Show Search Results Show Browse

Scottish National Dictionary (1700–)

Hide Quotations Hide Etymology

Abbreviations Cite this entry

About this entry:
First published 1965 (SND Vol. VI).
This entry has not been updated since then but may contain minor corrections and revisions.

MOORIT, adj., n. Also moorr- (Sh. 1903 E.D.D.), mour-, mur(r)-; -et, -a(i)t; -id, -ed, -ad, -od. [′murət, ′murəd; Ork. + ′mør-]

I. adj. Reddish-brown, applied esp. to one of the characteristic colourings of the Shetland sheep or its wool, either as a solid colour or combined with white (I.Sc. 1963).Sh. 1795 J. Sinclair Agric. N. Counties (App.) 27:
The silver grey wool is thought to be the finest and softest in Shetland; but the black, the white, the mourat, or brown, is very little inferior.
Sh. 1832 Old-Lore Misc. VIII. iv. 190:
Purchased a lamb, of the moorit or brown and white variety, for one shilling and six-pence.
Sh. 1884 Crofter's Comm. Evid. II. 1330:
We have to pay a little higher for the coloured wool, — dark and light brown — murrait wool.
Ork. 1911 Old-Lore Misc. IV. iv. 185:
Da peerie moorid burd no bigger ar me toom, at gaed flouchteran about da facies o' tha gues.
Ork. 1939 Orcadian (15 June):
That moorit sheep o' Reekielums broke oot o' the drive as uswal.
Sh. 1956 Shetland Times (9 Nov.):
Straying at Veensgarth — Moorit gimmer, half out before right ear.

II. n. The reddish-brown colouring characteristic of the Shetland sheep or its wool, gen. combined with white (Sh. a.1838 Jam. MSS. XII. 146); a sheep of this colouring.Ork. 1832 Old-Lore Misc. VI. iv. 190:
White woolled sheep are rare, most of those in Yell, where the genuine Shetland breed is to be found in its greatest purity, are black and white, or spotted of a lighter red, but the prevailing colour is certainly the moorit, or a piebald mixture of blueish brown and white.
Sh. 1948 J. G. Johnston Come fish with me 204:
A sensibly short skirt of natural murret.
Sc. 1951 Scots Mag. (Nov.) 83:
Although white is the predominant colouring of the modern Shetland sheep, there are still considerable flocks of faun-coloured moorits in the North Isles.

[Norw. dial. moraud, O.N. mórauðr, reddish, yellow-brown, of sheep and wool, lit. “moor-red”.]

You may wish to vary the format shown below depending on the citation style used.

"Moorit adj., n.". Dictionary of the Scots Language. 2004. Scottish Language Dictionaries Ltd. Accessed 18 Apr 2024 <http://www.dsl.ac.uk/entry/snd/moorit>

18871

snd

Hide Advanced Search

Browse SND:

    Loading...

Share: