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An iron hook or staple used to secure or support part of a structure.
places Beeston
sources Denison papers
dates 1755

Applied to animals that were not slaughtered but kept through the winter as breeding stock.
dates 1462 1580 1591 1612 1658 1683

A culvert, noted in Yorkshire by Wright (EDD).
places Bridlington
dates 1815

A number of minor place-names have ‘hole’ as a first element, especially those which describe ditches and water-courses.
dates 1423 1664 1695

As a verb this word was used in coal-mining when holes were cut through from one board to another or through pillars of coal in order to help air circulate.
dates 1574 1716 1719 1753

A linen fabric which owes its name to Holland when it was a province in the Netherlands.
dates 1423 1463 1465 1537 1566 1568 1667

A regional word for the holly.
dates 1316 1518 1526 1574 1592

This refers to holly branches blown down by the wind. They could be used as animal fodder and it was an offence to carry them away from the woods.
places Yeadon
dates 1390

In coal-mining contexts this verb had the same meaning as ‘to hole’.
places Colsterdale
dates 1707 1713 1815

Used of metal products such as bowls and pots, contrasted with flat-ware, that is plates, dishes and the like.
places York Beverley
dates 1416 1430 1444

A piece of land by a river or stream, often under water in times of flood.
dates 1558 1580 1658 1785 1809

For wholesome, with a sense of morally upright, well-meaning.
places Halifax
dates 1518

A copse or wood, a word rarely found in Yorkshire documents.
dates 1555 1763

The tenants of a manor who owed allegiance as a group to the lord and attended the manor court. The jurors at the court were sometimes called the homagers.
places Dewsbury
dates 1591

The part of a door hinge fixed in the door frame.
places Barnsley
dates 1677

A verb. The only example noted is in a context where ‘hooking’ seems likely to refer to the use of a hooked device, possibly to raise the sluices, or scour the cloughs.
places Bridlington
dates 1543

The piles that were driven into the river bed as part of bridge foundations could have an iron hoop round the head to keep them from splitting.
places Bolton Bridge
dates 1681

The iron ‘tyre’ on the wheel of a cart or wain.
places Ripley
dates 1578

A large finger ring.

Uncertain meaning, possible moist undrained land.
places Aysgarth
dates 1674-1675

A basket of the kind used for sowing corn.
dates 1317 1574 1628 1639

Either the cone or funnel through which grain passed onto the grindstones, or a basket, especially one used for sowing seed.
dates 1423 1572 1577 1607-1608 1619 1656 1758-1762

A basket, especially a small hand-basket made of straw (OED).
dates 1640 1670 1707

A common by-name, possible related to 'walkers' or fullers.
dates 1234 1236-1238 1301 1379 1383 1443

The hard material of an animal's horn, used in a variety of manufacturing.
places Eshton Sheffield
dates 1656 1719

spellings horner
As a verb, to furnish with horn.
places York
dates 1247-1262 1421

Of uncertain meaning, connected with clothiers' work.
dates 1555 1572 1576 1614 1638

spellings rider
A fault, in a mining context.
dates 1718 1783 1787

Part of a grinding wheel.
dates 1545 1554

A kind of bread, made of beans, bran, etc, as food for horses.
dates 1389-1390 1477 1482 1554 1742

A bridge that a horse could cross, perhaps one in a bridle-way.
dates 1599 1606 1667

A horse dealer.
places Tong
dates 1677

A horse doctor or farrier.
dates 1493 1596 1614

A shoeing smith who also had the care of horses, a horse doctor.
places York Brandsby
dates 1489 1510 1616

spellings horse-shoe nail
A nail of the type used to secure horse-shoes.
dates 1457-1458 1504

In the cutlery trade in Sheffield the horsing was a wooden framework attached to the grindstone, and it was provided with a ‘saddle’ on which the grinder sat while at work.
dates 1717 1739 1755

The plural of hose, an article of clothing which covered the leg and sometimes the foot.
dates 1520 1568 1577

hot

spellings hott muck-hott
When Chaucer and other fourteenth-century writers used this word they were clearly referring to a panier, used for transporting items such as sand, mortar and stone.
dates 1563 1610 1675 1758

According to Wright the east Yorkshire farmer called his better room the ‘house’ (EDD), whereas in parts of the West Riding, in terrace houses as well as those which were detached, the ‘house’ was the main room, the one in regular occupation.
dates 1618 1648 1664

The phrase ‘to go to house with’ meant to take up residence together.

Often a reference to an inn or ale-house, especially in connection with a surname for the landlord or landlady.
places Wakefield
dates 1630

As a verb this was to bring the corn or hay under the protection of a roof, that is into the barn or granary.
places Thurlstone
dates 1648

In Yorkshire inventories ‘hall’ continued to be the word for the main room in important houses well into the late 1600s, but during that same century a number of alternatives were also employed, including the ‘hall house’ and the ‘housestead’, words which are dealt with separately.
dates 1623 1648 1668 1707

spellings housbote
A liberty the tenant had to cut wood on the lord’s estate for building and repairing his house.
dates 1240 1249 1447 1488 1570

The holding and maintaining of a house.
places Selby Drax
dates 1312 1463

A succulent herb with pink flowers and thick stem and leaves.
dates 1819

In the phrase ‘houseling people’, the reference was to those who were of an age to receive the Communion.
places Bridlington
dates 1537

A early plural of house.
places Selby
dates 1533

Possibly an early euphemism for toilet.
places Gomersal
dates 1757

spellings office
A building for some special purpose, not a dwelling-house.
dates 1419 1450-1455 1532 1553 1576 1618

Usually room or accommodation within a house or housebody, associated with access to a fire and lodging.
dates 1588 1621 1639 1717

Less common than ‘house-room’ but with the same meaning.
places Honley
dates 1616

A row or series of houses; house by house.
dates 1675 1705-1708 1896

A piece of land on which a house stands or might be built.
dates 1350 1482 1558 1636 1668

A carpenter who built houses, one accustomed to working great timber.
dates 1557 1573 1578 1590 1601 1639 1661

A Nottinghamshire reference.
dates 1525

The Old Norse haugr, that is a natural hill or an artificial mound, gave rise to numerous minor place-names and it survived in the post-Conquest period as a word for a cairn. These were often boundary markers, probably heaps of stones or cairns.
dates 1250-1251 1332-1333 1383 1637 1707

spellings hole-tree
Timbers used in the construction of water defences.
dates 1318 1377 1399-1400 1403 1483 1520 1543 1612-1616 1613-1614

spellings hullet
Owl or owlet, a frequent element in minor place-names.
places Dalton Adel
dates 1693 1779

Photo by Kreuzschnabel CC BY-SA 3.0