Could it really be? Is Weird Vegetables tapping into the frosty heart of this season's Geist? This just in from our Irish vegetable linguist, Conor Creaney (aka Cardoon O'Chicory): neep is the Oxford English Dictionary's word of the day for today, Sunday, January 25, 2009. Leave it to the OED to unearth yet another pseudonym for a member of clan turnip that I left unexamined in my turnip vs. rutabaga post (see the comments too). If you make it to the OED site today, 'tis here. If not, then I've diced up the entry and kept my favorite bite-sized pieces below. I am particularly taken with the turnip paraphernalia (turnip watches and neep lanterns) that round out the uses of turnips elaborated below. Ju Duoqui may want to take note for her next vegetable outfit.
neep, n.
Now regional (chiefly Sc.)....
1. a. A turnip; (also, in later Sc. use) a swede. Also: a turnip plant or swede plant.
In Old English, perh. also applied to rape, Brassica napus.
The usual name in all Scottish dialects and current in Ulster and Northumberland, it is also recorded by Eng. Dial. Dict. (1903) in Cornwall, Suffolk, Hertfordshire, Herefordshire, north Wales, and Leinster.
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b. Sc. and Irish English (south.). A parsnip. Cf. MYPE n.
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3. Sc. A watch; spec. a watch in a case, a turnip watch.
Sc. National Dict. (1965) records the sense in general Scottish use in 1963.
or Heid 18 That great neep o' a watch o' yours wunna keep time.
neep brose n. Sc. and Irish English (north.) brose made with the liquid in which turnips or swedes have been boiled.
neep land n. Sc. (now Orkney and Shetland) ground prepared or used for growing turnips or swedes.
neep lantern n. Sc. = turnip-lantern n. at TURNIP n. Compounds 2.
neep-seed n. (a) the seed of the neep; (b) Sc. (north-east.), the time for sowing neeps.
neep-shaw n. Sc. and Eng. regional (Northumberland) a turnip top.
neep
ReplyDeleteVery nicce!
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