释义 |
▪ I. coff obs. form of corf, basket. ▪ II. coff, v. Sc. arch.|kɒf| Pa. tense and pple. coft; also 9 caft. [orig. found only in pa. pple. and pa. tense coft, prob. a. MDu. coft, cofte (still dial. beside later kocht), pa. pple. of côpen to buy and sell, deal, trade (according to the general Teutonic phonetic law which excluded pt, kt, cf. OE. sóhte for *sócte.) Hence, at a later date, was formed a present coff: the original present was cope, q.v.] trans. To buy, purchase.
c1425Wyntoun Cron. ix. x. 54 He þat all Man-kynd coft fra care. 1535Stewart Cron. Scot. II. 583 To thame that banquet had bene ouir deir coft. 1596Dalrymple tr. Leslie's Hist. Scot. (1885) 63 A hundir egs..war cofte for a frenche sous. 1774C. Keith Farmer's Ha' xxviii, A the lasses loup..'Cause lads for them coff broach sae bright. 1790Burns Tam o' Shanter 176 That sark she coft for her wee Nannie. 1807Tannahill Poems 124 His master caft him frae some fallows. 1868G. Macdonald R. Falconer I. 280, ‘I cam to coff twine for the draigon’. †b. To acquire, get (otherwise than by buying). Obs. ‘Used improperly’ (Jam.).
1559Mirr. Mag., Dk. Clarence xlix, Richard should beside the crowne have coft. a1586Sir R. Maitland in Edin. Mag. & Rev. (1810) Sept. 327 (Jam.) Mr. David Seton..mareit all his eldest brother dochters upon landit men..and coft ladies of heretage to his brother sones. |