See also: inglenook and ingle nook

English edit

Noun edit

ingle-nook (plural ingle-nooks)

  1. Alternative form of inglenook
    • 1799, Robert Fergusson, “An Eclogue. []”, in The Poetical Works of R. Fergusson, Paisley, Renfrewshire: R. Smith, [], →OCLC, page 80:
      The ingle-nook ſupplies the ſimmer-fields, / An' aft as mony gleefu' maments yields.
    • 1813, George Steuart Mackenzie, “Political Economy”, in General View of the Agriculture of the Counties of Ross and Cromarty. [], London: [] Sherwood, Neely, and Jones, [], →OCLC, section 8 (Healthiness of the Country, Mode of Living, &c.), pages 326–327:
      Could we find a Hamilton to write a tale in Gaelic, for the ingle-nooks of our cottagers, we might expect a speedy reform. The Highlanders are fond of tales, and there does not seem to be a better method of pointing out to them the advantages of activity and cleanliness, than dispersing among them a few stories drawn up with ability.
    • 1815 December 1, [Walter Scott; James Hogg], “The Lifting of the Banner”, in The Ettricke Garland; being Two Excellent New Songs on the Lifting of the Banner of the House of Buccleuch, at the Great Foot-ball Match on Carterhaugh, Dec. 4, 1815, Edinburgh: [] James Ballantyne and Co., →OCLC, page 5:
      May the Forest still flourish, both Borough and Landward, / From the hall of the Peer to the herd's ingle-nook; / And huzza! my brave hearts, for Buccleuch and his standard, / For the King and the Country, the Clan and the Duke.
    • 1957, Gerald Brenan, “The High Mountains and Guadix”, in South from Granada, 1st paperback edition, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire: Cambridge University Press, published 1980, →ISBN, page 153:
      Seated in my barber's chair in the ingle-nook, with a book and a cup of coffee on the table in front of me, I would hear coming down the chimney, as though the village was situated on an island in the sky, a succession of slow, somnolent sounds: [...]