释义 |
▪ I. cockled, a.|ˈkɒk(ə)ld| [f. cockle n.2] 1. Furnished with a shell.
1588Shakes. L.L.L. iv. iii. 338 More soft and sensible, Then are the tender hornes of Cockled Snayles. 2. Made ill by eating cockles. colloq. ▪ II. cockled, ppl. a.|ˈkɒk(ə)ld| [f. cockle v.1 + -ed1.] Bulged or puckered into ‘cockles’.
1714Gay Trivia i. 46 And show'rs soon drench the Camlet's cockled Grain. 1857Fraser's Mag. LVI. 608 The smooth crisp curves..become cockled, flatted, and destroyed. 1883Almondbury & Huddersf. Gloss., Cockled, said of worsted cloth which has gone into lumps. |