释义 |
▪ I. pinnock1 Now local.|ˈpɪnək| Forms: 3 pynnuc, pinnuc, 5 pynok, 6 pynnock, 6–7 pinnocke, 8– pinnock. [prob. echoic, from the bird's note; but the ending simulates -ock, dim. suffix.] A name for the hedge-sparrow or dunnock; also for the blue titmouse, and, locally, for some other birds: cf. dunnock, and Pinnick2 in Eng. Dial. Dict.
a1250Owl & Night. 1130 Pynnuc [v.r. pinnuc] goldfynch rok ne crowe Ne dar neuer cumen ihende. 14..Metr. Voc. in Wr.-Wülcker 625/3 Lirifa, pynok. 1570Levins Manip. 158/46 A Pinnocke, hedge sparrow. 1706Phillips, Pinnock, a sort of Bird. 1833G. Montagu's Ornith. Dict., Pinnock, a name for the Tomtit. 1885Swainson Prov. Names Brit. Birds 29 Hedge Sparrow (Accentor modularis)... From its short piping note it is called Titlene (North), Pinnock. ▪ II. pinnock2 local. Also pennock, pinnold. [Derivation unascertained; the ending seems to be -ock, dim suffix.] A small bridge over a ditch or runnel; a brick or wooden drain under a road or across a gateway, a culvert; also, a structure composed of three boards in which a hare when hard-pressed in coursing can take refuge as in a small drain or culvert: used in Romney Marshes.
1838Holloway Dict. Provincialisms, Pinnold, a small bridge. Sussex. 1846Worcester, Pinnock..a tunnel under a road to carry off the water; a culvert..(Local, Eng.). 1847–78Halliwell, Pennock, a little bridge over a water⁓course. Sussex. 1875Sussex Gloss., Pennock, a little bridge over a water course; a brick or wooden tunnel under a road to carry off the water. 1887Kent. Gloss., Pinnock, a wooden drain through a gateway. ▪ III. pinnock3 local. [Origin obscure. Cf. pinny a.] In Kent, a name for a particular kind of land: see quot. Hence ˈpinnocky a.
1796J. Boys Agric. Kent 78 Pinnock..is a sticky red clay, mixed with small stones, but although it is deemed poor for cultivation of grain, &c. yet it produces very fine chestnut wood; and filberts likewise grow well upon it. 1881Whitehead Hops 52 The planter notices..a small patch of yellowing plants in pinnocky or unkindly soil. |