Scottish word of the week: Bawbee
It has alternatively been used to describe a fortune (Sir Alexander Boswell’s Jennie’s Bawbee), and as a selling point for someone of modest means (‘bawbee baps’ are cheap rolls in Aberdeen).
Coulter’s Candy, an old Scottish folk song, refers to a bawbee in its more ordinary form:
“Ally bally, ally bally bee,
“Sittin’ on yer mammy’s knee,
“Greetin’ for a wee bawbee,
“Tae buy mair Coulter’s candy”
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Hide AdIt also makes a titular appearance on Kenneth McKellar & Morag MacKay’s traditional ballad, The Crookit Bawbee.
The bawbee, introduced by James V in 1538, also came in smaller denominations - the half bawbee and the quarter bawbee.