yead
English
editNoun
edityead (plural yeads)
- (dialect) head
- 1850, William Cullen Bryant, Letters of a Traveller[1]:
- The Derbyshire people have a saying-- "Darbyshire born, and Darbyshire bred, Strong o' the yarm and weak o' the yead."
- 1906, Mrs. Henry De La Pasture, Peter's Mother[2]:
- "Beer doan't agree wi' my inzide, an' it gits into my yead, and makes me proper jolly, zo the young volk make game on me.
- 1918, J. Arthur Gibbs, A Cotswold Village[3]:
- Put 'v' for 'f'; for 's' put 'z'; 'Th' and 't' we change to 'd,'-- So dry an' kip this in thine yead, An' thou wills't talk as plain as we."