dottle
English
    
    
Etymology 1
    
From Middle English dottel, dottelle (“a plug or tap of a vessel”), a diminutive of Old English dott (> English dot (“a point”)), equivalent to dot + -le. Related to Old English dyttan (“to stop up, clot”), Dutch dot (“a knot, lump, clod”), Low German Dutte (“a plug”). More at dit.
Alternative forms
    
Noun
    
dottle (plural dottles)
- A plug or tap of a vessel.
- A small rounded lump or mass.
- The still burning or wholly burnt tobacco plug in a pipe.
- 1892, Richard Oliver Heslop, Northumberland Words. English Dialect Society - Kegan Paul et al.
- In refilling a pipe, where twist is smoked, a common practice is to save the dottle and put it on the top of the new-filled pipe. "Aw like a baccy dottle to leet wiv."
 
- 1957, Lawrence Durrell, Justine, Faber, page 96:- one hand guards the burning dottle of my pipe from the force of the wind
 
- 1981, John Gardner, Freddy's Book, Abacus, published 1982, page 38:- I clenched my pipe in my right fist and poked at the dottle busily with various fingers, first one then another, of my left hand.
 
- 1984, Alan Dean Foster, The Hour of the Gate, page 89:- He tapped out the dottle on the deck, locked the steering oar in position, and commenced repacking his pipe.
 
- 2010, Stephen Fry, The Fry Chronicles:- I fiddle and scrape and poke for a while, banging out the dottle from my previous pipeful into an ashtray and puffing down the stem like a horn player warming up his trumpet.
 
 
- 1892, Richard Oliver Heslop, Northumberland Words. English Dialect Society - Kegan Paul et al.
- (Geordie) A baby's dummy, pacifier.
Translations
    
still burning or wholly burnt tobacco plug in a pipe
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References
    
- Newcastle 1970s, Scott Dobson and Dick Irwin,
- Frank Graham (1987) The New Geordie Dictionary, →ISBN
- Northumberland Words, English Dialect Society, R. Oliver Heslop, 1893–4
Adjective
    
Synonyms
    
- dodipole, dotel; see also Thesaurus:dotard
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