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A Dictionary of the Older Scottish Tongue (up to 1700)

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First published 1963 (DOST Vol. III).
This entry has not been updated since then but may contain minor corrections and revisions.

Hail(l, interj. 1 Also: haile, hayle, hale. [ME. heyl, hail (c 1200), ellipt. or interj. use of hail a. (see Hale a.); cf. ON. heill, and OE. hál, similarly used.] Hail! Also all hail (ME. alhayle, c 1400).(1) (a) c1420 Wynt. i. 915.
Hayle [W. haill, Mary,] full of grace, and God with thé
c1450-2 Howlat 727.
Haile, blissit mot thow be
Ib. 732, etc. a1500 Henr. Fab. 289 (A).
Thus maid thai mery … And ‘Haile, ȝule, haile’ thai cryit apon hie
c1500-c1512 Dunb. Flyt. 104.
Haill, souerane senȝeour!
Id. v. 11.
‘Ourtane fallow, haill’
1551 Hamilton Cat. 273.
Hail, Marie, ful of grace
a1568 Bann. MS. 134 a/35.
‘Haill or haill, quhat do ȝe now?’
a1570-86 Maitl. F. xlv. 24.
It is eith to cry hailȝule one ane vtheris mannis cost
(b) c1500-c1512 Dunb. lix. 4.
Hale, ros intact
Ib. 37.
Hale, qwene serene, hale, most amene
1531 Bell. Boece II. 259.
‘Hale, Thane of Glammis’
1560 Rolland Seven S. 8088.
‘Hale, Father deir’
(2) a1400 Leg. S. iii. 665.
‘Alhale, thu blissit croice’
15.. Clar. iv. 2150.
‘All hail! the eard awcht ȝow to honoure’

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"Hail interj.1". Dictionary of the Scots Language. 2004. Scottish Language Dictionaries Ltd. Accessed 3 May 2024 <http://www.dsl.ac.uk/entry/dost/haill_interj_1>

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