noucht, to weet their mouth, But sma' swipes or sheuch water.</span></span><span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib016690"><span class="geo">Mry.</span> <span class="date">1849</span> <span class="citAuthor">A. Blackhall</span> <span class="citTitle">Lays of North</span> 92: </span><br/><span class="quote">Aul' Clootie sat in his sooty seugh.</span></span><span class="cit even"><span class="cref ref-bib016387"><span class="geo">Wgt.</span> <span class="date">1877</span> <span class="citAuthor">“Saxon”</span> <span class="citTitle">Gall. Gossip</span> 74: </span><br/><span class="quote">Priest, book and everything cam doon wi' a clooster in the sheuch amang the glaur.</span></span><span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib016676"><span class="geo">Uls.</span> <span class="date">1889</span> <span class="citAuthor">H. Stephens</span> <span class="citTitle">Bk. Farm</span> I. 107: </span><br/><span class="quote">In some parts of Ireland the land is not ploughed into ridges at all, being made with the spade into narrow strips called lazy-beds, separated by deep narrow trenches named <i>sheughs</i>.</span></span><span class="cit even"><span class="cref ref-bib015148"><span class="geo">Ags.</span> <span class="date">1895</span> <span class="citAuthor">J. Inglis</span> <span class="citTitle">Oor Ain Folk</span> 203: </span><br/><span class="quote">I fand him lying in the sheuch by the roadside.</span></span><span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib015998"><span class="geo">Uls.</span> <span class="date">1924</span> <span class="citTitle">Northern Whig</span> (2 Jan.): </span><br/><span class="quote">I fell in a dry shough and very near brock my neck. I fell in a wat shough and very near got drooned.</span></span><span class="cit even"><span class="cref ref-bib015512"><span class="geo">Rxb.</span> <span class="date">1955</span> <span class="citTitle">Abd. Univ. Review</span> (Aut.) 150: </span><br/><span class="quote">As ebbs the restless ocean's tide, And winter sheuch in Simmer's dried.</span></span><span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib017187"><span class="geo">Uls.</span> <span class="date">1987</span> <span class="citAuthor">Sam Hanna Bell</span> <span class="citTitle">Across the Narrow Sea</span> 24: </span><br/><span class="quote">'Over the sheugh and away wi' ye, man,' said Alexander, waving towards a coppice of rough undergrowth that ran into the hills.</span></span> <span class="cit even"><span class="cref ref-bib017406"><span class="geo">em.Sc.(a)</span> <span class="date">1991</span> <span class="citAuthor">Kate Armstrong in Tom Hubbard</span> <span class="citTitle">The New Makars</span> 110: </span><br/><span class="quote">Frae muckle warld tae muckle warld, bairnie tae mither,<br/>spicket tae seiver, onding tae quernstane,<br/>sae Scotlaun's fowk, skailt frae ae clood or ither<br/>intil a sheuch descrives them as her ain,</span></span> <span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib017683"><span class="geo">Uls.</span> <span class="date">1993</span> <span class="citTitle">Times</span> 17 Apr : </span><br/><span class="quote">He is fond of vernacular language and treasures the rich resonances of Ulster dialect where a stagnant stream is a "sheugh", a whore is a "hoor" and vomit becomes the clipped onomatopoeic "boke".</span></span> <span class="cit even"><span class="cref ref-bib017391"><span class="geo">Sc.</span> <span class="date">1995</span> <span class="citTitle">Herald</span> 25 Nov 19: </span><br/><span class="quote">... we suffered the humiliation an repression o cultural imperialism an bein brainwasht intae thinkin aw oor native languages, Gaelic an Scots, wir only fit for barbarians an sheuch howkers, no for educatit folk at aw.</span></span> <span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib017196"><span class="geo">Abd.</span> <span class="date">1996</span> <span class="citAuthor">Sheena Blackhall</span> <span class="citTitle">Wittgenstein's Web</span> 4: </span><br/><span class="quote">O a suddenty, the back wheel o the tractor laired in the dubby sheugh aside the burn an furled roon, spirkin glaur in ilkie airt. Deeper an deeper it sank, fair stukken, held ticht in the rut o the sappy grun.