α. 1500s auburye, 1500s–1600s auburie, 1600s aubury.
β. 1500s–1600s anburie, 1600s–1800s ambury, 1600s– anbury, 1700s–1900s hanbury.
γ. 1600s–1900s anberry, 1700s hanbery.
See also nanberry n.
| 单词 | anbury | 
| 释义 | anburyn.α. 1500s auburye, 1500s–1600s auburie, 1600s aubury. β. 1500s–1600s anburie, 1600s–1800s ambury, 1600s– anbury, 1700s–1900s hanbury. γ. 1600s–1900s anberry, 1700s hanbery. See also nanberry n.ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > animal disease or disorder > disorders of cattle, horse, or sheep > 			[noun]		 > disorders of cattle or horses > growth or wart anbury1566 angleberrya1585 malt-worm1610 nanberry1707 1566    T. Blundeville Order curing Horses Dis. clviii. f. 108 in  Fower Offices Horsemanshippe  				Of an Auburye... This is a great spongy wert full of bloud, called of the Italians Moro, or Selso, which may growe in any place of the body, and it hath a roote like a Cockes stone. 1607    G. Markham Cavelarice  vii. 80  				An anbury is nothing but a spungie wart, growing vpon any part of the horses bodie. 1670    Acct. Bk. Househ. Expenses G. Norton (W. Yorks. Arch. Service WYL150/5984)  				For takeing of 3. Anberryes of 2 Oxen 0–3–0. c1720    W. Gibson Farriers New Guide  ii. l. 229  				Anburys, and other encysted Tumors, require a peculiar Treatment. 1850    H. Beasley Druggist's Gen. Receipt Bk. 98  				Ointment for warts and anburies. 1871    Veterinarian 44 237  				An accident to a mare while struggling on the ground, during an operation for the excision of ‘anberries’.  2.  Originally English regional (East Anglian). The plant disease club root, which causes severe distortion of the roots in turnips and other plants of the family  Brassicaceae; †a root affected by this disease (obsolete). Now historical and rare. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > disease or injury > 			[noun]		 > associated with particular type of plant > crop or food plant > vegetables > turnips or cabbages anbury1742 fingers and toes1799 club1830 club-root1832 clubbing1836 brown-heart1950 1742    W. Ellis Mod. Husbandman June iii. 27  				That common destructive turnep Disease..in the sandy grounds of Norfolk..is there called—Anbury. 1781    W. Marshall Minutes in  Rural Econ. Norfolk 		(1787)	 II. 33  				The apples of the turneps are just forming..while the anburies are already as big as the egg of a goose. 1839    J. C. Loudon Encycl. Agric. 861  				The forked excrescences [in turnips] known as fingers and toes in some places, and as the anbury in others. 1878    T. Moore Thompson's Gardener's Assistant 		(new ed.)	 x. 279/2  				The anbury has been attributed to the agency of insects, but these are now generally considered to be a consequence, and not the cause, of the malformation. 1934    Isis 21 107  				The symptoms of club root or as it was often called ‘Anbury’ are so conspicuous on cabbage and turnips that the disease could hardly escape the attention of the gardeners. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2019; most recently modified version published online December 2021). <  | 
	
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