释义 |
finned|fɪnd| [f. fin n.1 + -ed2.] Having a fin or fins (see senses of fin n.1). Also in parasynthetic derivatives, as prickly-finned, red-finned.
1340–70Alex. & Dind. 298 Of þe finnede fihcs our fode to lacche. 1611Cotgr., Perche de mer, a wholesome, rough⁓find..rocke-fish. 1707Mortimer Husb. 61 They..plough up the Turf with a broad finned Plough. 1774Goldsm. Nat. Hist. (1776) VI. 303 The fish that have bony prickly fins, are called Prickly Finned Fish. 1785Grose Dict. Vulgar Tongue s.v. Fin, A one finned fellow, a man who has lost an arm. 1864Boutell Heraldry Hist. & Pop. xxi. §ii. (ed. 3) 369 Dolphins..finned and ducally crowned or. 1868Morris Earthly Par. I. 313 Seeing The red-finned fishes o'er the gravel play. 1938Archit. Rev. LXXXIII. 32 ‘Finned’ pipes have been carried under the clerestorey behind a splayed capping on top of the upper stacks as a precaution against down draught. 1958Times Rev. Industry Feb. 68/2 The liquified ammonia..enters another system of finned tubes. 1970Cryogenics X. 239 (heading) A new form of finned-tube heat exchanger. |