单词 | founder |
释义 | foundern.1 1. a. ‘One who raises an edifice; one who presides at the erection of a city’ (Johnson). ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > causation > initiating or causing to begin > [noun] > institution or founding > of a building or city > one who founds foundera1387 a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1869) II. 79 Þe foundour of þis citee is vnknowe. c1440 Bone Flor. 11 Antenowre..fownder of Jerusalem. 1611 T. Coryate Crudities sig. D5v Iulius Cæsar was the first founder of this tower. a1727 I. Newton Chronol. Anc. Kingdoms Amended (1728) i. 161 Every City set up the worship of its own Founder. 1836 J. Murray Hand-bk. for Travellers on Continent 432/1 The building displays..the taste of different founders. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > creation > [noun] > creator forgerc1380 authora1382 feigner1382 formerc1386 founderc1390 makera1450 plasmatoura1500 constitutor1531 framer1534 creator1548 fashioner1548 opificer1548 essentiator1561 creatress1590 effecter1591 compactor1593 moulder1594 creatrix1595 mouldress1599 effector1635 composer1644 plastic1644 opifex1649 fabricator1650 formator1656 efformer1662 essentializer1669 constituenta1676 crafter1907 c1390 (?c1350) Joseph of Arimathie (1871) l. 68 He þat is mi foundeor may hit folfulle, þat was ded on þe cros & bouȝte us so deore. 2. One who sets up or institutes for the first time; one who gives its first beginning to (an institution, sect, etc.). Formerly in wider use, an originator (of a practice or custom). ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > causation > initiating or causing to begin > [noun] > institution or founding > one who or that which founds or establishes aginnera1300 founder1340 grounder14.. foundatorc1425 stablement1481 stablisher1535 institutera1538 patriarcha1538 institutor1546 erector1548 inventor1548 fundatrix1549 upsetter1581 establishera1600 co-founder1605 co-foundress1631 planter1632 institutive1644 instaurator1660 institutrix1706 institutress1788 godfather1830 founding father1903 founder member1909 1340–70 Alex. & Dind. 664 He [Mars] was fihtere fel & foundur of werre. 1389 in J. T. Smith & L. T. Smith Eng. Gilds (1870) 101 Ye first foundurs of yis gilde. 1548 Hall's Vnion: Henry VII f. xxxijv No man could tell who was the authoure and founder of that rumoure. 1563 2nd Tome Homelyes Wilful Rebel. iv, in J. Griffiths Two Bks. Homilies (1859) ii. 583 Sathan, the first founder of Rebellion. 1678 R. Cudworth True Intellect. Syst. Universe Contents sig. a Leucippus and Democritus..were..the Founders of that Philosophy, which is Atheistically Atomical. 1697 J. Dryden tr. Virgil Georgics i, in tr. Virgil Wks. 50 Pallas..Thou Founder of the Plough and Plough-man's Toyl. View more context for this quotation 1776 E. Gibbon Decline & Fall I. 357 Like Augustus, Diocletian may be considered as the founder of a new empire. 1855 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. IV. 24 George Fox, the founder of the sect of Quakers. 1875 A. Helps Social Pressure iii. 52 The founders of great fortunes and great families. 3. One who founds or establishes (an institution) with an endowment for its perpetual maintenance. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > social relations > an association, society, or organization > types of association, society, or organization > [noun] > institution > one who establishes founder1303 foundressc1450 1303 R. Mannyng Handlyng Synne 2584 He was fyrst founder and syre Of þe cherche of Knares myre. 1535–6 Act 27 Hen. VIII c. 28 Suche as pretende to be foundours, patrons or donours of suche relygyous houses. 1682 H. Prideaux Lett. (1875) 122 Our founders monument being defaced in the late wars, I am again restoreing it. 1693 R. Bentley Boyle Lect. ii. 8 The Honourable Founder of this Lecture. 