</span></span> <span class="cit even"><span class="cref ref-bib017755"><span class="geo">Edb.</span> <span class="date">2004</span>: </span><br/><span class="quote">We were playin fitba an loast the baw in a sheuch.</span></span></p><p><b>2</b>. A trench or furrow into which plants are temporarily set until they can be finally transplanted or used. Gen.Sc.<span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib015970"><span class="geo">Sc.</span> <span class="date">1812</span> <span class="citAuthor">W. Nicol</span> <span class="citTitle">Planter's Kalendar</span> 229: </span><br/><span class="quote">Nothing is more destructive to young seedling trees, than allowing them to lye too thick together in the <i>shough</i>.</span></span><span class="cit even"><span class="cref ref-bib016676"><span class="geo">Sc.</span> <span class="date">1844</span> <span class="citAuthor">H. Stephens</span> <span class="citTitle">Bk. Farm</span> I. 373: </span><br/><span class="quote">The plants are taken from the <i>sheughs</i> when wanted.</span></span><span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib016407"><span class="geo">Sc.</span> <span class="date">1946</span> <span class="citTitle">Scots Mag.</span> (Sept.) 429: </span><br/><span class="quote">The sheughs for the trees to lie in.</span></span></p><p><b>3</b>. A furrow made by a plough (Sc. 1808 Jam., 1869 J. C. Morton <i>Cycl. Agric</i>. II. 725; Rxb. 1923 Watson <i>W.-B.</i>).<span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib015066"><span class="geo">Sc.</span> <span class="date">1835</span> <span class="citTitle">Trans. Highl. Soc.</span> 311: </span><br/><span class="quote">Making small open drains of 6 inches by 4 between the potato shoughs before the potatoes were raised.</span></span><span class="cit even"><span class="cref ref-bib018247"><span class="geo">Gall.</span> <span class="date">1892</span> <span class="citTitle">Farmer's Curst Wife</span> in </span><span class="cref ref-bib018247"><span class="citAuthor">Child</span> <span class="citTitle">Ballads</span> No. 278 B. i.: </span><br/><span class="quote">The auld Deil cam to the man at the pleugh, Saying, I wish ye gude luck at the making o' yer sheugh.</span></span><span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib016208"><span class="geo">Lnk.</span> <span class="date">1923</span> <span class="citAuthor">G. Rae</span> <span class="citTitle">Langsyne</span> vii.: </span><br/><span class="quote">Nane o' yer Amairican ploos, but an auld-farrant smiddy-made yin that can drive a guid deep sheuch.</span></span></p><p><b>4</b>. A street gutter (em.Sc.(a). Lth., wm.Sc. 1970).<span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib016963"><span class="geo">Dmb.</span> <span class="date">1894</span> <span class="citAuthor">T. Watson</span> <span class="citTitle">Kirkintilloch</span> 199: </span><br/><span class="quote">Huge open gutters or “sheuchs” on either side of the streets, received all the sewage.</span></span><span class="cit even"><span class="cref ref-bib015089"><span class="geo">Fif.</span> <span class="date">1952</span> <span class="citAuthor">R. Holman</span> <span class="citTitle">Behind the Diamond Panes</span> 70: </span><br/><span class="quote">No street lighting guided their way on roads flattered by the name of street, . . . showing up a few of the many puddles or crudely-made “shuch” or gutter.</span></span><span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib015342"><span class="geo">Gsw.</span> <span class="date">1953</span> <span class="citAuthor">J. J. Lavin</span> <span class="citTitle">Compass of Youth</span> I. v.: </span><br/><span class="quote">Sellin' balloons on the Argyle Street sheughs.</span></span></p><p><b>5</b>. A hollow road, ravine or passage way of any kind; an alley between houses (Lth. 1970); <i>fig</i>. the gullet, throat, the nape of the neck.<span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib015074"><span class="geo">Sc.