English edit

Etymology edit

slide +‎ butt (cart)

Noun edit

slide-butt (plural slide-butts)

  1. (West Country, obsolete) A horse- or ox-drawn cart, with runners instead of wheels, used for carrying dung.
    • 1817, Charles Sandoe Gilbert, An Historical Survey of the County of Cornwall[1], page 352:
      The slide-butt is a strong, oblong box, sufficiently capacious to hold three or four common wheel-barrows of earth or compost; it is shod with thing rough pieces of timber, and is convenient of spreading dressing over field, in small heaps. Two oxen, or one horse are employed to draw it.
    • 1827, Alexander Jamieson, A Dictionary of Mechanical Science, Arts, Manufactures and Miscellaneous Knowledge[2], page 943:
      SLIDE-BUTT, in Agriculture, a sort of sledge in the form of a strong oblong box, shod underneath with thick pieces of timber. It is chiefly used for drawing manure from place to place, but chiefly in fields. It will contain about three wheel-barrows' full. Sometimes the butt has wheels, and when this is the case it is called a gurry.

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