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butty
1or but·tie
[ buht-ee ]
butty
2or but·tie
[ buht-ee ]
noun
, British Dialect.
, plural but·ties.
- a fellow worker or friend, especially in a coal mine.
butty
1/ ˈbʌtɪ /
noun
- dialect.(esp in mining parlance) a friend or workmate
butty
2/ ˈbʌtɪ /
noun
- dialect.a sandwich
a jam butty
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Word History and Origins
Origin of butty2
First recorded in 1780–90; origin obscure
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Word History and Origins
Origin of butty1
C19: perhaps from obsolete booty sharing, from boot ², later applied to a middleman in a mine
Origin of butty2
C19: from buttered ( bread )
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Example Sentences
He said when he told his wife she replied: "We'll go and have a bacon butty with that."
From BBC
The inquest jury was told that on the day of her death, Mrs Thain had started choking on a chip butty.
From BBC
But to pass the true cost of their bills on to customers, they would have to charge £12 for a bacon butty, the owner said.
From BBC
Ireland’s crisp/chip butty: Serve Irish potato crisps or chips between two slices of buttered white bread.
From BBC
And "in some regions, it's called a butty."
From Salon
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