cutty
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈkʌti/
Audio (Southern England): (file)
Adjective
cutty (comparative more cutty, superlative most cutty)
- (Scotland, Northern England) Short, shortened, or small; curtailed.
- (of audio or video) Having many cuts.
- Sharp, cutting easily.
Derived terms
- cutty-brown
- cutty grass (Austroderia spp.)
- cutty-gun
- cutty-hare
- cuttymum
- cutty-pipe
- cutty-quean
- cuttystool
- cutty-stoup
- fatty cutty
Noun
cutty (plural cutties)
- (Scotland) A short spoon.
- (Scotland) A short tobacco pipe; a cutty-pipe.
- 1750, Allan Ramsay, A Collection of Scots Proverbs, page 51:
- I'm no sae scant of clean pipes as to blaw wi' a brunt cutty.
- (Scotland, archaic) A wanton or unchaste woman.
- 1818 July 25, Jedediah Cleishbotham [pseudonym; Walter Scott], Tales of My Landlord, Second Series, […] (The Heart of Mid-Lothian), volume (please specify |volume=I to IV), Edinburgh: […] [James Ballantyne and Co.] for Archibald Constable and Company, →OCLC:
- “And me coming a this way out o' my gate to pleasure you, ye ungrateful cutty,”
- (Scotland, archaic) A girl with a short, dumpy figure.
- (Northern Ireland, Ulster) A girl or young woman.
- Coordinate term: cub
- 1993, Ray Givans, No Surrender, Castlecaulfield, Lapwing Publications, →ISBN, page 14:
- A man who reared ten cubs and three cutties.
- 2016 September 12, Henry Glassie, The Stars of Ballymenone, Indiana University Press, →ISBN, page 229:
- The point of the example is educational, moral, and the moral qualities of the stories attracted Peter Flanagan who remembered them from childhood and told them to the cutties and cubs when he was, for them, a funny old man.
See also
References
- John Jamieson (1825) Supplement to the Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language [1]
Scots
Etymology
From cut.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈkʌtɪ/, /ˈkʌti/
Adjective
cutty (comparative mair cutty, superlative maist cutty)
Noun
cutty (plural cutties)
- (archaic) child