Grab a cup of tea, sit down in the summerhouse and enjoy a moment of tranquility whilst reading Amanda Thomson’s delightful A Scots Dictionary of Nature.
Split into six categories – land, wood, weather, birds, water and walking – the author has brought together some long-forgotten words that are customarily used to describe Scotland’s rich fauna and flora.
Exploring unique Scottish lexicon, rediscover words like ‘sooch’ – a hollow, murmuring sound or the sighing of the wind; ‘huam’ – the moan of an owl in the warm days of summer; and ‘glouk’ – the sound made by crows or skathies over carrion.
A celebration of Scotland’s great outdoors, this is a lovely book to have on the coffee table.
Easy to read and interesting to rifle through on a quiet afternoon, it keeps alive archaic words that have been shaped by the environment itself.
A Scots Dictionary of Nature, by Amanda Thomson, published by Saraband, £12.99.
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