Jut
Source : Wright, Joseph English Dialect Dictionary web : https://eddonline4-proj.uibk.ac.at/edd/main.html
JUT, sb. Sc. Lin. An abutment, protuberance; a support in the roof of a building. Ayr. Hanging with threatening jut, like precipices, Burns Brigs of Ayr, l. 132. Gall. The snow clung to every joint, jut, stoop, and
step of the house fronts, Crockett Moss-Hags (1895) xiv. n.Lin.1
JUT, v. Yks. Not. Lin. [dʒut.] To bump; to jolt. w.Yks. ‘Jut him,’ means lift him by legs and arms and bump his posterior against wall or posts, Banks Wkfld. Wds. (1865). Not.1 I ‘jut’ mi yead agen th' wall. sw.Lin.1 The waggons did jut us. Hence (1) Jutting, sb. a punishment which schoolboys inflict on each other; see below; (2) Jutty, adj. bumping, jolting. (1) n.Lin.1 Two strong lads take the culprit, the one by the legs the other by the arms, and beat his buttocks against a post or tree.
(2) sw.Lin.1 I never knew such jutty work.
JUT, see Jet, v., Joot.
Source : Century Dictionary web : http://triggs.djvu.org/century-dictionary.com/splash3.html

