Table of Contents
What does Hinny mean in slang?
Hinnynoun. a term of endearment; darling; — corrupted from honey.
What do you call a Scots woman?
[ skots-woom-uhn ] SHOW IPA. / ˈskɒtsˌwʊm ən / PHONETIC RESPELLING. noun, plural Scots·wom·en. a woman who is a native or inhabitant of Scotland; Scot.
What does Hin mean in Glasgow?
n. 1. As a term of endearment: sweetheart, darling (s.Sc.
What is a Keech in Scottish?
1Scottish informal Excrement. 1.1Rubbish. ‘maybe this keech about ‘microclimate’ was true’
Can a Hinny be male or female?
A hinny is a domestic equine hybrid that is the offspring of a male horse (a stallion) and a female donkey (a jenny). It is the reciprocal cross to the more common mule, which is the product of a male donkey (a jack) and a female horse (a mare)….
Hinny | |
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Species: | E. caballus♂ × E. asinus♀ |
Synonyms | |
Equus mulus |
What does a hinny look like?
A hinny resembles a horse more than it does an ass. It looks more like a horse with long ears and looks very much like a mule. The hinny has been used as a saddle animal from antiquity and is more difficult to produce than the mule, because the jennet does not conceive well with the stallion.
Do Scottish people still say Lassie?
If you come through Scotland you can easily meet people saying words like “bonnie” (pretty), “wee” (small), “laddie/lassie” (boy/girl), and also many other idiomatic sentences that you probably would not understand, but Scottish people use regularly.
What is a hing oot?
A hing-oot is an insulting slang word for a woman of easy virtue: ‘Aye, she’s no bad lookin fur a clatty wee hing-oot.
Is Hun a bad word?
Hun can be a term of endearment, a phonetic spelling from a shortening of honey. It’s also used as a derogatory slang term for women involved in multi-level marketing.
What is a Tolly in Scotland?
toley Local term for the act or product of defecation. Sometimes used as a name for an objectionable person.
What does Raj mean in Scottish?
Whereas radge, or raj (slang for a mad, crazy idiot or fool and one of Begbie’s favourite words) is thought to be a variant of the Gypsy word “raj” or “rajy”, which has the exact same meaning. Even “gadge”, or “gadgie”, that has come to mean a man in Scots, was originally used by travellers to refer to an outsider.