单词 | dug |
释义 | dugn.1 a. The pap or udder of female mammalia; also the teat or nipple; usually in reference to suckling. As applied to a woman's breast, now contemptuous. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > mammals > [noun] > parts of > udder uddera1000 yure1483 dug1530 bag1579 ewer1787 the world > life > the body > external parts of body > trunk > front > breast or breasts (of woman) > [noun] titOE breastOE mammaOE pysea1400 mamellec1450 dug1530 duckya1533 bag1579 pommela1586 mam1611 Milky Way1622 bubby?1660 udder1702 globea1727 fore-buttock1727 tetty1746 breastwork?1760 diddy1788 snows1803 sweets1817 titty1865 pappy1869 Charleys1874 bub1881 breastiec1900 ninny1909 pair1919 boobs1932 boobya1934 fun bag1938 maraca1940 knockers1941 can1946 mammaries1947 bazooms1955 jug1957 melon1957 bosoms1959 Bristols1961 chichi1961 nork1962 puppies1963 rack1968 knob1970 dingleberry1980 jubblies1991 the world > life > the body > external parts of body > trunk > front > breast or breasts (of woman) > [noun] > nipple papc1175 teat?a1200 pap-head?a1425 big?a1439 wartc1440 teat headc1500 nipplec1510 spin1525 dug1530 spean1573 bud1593 milk papa1616 niplet1648 dud1679 mamilla1684 duddlea1708 diddy1788 tittya1825 knob1941 nip1970 1530 J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 280/1 Tete, pappe, or dugge, a womans brest. 1582 R. Stanyhurst tr. Virgil First Foure Bookes Æneis i. 14 Her dug with platted gould rybband girded about her. 1593 W. Shakespeare Venus & Adonis sig. Fiij Like a milch Doe, whose swelling dugs do ake. 1607 E. Topsell Hist. Foure-footed Beastes 671 The number of young pigges..I find to be so many as the Sow hath dugges for. a1628 J. Preston New Covenant (1630) 477 The promises are full of comfort as a dugge is full of milke. 1713 W. Derham Physico-theol. iv. xv. 256 With Duggs and Nipples placed in the most convenient part of the Body of each Animal. 1878 H. M. Stanley Through Dark Continent II. iii. 75 The enormous dugs which hung down from the bosoms of the women. b. transferred and figurative. ΚΠ 1670 S. Wilson Lassels's Voy. Italy (new ed.) i. 131 Lye hidden a while, at the dug of the booke. 1774 O. Goldsmith Hist. Earth VII. 253 Nature has supplied this animal [sc. spider] with..five dugs or teats for spinning it into thread. 1866 B. Taylor Poems Mondamin, The savage dugs of fable. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular fruit-tree or -plant > [noun] > tropical or exotic fruit-tree or -plant > pawpaw tree dug-tree1640 pawpawc1645 papaya tree1704 1640 J. Parkinson Theatrum Botanicum xvii. cxxix. 1649 Manoera mas & femina. The male and female Dugge tree. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1897; most recently modified version published online March 2022). † dugn.2 Obsolete. Angling. A kind of red worm used as a bait. More fully called dug-worm n. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > fishing > fishing-tackle > means of attracting fish > [noun] > bait > worms and grubs angletwitcheOE wormc1320 codwormc1450 redwormc1450 gentle1577 touchangle1581 bob1589 Jack1601 dug1608 codbait1620 caddis-worm1627 caddis1653 cockspur1653 lob-worm1653 marsh worm1653 gilt tail1656 cadew1668 cad1674 ash-grub1676 clap-bait1681 whitebait1681 earth-bob1696 jag-tail1736 buzz1760 treachet1787 angleworm1788 cow-turd-bob1798 palmer bob1814 slob1814 angledog1832 caddis-bait1833 sedge-worm1839 snake feeder1861 hellgrammite1866 easworm1872 cow-dung bob1880 snake doctora1883 1608 E. Topsell Hist. Serpents 307 Some are redde, (which we Englishmen call Duggs). 1653 I. Walton Compl. Angler iv. 93 Others [breed] amongst or of plants, as the dug worm . View more context for this quotation 1674 N. Cox Gentleman's Recreation iv. 280 Baits for the Angler, the Earth-worm, the Dug-worm, the Maggot or Gentle. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1897; most recently modified version published online March 2021). dugadj. 1. Obtained by digging, excavated, thrust into something, etc.: see the verb. ΚΠ 1715 N. Dubois & G. Leoni tr. A. Palladio Architecture I. v. 5 All dug stones are better..than the gather'd ones. 1885 Ld. Tennyson Balin & Balan in Wks. (1894) 374/2 Now with slack rein..Now with dug spur..he rode. 1892 A. E. Lee Hist. Columbus I. 29 Several excavations or ‘dugholes’, from which material..seems to have been taken. 2. dug-in, entrenched; firmly established in a position; (see also quot. 1948). Cf. to dig in at dig v. Phrasal verbs. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > safety > [adjective] > safe or secure > in a secure position dug-in1919 1919 W. H. Downing Digger Dial. 21 Dug in, in a safe or comfortable position. 1944 Times 6 July 4/6 From a ridge behind the airfield dug-in German tanks have a clear field of fire. 1948 E. Partridge et al. Dict. Forces' Slang 62 Dug-in job, a base job; such a job within a unit..as carried certain privileges. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1897; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.11530n.21608adj.1715 |
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