Scutches vs Scutched - What's the difference?
scutches | scutched |
(scutch)
(obsolete, UK, Scotland, dialect) To beat or whip; to drub.
To separate the woody fibre from (flax, hemp, etc.) by beating; to swingle.
* 2005', John Martin, Warren Leonard, David Stamp, and Richard Waldren, ''Principles of Field Crop Production (4th Edition)'', section 32.10 “Processing Fiber Flax”, the title of subsection 32.10.3 “' Scutching ”.
* 1976 , (Robert Nye), Falstaff :
An implement used to separate the fibres of flax by beating them.
The woody fibre of flax; the refuse of scutched flax.
* Cuthbert Bede
A tuft or clump of grass.
As verbs the difference between scutches and scutched
is that scutches is (scutch) while scutched is (scutch).As a noun scutches
is .scutched
English
Verb
(head)scutch
English
Etymology 1
Perhaps imitative.Verb
(es)- His prey was more often the over-scutched huswives, the threepenny whores with well-whipped backs, both from the beadle and their own hot-blooded clients.
Noun
(es)- The smoke of the burning scutch .