释义 |
wainage Hist.|ˈweɪnɪdʒ| Also 6 waynage. [ad. Anglo-L. wainnagium: see gainage.] 1. = gainage 3 (q.v. with regard to erroneous interpretations).
c1500tr. Gt. Charter in Arnolde's Chron. (1811) 217 A villayne other than ours the same wise shalbe amercyed, sauyng his waynage yf he falle into our handis. a1632Coke Inst. ii. xiv. (1642) 28 It was great reason to save his wainage, for otherwise the miserable creature, was to carry it on his back. 1700J. Tyrrell Hist. Eng. II. 814 His Wainage (i.e. his Carts and Implements) to Till his Land. 2. Land under cultivation.
1810G. Chalmers Caledonia II. ii. 134 The waynage, or cultivable lands, and meadows of each district or manor, were possessed, and laboured, in separate portions, by the individuals of the manor. 1875Stubbs Const. Hist. I. xii. 510 That they would..declare how many carucates, or what wainage for ploughs, there were in each township. 1898W. Farrer Cartul. Cockersand Abbey II. i. 362 With acquittance of multure at the grantor's mill of his house and wainage. |