plouter
Appearance
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Verb
[edit]plouter (third-person singular simple present plouters, present participle ploutering, simple past and past participle ploutered)
- (Scotland, Ireland, Northern England, dialect) To splash around in something wet; to dabble.
- 1894 May, Rudyard Kipling, “Servants of the Queen”, in The Jungle Book, London, New York, N.Y.: Macmillan and Co., published June 1894, →OCLC, page 187:
- As I did not want to plowter about any more in the drizzle and the dark, I put my waterproof over the muzzle of one gun, and made a sort of wigwam with two or three rammers that I found, and lay along the tail of another gun, wondering where Vixen had got to, and where I might be.
- (Scotland, Ireland, Northern England, dialect) To potter.
- 1847 December, Ellis Bell [pseudonym; Emily Brontë], chapter IX, in Wuthering Heights: […], volume I, London: Thomas Cautley Newby, […], →OCLC, page 187:
- He's left th' yate ut t' full swing, and miss's pony has trodden dahn two rigs uh corn, un plottered through, raight o'er intuh t' meadow!
- 1922 February, James Joyce, “[Episode 18: Penelope]”, in Ulysses, Paris: Shakespeare and Company, […], →OCLC, part III [Nostos], page 703:
- [O]f course he prefers plottering about the house [...]
- 1932, Lewis Grassic Gibbon, Sunset Song (A Scots Quair), Polygon, published 2006, page 21:
- So one night after they had all had supper in the kitchen and old Sinclair had gone pleitering out to the byres, old Mistress Sinclair had up and nodded to Kirsty […].
- 1986, Michael Innes, Appleby & Ospreys:
- There's certainly a small boat that people plouter about in.
Noun
[edit]plouter (plural plouters)
- (Scotland, Ireland, Northern England, dialect) The act of ploutering, or splashing about.