n
Pronunciation spelling of chickling. [A small chick or chicken; a baby chick.]
n
A loving or affectionate murmuration.
n
Alternative spelling of coo-coo (“the foodstuff”) [The two-note vocalisation made by the male of the common cuckoo (Cuculus canorus), or imitation of this by a cuckoo clock.]
v
(UK, US, Southern US, dialect) To pine, lament, or long.
v
Alternative form of meemaw [(intransitive, UK, dialect) To mouth words so that they can be heard over noise (or later so that they cannot be overheard), originally in the cotton industry of Lancashire.]
n
(dated) The cry of a cat.
n
(Australia) A notional object put forward as an explanation when asked about something one does not want to tell.
adj
Alternative form of yauld [(Now chiefly dialectal, Scotland) Vigorous; strong; healthy.]
adj
Alternative form of yaller
n
Pronunciation spelling of yellow dog. [Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see yellow, dog.]
adj
Pronunciation spelling of yellow, representing Southern US English. [Having yellow as its color.]
n
Pronunciation spelling of yellow dog. (Carolina dog) [Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see yellow, dog.]
adj
(Now chiefly dialectal, Scotland) Active; sprightly; alert.
n
(archaic, dialect, UK, Scotland) The yellowhammer.
n
Alternative form of yeldrin [(archaic, dialect, UK, Scotland) The yellowhammer.]
n
Alternative form of yeldrin [(archaic, dialect, UK, Scotland) The yellowhammer.]
adj
Pronunciation spelling of yellow. [Having yellow as its color.]
n
(UK, slang) Someone from Lincolnshire.
n
(UK, dialect) The avocet (so-called from its sharp, shrill cry).
n
(Scotland) The yellowhammer.
n
(UK, dialect) The yellowhammer.
n
Alternative form of yite [(UK, dialect) The yellowhammer.]
n
(Scotland, informal) A re-spelt abbreviation of unionist, often used by advocates of Scottish independence.
n
Alternative form of yowe [(archaic, dialect, UK, Scotland) A ewe; a female sheep.]
n
(dated, UK, dialect) The European yellowhammer.
n
(Britain, dialectal, obsolete) Alternative form of yoldring (“yellowhammer”) [(Britain, dialectal, obsolete) A bird, the yellowhammer.]
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