Definition of "wynd"
wynd
noun
plural wynds
(chiefly Scotland, Northumbria) A narrow lane, alley or path, especially one between houses.
Quotations
Fortune favoured us, and we got home without meeting a soul. Once we saw a man, who seemed not quite sober, passing along a street in front of us; but we hid in a door till he had disappeared up an opening such as there are here, steep little closes, or wynds, as they call them in Scotland.
1897, Bram Stoker, Dracula, New York, N.Y.: Modern Library
(Ireland, dated) A stack of hay.
Quotations
This was then used as the base for the cocks of hay, or wyndes as we called them. […] A piece of hay with its ends firmly embedded in the base of the wynde was wound around the hay twine and knotted with it. The ball of twine was then thrown across the wynde and tied at the other side in the same way, and this process was repeated crossways.
1988, Alice Taylor, To School Through the Fields: An Irish Country Childhood, Brandon Ltd, pages 80–81