rickle

Etymology
From, from with the Scots suffix.

Noun

 * 1)  A loose, disordered collection of things; a heap; a jumble.
 * 2)  A small rick of grain.
 * 3)  A dilapidated or ramshackle building.
 * 4) * 1844, Jane Welsh Carlyle, letter to Thomas Carlyle dated 28 June 1844, re-printed in New Letters and Memorials of Jane Welsh Carlyle (ed. Alexander Carlyle), John Lane (1903), pages 136-137:
 * We came home by a place called Speke Hall — built 1589 — the queerest-looking old rickle of boards that I ever set eyes on;
 * 1)  Any object in poor condition, particularly a vehicle.
 * 2)  An emaciated person or animal.
 * 1)  An emaciated person or animal.
 * 1)  An emaciated person or animal.

Noun

 * 1) A rickle (a heap, a jumble).
 * 2) * 1831, Sir Walter Scott, The Antiquary, Baudry's Foreign Library (1831), page 109:
 * "sco"

- Rab Tull keepit a highland heart, and bang'd out o' bed, and till some of his readiest claes — and he did follow the thing up stairs and down stairs to the place we ca' the high dow-cot, (a sort of little tower in the corner of the auld house, where there was a rickle o' useless boxes and trunks,) and there the ghaist gae Rab a kick wi' the tae foot,


 * 1) A rickle (a ramshackle building).
 * 2) A rickle (any object in poor condition).
 * 1) A rickle (any object in poor condition).