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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.

Lit, n. Also: litt, lyt(t, lyte. [ME. (midl. and north.) lit (Gen. & Ex.) colour, litte (14th c.) batch of dyeing, ON. lit-r colour, hue. In the mod. dial. chiefly Sc. and north. Eng.]

1. Colour, dye. c1420 Wynt. v. 1381.
Off clene lynt … Fayre and quhyt but ony lyt

2. Dye-stuff; also, dyeing fluid.Also with qualifying words, as brissell-litt, Brissell n. 1 b, Grain-litt n., and mather-, orcheard- (orcheart-), orlian- and shumak-litt, q.v. — 1457 Acts II. 49/1; 1567 Ib. III. 30/2.
That lit be criyt vp and vsyt as it was wont to be
1513 Doug. viii. Prol. 92.
Sum latyt latton, but lay, lepys in lawyd lyt [v.r. lyte]
1578 Conv. Burghs I. 76.
Euery burgh … to tak ordour anentis thame quha hantis the litting of fals litt, sic as bleu brissell, orchart litt
c1575 Balfour Pract. 588. 1592 Edinb. Test. XXV. 16 b.
Sax quarteris of lit of pleis madame at xl s. the stane
1605 J. McUre View City of Glasgow (1736) 178.
It shall not be leasom … to tap … waid, grain, indego nor any other kind of litt
1609 Aberd. Eccl. Rec. 72.
The said Patrik being then litting Frenshe cullouris, quhilkis throw her occasioun wald not tak with the litt
1622 Edinb. Test. LI. iii.
In his … buithe in materiallis for litting vnwrocht of grein litt xj pund wecht
a1650 Row 432.
If the fishers strike it [a fish] on the head it renders out all its blood, and it is excellent litt
1654 Stirling B. Rec. I. 216.
[The council] have dischairgit the litstares … to litt any yairne heirefter withe caprus gallis, blew birsall or any uther unsufficient litt
1684 Symson Descr. Galloway 79.
In … Monnygaffe there is ane excrescence, … which the country people make up into balls … [which] they call cork-lit
1692 Conv. Burghs IV. 662.
The few cramers or chopkeepers [at Fortrose] … does not now export or import any merchant vair … except some litle salt, iron, litts [etc.]
1633 (1711) Sibbald's Orkn. & Shetl. 25.
Of this scraped from the stone it groweth on, they make the lit they call the corkar litt
c1700 Sibbald Autob. 32.
Some servant … had let the cole of a candle fall into the lit … which had fyred it but did not spread

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"Lit n.". Dictionary of the Scots Language. 2004. Scottish Language Dictionaries Ltd. Accessed 19 Apr 2024 <http://www.dsl.ac.uk/entry/dost/lit_n>

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