释义 |
ˈpanton Sc. (Now local.) Also 5–6 pantoun(e, 9 Shetland -in. [Origin unknown. App. related in some way to pantofle.] 1. A slipper; = pantofle.
1489Acc. Ld. High Treas. Scot. I. 111 For xxxti payre of schone and xxxti paire of pantonis to my Lorde of Ross. 1500–20Dunbar Poems liii. 27 He trippet, quhill he tint his pantoun. 1585Jas. I Ess. Poesie (Arb.) 55 The counsale quhilk Apelles gaue to the shoomaker..seing him find falt with the shankis of the Image of Venus, efter that he had found falt with the pantoun, Ne sutor vltra crepidam. 1615Rec. Sterling Council in Trans. Nat. Hist. & Arch. Soc. Sterling (1902) 62 Buitts, schone, pantones and pickedaillis. 1692Sc. Presb. Eloq. (1738) 142 That all the Kings in the World may..kiss his Soles, not the Popes Soles, &c., no nor his stinking Panton neither. [1897Shetland News 15 May (E.D.D.) What..is tempid dee ta come butt..'ithoot dee pantins?] attrib.1618Lithgow Pilgr. Farewell C iij b, The Papall Panton heele. 1641Sc. Acts Chas. I (1817) V. 541 In name and behalff of..wrichtis, Couperis..panton heil makeris. †2. Comb.: panton-shoe (Farriery), a horseshoe having the sponges thick inside sloping to a thin outer edge, as a remedy for narrow or contracted heels; also called pantofle-shoe. Obs.
1696Hope tr. Solleysel's Parfait Mareschal i. xl. 130 For those horses which are hoof-bound..you must have Panton shoes. 1727Bailey vol. II, Panton-Shoe, a Shoe contrived for recovering narrow and Hoof-bound Heels in Horses. 1753Chambers Cycl. Supp., Panton-shoe, in the manege. |