Such as "Ivers," appearing in court lists or divorce filings.
Could you provide about where you encountered this phrase? For example, is it from a specific religious text , a childhood rhyme , or a technical manual ? Is I Vers
In the 1823 work Suffolk Words and Phrases , the phrase appears within discussions of local dialects or specific verses. It is often linked to the work of Edward Moor, who collected "lingual localisms" and used similar phrasing to categorize regional rhymes or sayings. 2. Archival Newspaper Records Such as "Ivers," appearing in court lists or divorce filings
The phrase "Is I Vers" frequently appears in digitized historical newspaper archives (e.g., The New Albany Weekly Tribune , 1904) as an OCR (Optical Character Recognition) error. In these cases, it is often a misreading of: In the 1823 work Suffolk Words and Phrases
If you are looking for a that begins with these words, it may be a phonetic transcription of a non-English dialect or a specific regional folk rhyme.