nanpie
English
Noun
nanpie (plural nanpies)
- (UK, dialect, obsolete) The magpie.
- 1800, Thomas Browne, Poems on Several Occasions, page 160:
- An' twea 'r three Nanpies chatt'rin' owre her head.
- 1874, Nattie Nydds, T'Nidderdill Olminac, an'ivverybody's Kalinder fer 1875, page 172:
- T'jerney wer lead'd forrard teah wi' an immense amount o' pleazure; in fakt, ivvery number i' t' nine gat theresense run up ta t' heeist pitch o' joyful expecktashun, fer all yan o' t' lot had a soart o' misgivin', becos he sed hede seen fer three da's hand runnin' nine Nanpies, whitch wer a bad sine, he sed—
- 1901, Eliza Gutch, Examples of Printed Folk-lore Concerning the North Riding:
- The unusual appearance of nanpies in a place is said to be ominous.
- 2022, F. W. Moorman, More Tales of the Ridings:
- You see, he kept all nations o' wild birds an' wild animals down at his house; he'd linnets an' nanpies i' cages, and an ark full o' pricky-back urchins.
Noun
nanpie (uncountable)
- A traditional Dai spicy and sour paste-like side dish made by combining vegetables, herbs and spices in a mortar and pestle.
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