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doric words
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what is the doric word DIRLER translated to english mean.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.To dirl does mean to vibrate, but it also means to thrill; hence, a dirler is a thriller, something that excited the user of the word. An English equivalent might be the rather old-fashioned 'hummer'...and I don't mean a Schwarzenegger 'tank'! Even 'humdinger' is rarely heard nowadays, but that's the basic idea here.
Chamber-pot! I was born and brought up in a Doric-speaking environment and the only word for chamber-pot we ever used was chuntie or chanty. I suspect, therefore, that dirler was used by the rustic community rather than the townsfolk of north-east Scotland.
(The worrying thing is that I had totally forgotten I had a Doric dictionmary right there on my bookshelves!)
The chamber-pot meaning obviously harks back to Barmy's earlier response, in that it refers to the vibrating sound created when the device was used!
(The worrying thing is that I had totally forgotten I had a Doric dictionmary right there on my bookshelves!)
The chamber-pot meaning obviously harks back to Barmy's earlier response, in that it refers to the vibrating sound created when the device was used!