By G. E. Dartnell and the Rev. E. H. Goddard. 239 
~ Bumble-footed. Club-footed. ‘ N. & S.W. 
*Bumbled. “TI be terble bumbled,” hard up, ete. N.W. (Aldbourne.) 
-*Bummick. Cow or ox. ‘Goan’ sar the bummicks.” S.W. (Deverill.) 
- Bungey. The inhabitants of Imber near Heytesbury, are derisively styled 
“Imber Bungeys” by their neighbours. S.W. 
- Burn-bake. (1), (2), and (3), add :-—N.W. 
a Bush-magpie. Pica caudata, Magpie. N. & S.W. 
“The old myth of the existence of two species—i.e., the ‘ Bush Magpie’ 
and the ‘Tree Magpie’—is still firmly believed in here.”—(Birds of 
_ Marlborough.) t should be noted that the so-called‘ Bush Mag.” has a 
very much shorter tail than the “ Tree Mag.,” and is a smaller bird in every 
‘ way. 
: ‘Butt. A hassock, usually of plaited straw. N. & S.W. 
4 Butter-and-Eggs. Add :—(3) <A method of sliding, similar to the 
* Cobbler’s Knock.” N.W. 
“T can do butter-and-eggs all down the slide. . . . The feat 
consists in going down the slide on one foot, and beating with the heel and 
; toe of the other at short intervals.”—Ashen Faggot. 
Button. * He’s a button short,’ or, “He hasn’t got all his fatten he is 
somewhat deficient in intellect. N. &S.W. 
By. (1) For, “I hadn’t the money to do’t by her.” N. & S.W. 
: (2) With. “I caan’t doo nothen by her.” N. & S.W. 
. Paddle. (2) Add :—Sometimes Cattel in S. Wilts. 
(6) Add :— How did you like the sermon, John ?’’—‘ Aw, thur, Zur, 
*tood a bin a main sight better if a hadden caddled the Scriptur so!” There 
was an old Wiltshire cobbler who used always to word his bills for making 
boots and doing small repairs to them thus :—‘ Making and caddling Mr. 
_ So-and-so’s boots.” 
4 Be ilosome. Add :—(2) Troublesome. N. & S.W. 
Caddly. Of weather, stormy, uncertain. N.W. 
*Cafly Cottrel. A simpleton —(Hist. of Chipp.) N.W. 
*Caffy Noodle. A simpleton. Sw. 
Ce lvary. “Walse Hop—called ‘Calvary’ from the spots of blood on the 
leaf.” —(Diogenes’ Sandals, p. 85.) S.W. 
andle-and-lantern fair. See quotation :-— 
We used [at Warminster] to call one of the smaller fairs (I believe it 
a was the August one) “Candle-and-lantern Fair,” presumably from the 
