The words taking their places in the new edition included attachment, block-graph, blog, broadband, bullet-point, celebrity, chatroom, committee, cut-and-paste, MP3 player and voice-mail. The deletions included acorn, adder, ash, beech, bluebell, buttercup, catkin, conker, cowslip, cygnet, dandelion, fern, hazel, heather, heron, ivy, kingfisher, lark, mistletoe, nectar, newt, otter, pasture and willow. Under pressure, Oxford University Press revealed a list of the entries it no longer felt to be relevant to a modern-day childhood. A sharp-eyed reader noticed that there had been a culling of words concerning nature. The same summer I was on Lewis, a new edition of the Oxford Junior Dictionary was published. ![]() It would be an impossible book, MacCaig concluded:Ī volume thick as the height of the Clisham, Every village in the upper islands would have its different phrases to contribute.” I thought of Norman MacCaig’s great Hebridean poem “By the Graveyard, Luskentyre”, where he imagines creating a dictionary out of the language of Donnie, a lobster fisherman from the Isle of Harris. I have a friend from South Uist who said her grandmother would add dozens to it. “It represents only three villages’ worth of words. “There’s so much language to be added to it,” one of its compilers, Anne Campbell, told me. It ran to several pages and more than 120 terms – and as that modest “Some” in its title acknowledged, it was incomplete. The “Peat Glossary” set my head a-whirr with wonder-words. ![]() Other terms were striking for their visual poetry: rionnach maoim means “the shadows cast on the moorland by clouds moving across the sky on a bright and windy day” èit refers to “the practice of placing quartz stones in streams so that they sparkle in moonlight and thereby attract salmon to them in the late summer and autumn”, and teine biorach is “the flame or will-o’-the-wisp that runs on top of heather when the moor burns during the summer”. ![]() Reading the glossary, I was amazed by the compressive elegance of its lexis, and its capacity for fine discrimination: a caochan, for instance, is “a slender moor-stream obscured by vegetation such that it is virtually hidden from sight”, while a feadan is “a small stream running from a moorland loch”, and a fèith is “a fine vein-like watercourse running through peat, often dry in the summer”. It was entitled “Some Lewis Moorland Terms: A Peat Glossary”, and it listed Gaelic words and phrases for aspects of the tawny moorland that fills Lewis’s interior. E ight years ago, in the coastal township of Shawbost on the Outer Hebridean island of Lewis, I was given an extraordinary document.
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