Dialect ‘P’ 2
Play conduct, ‘it will be the best of your play, not to meddle with him’
Plenish stock, furnish, ‘a well-plenished house or farm’
Polished consummate, ‘a polished rascal, him’
Poor mouth v. denigrate
Power quantity, ‘a power of money’
Prentice apprentice
Prig haggle or steal
Prod push or stick
Prog steal
Pross sue
Prough plenty, ‘he has a brave prough with him’
Poor, ‘a wee prough of a place’
Puke vomit, n. miserable, disagreeable type of person
Purty pretty
Purty-bread potato-bread
Purty-middling fair well
Puss sour-puss, miserable-looking face
Put by, Put about upset
Put by iridescent, ‘I was put by myself with anger’
Put on dress, ‘she had hardly time to put on herself’, pretending, ‘she’s good at putting it on’
Put out story, ‘that’s a quare put-out for you to repeat’
Putting a face on him showing his annoyance