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cottar
cottar, cotter (ˈkɒtə(r)) [Partly ad. med.L. cotārius, f. cota cot; partly a later formation from cot n.1 + -ar3, -er1.] 1. Sometimes used to translate med.L. cotārius, applied in Domesday Book to a villein who occupied a cot or cottage with an attached piece of land (usually 5 acres) held by servic...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Cottier
Cottier may refer to:
Surname
Cottier (surname), a name originating from the British Isles
Various
Cottier (farmer), a type of serf, also cottar, cottager
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cottery
† ˈcottery Sc. Obs. rare. [f. cotter, cottar: see -ery; cf. coterie.] A cottar's holding.1792 Statist. Acc. Scot. IV. 401 The decrease is attributed to the abolishing of cotteries. 1808 Agric. Survey, Inverness 349 (Jam.) Let there be a house and garden provided for a Protestant Schoolmaster..There ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Cotter (farmer)
Cotter, cottier, cottar, or is the German or Scots term for a peasant farmer (formerly in the Scottish Highlands for example). A cottar or cottier is also a term for a tenant who was renting land from a farmer or landlord.
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cotset
† ˈcotset Hist. [OE. cot-sǽta (Somner), lit. ‘occupant of a cot,’ chiefly known in latinized form cotsētus and OF. cozet, coscet (pl. -ez) in Domesday and other early sources; f. cot n.1 + -sǽta = OLG. -sâto, OHG. -sâȥo sitter, dweller.] In OE. Law: A villein who occupied a cot or cottage with an at...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Napier Commission
Historical context
The Commission was a response to crofter and cottar agitation in the Highlands of Scotland. The terms crofter, cottar and Highlands and Islands all lacked clear definition, and the Commission was left to use its own judgement as when, where and
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cotman
† ˈcotman Hist. Also 6 cote man. [f. cot1, cote1 + man.] The tenant of a cot or cottage; a cottager, ‘cotset’, or ‘coterell’; in Sc. a cottar. Also attrib., as in cotman land, agricultural land held by a cotman.c 1086 Domesday Bk., Worcestersh. (Spelman), Et 8 bordarii & Cotmanni cum 2 carucis. 1358...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Charles Findlater
He would sing a song at a cottar's wedding, and on wintry Sundays gather his congregation round him in his kitchen and give them dinner afterwards.
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cottager
cottager (ˈkɒtɪdʒə(r)) Forms: 6 cottyger, cotiger, coticher, 6–7 cotager, 7– cottager, (6 cotinger, 7 cottinger). [f. cottage + -er1.] One who lives in a cottage; used esp. of the labouring population in rural districts. (Johnson's statement, repeated in later Dicts., ‘A cottager, in law, is one tha...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Cirein-cròin
A saying goes:
Poem collected by Alexander Carmichael It was taken down in 1860, with much more old lore, from Kenneth Morrison, cottar, Trithion, Skye
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cotland
† ˈcotland Hist. Also coth-. [f. cot n.1 + land. Early documentary evidence shows chiefly the latinized forms cotlandum, cotlanda.] The piece of arable land (of about 5 acres) held along with his cot by the Old English cotset or cottar.a 1150 in Monast. Angl. I. 325 Item una virgata terræ, cum dimid...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Porrogszentkirály
A cottar noticed it and put his finger in the hole. The king asked him where he lives. But he could not tell him because his village had no name.
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bordar
bordar Feudal System. (ˈbɔːdə(r)) Also 9 border. [mod. ad. med.L. bordārius cottager, f. med.L. borda (Pr., Cat. borda, F. borde) hut, cottage, referred by Diez to Teut. bord (neuter) ‘wooden board’, etc. (The OF. was bordier.) (The actual history of the sense which borda has taken in Romanic, and o...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Frances Dunlop
Having read the Cottar's Saturday Night in a friend's copy while recovering from a severe illness, she was so delighted with it that she immediately sent
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tikkat
▪ I. † tike, tyke1 Obs. rare—1. [Generally taken as = tyke, dog, sense 2; but perh. ad. Welsh taeog (taiog), in OWelsh taiawc villain, churl, Cornish tioc or tiac husbandman, farmer, ploughman, rustic:—OCeltic *tegācos, deriv. of *teg-os, Welsh ty a house: cf. for the sense cottar, med.L. cotarius, ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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