</span> <span class="date">1875</span> <span class="citAuthor">A. Hislop</span> <span class="citTitle">Anecdotes</span> 128: </span><br/><span class="quote">Hout Atropos! hard hearted hag, To cut the sheugh of Jamie Craig.</span></span><span class="cit even"><span class="cref ref-bib015941"><span class="geo">Rnf.</span> <span class="date">1877</span> <span class="citAuthor">J. Neilson</span> <span class="citTitle">Poems</span> 49: </span><br/><span class="quote">Wi's big blue Kilmarnock; but jist like a seck It hung in the sheuch o' the dramatist's neck.</span></span><span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib015009"><span class="geo">Sc.</span> <span class="date">1906</span> <span class="citAuthor">J. A. Harvie-Brown</span> <span class="citTitle">Fauna of Tay</span> 184: </span><br/><span class="quote">There is a “glac” or deep “scaur” or “sheugh” in Strathfinella Hill.</span></span><span class="cit even"><span class="cref ref-bib017755"><span class="geo">Ayr.</span> <span class="date">2003</span>: </span><br/><span class="quote">The lane that connects Ladykirk Road with Prestwick Main Street is known locally as 'the Puddock Shuch'.</span></span> <span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib017185"><span class="geo">Uls.</span> <span class="date">2004</span> <span class="citTitle">Belfast News Letter</span> 3 Jun 22: </span><br/><span class="quote">Jeffrey Donaldson ventures that it would be better located out among the 'sheughs' and spuds of the Maze in his Lagan Valley constituency.</span></span> </p><p><b>6</b>. In jocular usage: the North Channel in the Irish Sea between Scotland and Ireland (Uls. 1970).<span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib017186"><span class="geo">Uls.</span> <span class="date">2000</span> <span class="citTitle">Belfast Telegraph</span> 9 Mar : </span><br/><span class="quote">A hornet's nest has been stirred up. We're all only too familiar with the sorry history of our Assembly. Across the sheugh, Scottish Labour had to form a coalition with the Liberal Democrats.</span></span> <span class="cit even"><span class="cref ref-bib017671"><span class="geo">Uls.</span> <span class="date">2004</span> <span class="citTitle">Sunday Mirror</span> 4 Apr 68: </span><br/><span class="quote">I wonder how much this pointless little debacle has cost the taxpayer?<br/>Meanwhile the Sellafield menace is till operating across the sheugh ...</span></span> <span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib017185"><span class="geo">Uls.</span> <span class="date">2004</span> <span class="citTitle">Belfast News Letter</span> 10 Apr 20: </span><br/><span class="quote">Frae quhat differ prittas ir cried ye're fit tae jalouse tha monie o' thaim wur bred athwort the sheugh i Scotlan.</span></span></p><p><b>7</b>. In <i>fig</i>. usages. Phrs. <i>in a</i> or <i>the sheuch</i>, in a state of squalor or misery, in the “gutter”, abject, ruined, in a sorry plight (Uls. 1953 Traynor; w.Lth., Ayr., Wgt. 1970); <i>up a sheuch</i>, in error, mistaken (Dmf. 1970).<span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib017118"><span class="geo">Gsw.</span> <span class="date">1860</span> <span class="citAuthor">J. Young</span> <span class="citTitle">Poorhouse Lays</span> 147: </span><br/><span class="quote">A puir wretch wallowin' in the sheugh O' cursed alcohol's pollution.</span></span><span class="cit even"><span class="cref ref-bib016091"><span class="geo">Edb.</span> <span class="date">1897</span> <span class="citAuthor">W. Beatty</span> <span class="citTitle">Secretar</span> viii.: </span><br/><span class="quote">He was in a bit of a sheugh, one that he was in a sweat to be out of.</span></span><span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib016880"><span class="geo">Arg.</span> <span class="date">1917</span> <span class="citAuthor">A. W. Blue</span> <span class="citTitle">Quay Head Tryst</span> 72: </span><br/><span class="quote">Weak, distressfu' mortals: up wan day, in the sheuch the next.</span></span><span class="cit even"><span class="cref ref-bib018383"><span class="geo">Dmb.</span> <span class="date">1931</span> <span class="citAuthor">A. J. Cronin</span> <span class="citTitle">Hatter's Castle</span> <span class="sc">ii</span>. iv.: </span><br/><span class="quote">Back in the sheuch I took him out o'.