No end in sight for this peedie quest

Sometimes the dialect sends me out on a quest for an answer, and I cant be satisfied before I find out. These quests sometimes take years to solve.

One such quest that Im on at the moment, and cant seem to get to the bottom of, is the word peedie. Its the first Orkney dialect word that we incomers learn (by the way: may I call myself a ferrylouper when Im not from the UK, or does it only apply to British people? I did arrive on the St Sunniva, but had flown in to Aberdeen ...). Once, a journalist from south phoned me up and asked: Is it true that people on Orkney use slang words like peedie instead of little? I explained that it is not slang, it is dialect. People dont say it for effect; its just the normal word. Slang is a set of informal, colloquial words and phrases that are used within particular social groups, and are regarded as a counter-language, used in opposition to mainstream language. Peedie, in Orkney, is part of the mainstream language and part of a geographically determined dialect.

That said, we are very much aware that it distinguishes us as a group. You may not think about it when you are in Orkney, but lets say you went on holiday to Australia and suddenly heard the word peedie there. It would make you jump, wouldnt it, and give you a jolt of homesickness, perhaps. And if someone asked you what the Orkney dialect is like, perhaps you would tell them that we say peedie instead of little. It is one of those high-awareness characteristics, unlike other things that incomers may notice, but Orcadians never think about themselves, such as saying shoe-lacers instead of shoe-laces.

But back to peedie. Where does that word come from? This is still a mystery to me, but I can share what I have discovered so far.

The first place to look is obviously Hugh Marwicks dictionary The Orkney Norn. It says: peedie: adj, small; this is fairly general, but not so often used as the variant peerie. Indeed I have been told by older speakers of Orkney dialect that peerie used to be more common.  So, what does Marwicks dictionary have to say about peerie, then? It says: This is used everywhere in Orkney and always unless one be trying to speak proper. Also in Shetland and some parts of Lowland Scotland. It doesnt say which parts of Lowland Scotland he has in mind, but the Dictionary of the Scots Language () says that it is now current only in Shetland and Orkney.

The etymological origins for peerie seem to be a Scandinavian word referring to either something small, thin, or ailing or a small fish. Hugh Marwick writes that in Norwegian, pir is used of a small object, a tiny creature, and piren, adjective, is used for weakly, ailing, thin (of growth) delicate (not robust). Personally, I have only encountered the word pir meaning a young fish or more specifically a young mackerel.  However, the Norwegian Nynorsk dictionary has the expression pirande liten meaning tiny-little and the verb pire: trickle as in a thin trickle of water or a plant growing up thin and pointy. This last meaning of the word, the dictionary connects with the word spire, which means to germinate. Hugh Marwick also notes pidre-liten and pirande-liten (no doubt two pronunciations of the same word) in the sense of very small.

Amazingly, the Oxford English Dictionary (online) also has an entry for peerie. According to it, peedie  is the unattested Norn reflex of the early Scandinavian word represented by Swedish pirig, Swedish regional pirug poor, meagre, thin (compare also Faroese p穩rin stingy, niggardly, Norwegian (Nynorsk) piren niggardly, scrawny, slight, thin).  The Swedish dictionary Svenska Akademiens Ordbok also has the noun pyre as a small and weak person, or little child, or changeling, or a baby animal. Reading on in the Oxford English Dictionary, it goes on to talk about small fish and young mackerel, and tells us that also West Frisian, Middle Dutch and Middle Low German all have words cognate with pir in the sense of a worm.

Now, this is where my scepticism kicks in. There is a scientific principle which says that simple explanations are preferable to complicated explanations if they have the same explanatory power. Why choose a complicated theory when a simple one will explain the same thing? So in this case: Why go via worms and young fish and thin, stringy, pointy plants and small and ailing people? What the Orkney word peedie or peerie means is neither of these things, but simply small. No undertones of ailing or weak or worm or plant or fish. So if there were a word cognate to peedie or peerie simply meaning small, and nothing else, I would prefer it.

Before I could start looking for that, I had to ask myself: Is peedie and peerie really the same word, or are they two different words? I dont have any proof, but my intuition tells me that they are the same word, because phonetically a d is very close to an r when the r is short and pronounced as a tap. So I gave myself permission to look for words with a d or t in its root, as well as the r words.

And my eyes fell on the French word petit. It simply means little. I dont mean to say that the Orkney word comes from French directly, but that there may be some common ancestor. From what I have been able to find out, the etymology of petit is somewhat debated. There is a Medieval Latin word pitinnus, meaning small, which could be the root of petit. Petit doesnt seem to have any root in Classical Latin, but since Medieval Latin absorbed words from the vernacular languages around it, the word could of course have entered from one of these. This has led some to connect it with a Celtic root pett- (Proto-Celtic ), meaning a part, piece or bit, and can be seen in many Scottish place-names, such as Pitlochry, containing pet or pit in the sense of portion of land. However, the connection with petit is debated. The word piece is related to the Celtic word, though: The Oxford English Dictionary says that piece is cognate with Welsh 梯梗喧堯 in the sense of a thing, affair, matter and Old Irish cuit, meaning a portion or share, and that the suggestion is that the underlying [Medieval] Latin word may have been borrowed from an unattested Gaulish cognate of these [Celtic, Welsh and Old Irish ] words and entered into English via Anglo-Norman. (I have seen this Gaulish word reconstructed as pettia). In English, we also know it in the form petty.  However, this explanation is starting to look just as complicated as the last one, so I am not sure if I have advanced my case.

However, there is another alternative. If you still want a Scandinavian root for peedie, these languages also offer an alternative to the fish-worm-plant-small-ailing theory. In Norwegian, when something is very, very small, you can say that it is bitte-liten or in some dialects pitte-liten. In Swedish, the cognate word is pytte-liten, while the noun pytt or pytte is a small boy or a small grown person. I have unfortunately not succeeded in finding an etymology for these yet. The Norwegian Nynorsk dictionary wants to connect bitte-liten with the word bete, Old Norse biti, which is the same as English bit presumably connected with the word bite: a bit is what you get after performing the act of biting. However, I feel that this explanation doesnt take the p seriously, and since we also find the forms starting with a p in Swedish, the p must not be dismissed as simply a variant of b. I think this line of enquiry may have potential, although I know that the form with r peerie is said by reliable Orcadians to be older than the form with d. I wonder if pitte-liten could also somehow be related to the Medieval Latin pitinnus and to our own peedie? The quest goes on.