roch
German
Scots
Etymology
From Old English rūh, from Proto-Germanic *rūhwaz.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [rox], [rʌx]
- (Southern) IPA(key): [rʌux]
Adjective
roch (comparative mair roch, superlative maist roch)
- rough
- lewd, foul-mouthed, indecent, immoral
- abundant, bounteous, plentifully supplied, well-furnished (especially with good plain fare)
- (agriculture, etc., of the growth of grass or crops) strong, luxuriant, dense, luxuriant but of poor quality, rank
- (of a bone) having meat on it
- (agriculture, of sheep) unshorn, unclipped
Derived terms
- rochian (“ruffian”, noun)
- rochie (“long wholemeal loaf of rough texture”, noun)
- rochle (“rough”, adj)
- rochle (“rough person”, noun)
- rochle (“to toss about, agitate, shake roughly, tousle”, verb)
- rochness (“roughness, abundance, plenty”, noun)
- rochsome (“somewhat rough or uneven, rude, crude, uncouth”, adj)
- rocht (“fitted with frost-nails”, adj) (of a horse)
- rochterie (“rough people, riff-raff”, noun)
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