bardie
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English[edit]
Etymology 1[edit]
From bard + -ie (“diminutive suffix”).
Pronunciation[edit]
Noun[edit]
bardie (plural bardies)
- (Scotland) A minor poet or bard; used as a self-deprecatory epithet by Robert Burns.
- 1998, Carol McGuirk, Critical Essays on Robert Burns[1], page 168:
- […] Burns signals her distance from the Classical Muses, and his position as more bardie than bard.
Etymology 2[edit]
Adjective[edit]
bardie (comparative more bardie, superlative most bardie)
- Rude and insolent; bolshie.
Etymology 3[edit]
From Noongar language bardi.
Alternative forms[edit]
Noun[edit]
bardie (plural bardies)
- (Australia) The edible larva of an insect.
- 1938, Xavier Herbert, chapter II, in Capricornia[2], pages 19–20:
- Oh don't you remember Black Alice […] / […] the bardees she gathered, the snakes that she stewed / And the damper you taught her to bake—.