释义 |
▪ I. yale1|jeɪl| Also 5 gaill, gale, 6 jall, 7 yeale. [ad. L. ealē (Pliny Nat. Hist.).] A fabulous beast with horns and tusks, perhaps the two-horned rhinoceros; used Her. (see quot. 1910).
c1425Wyntoun Cron. i. ix. 754 In to þat lande [sc. India] þai say sulde be Ane oþer best, callyt Eale [v.r. Ane oþir beist is callit Gaill Into þat land forouttin faill], Þat is lik al til a hors..And has a gret tusk as a bare..And in his hewide ar hornys twa. 1536in Archaeologia (1910) LXII. 311 Paid to Ric. Rydge..for lyke cuttyng carvyng..and makyng of..and jall and Iunecorne a dragon, a lyan a greyhonde [etc.] [1601Holland Pliny viii. xxi. I. 206.] a1660Contemp. Hist. Irel. (Ir. Archæol. Soc.) I. 264 The Ethiopian yeale hath two hornes of a cubit longe. 1910Archaeologia 313 The jall or yale..is a rare and strange animal partaking of the nature of the heraldic antelope, that is to say, wearing horns and a large pair of projecting tusks:..and he is silver bezanty, that is, white with yellow spots. He is one of the supporters of the Dukes of Somerset. Ibid. 314 note, The yale occurs as one of the supporters of the arms of the Lady Margaret Beaufort, mother of King Henry VII. ▪ II. yale, yall obs. forms of ale, yawl. |