| Central - LAL |
| Ingle | provides yet anither example, |
| Ulster - PUL |
lin, scrapin shunners fae tha | ingle | . Times fur daein things, lake |
| Ulster - PUL |
ilygan, tha wumman sut by tha | ingle | , glowerin at tha greesheugh. |
| Central - EDN |
As a smoored | ingle | 's heat remains, |
| Doric - ABN |
k while Farquhar gaed the wee | ingle | a prog wi a lanth o airn bar, |
| Doric - DOR |
Inbye, the | ingle | 's reidie leam, An bairnheid's |
| Central - LAL |
ed in it is always called the | ingle | , in the southern parts of Sco |
| Central - WCE |
ither grabbed a poker fae the | ingle | . The faither took a golf club |
| Doric - DOR |
Ma mither wis reeted tae the | ingle | , fair terrifeed, grippin me t |
| Central - LAL |
Sittin ower close tae the | ingle | is a recipe for acquirin Tink |
| Central - LAL |
es baudrons crooned aside the | ingle | -stane; |
| Central - WCE |
e watter ower the fire in the | ingle | .' |
| Southern - WCE |
s monie a nicht I sate in the | ingle | -neuk |
| Central - AYR |
we o the lowpin flames in the | ingle | neuk an yer imagination cuid |
| Central - LAL |
For pouer wis cleckit in the | ingle | -licht |
| Central - SWE |
an gettin baukit in the | ingle | -neuk |
| Central - LAL |
seen him haudin coort in the | ingle | wi his cronies . . . he’s g |
| Central - AYR |
kitchen waarmin himsel on the | ingle | -stane, whan the coachman cam |
| Central - AYR |
81. Set doun on ae side o the | ingle | , wi Isabel Weir by the tither |
| Central - LAL |
ntit ane ‘Cheery blinks the | ingle | -gleede’. John Pinkerton (17 |
| Doric - DOR |
aa forbye the pairt ahint the | ingle | . Och, fou I wuss I cwid see t |
| Central - LAL |
ane: ‘There, lanely, by the | ingle | -cheek, I sat and ey’d the s |
| Central - LAL |
an waddins, at wark or by the | ingle | . Margaret Fay Shaw tells us t |
| Central - SEC |
y sattelt doun by her couthie | ingle | and Ma daednae gae tae fetch |
| Central - WCE |
th haunds. There wis a muckle | ingle | in the dinin-room and she noo |
| Doric - DOR |
oose an e fire's bleezin in e | ingle | , I've plunted a tree aat gies |
| Doric - MNA |
o ? an he dunted e kyles in e | ingle | wi e tae o’s beet. I’m aw |
| Doric - MNA |
Sittin roon thi | ingle | bi smokey lum, |
| Central - SEC |
sittin in his chair at a tuim | ingle | . "Aweel, Airchie," A tried ta |
| Central - SEC |
sittin in his chair at a tuim | ingle | . "Aweel, Airchie," I tried ta |
| Central - LAL |
an | ingle | in the benmaist hearth, |
| Central - LAL |
lanted unco right, Fast by an | ingle | , bleezing finely” a smoky a |
| Central - SWE |
aroon the bleezin | ingle | warm an bricht, |
| Central - GLA |
The ess steys warm lang efter | ingle | wilts, |
| Central - LAL |
es (SSC 006) and The Farmer's | Ingle | (SSC 007). |
| Central - LAL |
bb it at ane vthir auld wyfis | ingle | ’. Burns provides several we |
| Central - LAL |
inkerton (1783) tells us that | ingle | is a wird ‘appropriated to |
| Ulster - DUL |
enuch tae hae a haet | ingle | tae gaether roon, wur afeart |
| Central - NEC |
“God tak us, ah kennae whit | ingle | sae bleezes aboot me.” Auld |
| Central - WCE |
oon ablow, an afore the first | ingle | o the hairst is brunt oot, I |
| Ulster - BUL |
Inbye tha airy | ingle | -crypt |