释义 |
▪ I. rizzar, n.1 Sc.|ˈrɪzə(r)| Also 7 razour, rizer, 8 rizzer, 9 rizzart, rizar. [Of obscure origin; perh. f. rid red a. on the analogy of groser.] The red currant; also attrib., as rizzar-berry, rizzar-bush.
1679Cunningham of Craigends Diary 9 July (S.T.S.) 112 For razour-berries in a yeard. 1684J. Erskine Jrnl. 27 June (1893) 67, I did eat some straw and rizer berries. 1703Brand Orkney 80 There are also at Scalloway some Goose and Rizzer-berrie bushes. 1899J. Colville Scot. Vernacular 12 Round the garden ran a high, flat-topped wall, clad on the sunny side with rizzars. ▪ II. ˈrizzar, n.2 Sc. Also rizar. [f. the vb.] 1. ‘A drying by means of heat, properly that of the sun’ (Jamieson, 1808). 2. A rizzared haddock.
1834J. Wilson Noct. Ambr. xxxiv, Loaves and fishes! Rizzars! Finnans! Kipper! ▪ III. ˈrizzar, v. Sc. Also 9 rizar, rizzer, -or. [See next.] trans. To dry or parch (esp. haddocks) in the sun.
a1818Macneill Poems (1844) 88 Haddies caller at last carting, Or rizzered sweet. 1893Stevenson Catriona xii, He engaged the goodwife..with some compliments upon the rizzoring of our haddocks. |