By G. E. Dartuell and the Bev. E. 11. Goddard. 137 



Kitty Candlestick. Ignis fatuus,W\\\-o'-ihe-Wis^. S.W. (Devevill.) 



Knap. Add :— (2) n. A little hill, a steep ascent in a road. This is really 



a Devon use. S.W. (Dorset bord.) 



Knit. Of fruit, to set. " The gooseberries be knitted a'ready," N.W. (Clyffe 



Pypard.) 

 Knitch. (2) Add :— Compare " He's got his market-nitch."— Te** of the 



D' Urbervilles, vol. i., p. 19. 

 Ladies-and-Geutlemen. Arum ma culatum, Jj^Cuckoo-jyint. N. &S.W. 

 Lady's-Finger. (2) Arummaculatum.li.yCnckoo-^mt. S.W. (Barford 



St. Martin.) 

 *Lady's-Gl0Ve. " The Greater Bird's-foot." S.W. 



Lady's-Shoe. Fumaria officinalis, L., Common Fumitory. S.W. (Barford 



St. Martin.) 



*Latter Lammas. Unpunctuai {SIok). s.w. 



Lane {a broad). A strip of grass, generally irregular, bounding an arable 

 flg|(j_ N.W. (Devizes.) 



Lanshet. See Linch. 



Lay. (4) J(^c^:— Davis's lain is probably a contraction of lay in. At 

 Mildenhall you often hear of laying or laying in a pickaxe, and the word 

 is to be traced back for a century or more in the parish accounts there. N.W. 



Learn. To teach. " I'll learn 'ee to do that agean, you young vaggot ! " In 

 general use in this county. N. & S.W. 



Libbet. Add-.-B.^f. 



Limbers. The shafts of a waggon. Mid. & S.W. 



Linch. Add :— Lanshet (N.W.), and Lytchet (S.W.), are variants of 

 this word. 



" Another British coin, found on the ' lytchets ' at East Dean, has passed 

 into the cabinet of Dr. Blackmore."— TT/Z^* Arch. Mag., xxii., 242. For 

 articles on Lynchet, Linchet, or Linch, see Wilts Arch. Mag., xii.. 185, and 

 XV., 88. Also articles and letters in Marlborough College Natural History 

 Beport and Marlborough Times, 1892. 

 Lollop. (2) Add :-S.W. 



Lolloper. A lazy lout. N. &S.W. 



Lono- wood. The long branches which are bent down and used to weave in 



and bind a hedge when it is being laid. IS.W. 



Lonffful. Add -.-S.W. 



1. 1 "WW 



Loppetty. Weak, out of sorts. ■^''•"* 



*Tr>ftlp V To sound as water trickling in a small stream (Mr. W. 

 AjijLii\./. • N W. 



Cuunington) 