1856 R. W. Emerson Eng. Traits xii. 201 The pictures of the founders hang from the walls. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > safety > protection or defence > preservation from injury or destruction > [noun] > preservation in being or maintenance > one who preserves in being or condition sustenance?a1430 maintainera1450 supportera1450 founder1548 retainer1548 1548 Hall's Vnion: Henry VII f. l He [sc. Perkyn Warbeck]..with all hys complices and confederates, and Jhon Awater..one of hys founders, and hys sonne, were..arreyned and condempned at Westmynster. a1625 F. Beaumont & J. Fletcher Captaine i. iii, in Comedies & Trag. (1647) sig. Gg/2 What a vengeance ails ye, To be so childish to imagine me A founder of old fellows? Compounds Cf. foundation n. Compounds 2. founder member n. a person belonging to or associated with the founding of a society or institution. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > causation > initiating or causing to begin > [noun] > institution or founding > one who or that which founds or establishes aginnera1300 founder1340 grounder14.. foundatorc1425 stablement1481 stablisher1535 institutera1538 patriarcha1538 institutor1546 erector1548 inventor1548 fundatrix1549 upsetter1581 establishera1600 co-founder1605 co-foundress1631 planter1632 institutive1644 instaurator1660 institutrix1706 institutress1788 godfather1830 founding father1903 founder member1909 1909 Westm. Gaz. 23 Apr. 9/3 The committee of the Aero Club of the United Kingdom have decided that after the first thousand members have been elected, such thousand members being founder members, the subscription will be raised and an entrance fee charged. 1960 Farmer & Stockbreeder 8 Mar. 63/2 A founder-member of the British Charollais Committee..said many farmers would like to see Charollais imported. founder's-shares n. (also founder's-parts) plural shares issued to the founders of a public company, as part of the consideration for the business or concession which is taken over, and not forming a part of the ordinary capital. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > stocks and shares > stocks, shares, or bonds > [noun] > share > types of shares bonus share1823 preference share1842 preferred share1842 qualification shares1846 pref1849 financial1864 founder's-shares1889 preference1890 preferred1891 ordinary1898 participation1916 equity1930 leader1938 Euroequity1969 small cap1984 1889 Daily News 24 Oct. 7/2 The value of..founders' shares has grown unwieldy. 1896 Athenæum 1 Feb. 143/2 The invention of ‘founders' shares’..dates only from 1889. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1897; most recently modified version published online March 2022). foundern.2 a. One who founds or casts metal, or makes articles of cast metal. Often in combination, with the metal or article specified, as bell-founder, type-founder.See also ironfounder n. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > worker > workers according to type of work > manual or industrial worker > workers with specific materials > metalworker > [noun] > caster or founder yettereOE metal yetterc1400 founder1402 wellera1425 caster1535 1402 in Rot. Parl. III. 520 Bartilmew Dekene, Founder. 1560 Bible (Geneva) Jer. vi. 29 The lead is consumed in the fyre: the founder melteth in vaine. 1637 Decree Starre-Chamber conc. Printing xxvii. sig. G4v That there shall be foure Founders of letters for printing allowed. 1681 N. Grew Musæum Regalis Societatis iii. iii. 334 Founders add a little [antimony] to their Bell-Metal, to make it more sonorous. 1705 N. Luttrell Diary in Brief Hist. Relation State Affairs (1857) V. 581 Her majesties founder has orders to cast 60 heavy cannon. 