</span></span></p><p><b>I. 8.</b> The cleft of the buttocks; the buttocks.<span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib017706"><span class="geo">Per.</span> <span class="date">1990</span> <span class="citAuthor">Betsy Whyte</span> <span class="citTitle">Red Rowans and Wild Honey</span> (1991) 82: </span><br/><span class="quote">'I can see my father giving her a kick on the shuch one of these nights,' Annie was saying.</span></span><span class="cit even"><span class="cref ref-bib017755"><span class="geo">Kcb.</span> <span class="date">1990s</span>: </span><br/><span class="quote">'The sheuch of yer erse' on a person, refers either to the area around the backside and genitals in general, or more specifically the cleft between the buttocks.</span></span><span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib017391"><span class="geo">Sc.</span> <span class="date">1993</span> <span class="citTitle">Herald</span> 16 Apr 12: </span><br/><span class="quote">Have you seen the way children walk now? They walk as if they have an especially sharp sixpence up their sheughs and their shoes are lined with the kind of sanitary towels which have wings on them.</span></span><br/></p><p><b>II</b>. <i>v</i>. <b>1</b>. <i>tr</i>. and <i>intr</i>. To dig, trench, make a ditch or furrow (in) (wm.Sc. 1880 Jam.; Rxb. 1923 Watson <i>W.-B.</i>; Per., Fif., Lth., wm.Sc., Wgt. 1970); <i>tr</i>. of peats: to dig out from a trench, to cast (wm.Sc. 1880 Jam.; Ayr. 1928).<span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib016414"><span class="geo">Rxb.</span> <span class="date">1808</span> <span class="citAuthor">A. Scott</span> <span class="citTitle">Poems</span> 34: </span><br/><span class="quote">Sic sheughing pranks we dinna need to fear; Except for quarrie, or a five-feet ditch.</span></span><span class="cit even"><span class="cref ref-bib018131"><span class="geo">Ayr.</span> <span class="date">1892</span> <span class="citAuthor">H. Ainslie</span> <span class="citTitle">Pilgrimage</span> 334: </span><br/><span class="quote">They're howkin' sae in bank an' brae, An' sheughin' hill an' howe.</span></span></p><p><b>2</b>. To lay a plant, etc., in the ground, <i>specif</i>. to put seedlings, root crops or the like into a temporary trench for later transplanting or storage in order to retain the sap (Sc. 1808 Jam., 1869 J. C. Morton <i>Cycl. Agric</i>. II 725; Rxb. 1923 Watson <i>W.-B.</i>; Ork. 1929 Marw.). Gen.Sc. Also <i>fig</i>.<span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib015185"><span class="geo">Sc.</span> <span class="date"><i>c</i>.1714</span> <span class="citTitle">Jacobite Minstrelsy</span> (1829) 46: </span><br/><span class="quote">Sheughing kail, and laying leeks.</span></span><span class="cit even"><span class="cref ref-bib015926"><span class="geo">Hdg.</span> <span class="date">1790</span> <span class="citAuthor">J. Mylne</span> <span class="citTitle">Poems</span> 32: </span><br/><span class="quote">My only hope was sheught in thee.</span></span><span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib015970"><span class="geo">Sc.</span> <span class="date">1799</span> <span class="citAuthor">W. Nicol</span> <span class="citTitle">Practical Planter</span> 167: </span><br/><span class="quote">The plants being prepared as directed, brought to the ground and soughed in.</span></span><span class="cit even"><span class="cref ref-bib015066"><span class="geo">Sc.</span> <span class="date">1871</span> <span class="citTitle">Trans. Highl. Soc.</span> 444: </span><br/><span class="quote">The plants should be carefully <i>sheughed</i> as soon as they are brought forward from the nurseries.</span></span><span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib014656"><span class="geo">Sc.</span> <span class="date">1904</span> <span class="citAuthor">R. Ford</span> <span class="citTitle">Vagabond Songs</span> 331: </span><br/><span class="quote">In the winter when we're sheuchin' neeps.</span></span><span class="cit even"><span class="cref ref-bib016981"><span class="geo">Dmf.