hig
Translingual
Symbol
hig
See also
- Wiktionary’s coverage of Kamwe terms
English
Etymology
From or related to Old English hyġe.
Noun
hig
- (dialectal) A huff; a fit of passion, annoyance, or offense.
- 1850, Tim Bobbin, Samuel Bamford, Dialect of South Lancashire: Or, Tim Bobbin's Tummus and Meary ; with His Rhymes and an Enlarged and Amended Glossary of Words and Phrases, Chiefly Used by the Rural Population of the Manufacturing Districts of South Lancashire, page 33:
- ... aw leep off, in a great hig, an sed, […]
- 1889, John Nicholson (School principal), The Folk Speech of East Yorkshire, page 43:
- She was iv a hig, 'cos Ah wadn't let[ ]her hev her new bonnit on.
- 1890, Peacock, Tales, page 78, quoted in the EDD:
- Off he goas in a hig.
See also
Aromanian
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Latin īnfīgō or fīgō. Compare Romanian înfige, înfig.
Verb
hig first-singular present indicative (third-person singular present indicative hidzi or hidze, past participle hiptã)
Synonyms
Related terms
- hidziri / hidzire, hidzeari / hidzeare
- hiptu
- hipshu
Middle English
Pronoun
hig
- alternative form of he (“they”)
Old English
Pronunciation
IPA(key): /xiːj/, [hiːj]
Etymology 1
Noun
hīġ n
- alternative form of hīeġ
Etymology 2
Pronoun
hīġ
- alternative form of hīe