Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-lj6df Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-20T01:33:44.237Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Scaring crows in English

More on scarecrows

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 October 2008

Abstract

One never quite knows what will catch on with ET readers and what will pass unremarked. Certainly, Louise Sylvester's piece ‘Unusual and dialect terms for scarecrows’ in ET42 (Apr 95) has prompted a remarkable – and painstakingly detailed – response, in the two replies that follow.

Type
Lexicon
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1996

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

[Anon.] 1985. ‘Want to be a Worzel?’. Daily Mail, 16th May, p.9.Google Scholar
Arch, Joseph. 1898. The Story of His Life. London: Hutchinson, p. 33.Google Scholar
Brough, T. 1968. ‘Recent Developments in Bird Scaring on Airfields’. In Murton, R. K. & Wright, E.N., eds., The Problems of Birds as Pests. London: Academic Press, pp.30, 36.Google Scholar
Steele, Elliott J.. 1936. Bedfordshire ‘Vermin’ Payments. Luton: The Public Museum, pp. 19, 46.Google Scholar
Gunther, R. T. 1917. Report on Agricultural Damage by Vermin and Birds in the Counties of Norfolk and Oxfordshire in 1916. London: Oxford University Press, p. 70.Google Scholar
Haining, Peter. 1988. The Scarecrow. London: Robert Hale, pp. 28, 42, 115117, 150.Google Scholar
[Hogg, James.] 1802. ‘A Journey Through the Highlands of Scotland’. The Scots Magazine; or General Repository vol. 64 p. 816.Google Scholar
Hunter, F. A. 1974. ‘Preliminary Practical Assessments of Some Bird Scaring Methods Against Wood-Pigeons’. In Annals of Applied Biology vol. 76, pp. 351353.Google Scholar
Kidson, Frank, ed. 1904. 75 British Nursery Rhymes (and a Collection of Old Jingles). London: Augener, p. 14.Google Scholar
Leapman, Michael. 1992. ‘Gardener's Question Time’. The Independent on Sunday, 20th 12, Sunday Review, pp. 65, 68.Google Scholar
May, Derwent. 1993. ‘The Ragged Sentinels’. The Times, 27 February, Section 3, p.3.Google Scholar
May, Derwent. 1994. ‘Rookie on How to Identify a Crow?’. The Times, 29th October, Weekend Section, p. 12.Google Scholar
McManaway, James G. et al. , eds. 1955. Dick of Devonshire. Oxford: The Malone Society, p. 32.Google Scholar
Murton, R. K. 1971. Man and Birds. London: Collins, pp. 289, 307.Google Scholar
Northall, G.F. 1892. English Folk-Rhymes. London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner, pp. 319320.Google Scholar
Richardson, Nigel. 1994. ‘Scary Monsters’. Daily Telegraph, 8th October, Weekend Section, pp. 14–15.Google Scholar
Robinson, Eric et al. , eds. 1989. The Early Poems of John Clare 1804–1822. Oxford: Clarendon Press, vol. 1 p. 434.Google Scholar
[Robinson, F.K.] 1855. A Glossary of Yorkshire Words and Phrases Collected in Whitby and the Neighbourhood. London: John Russell Smith, facing p. 59. Copy annotated by John Richard Wise in Manchester Language and Literature Library, Central Library, shelved at 427. 74 R8.Google Scholar
Robinson, F. K. 1876. A Glossary of Words Used in the Neighbourhood of Whitby. London: Trübner (for the English Dialect Society), p. 22.Google Scholar
Ryals, Clyde de L. & Fielding, Kenneth J. 1993. The Collected Letters of Thomas and Jane Welsh Carlyle. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, vol.20 p. 108.Google Scholar