A fork of Rural Dictionary
Little used Northern England slang for "see thee," meaning "see you"
"Oreet Ben. How are you today?" "Can't talk, I'm afraid. I have to run." "OK, sithy later."
Sithis (also known as Padomay) is a deity, representative of emptiness and the void. He is worshipped by the Dark Brotherhood. Used to represent him symbolically is a skull, as nothing really comes close to representing the true emptiness of the dread father.
"Hmm... That's like telling you about the cold of space, or terror of midnight. Sithis is all those things. He is... the Void."
Sithi is the type of girl to be there for you. she will be the listener of your worries when you have no one to complain. she is shy yet brave when you need her. she is silly but knows when to be wise. if you have a sithi in your life hold on to them tightly because they are the sweetest. Sithi is what you would name a miracle !
i met someone today and sithi would be the perfect name for her. (sithi-someone who's bright as a star , has eyes that are the prettiest and a heart that is the kindest)
1. Lancashire dialect used to wish someone farewell. Abbreviated from "See thee" i.e. "See you (later)". 2. Lancashire term used to draw attention to something (compare with the Welsh "Look you".
"Sithi, ah'm bound for t' be goowin' in a bit. So I'll sithi in t' pub toneet!" From "I bet the Yanks struggle with this one" by A. Northerner.