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As a verb it is still used in dialect to mean ‘to work purposefully’, and it is commonly employed in the admonition ‘frame thissen’.
places Sessay
dates 1797

The usual explanation is that a ‘frank’ was a stall or sty in which hogs could be fattened.
places Whitby Abbey
dates 1394-1395

Possibly anger.
places Thurlstone
dates 1647

Of uncertain meaning but possibly for 'fratched'.
dates 1539

The verb to fratch was in frequent use until recently, in the sense of to quarrel.
dates 1675 1714

The noun ‘fraught’ was originally the sum of money paid for the hire of a vessel to carry freight.
places Beverley
dates 1359

Used to describe horses which had distinguishing marks, probably streaks or patches.
dates 1539 1546 1559 1564 1631

A freedom or privilege.
dates 1510 1609 1617 1619 1649

spellings widow
Among the records of the city of York are registers dating from 1272 of the 'freeman', that is men who had acquired the right or franchise to trade in the city. It should be noted that a widow 'inherited' her husband's franchise and lost it only if she remarried.
places York
dates 1529

spellings fire-stone
Fine-grained stone that can be worked easily by the masons.
places York Beverley Hull
dates 1367 1399 1409 1415 1453

A rare verb, explained by one editor as the process of whitening and bleaching leather, and by another as a currier’s word, used when a pelt is split and the layer of fat between the flesh and the grain removed.
places York
dates 1425 1472

A sudden flow of water in a river; a flood.
places Addingham
dates 1710

An iron hoop, said to fit round the nave of a wheel.
dates 1560 1613 1619 1639

spellings friezed friezer friezing board friezing mill
The noun describes a type of coarse woollen cloth with the nap raised on one side.
dates 1429 1485 1526 1536 1578 1615 1622 1755-1756 1758 1758-1762

Tools used in the cloth finishing process, to soften and smooth the surface of the cloth.
places Leeds
dates 1576

Oats from Friesland which produced better yields than common oats (CA161n).
dates 1740 1785 1829

fro

An alternative of ‘from’.
dates 1463 1558 1608

spellings frog pot
An earthernware vessel with a frog in the bottom, especially a drinking pot in the West Riding.
places York
dates 1391 1507

Possibly decorative andirons.
places Doncaster
dates 1674

spellings frontstead
These words appear to share the same meaning and to refer to a small piece of ground, either the site of a former dwelling, or land attached to the front of a dwelling, a garden.
dates 1582-1588 1688 1689 1742

spellings frontlet
A band worn round the forehead, usually for ornament.
places York Dewsbury
dates 1396 1509

A canker or sore in the mouth of a hawk.
places Brandsby
dates 1617

spellings fraward
Of a person, perverse, difficult to deal with.
dates 1316 1333 1540 1648

A dish of hulled wheat boiled in milk and seasoned with cinnamon, sugar, treacle or the like (OED).
places Skipton Bradley
dates 1526 1698

spellings frondle fryndill frandall
A dry measure, used typically of grain, peas, etc.
dates 1412 1570 1572 1579 1642

To strike violently, so as to bruise or crush.
places Egton
dates 1521

Of uncertain origin, used in Yorkshire in association with velvet.
dates 1568 1570

In physical descriptions it was derogatory, indicating overfed, surfeited.
places Tickhill
dates 1674

spellings fulture
Rubbish; later, associated closely with manure.
dates 1570 1572 1685

Probably a pan in which something aromatic would be burnt, an abbreviation of ‘perfuming pan’.
dates 1565 1591

fun

The noun has not been found earlier than a.1700, when it was used of a hoax or practical joke, although not long afterwards it referred to the amusement or pleasure caused by such diversions.
places Bingley
dates 1658

To bury with funeral rites.
places Finghall Scruton
dates 1548 1566

A metal pot in which items could be boiled or heated, probably one that could be set in a stone or brick structure.
places Bretton
dates 1675

spellings forderly
Favourable or advantageous, although here perhaps 'sharing the same benefits'.
places Micklefield
dates 1554

A saddle-tree maker.
places York Kippax
dates 1277-1278 1487-1488

Originally a kind of coarse cloth, made of cotton and flax. It is thought to take its name from a suburb of Cairo named Fostat.
dates 1399-1400 1439 1454 1485 1504 1527 1535 1556 1568

spellings fustian naples
A material made in Naples, presumably a type of fustian originally but noted in 1465 and defined as a kind of cotton velvet (OED).
places Howden
dates 1478 1563-1565

The name of two kinds of wood, both used for dying yellow. It occasionally referred to the dye itself.
dates 1668 1760 1813

Probably for ‘filbert’.
places Woodsome
dates 1570

A loose upper garment of coarse material, a mantle worn by either sex.
dates 1528 1535 1546 1556 1573

spellings gaffelage gavelage husgable
This traditional tax on houses in Scarborough suggests that ‘gabelle’ meaning tax may have been confused with ‘gable’ as part of the house.
places Scarborough York
dates 1155-1163 1250 1307 1311 1357 1407 1450 1546 1601-1602 1697

gad

The ‘gad’ was originally an iron spike or bar and both meanings are on record from the early thirteenth century (OED).
dates 1311 1510 1581 1600-1658 1609 1658 1693 1701

A word for jet, on record from the Old English period (OED).
dates 1395-1396 1436 1447 1500

A variant spelling of ‘gauge’, used as a measure for stone roofing slates.
dates 1685 1687

In the mining industries the meaning may have been similar to that of ‘to win’.
places Colsterdale
dates 1694

Commonly used in connection with routes between two places, meaning ‘short’ or ‘convenient’.
dates 1616 1683 1778

spellings golosh galosh
Spellings of ‘galosh’ which in early references was a wooden shoe or sandal fastened to the foot with thongs of leather (OED).
dates 1424 1621 1653

spellings gaud (1) gauld
A rate or tax.
dates 1587 1597 1638 1674 1695

The bog myrtle.
places York Hatfield
dates 1529 1687

A narrow lane, particularly common in York in the centuries immediately after the Conquest, especially as a street-name suffix.
dates 1288 1353 1387 1529 1585 1661

The aromatic root of certain East Indian plants, formerly used in medicine and cookery.
places Whitby
dates 1395-1396

A rare word, listed by Halliwell as ‘galcar’ meaning an ale-tub.
dates 1611 1614 1636 1639 1700 1775

Photo by Kreuzschnabel CC BY-SA 3.0