</span> <span class="date">1912</span> <span class="citAuthor">J. L. Waugh</span> <span class="citTitle">Robbie Doo</span> 22: </span><br/><span class="quote">Thae leeks'll never be sheuched.</span></span><span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib017743"><span class="geo">Ags.</span> <span class="date">1951</span> <span class="citTitle">Elgin Courant</span> (9 Nov.): </span><br/><span class="quote">A team of six pullers and a tractor or horseman with a plough should be able to “sheugh” about 5 acres a day.</span></span><span class="cit even"><span class="cref ref-bib017902"><span class="geo">wm.Sc.</span> <span class="date">1957</span> <span class="citTitle">Bulletin</span> (2 March): </span><br/><span class="quote">Roses, which arrived from the nursery in the middle of January and were carefully sheuched in.</span></span><span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib017755"><span class="geo">Ags.</span> <span class="date">1990s</span>: </span><br/><span class="quote">Sheuch: v. trench; earth up.</span></span> <span class="cit even"><span class="cref ref-bib016408"><span class="geo">Sc.</span> <span class="date">1991</span> <span class="citTitle">Scotsman</span> 2 Mar 21: </span><br/><span class="quote">I noticed that bare-root gooseberry bushes - including the newish variety, Invicta, which is said to be fairly resistant to mildew - were on offer in the same garden centre. If soil conditions are not suitable for planting them immediately after purchase, they should be taken out of their plastic bags and sheuched in temporarily to prevent the roots drying up.</span></span> <span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib017301"><span class="geo">Sc.</span> <span class="date">1999</span> <span class="citTitle">Edinburgh Evening News</span> 13 Nov 16: </span><br/><span class="quote">There, I would sheugh in the plants temporarily. Do you know what I mean?</span></span></p><p><b>3</b>. To bury, to cover with earth. Also <i>fig</i>.<span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib014651"><span class="geo">Abd.</span> <span class="date">1754</span> <span class="citAuthor">R. Forbes</span> <span class="citTitle">Ajax</span> 3: </span><br/><span class="quote">Ajax bangs up, whase targe was shught In seven fald o' hide.</span></span><span class="cit even"><span class="cref ref-bib017005"><span class="geo">Rnf.</span> <span class="date">1838</span> <span class="citTitle">Whistle-Binkie</span> II. 101: </span><br/><span class="quote">The bodies in Mauchlin Wish Meg in her kist, an' as deep sheugh'd as Lauchlan.</span></span><span class="cit odd"><span class="cref ref-bib014690"><span class="geo">Per.</span> <span class="date"><i>a</i>.1880</span> <span class="citAuthor">W. Fraser</span> <span class="citTitle">Red Bk. Menteith</span> I. 403: </span><br/><span class="quote">They just shoughed it at the point of Coilmore, whence it was exhumed and placed afterwards in the old chapel.</span></span><span class="cit even"><span class="cref ref-bib015442"><span class="geo">Hdg.</span> <span class="date">1908</span> <span class="citAuthor">J. Lumsden</span> <span class="citTitle">Th' Loudons</span> 199: </span><br/><span class="quote">His wanton widow sheuch'd him here.</span></span></p> <span class="etym">[O.Sc. <i>sewch</i>, 1501, <i>souch</i>, 1570, <i>shouch</i>, 1665, furrow, trench, ditch, <i>seuch</i>, to make a furrow, 1513, Early Mid.Eng. <i>sogh</i>, furrow. Of uncertain orig. N.E.D. compares Brabant dial. <i>zoeg</i>, a meadow ditch.]</span> </div><div id="firstFixed" class="noPrint"><h3>Sheuch <i>n., v.</i></h3><div id="firstTop"><a href="#header"><i class="fa fa-chevron-up" aria-hidden="true"></i> Top</a></div><div id="firstOpts" class="small"><a href="#" id="firstOptQuot">Hide Quotations</a><br /><a href="#" id="firstOptEtym">Hide Etymology</a></div></div><div id="citation" title="Cite this entry"><p>You may wish to vary the format shown below depending on the citation style used.</p><p>"Sheuch <i>n., v.</i>". <i>Dictionary of the Scots Language</i>. 2004. Scottish Language Dictionaries Ltd. 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