seck

See also: Seck

English

Noun

seck (plural secks)

  1. (chiefly Scotland, obsolete) Alternative form of sack
    • 1884, David Grant, Lays and Legends of the North: And Other Poems and Songs, Humorous and Grave, Original and Translated, page 3:
      [] barn-fans, an' flails, an' fleers, / An' canasses, an' secks; / An' cheeks o' doors, an' doors themsel's, / Wi' broken ban's an' snecks;  []
    • 1884, Streatfeild, Lin. and Danes, 264, 357:
      The kittlings ligging on the secks []
    • 1894, John Trafford Clegg, David's Loom: A Story of Rochdale's Life in the Early Years of the Nineteenth Century, page 30:
      ... a rough seck undher him, a bit o' flannel hardly coverin' him above, an' he looked like dyeath.
    • 1912 [????], Walter William Skeat, English dialects from the eighth century to the present day. Repr, page 117:
      This seck is elding to keep us fra starving!

Adjective

seck (comparative more seck, superlative most seck)

  1. Only used in rent seck

References

Anagrams

Middle English

Noun

seck

  1. Alternative form of sak
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