utchy
English
    
    Etymology 1
    
A modification of utch, ich, iche, from Middle English ich (“I”, pronoun),[1] from Old English iċ, iċċ (“I”, pronoun), from Proto-Germanic *ik, *ek (“I”, pronoun), from Proto-Indo-European *éǵh₂ (“I”). Doublet of che. Recorded in use in the area around Yeovil in southern Somerset.[2]
Alternative forms
    
Pronunciation
    
- IPA(key): /ˈʌt͡ʃɪ/[2]
Pronoun
    
utchy
- (West Country, Somerset, obsolete, personal) I[3]
- What shall utchy do?
 -  1869, James Jennings, The Dialect of the West of England: Particularly Somersetshire, page 69:- [It is, manifestly, a corrupt pronunciation of Ich, or Ichè, pronounced as two syllables, the Anglo-Saxon word for I. What shall utchy do? What shall I do. I think Chaucer sometimes uses iche as a dissyllable; […] ]
 
-  1916, John Read, Latter-Lammas:- [page 11:] As valled out, utchy come across en out to Clinkerbell Barn […]
 [page 63:] Let utchy bide, cassen!
 [page 81:] Only let en lay 's han' 'pon u t c h y! 'Ch'ill zmoor en doown! 'Ch'ill gie en the backzwrd cut!
 
 
Etymology 2
    
Unknown.[4]
References
    
- Jennings, James Knight (1869), “I, Ic, Ich, Iche, Utchy, Ise, C', Ch', Che, Ch'am, Ch'ud, Ch'll”, in The Dialect of the West of England, 2nd edition, London: John Russell Smith, pages 150–155
- Ellis, Alexander John (1889), “The Land of Utch for I, Sm.”, in On Early English Pronunciation, volume 5, London: Trübner & Co, page 1516
- William Holloway (1840) A General Dictionary of Provincialisms, page 181
-  “utchy, adj.”, in OED Online  , Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, June 2018. , Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, June 2018.
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