1724 J. Swift Let. to Mr. Harding 6 Let Mr. Woods and his Crew of Founders and Tinkers Coyn on. 1892 Labour Commission Gloss. (at cited word) Master founders are the owners or managers of a foundry for making iron or brass castings. b. One who founds glass. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > worker > workers according to type of work > manual or industrial worker > producer > glass-maker > [noun] > involved in specific process glass-blower?1518 annealer1656 sarole-man1662 lamp-worker1665 leer man1849 founder1853 wetter-off1883 smalt-maker1921 smalter1923 presser1962 firer1998 1853 A. Ure Dict. Arts (ed. 4) I. 905 The glass-founder. ?1881 Census Eng. & Wales: Instr. Clerks classifying Occupations & Ages (?1885) 89 Glass Manufacture [Workmen employed in] Metal Making: Founder. Compounds C1. founder's dust, founder's sand (see quots.). ΚΠ 1858 P. L. Simmonds Dict. Trade Products Founders' Dust, charcoal powder, and coal and coke dust ground fine and sifted for casting purposes in foundries. 1858 P. L. Simmonds Dict. Trade Products Founders' sand, a species of sand obtained from Lewisham, Kent, and other districts, for making foundry moulds. C2. founder's limit n. ΚΠ 1872–6 G. E. Voyle Mil. Dict. (ed. 3) Limit, Founder's. In the manufacture of ordnance, the limitation of error for guns, shot, &c. allowed to the founder. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1897; most recently modified version published online June 2022). foundern.3ΘΚΠ the world > matter > constitution of matter > density or solidity > state of being solid rather than fluid > [noun] > solid matter which falls to bottom of liquid drega1300 groundsa1340 upon the lee1390 foundersc1450 residence1539 sediment1547 resident1558 precipitate1594 settling1594 precipitation1605 crassament1615 subsistence1622 subsidence1646 sedimen1655 crassamentum1657 deposit1781 sludge1839 ppt1864 c1450 Middle Eng. Med. Bk. (Heinrich) 176 Do awey þe foundres [v.r. groundes] vnderneþe. 2. The action of founder v.; a landslip. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > structure of the earth > formation of features > movement of material > [noun] > movement under gravity or water land-rushc1550 slide1664 landslip1679 pitting1686 rockfall?1797 shoot1820 landslide1822 run1827 mountain slide1830 slip1838 slough1838 mudslide1848 founder1882 creep1889 soil-creep1897 rock creep1902 slump1905 solifluction1906 slumping1907 slopewash1938 sludging1946 mass wasting1951 1882 Cornhill Mag. Dec. 738 A series of founders or land~slips, caused by the undermining of the solid strata. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1897; most recently modified version published online June 2021). foundern.4ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > endeavour > searching or seeking > finding or discovery > [noun] > one who finds or discovers finderc1384 discoverer1576 founder1577 finder-outa1616 repertor1650 ferreter1863 1577 J. Frampton tr. N. Monardes Three Bookes ii. f. 45 Lorde Nicot,..firste founder out of this hearbe. 2. spec. in Derbyshire Mining (see quot. 1851). ΚΠ 1734 High Peak Articles in Compl. Mineral Laws 22 Who..were or pretended to be possess'd of the same Ground as Taker of a Fore-field for an old Founder. 1851 T. Tapping Gloss. in Chron. Customs Lead Mines (E.D.S.) Founder is the mining term expressive of the finder of a vein, or rake, or in ordinary language, a miner. 3. That portion of a lead-mine which is given to the first finder of the vein; hence, the part first worked. Called also founder-meer, founder-shaft. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > workplace > places where raw materials are extracted > mine > [noun] > portion worked by a miner > in lead-mine founder-meer1653 taker meer1653 1653 E. Manlove Liberties & Customes Lead-mines Derby 59 If two Founders in one Rake be set. 1747 W. Hooson Miners Dict. sig. Iijb Sometimes it happens that there is two Founders in the same Vein, for a Vein may be found at a distance from my Founder. 