Gubbins.
fragments of wood, lumps of iron ore, wild folk of Dartmoor, country fellows, a bit of Cheshire (A UK county)
take your pick. in more modern usage it is a collective noun usually applied to mechanisms when a detailed description is not required, such as 'the bonnet covers the gubbins'. which, for US listeners, would translate into 'the engine is under the hood' - interesting that we refer to the engine cover of a car as a 'bonnet' where you would say 'hood' - both articles of female head coverings.
Jim. fascinated by dialects and accents.
The EDD (English Dialect Dictionary, 1894) gives
1. GUBBINS, sb. pl. Dev. [girbinz.] A nickname given
to the natives of Dartmoor.
Dev. Horae Subsecivae (1777) 193; They still have the reputation
of having been a wild and almost savage race, Bray Desc. Tamar
and the Tavy (1836) I. Lett. xiv; The race of ‘Gubbins,’ as old
Fuller calls them, may die out, Cornh. Mag. (Nov. 1887) 508.
2. GOBBIN, sb.2 and adj. n.Cy. Lan. Chs. Der. Suf. Also
in forms goblin Chs.1; gubbins e.Suf. [go·bin.] 1. sb.
An ignorant or clownish person; a country fellow.
n.Cy. Grose (1790). Lan. Th' gobbin nere consithert at hangin
wudno be coed good spwort, Tim Bobbin View Dial. (1740) 38;
But when the singing started I stood just like o gobbin, Gaskel
Comic Sngs. (1841) 26; Lan.1, m.Lan.1, nw.Der.1, e.Suf. (F.H.)
Hence Gobbinshire, sb. an old name for a portion of
West Cheshire; see below.
Chs.1 Gobbinshire seems to have included Saughall, Shotwick,
Ness, Neston, and the hamlets on the north shore of the Dee to
the borders, perhaps, of Backford. It has been suggested that
the name means Gawbyshire, because forty or fifty years ago the
residents there were out of the ordinary run of mortals, and the
lubberly boys and girls who came from those places to Chester at
Christmas for their annual hiring used to be called, and in fact
were, ‘country gawbies.’ s.Chs.1 This word only survives in
s.Chs. in the following rhyme: ‘Gob·inshŭr, Gob·inshŭr, frŭm
Gob·inshŭr Greyn, Dhŭ rongk·ist uwd beg·ŭr ŭz ev·ŭr wŭz seyn’
[Gobbinshire, Gobbinshire, from Gobbinshire Green, The ronkest
owd beggar as ever was seen].
2. A spoilt child. Der.2, nw.Der.1 3. adj. Uncouth,
lubberly. Chs.1
3
GUBBIN(G)S, sb. pl. Shr. Suf. Dev. [gɐ·binz.]
1. The shavings of fish; offal, refuse.
Dev. D. & G. Wds. (1893) (s.v. Gubbarn). n.Dev. We call the
shavings of fish (which are little worth) gubbings, Kingsley Westward
Ho (1855) 112, ed. 1889.
2. Fragments of wood. e.Suf. (F.H.)
3. Lumps of iron ore.
Shr. ‘Newmine, gubbins, blue-flats, and black-jacks.’ All local
names for lumps of iron ore, White Wrekin (1860) xxvi.
[1. Gubbings, Opsoniorum praesegmina, Coles (1679).]