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bluther
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bluther
bluther, v. Sc. and north. dial. (ˈblʌðə(r)) Also blother, bludder. [An onomatopœic word, of similar formation to blubber, with which it is often synonymous, though perhaps expressing more specifically the sound of air and liquid in the mouth, nose, and throat: cf. also blether, and esp. its form bl...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Blairhall
Nearly to the south, beyond Shiresmill, and to the west of the Bluther Burn, stands the 17th-century laird's house of Blairhall, which was the birthplace
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bludder
▪ I. † ˈbludder, v. Obs. Perhaps = To blunder; perh. To talk stuff; cf. blether, bluther. (Much used by Bale.) Hence ˈbluddering ppl. a.1553 Bale Vocacyon in Harl. Misc. (Malh.) I. 359 The blinde bludderinge papistes. 1554 ― Declar. Bonner's Articles xxxvi. (D.) This bussard, this beast, and this bl...
Oxford English Dictionary
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blowter
† ˈblowter, v. Obs. [Cf. bluther, blouter, blutter.] intr. To blubber; to weep effusively.A. Strickland Queens Scot. (1851) II. 257 Derided the tears, which he [Duke of Norfolk, 1560] elegantly terms the blowtering, of Mary of Lorraine.
Oxford English Dictionary
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