Vulgar words in Poems of Rural Life in the Dorset Dialect (Page 1)
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~ ~ ~ Sentence 224 ~ ~ ~
But as vor me, d'ye zee, with theäse here bit O' land, why I have ev'ry thing a'mwost: Vor I can fatten vowels for the spit, Or zell a good fat goose or two to rwoast; An' have my beäns or cabbage, greens or grass, Or bit o' wheat, or, sich my happy feäte is, That I can keep a little cow, or ass, An' a vew pigs to eat the little teäties.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,026 ~ ~ ~
There's Jim an' Tom, a-grown the size O' men, girt lusty chaps, so's, An' Fanny wi' her sloo-black eyes, Her mother's very dap's, so's; An' little Bill, so brown's a nut, An' Poll a gigglèn little slut, I hope will shoot Another voot The year that's comèn in, so's.
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_Stunpoll_ (7), stone head, blockhead; also an old tree almost dead.