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Mither
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Has anybody ever seen the word "mither" in a dictionary? I haven't, yet it's in common use, at least here in NW England. Maybe the compilers couldn't be ... bothered?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I'm between 2 houses at the moment so I don't have my old New Oxford handy, but I do have the Oxford Illustrated which includes "moither" (Def: worry, perplex, be incoherent or wandering), and the Readers Digest Universal which also includes "moither" (Def: - also moider - to confuse, baffle or bewilder). Intersting, as the common usage up here means to hassle or complain - as in "stop mithering" - or in another sense, to worry (or more specifically not care or be bothered either way) - as in "I'm not mithered".
Both Chambers and The Oxford English Dictionary list 'mither' as a dialectal variation of 'moider', as I suggested above. Chambers offers the following meanings...confuse, stupefy, overcome, pester and hassle. The last two are the commonest usages in Scotland and - judging by comments above - the north of England, too, but I don't believe the lexicographers are biased! After all, they give the whole range of meanings.