释义 |
fetterlock|ˈfɛtəlɒk| Also 5 feter-, -ir-, -yr-, 6 fether-, 7 feawter-, fewter-. [f. fetter n. + lock; in sense 1 a corruption of fetlock.] 1. = fetlock 1. Also used attrib.
1587L. Mascall Govt. Cattle (1627) 135 They clippe away all the hayre sauing the fetherlocke. 1617Markham Caval. ii. 9 His ioyntes beneath his knees great, with long feawter lockes. 1678Lond. Gaz. No. 1338/4 A grey Mare..charm'd upon the 4 fetter-lock joints. 1688R. Holme Armoury ii. 154/1 The Fewter-lock. 1716Lond. Gaz. No. 5470/4 The Fetter-Locks behind bigger than the other. 1841Catlin N. Amer. Ind. (1844) II. xlv. 85 Our horses' feet were sinking at every step above their fetterlocks. b. transf. of a human being.
1664Butler Hud. ii. i. 91 To set at large his Fetter-locks. 2. An apparatus fixed to the foot of a horse, to prevent his running away.
c1440Promp. Parv. 159/1 Fetyrlokke, sera compeditalis. 1530Palsgr. 220/1 Fetterlocke, serrure a goujons. 1610Holland Camden's Brit. i. 510 The forme of the Keepe..built like a fetter-lock. fig.1841James Brigand xxi, Despotic suspicion had not invented the fetter-lock of passports. b. The same represented on a badge, shield, etc. Also a jewel of the same form. It is figured as a cylinder to which a chain or steel band is attached in the form of a D, one end being permanently fixed and the other secured by a lock.
1463Bury Wills (1850) 37 A litil fetirlok of gold with a lace of perle and smal bedys therto of blak. c1465Pol. Rel. & L. Poems (1866) 2 An F. for þe feterlock þat is of grete substance. 1605Camden Rem. (1637) 346 King Edward..bare his white Rose, the fetterlocke before specified. 1646Buck Rich. III, iv. 115 The device was, A Faulcon encompassed with a Fetter-lock. 1820Scott Ivanhoe xxix, A fetterlock, and a shacklebolt on a field-sable. |