1802 J. Mawe Mineral. of Derbyshire 204 Foundermere, the first 32 yards of ground worked. 1802 J. Mawe Mineral. of Derbyshire 204 Foundershaft, the first shaft that is sunk. 1851 Act 14 & 15 Victoria c. 94 §2 The Word ‘Founder’ shall mean the Point at which a Vein of Ore shall be first found..the Words ‘Founder-Meers’ shall mean the Two first Meers to be set out to the Finder. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1897; most recently modified version published online June 2018). foundern.5 1. Inflammation of the laminar structures of a horse's foot, resulting usually from overwork; a similar disease in dogs. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > animal disease or disorder > disorders of dogs > [noun] formicac1400 running woodnessa1425 founder1547 distemper1746 blotch1824 kennel lameness1841 foul1854 dog ill1874 salmon disease1880 piblokto1894 strongyloidiasis1907 strongyloidosis1907 salmon poisoning1925 hard-pad1948 Rubarth's disease1951 canine parvovirus1972 parvovirus1979 the world > health and disease > ill health > animal disease or disorder > disorders of horses > [noun] > disorders of feet or hooves pains1440 mellitc1465 false quarter1523 gravelling?1523 founder1547 foundering1548 foot evil1562 crown scab1566 prick1566 quittor bone1566 moltlong1587 scratches1591 hoof-bound1598 corn1600 javar1600 frush1607 crepance1610 fretishing1610 seam1610 scratchets1611 kibe1639 tread1661 grease1674 gravel1675 twitter-bone1688 cleft1694 quittor1703 bleymes1725 crescent1725 hoof-binding1728 capelet1731 twitter1745 canker1753 grease-heels1753 sand-crack1753 thrush1753 greasing1756 bony hoof1765 seedy toe1829 side bone1840 cracked heel1850 mud fever1872 navicular1888 coronitis1890 toe-crack1891 flat-foot1894 1547 W. Salesbury Dict. Eng. & Welshe Fraeo val march, fownder. 1708 J. C. Compl. Collier 12 in T. Nourse Mistery of Husbandry Discover'd (ed. 3) They are subject to Beat or Founder to their Feet or Leggs. 1825 J. C. Loudon Encycl. Agric. §6517 (1831) 987 Founder of the feet. 1884 T. Speedy Sport in Highlands iii. 31 Kennel lameness, founder, and rheumatism [in dogs] are often caused by [etc.] 2. A rheumatic affection of the muscles of the chest in horses. Called also body-founder, chest-founder. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > animal disease or disorder > disorders of horses > [noun] > other disorders of horses trench?a1450 colt-evilc1460 affreyd?1523 cholera1566 crick1566 incording1566 leprosy1566 taint1566 eyesore1576 fistula1576 wrench1578 birth1600 garrot1600 stithy1600 stifling1601 stranglings1601 hungry evil1607 pose1607 crest-fall1609 pompardy1627 felteric1639 quick-scab1639 shingles1639 clap1684 sudden taking1688 bunches1706 flanks1706 strangles1706 chest-founderingc1720 body-founder1737 influenza1792 foundering1802 horse-sickness1822 stag-evil1823 strangullion1830 shivering1847 dourine1864 swamp fever1870 African horse sickness1874 horse-pox1884 African horse disease1888 wind-stroke1890 thump1891 leucoencephalitis1909 western equine encephalitis1933 stachybotryotoxicosis1945 rhinopneumonitis1957 1737 H. Bracken Farriery Improved xxxii. 469 They were often mistaken even in what they call the Chest or Body-founder. 1818 Sporting Mag. 2 171 I agree with the French writers that the founder is a fluxion. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1897; most recently modified version published online March 2022). founderv.ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > breaking or cracking > break [verb (transitive)] > break in or through founderc1330 perbreak?a1400 stave1716 cave1857 to beat in1869 c1330 R. Mannyng Chron. (1725) 183 And whan he was withinne, & fauht as a wilde leon, He fondred þe Sarazins otuynne & fauht as a dragon. a1400 Coer de L. 5266 He gaff Richard a sory flatt, That foundryd bacynet and hat. ΘΚΠ the world > life > death > cause of death > cause death [verb (transitive)] > by drowning fordrencha1225 founderc1400 whemmel1567 the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > destroy [verb (transitive)] > devour, engulf, or consume (of fire, water, etc.) supeOE eatc950 fretc1000 forthnimc1175 forfret?c1225 to-fret?c1225 swallowa1340 devourc1374 upsoup1382 consumea1398 bisweligha1400 founderc1400 absorb1490 to swallow up1531 upsupa1547 incinerate1555 upswallow1591 fire1592 absume1596 abyss1596 worm1604 depredate1626 to gulp downa1644 whelm1667 c1400 (?c1380) Cleanness l. 1014 Þis watz a uengeaunce violent þat voyded þise places, Þat foundered hatz so fayr a folk & þe folde sonkken. 1490 W. Caxton tr. Eneydos xxvii. 97 Haue no mercy..of ony man that lyueth, foundre & droune altogider [Fr. effondres tout] in-to the botome of the sea. 3. a. intransitive. Of the earth, a building, etc.: To fall down, give way. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > downward motion > falling > fall [verb (intransitive)] > collapse founder1489 sink1530 shrink1590 subside1678 collapse1732 blow1783 1489 W. Caxton tr. C. de Pisan Bk. Fayttes of Armes ii. xxxv. 153 The toure foundred and sanke doune in to the grounde. a1697 J. Aubrey Nat. Hist. Wilts. (Bodl. MS Aubrey 1) f. 93 In Cheshire..a quantity of earth foundred, and fell downe a vast depth. 1830 C. Lyell Princ. Geol. I. 274 We find that the cliffs of Bawdsey and Felixtow are foundering slowly. ΘΚΠ the mind > goodness and badness > harmfulness > [verb (transitive)] > to person or thing werdec725 wemc900 forworkOE evilc1000 teenOE grievec1230 misdoc1230 mischievec1325 shond1338 endamagec1374 unrighta1393 damagea1400 disvail14.. disavail1429 mischief1437 outrayc1440 prejudice1447 abuse?1473 injuryc1484 danger1488 prejudicate1553 damnify?a1562 wrack1562 inviolate1569 mislestc1573 indemnify1583 qualify1584 interess1587 buse1589 violence1592 injure1597 bane1601 envya1625 prejudiciala1637 founder1655 1655 T. Fuller Church-hist. Brit. iii. 51 King John having his soul battered without, with forrain fears, and foundred within by the falsenesse of his Subjects, sunk on a sudden beneath himself. a1656 J. Ussher Ann. World (1658) v. 60 The river..foundering the wall thereof 20 furlongs in length, bare it down. 4. intransitive. (Chiefly of a horse or its rider.) To stumble violently, fall helplessly to the ground, collapse; to fall lame; occasionally to sink or stick fast (in mire or bog). ΘΚΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > downward motion > falling > fall [verb (intransitive)] > fall down or from erect position > specifically of person or animal > stumble and fall founderc1405 stumblec1503 the world > movement > absence of movement > [verb (intransitive)] > cease to move or become motionless > be arrested or intercepted in progress > by mud, bog, or sand stablec1571 mire?1590 to be bogged1743–7 boga1800 set1869 founder1875 c1405 (c1385) G. Chaucer Knight's Tale (Hengwrt) (2003) l. 1827 For which his hors for feere gan to turne And leep asyde, and foundred as he leep. 1508 Golagros & Gawane (Chepman & Myllar) sig. cvv As he loutit our ane bra His feit founderit hym fra. 1513 G. Douglas tr. Virgil Æneid x. xiv. 157 Down swakkis the knycht sone with a fellon fayr, Foundris fordwart flatlingis on hys spald. c1560 A. Scott Poems (S.T.S.) ii. 163 To grund, for fersness, he did funder. 1563 2nd Tome Homelyes Rogation Week iv, in J. Griffiths Two Bks. Homilies (1859) ii. 498 Where~by thy poor nyghbour, sitting on his seelly weak beast, foundereth not in the deep thereof. 1713 R. Steele Guardian No. 132. ⁋6 The man is a thick-skull'd puppy, and founders like a horse. 1875 F. Hall in Lippincott's Monthly Mag. 16 749/1 The guide had strayed off the ford, and I was foundering in a quicksand. 