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- Q4020495 subject Q8718666.
- Q4020495 subject Q8720225.
- Q4020495 subject Q8720686.
- Q4020495 subject Q8721889.
- Q4020495 abstract "In Scotland, a wirry-cowe [ˈwɪɾɪkʌu, ˈwʌɾɪkʌu] was a bugbear, goblin, ghost, ghoul or other frightful object. Sometimes the term was used for the Devil or a scarecrow.Draggled sae 'mang muck and stanes,They looked like wirry-cowsThe word was used by Sir Walter Scott in his novel Guy Mannering.The word is derived by John Jamieson from worry (Modern Scots wirry), in its old sense of harassment in both English and Lowland Scots, from Old English wyrgan cognate with Dutch wurgen and German würgen; and cowe, a hobgoblin, an object of terror.Wirry appears in several other compound words such as wirry hen, a ruffianly character, a rogue; wirry-boggle, a rogue, a rascal; and wirry-carle, a snarling, ill-natured person, one who is dreaded as a bugbear.".
- Q4020495 wikiPageWikiLink Q1402155.
- Q4020495 wikiPageWikiLink Q14549.
- Q4020495 wikiPageWikiLink Q1860.
- Q4020495 wikiPageWikiLink Q188.
- Q4020495 wikiPageWikiLink Q1990797.
- Q4020495 wikiPageWikiLink Q208446.
- Q4020495 wikiPageWikiLink Q22.
- Q4020495 wikiPageWikiLink Q2288976.
- Q4020495 wikiPageWikiLink Q308697.
- Q4020495 wikiPageWikiLink Q4160151.
- Q4020495 wikiPageWikiLink Q42365.
- Q4020495 wikiPageWikiLink Q45529.
- Q4020495 wikiPageWikiLink Q654775.
- Q4020495 wikiPageWikiLink Q6674.
- Q4020495 wikiPageWikiLink Q6888858.
- Q4020495 wikiPageWikiLink Q7411.
- Q4020495 wikiPageWikiLink Q79025.
- Q4020495 wikiPageWikiLink Q8718666.
- Q4020495 wikiPageWikiLink Q8720225.
- Q4020495 wikiPageWikiLink Q8720686.
- Q4020495 wikiPageWikiLink Q8721889.
- Q4020495 comment "In Scotland, a wirry-cowe [ˈwɪɾɪkʌu, ˈwʌɾɪkʌu] was a bugbear, goblin, ghost, ghoul or other frightful object.".
- Q4020495 label "Wirry-cow".