TIMMER, _s._

1. Timber, S.

Sw. _timmer_, id.

2. A legal quant.i.ty of forty skins packed up within two boards of _timber_.

_Skene._

~Timmertuned~, _adj._ Having a harsh unmusical voice, S.

TIMMING, TEMMING, _s._ A kind of coa.r.s.e thin woollen cloth, S.

_Stat. Acc._

Fr. _etamine_, id.

TYMPANE, _s._ The sistrum.

_Douglas._

Lat. _tympanum_.

TIN, _s._ Loss.

_Sir Tristrem._

TINCh.e.l.l, TINCHEL, _s._ A circle of sportsmen, who, by surrounding a great s.p.a.ce, and gradually narrowing, brought great quant.i.ties of deer together.

_Pittscotie._

Ir. Gael. _tinchioll_, circuit, compa.s.s.

_To_ TYND, _v. n._ To kindle.

V. ~Teind~.

~Tynd~, _s._ A spark.

TYND, _s._

1. A harrow-tooth, S.

Isl. _tindr_, Su. G. _tinne_, id.

2. One course of the harrow over a field, S.

3. _Tyndis_, _s. pl._ The horns of a hart.

_Douglas._

Su. G. _tinne_, any thing sharp like a tooth.

TINDE, _s. On tinde_, in a collected state.

Isl. _tynt_, collectum.

_Sir Tristrem._

_To_ TINE, TYNE, _v. a._

1. To lose.

_Wallace._

2. To forfeit.

_Acts Ja. I._

3. To kill or destroy.

_Wyntown._

4. _To tine the saddle_, to lose all, S.

Isl. _tyn-ast_, perdere.

_Baillie._

~Tineman~, _s._ An appellation given to one of the Lords of Douglas, from his being unfortunate in losing almost all his _men_ in battle.

_G.o.dscroft._

~Tynar~, ~Tiner~, _s._ A loser, S.

_Acts Ja. V._

~Tynsaill~, ~Tinsall~, ~Tynsell~, _s._

© 2024 www.topnovel.cc