1880 J. Muirhead tr. Gaius Institutes iii. 262 When a man has..driven another's horse so hard as to cause it to founder. 5. a. transitive. To cause to break down or go lame; esp. to cause (a horse) to have the founder, thus disabling him. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > animal disease or disorder > disorders of horses > cause injury or disease of horse [verb (transitive)] > disorders of feet or hooves founder1593 gravel1593 dry-founder1619 grease1737 wire1753 1593 T. Nashe Strange Newes 51 A broken-winded..Iade, that..now is quite foundred and tired. 1608 Yorkshire Trag. sig. C4v Oh stumbling Iade..I am sorely bruisde, plague founder thee. 1674 N. Cox Gentleman's Recreation i. 45 You will surbate or founder your Hounds. 1680 W. Hacke Coll. Orig. Voy. ii. (1699) 3 A very bad Path, which with our being necessitated to wade the River..almost foundred our Men. 1732 J. Gay Achilles 1 He will quite founder himself with galloping from place to place to look after me. 1884 W. C. Smith Kildrostan 74 She..rode my pony till she foundered him. b. figurative. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > ability > inability > render unable [verb (transitive)] unablec1380 unablec1380 disable1548 lame1568 founder1590 disenable1604 discapacitate1660 incapacitate1666 uncapacitate1668 incapacify1683 dishabilitate1871 the world > action or operation > ability > inability > disable [verb (reflexive)] founder1590 1590 R. Harvey Plaine Percevall sig. Dv Such firie Agues fall soonest into a surfeit, and founder themselues with their intemperate behauiour. 1645 J. Milton Colasterion 17 Founder himself to and fro in his own objections. 1658 J. Bramhall Consecration Protestant Bishops Justified vii. 148 And so your Consequence..is foundered of all four, and can neither passe nor repasse. c. Confused with founded adj.1: To benumb. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > properties of materials > temperature > coldness > make cold [verb (transitive)] > give sensation of cold to > numb with cold acumblea1325 cumberc1325 daze1340 cumblea1425 foundedc1450 benumb1530 founder1562 beclumpse1611 chill1712 shram1787 1562 W. Turner 2nd Pt. Herball f. 108 [Pyrethro] is excellently good for any parte of the body yt is fundied or foundered or made allmost num, with to much colde. 1578 H. Lyte tr. R. Dodoens Niewe Herball iii. xix. 342 The Oyle..is good..for members that are benummed or foundered. 6. a. intransitive. Of a vessel: To fill with water and sink, go to the bottom. [= Old French s'enfondrer : compare sense 2] ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > shipwreck > suffer shipwreck [verb (intransitive)] > sink sinkOE adrenchc1230 perishc1350 founder1600 to go to the bottom1812 1600 R. Hakluyt tr. G. B. Ramusio in Princ. Navigations (new ed.) III. 398 Already she had receiued in much water, insomuch that she beganne to founder. 1719 D. Defoe Life Robinson Crusoe 12 The Seamen every now and then cried out, she would founder. 1882 W. H. White Man. Naval Archit. (ed. 2) 13 Ships founder when the entry of water into the interior causes a serious and fatal loss of floating power. b. figurative. To ‘come to grief’, be wrecked. ΚΠ 1623 W. Shakespeare & J. Fletcher Henry VIII iii. ii. 40 But in this point, All his trickes founder . View more context for this quotation 1816 M. Keating Trav. (1817) I. 56 (note) Spain began to founder from the loss of the Low Countries: but a first-rate ship does not go down like a wherry. 7. transitive. To cause (a ship) to fill with water and sink; to send to the bottom. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > shipwreck > cause to suffer shipwreck [verb (transitive)] > cause to sink besinkc1200 sinka1300 whelm1558 founder1659 1659 D. Pell Πελαγος 305 When a vessel is, or comes once to bee foundered, there is no possibility of her being helped up. [But this may be sense 6.] 