Associations to the word «Auld»
Noun
- Housekeeper
- Whistle
- Er
- Witch
- Melody
- Esther
- Rouen
- Saxophonist
- Bane
- Willie
- Ta
- Pages
- Yell
- Plea
- Fields
- Beggar
- Na
- Sake
- Orthodoxy
- Glad
- Glen
- Sergei
- Warrant
- Dee
- Whisky
- Kindness
- Lex
- Lordship
- Lindsay
- Ill
- Satan
- Sin
- Fu
- Highland
- Trot
- Dearest
- Nick
- Bit
- Cock
- Crack
- Gown
- Till
- Sixth
- Rag
- Fifteen
- Neighbour
- Dear
- Poem
- Wally
- Se
- Mon
- Renewal
- Moonlight
- Annie
- Bryan
- Roberto
- Chorus
- Mare
- Moose
- Dragoon
- Stir
- Eve
- Highlander
- Countess
- Allan
- Reel
- Moss
- Wife
- Glasgow
- Panther
- Wallace
- Ha
- Vancouver
- Hound
- Dame
- Bonnie
- Angus
- En
- Burn
- Plague
- Blessing
Wiktionary
AULD, adjective. (archaic) (Northern England) (Liverpool) old
AULD ALLIANCE, proper noun. (historical) The old alliance between Scotland and France against England
AULD LANG SYNE, noun. (idiomatic) Days gone by; former times.
AULD LICHT, noun. (historical) A member of the conservative party in the Church of Scotland in the latter part of the 18th century.
Dictionary definition
AULD, adjective. A Scottish word; "auld lang syne".
Wise words
The chief virtue that language can have is clearness, and
nothing detracts from it so much as the use of unfamiliar
words.