ChatterBank0 min ago
Mither
14 Answers
Has anybody ever seen the word "mither" in a dictionary? I haven't, yet it's in common use, at least here in NW England. Maybe the compilers couldn't be ... bothered?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by deso. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I'm between 2 houses at the moment so I don't have my old New Oxford handy, but I do have the Oxford Illustrated which includes "moither" (Def: worry, perplex, be incoherent or wandering), and the Readers Digest Universal which also includes "moither" (Def: - also moider - to confuse, baffle or bewilder). Intersting, as the common usage up here means to hassle or complain - as in "stop mithering" - or in another sense, to worry (or more specifically not care or be bothered either way) - as in "I'm not mithered".
Both Chambers and The Oxford English Dictionary list 'mither' as a dialectal variation of 'moider', as I suggested above. Chambers offers the following meanings...confuse, stupefy, overcome, pester and hassle. The last two are the commonest usages in Scotland and - judging by comments above - the north of England, too, but I don't believe the lexicographers are biased! After all, they give the whole range of meanings.