1748 Acct. Voy. for Discov. North-west Passage I. 52 Capable of pierceing a Ship under her Bends, so foundering her. 1893 G. Allen Scallywag III. 110 A great ship was being foundered and ground to pieces by some invisible force within a few yards of them. 8. Golf. To hit (a ball) into the ground. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > golf > play golf [verb (transitive)] > type of play or stroke drive1743 draw1842 heel1857 hook1857 loft1857 founder1878 to top a ball1881 chip1889 duff1890 pull1890 slice1890 undercut1891 hack1893 toe1893 spoon1896 borrow1897 overdrive1900 trickle1902 bolt1909 niblick1909 socket1911 birdie1921 eagle1921 shank1925 explode1926 bird1930 three-putt1946 bogey1948 double-bogey1952 fade1953 1878 ‘Capt. Crawley’ Football, Golf & Shinty 96 The young Golfer..is likely to founder the ball, or drive it only a comparatively short distance. 9. [= French fondre.] To burst (into tears). ΚΠ 1477 W. Caxton tr. R. Le Fèvre Hist. Jason (1913) 5 The damoiseau Iason..began thenne to foundre in teeris right habondantly. a1533 Ld. Berners tr. Arthur of Brytayn (?1560) xxii. sig. Cvv The kig [sic] foundred all in teeres. Derivatives ˈfoundering n. and adj. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > animal disease or disorder > disorders of horses > [noun] > disorders of feet or hooves pains1440 mellitc1465 false quarter1523 gravelling?1523 founder1547 foundering1548 foot evil1562 crown scab1566 prick1566 quittor bone1566 moltlong1587 scratches1591 hoof-bound1598 corn1600 javar1600 frush1607 crepance1610 fretishing1610 seam1610 scratchets1611 kibe1639 tread1661 grease1674 gravel1675 twitter-bone1688 cleft1694 quittor1703 bleymes1725 crescent1725 hoof-binding1728 capelet1731 twitter1745 canker1753 grease-heels1753 sand-crack1753 thrush1753 greasing1756 bony hoof1765 seedy toe1829 side bone1840 cracked heel1850 mud fever1872 navicular1888 coronitis1890 toe-crack1891 flat-foot1894 the world > health and disease > ill health > animal disease or disorder > disorders of horses > [noun] > disorders of feet or hooves > causing of foundering1548 the world > health and disease > ill health > animal disease or disorder > disorders of horses > [noun] > other disorders of horses trench?a1450 colt-evilc1460 affreyd?1523 cholera1566 crick1566 incording1566 leprosy1566 taint1566 eyesore1576 fistula1576 wrench1578 birth1600 garrot1600 stithy1600 stifling1601 stranglings1601 hungry evil1607 pose1607 crest-fall1609 pompardy1627 felteric1639 quick-scab1639 shingles1639 clap1684 sudden taking1688 bunches1706 flanks1706 strangles1706 chest-founderingc1720 body-founder1737 influenza1792 foundering1802 horse-sickness1822 stag-evil1823 strangullion1830 shivering1847 dourine1864 swamp fever1870 African horse sickness1874 horse-pox1884 African horse disease1888 wind-stroke1890 thump1891 leucoencephalitis1909 western equine encephalitis1933 stachybotryotoxicosis1945 rhinopneumonitis1957 society > travel > travel by water > shipwreck > [adjective] > sinking foundering1813 1548 Hall's Vnion: Henry VI f. cxxvij Matthew Gouth, by founderyng of his horsse, was taken. 1596 W. Warner Albions Eng. (rev. ed.) ix. liii. 240 No one thing quailes Religion more than foundring Presbytrie. 1614 G. Markham Cheape & Good Husbandry (1668) i. li. 62 Of Foundring in the Feet there be two sorts, a dry and a wet. 1802 C. James New Mil. Dict. (at cited word) Foundering in the feet..Foundering in the chest. 1813 W. Scott Rokeby i. xvi. 25 Rescued from our foundering skiff. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1897; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.11303n.21402n.3c1450n.41577n.51547v.c1330 |
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