SCAB, SCABBED, SCABBY
ADJECTIVES
1400 — CRUSTOUS of the nature of a scab or crust → obs.
1641 — SCALD scabbed, scurfy, affected with eczema or ringworm → Sc. & Eng. dial.
1684 — REEFY scabby, itching → Sc. & Eng. dial.
1824 — SCABBERT scabbed, bare → Sc.
..20C — GALE covered in scabs, itching, suffering from scabies, eczema, or some other skin disease → W. Indies sl.
NOUNS
1677 — SCALL a scab, a blister; a skin sore → Sc. & Eng. dial.
1892 — HATTEREL — HITTERIL a collection of sores in any part of the body; a series of scabs running into one another → Sc. & Eng. dial.
1898 — ATTER a scab, a dry sore → Eng. dial. (Bk.)
1898 — BILDER a scab → Sc. (Bk.)
1920 — SANDY MACNAB — SANDY MCNAB a scab → Aust. rhyming sl.
NOUNS, PERSON
1440 — SCABBARD a ‘scabbed’ person; a dirty, mangy, scabby person → obs.
1880 — SCALL a mean, scabby fellow → Eng. dial. (Bk.)