释义 |
▪ I. † panade1 Obs. rare. [app. related in its radical part to OF. pann-, pan-, penart, penard ‘cutlass, a kind of large two-edged knife, poniard’ (Godef.), med.L. penardus (Du Cange), but the suffix is different. Cf. also med.L. pennatus a kind of sword (Du Cange), It. pennato ‘a kind of cutting-hooke that gardiners vse’ (Florio); also (for the radical part) L. bipennis a two-edged axe.] A kind of large knife.
[13..Annales Paulini an. 1330 in Chron. Edw. I & II (Rolls) I. 350 Quando episcopus erat moriturus clamavit et præcepit ‘Occide, occide’; et ad hoc tradidit suum panade, unde caput episcopi fuerat abscisum. 1883Stubbs ibid. II. p. xcix, [Bishop Stapleton was] stripped and beheaded with a panade or butcher's knife, which one of the bystanders offered. ]c1386Chaucer Reeve's T. 9 And by his belt he baar a long panade [mispr. by Thynne pauade]. Ibid. 40 Wiþ panade and wiþ knyf or boydekyn. ▪ II. panade2|pəˈneɪd| [a. F. panade.] = panada.
1598Florio, Panadella, Panadina, a little messe of Panad. 1603Holland Plutarch's Mor. 714 They give pappes and panades unto their little babes. 1655J. Phillips Sat. agst. Hypocr. (1674) 14 It was no Christmas-dish with Pruens made, Nor White-broath, nor Capon-broth, nor sweet ponade. 1892W. B. Scott Autobiog. Notes I. 127 His [Leigh Hunt's] own food seemed to be panade. |