DEFINITIONS CONTINUED VERBS 1. to ravel, to entangle, to ruffle (dialect and Scottish) 2. to throw into disorder; to perplex, to confound (dialect) 3. to move aimlessly (dialect) 4. to tire, to wear out; to exhaust with fatigue (dialect and Scottish) 5. to trifle, to idle, to loiter (dialect) From: Glossary of Words Used in the Wapentakes of Manley and Corringham,
Edward Peacock, 1875
5 Comments
Chris Padley
20/4/2017 12:18:03 pm
I come from about 15 miles from Corringham. Taffle is the normal word I would use for, well, taffle. My partner who is from London thinks it is odd, despite the fact her father was a Scot. It seems to me be to be a perfectly normal word which everyone understands. .
Reply
21/4/2017 12:26:34 am
Hi there Chris.
Reply
Richard Horne
18/7/2022 05:58:24 am
I come from Hull. My mother and grandmother (born 1899) used to use"taffle" when their knitting wool used to get knotted or "taffled". My grandmother's family were all in the merchant navy and I always wondered if the word was connected to the taffrail on a ship where rigging ropes were tied onto.
Reply
Leave a Reply. |
Archives
September 2021
|