kame
See also: Appendix:Variations of "kame"
English
editEtymology
editFrom Scots, from Middle English cambe (“comb”).
Noun
editkame (plural kames)
Derived terms
editAnagrams
editChavacano
editPronoun
editkame
- we (exclusive; we and not you)
Japanese
editRomanization
editkame
Lithuanian
editPronoun
editkame
Pali
editAlternative forms
editAlternative scripts
Verb
editkame
Scots
editAlternative forms
editEtymology
editOlder Scots kame, came, from Middle English cambe (“comb”).
Noun
editkame (plural kames)
- an act of combing
- 1994 [1920], George P. Dunbar, “A guff o' peat reek”, in Anne Forsyth, Canty and Couthie, page 43:
- She wroct fae shreek o' mornin' till the mirkest oor ye'll name,
An’ scarce hed time t’ dict her face, nor gie her heid a kaim- She worked from break of morning until the darkest hour you can name, / And scarcely had time to make up her face, or give her head a combing
- a steep hill or ridge; the crest of a hill
Verb
editkame (third-person singular simple present kames, present participle kamin, simple past kamet, past participle kamet)
- to comb
- 1908, Glasgow Ballad Club, “Jenny Kilfunk”, in Ballads and Poems: Third Series, page 115:
- Wi’ her short green goon, an’ her queer red cap,
An’ her een sae skelly an’ blear ;
Wi’ her fingers sae lang, aye keepit sa thrang,
A-kaimin’ her yellow hair- With her short green gown, and her odd red cap, / And her eyes so squinty and bleary; / With her fingers so long, held so close together, / Combing her yellow hair
- to rake loose straw or hay
- to scold, drub
- gie ’im a kamin doun
- give him a dressing down
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- Pali non-lemma forms
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- Scots terms inherited from Middle English
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