English edit

Etymology edit

From Welsh cwtsh (hug, cuddle; little corner, recess), from Middle English couche. Doublet of couch.

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

cwtch (plural cwtches)

  1. (Wales) A cubbyhole or similar hiding place.
    • 1944, Glyn Jones, “An Afternoon at Ewa Shad's”, in The Water-Music and Other Stories:
      In front of the pavement again stretched a flat patch of rusty ground, a sort of little platform in the side of the hill where the sagging drying-lines stood and a chickens' cwtch built of orange-boxes.
    • 2007 August 20, Mike Buckingham, Western Telegraph:
      "In better times when the coalman called at our home in William Street he heaved the sacks through the front door and put their contents into the ‘cwtch’ under the stairs, a messy business indeed."
  2. (Wales) A hug or cuddle.
    • 2007 November 18, Ieuan Evans, The Telegraph:
      I am expecting the big man to come round the corner and give me a ‘cwtch’ as he has done beside countless rugby fields.
    • 2011 February 17, Rachel Mainwaring, South Wales Echo:
      I don’t mind them coming in for a quick cwtch before trudging back off to their own rooms, as long as no conversation is required and it is literally just a five-minute cuddle.

Translations edit

Verb edit

cwtch (third-person singular simple present cwtches, present participle cwtching, simple past and past participle cwtched)

  1. (Wales) To hug or cuddle.
  2. (Wales) To crouch down.

Synonyms edit

Translations edit

References edit

  • OED 2006