turmit
Appearance
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Noun
[edit]turmit (plural turmits)
- (archaic, dialect, British) turnip
- 1825, John Trotter Brockett, A Glossary of North Country Words in Use
- TORMIT, TURMIT, a turnip.
- 1828, William Carr, The Dialect of Craven: In the West-Riding of the County of York
- TURMAT, A turnip.
- 1863, Joseph Philip Robson (ed.), Songs of the bards of the Tyne; or a choice collection of original songs, chiefly in the Newcastle dialect
- We hev taties and turmits like Rosemary toppin.
- 1857, Thomas Wright, Dictionary of Obsolete and Provincial English
- TORMIT, s. A turnip. North.
- 1869, James Jennings, The Dialect of the West of England, particularly Somersetshire
- Tur′mit. s. A turnip.
- 1890, John Drummond Robertson & Henry Haughton Reynolds Moreton, A Glossary of Dialect & Archaic Words Used in the County of Gloucester
- TURMIT or TURMUT. sb. Turnip. [Common.]
- 1918, Joseph Arthur Gibbs, A Cotswold Village
- “I be a turmut hower,
- Vram Gloucestershire I came;
- “I be a turmut hower,
- 1825, John Trotter Brockett, A Glossary of North Country Words in Use