a'body
Appearance
Scots
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From a' (“all, every”) + body. Attested at least from c. 1800; compare a' from Middle English all.
Pronoun
[edit]a'body
- everybody, everyone
- c. 1800, Carolina Nairne, “Kitty Reid’s House”, in Life and Songs of the Baroness Nairne, published 1869, page 61:
- The light glimmer’d in thro’ a crack i’ the wa’,
An’ a’ body thocht the lift it would fa’,
An’ lads and lasses they soon ran awa
Frae Kitty Reid’s house on the green, Jo.- The light shone in through a crack in the wall, And everybody thought the sky would fall, And the boys and girls soon ran away from Kitty Reid’s house on the green, Love.
- 1823, Robert Chambers, editor, The Popular Rhymes of Scotland, Miscellaneous, page 302:
- There was an auld wife, and they ca’d her Kilfuddie;
An a’ body said she wad gang to the wuddie;
But I think she de’ed in a better commaund,
For she danced her to deid at her ain house end.- There was an old woman, and they called her Kilfuddie; And everybody said she was bound for the gallows; But I think she died in a better situation, For she danced herself to death under her own roof.
- 2020, Matthew Fit, But n Ben A-Go-Go, page 82:
- He wis throu wi Clart Central, Port, the Ceilidh, an awbody. An no lang nou, awbody wid be thro wi him.
- He was through with Central Division, the port, the dance hall, and everyone. And not long from now, everybody would be through with him.