cwtch
English
Alternative forms
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /kʊtʃ/
- Rhymes: -ʊtʃ
Etymology 1
From Welsh cwtsh (“hug, cuddle; little corner, recess”), from Middle English couche.[1] Doublet of couch.
Noun
cwtch (plural cwtches)
- (Wales) A cubbyhole or similar hiding place.
- 1944, Glyn Jones, “An Afternoon at Ewa Shad's”, in The Water-Music and Other Stories:
- In front of the pavement again stretched a flat patch of rusty ground, a sort of little platform in the side of the hill where the sagging drying-lines stood and a chickens' cwtch built of orange-boxes.
- 2007 August 20, Mike Buckingham, Western Telegraph:
- "In better times when the coalman called at our home in William Street he heaved the sacks through the front door and put their contents into the ‘cwtch’ under the stairs, a messy business indeed."
- (Wales) A hug or cuddle.
- 2007 November 18, Ieuan Evans, The Telegraph:
- I am expecting the big man to come round the corner and give me a ‘cwtch’ as he has done beside countless rugby fields.
- 2011 February 17, Rachel Mainwaring, South Wales Echo:
- I don’t mind them coming in for a quick cwtch before trudging back off to their own rooms, as long as no conversation is required and it is literally just a five-minute cuddle.
Translations
Etymology 2
From Welsh cwtsio, from cwtsh + -o (suffix forming verbnouns).[2]
Verb
cwtch (third-person singular simple present cwtches, present participle cwtching, simple past and past participle cwtched)
- (Wales) To hug, cuddle, embrace, or comfort.
- Synonyms: see Thesaurus:embrace
- (Wales) To crouch or lie (down).
- 2014, Alan Meats, “Toffee Dabs and Doughboys”, in Valley Boy Goes West: Memoirs of a Parish Priest, Guildford, Surrey: Grosvenor House Publishing Limited, →ISBN, pages 1–2:
- A family are about to have a meal round the kitchen table, so the dog is told to go and “cwtch” in the corner, out of harm’s way.
Translations
to cuddle
|
to crouch
|
References
- ^ “cwtch, n.”, in OED Online , Oxford: Oxford University Press, launched 2000.
- ^ “cwtch, v.”, in OED Online , Oxford: Oxford University Press, launched 2000.