- saw her from his
window in the garden. The poem
described her as ‘beautee
eneuch to mak a
world to dote.’ The
marriage was at
least partially political,...
-
Standard English also occur, is
generally /ju/ in for example, beuk (book),
eneuch (enough), ceuk (cook), leuk (look) and teuk (took). Stem
final ew (vowel...
-
north of Alnwick. The
Scots [x]–English [∅]/[f]
cognate group (micht-might,
eneuch-enough, etc.) can be
found in a
small portion of
north ****bria with the...
- –1875) This wee thing's o'
little value, But for a' that it may be Guid
eneuch to gar you, l****ie, When you read it,
think o' me.
Think o' whan we met...
- graphemes, for example, e'en and even, e'er and iver (ever), eneu' and
eneuch (enough), lea' and leave, ne'er and
niver (never), ne'er's day and new year's...
-
before /k/ and /x/ see ui) is
often realised /iu/, for
example beuk (book),
eneuch (enough), ceuk (cook), leuk (look) and teuk (took). ou, also oo (vowel 6)...
- /j u/ in the
southwest and
south of the Forth, for
example beuk (book),
eneuch (enough), ceuk (cook), leuk (look) and teuk (took). o (vowel 18): /ɔ/ has...
-
bonnily as ye can, and
bring him in as
fairly as ye will, we see him well
eneuch, we see the
horns of his mitre." He was
summoned before King
James at Holyrood...
-
depending on dialect, for example:
beuch (bough), beuk (book), ceuk (cook),
eneuch (enough),
heuch (cliff), heuk (hook),
leuch (laughed), leuk (look), pleuch...
- the
richt wey o daen (the
start o a
selection o her work). That
wasnae eneuch: I kent hoo she
thocht aboot things frae whit she
wrote and
wantit mair...