A Dictionary of the Older Scottish Tongue (up to 1700)
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First published 1990 (DOST Vol. VII).
This entry has not been updated since then but may contain minor corrections and revisions.
Quotation dates: 1399-1420, 1500, 1623-1669
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Res(e, n. Also: reas, reace. Also ? with erroneous altered ending: rest. [ME ræse (Layamon), res (a1250), rese (Cursor M.; also Caxton), resse, rees, reys, also ras (c1330), OE rǽs = ON rás Ras(e n.1] a. In a rese at a run, at full speed. = Ras(e n.1 1. Cf. ME in a res (Cursor M.). b. The course (of a river). c. A (competitive) race; a horse race. &a. a1400 Legends of the Saints iii 31.
& to the pressone in a rese Went a1400 Ib. xvi 823.
Men says that Hercules … a stage in a rese [: pes] Vald ryne, sa wel anedyt he ves c1500 Makculloch MS iv 54.
To Lungius hand thi blud ran one [Bann. in] a rest —b. c1420 Wynt. i 154.
Tyger syne, and Ewfrates, Off Armeny thai tak thair res [W., E. rase] — 1623 Elgin Rec. II 178.
c. Rinning and taking on reasses wp and doun the publict streitis 1669 Lamont Diary 215.
A horse reace for a sadell, … and a foot reace for a bonet, and a paire of shoes
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"Res n.". Dictionary of the Scots Language. 2004. Scottish Language Dictionaries Ltd. Accessed 5 Dec 2025 <http://www.dsl.ac.uk/entry/dost/rese>


