Wee vs Ould - What's the difference?
wee | ould | Synonyms |
(Scotland, Northern Ireland, North England, NZ) Small, little.
* 2008 , (James Kelman), Kieron Smith, Boy , Penguin 2009, p. 73:
(colloquial, uncountable) urine
(colloquial) An act of urination.
(colloquial) To urinate.
(slang, Ireland) old, aged, long-established
* "The Ould Lammas Fair takes place in Ballycastle, Co. Antrim on the last Monday and Tuesday in August. It's one of the oldest fairs in Ireland"
* "But, begonnies, in three months I was able to send home for the ouldest little girl--she was only nine years of age."Maguire, John Francis
* "maybe they'd come round you to play wid you, an' then what's the harum, barrin' they're not any o' the grown brats, as ould or oulder than yourself, that you're behoulden to keep at a distance"Banim, John
(-)
(slang, Ireland) term of denigration
* "Sonny'll tell you all about it, but pay no heed to him. He's only an ould goat anyway."Taylor, Patrick An Irish Country Doctor , p.85 [ISBN 0765319950] Macmillan (2008)
(slang, Ireland) term of diminution (often affectionate)
* for home entertainment they then have to endure the bloody Afternoon Show on RTE, all that bullshit about cookery and clothes and celebrity gossip, when all they want is an ould song from Johnny McEvoy.Lynch, Declan "
Wee is a synonym of ould.
As a noun wee
is .As an adjective ould is
(slang|ireland) old, aged, long-established.wee
English
(wikipedia wee)Etymology 1
From (etyl) (15c).Adjective
(er)- I had not seen a wee' boy do it like that before. He was ' weer than me and his swimming was just like splashing about.
- You looked a little cold so I lit a wee fire.
References
* Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary: Tenth Edition (1997)Etymology 2
UnknownNoun
(-)- to have a wee
Synonyms
* wee wee * See also * See alsoVerb
Synonyms
* See alsoould
English
Alternative forms
* auld, oul'Adjective
(er)The Ould Lammas Fairfrom irishcultureandcustoms.com
The Irish in America, CHAPTER XVI....concluded(1868)
The Nowlans , Vol. 1, Chap. 3(1825)
Why those poor ould fellas deserved to have their say" Sunday Independent (October 14 2007)
