Word of the week
Words by month
- Jan 2009
- Dec 2008
- Nov 2008
- Oct 2008
- Sep 2008
- Aug 2008
- Jul 2008
- Jun 2008
- May 2008
- Apr 2008
- Mar 2008
- Feb 2008
- Jan 2008
- Dec 2007
- Nov 2007
- Oct 2007
- Sep 2007
- Aug 2007
- Jul 2007
- Jun 2007
- May 2007
- Apr 2007
- Mar 2007
- Feb 2007
- Jan 2007
- Dec 2006
- Nov 2006
- Oct 2006
- Sep 2006
- Aug 2006
- Jul 2006
- Jun 2006
- May 2006
- Apr 2006
- Mar 2006
- Feb 2006
- Jan 2006
brae n. a hillside, slope, stretch of rising ground, etc.
“brae n. a hillside, slope, stretch of rising ground, etc.”
18th December 2006
Brae is frequently found in Scottish place-names including the numerous Braeheads, Braefields and Braesides dotted across the country. Braes also feature in proverbs and phrases. A failing enterprise may be gaein doon the brae, but set a stout hert tae a stey (steep) brae to face adversity with resolve.
Like many words, brae does not have a completely straightforward etymology. Old English brū 'eyebrow, brow; brow of a hill' and its Old Norse sister-form brį are part of the answer, but Gaelic brąighe 'the upper part of something' has also played a role, particularly in names like the Braes of Angus. The contribution of Gaelic to Scots (and English) is not yet fully appreciated, but advances in lexicography and Celtic scholarship are helping to redress this situation.
Brae appears in Scots texts throughout the Middle Ages, where it often refers to the bank of a river. The "brais of Acherone", the fabled river of the Underworld, feature in Sir David Lyndsay's sixteenth-century poem, The Monarche. An eighteenth century brae could also be an artificial bank built across a river as a salmon trap. Papers from Court of Session records relating to Moray (1733) include the following: "a brae, on the river of Spey, is where the water is ebb, and where they can get a found for a dyke; and as the winter frosts and speats (floods) cut and pot these ebbs, they change the stance of their dyke to another ebb place of the river, which they call a brae".
Brae is also found in one of the lesser-known verses of Auld Lang Syne: "We twa hae run about the braes, And pou'd the gowans fine, But we've wander'd monie a weary fit, Sin auld lang syne". Anyone unsure of their lines can read (and hear) all the verses at www.scotslanguage.com on the new, seasonal pages of the Scots Language Centre's website.



Related Articles on Scots