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单词 grane
释义

granen.

Forms: Also Middle English grone.
Etymology: Not in Old English, but apparently in ablaut relation to the synonymous grin n.1
Obsolete.
A snare, trap; a noose. (Cf. girn n.1)
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > hunting > equipment > trap or snare > [noun]
grinc825
trapa1000
snarea1100
swikea1100
granea1250
springec1275
gina1300
gnarea1325
stringc1325
trebuchet1362
latch?a1366
leashc1374
snarlc1380
foot gina1382
foot-grina1382
traina1393
sinewa1400
snatcha1400
foot trapa1425
haucepyc1425
slingc1425
engine1481
swar1488
frame1509
brakea1529
fang1535
fall trap1570
spring1578
box-trapa1589
spring trapa1589
sprint1599
noosec1600
springle1602
springe1607
toil1607
plage1608
deadfall1631
puppy snatch1650
snickle1681
steel trap1735
figure (of) four1743
gun-trap1749
stamp1788
stell1801
springer1813
sprent1822
livetrap1823
snaphance1831
catch pole1838
twitch-up1841
basket-trap1866
pole trap1879
steel fall1895
tread-trap1952
conibear trap1957
conibear1958
a1250 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Nero) (1952) 125 So lutel þing is edmodnesse & so smel ðet no grone [?c1225 Cleo. grune] ne mei hire etholden.
a1250 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Nero) (1952) 59 Leste heo beo ikeiht þuruh summe o deofles gronen [?c1225 Cleo. grunen].
c1380 J. Wyclif Wks. (1880) 437 Þes two lawis ben graues [sic] to þe fend to gnare men in his net.
c1380 J. Wyclif Sel. Wks. III. 198 Þe day of dome schal come as a snare, or grane.
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(1)) (1850) Judith ix. 13 Be he taken with the grane of his eȝen in me.
c1384 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(2)) (1850) Amos iii. 5 A brid shal falle in to grane of erthe.
c1384 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(2)) (1850) Matt. xxvii. 5 He hangide hym with a grane.
a1400 Metr. Hom. (Vernon MS.) in Archiv f. das Studium der Neueren Sprachen 57 247/1 He sauh al þe eorþe was sprad wiþ panters and wiþ grones blake.
c1430 J. Lydgate Minor Poems (Percy Soc.) 203 That fro hir gravys [? read granys] and hir snare Goth not awey that comyth between.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1900; most recently modified version published online December 2020).

granev.

/ɡreɪn/
Forms: Also 1600s, 1800s grain, 1800s dialect green.
Etymology: < grane n.; the form green may belong to grin v.1
Obsolete exc. dialect.
transitive. To choke, strangle.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > disorders of internal organs > disordered breathing > have or cause breathing disorder [verb (transitive)] > choke
stranglea1300
chokec1380
worrya1400
stiflec1400
to stop the breath (more rarely the wind) ofc1400
scomfishc1480
to choke up1555
grane1613
suffocatea1616
the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > disorders of internal organs > disordered breathing > have or cause breathing disorder [verb (transitive)] > choke > by external compression of throat
choke1303
stranglec1450
grane1613
1613 S. Purchas Pilgrimage 112 One executioner on one side, and another on the other, graned him [the condemned person] with a linnen cloth about his neck, pulling the same till they forced him to gape.
1691 J. Ray S. & E. Country Words in Coll. Eng. Words (ed. 2) 101 To Grain, or Grane, to choak or throttle.
1806 R. Bloomfield Wild Flowers 43 Till I was nearly gran'd outright; He hugg'd so woundly hard.
1823 E. Moor Suffolk Words 155 Green, throttle—choak. A tight collar is said to green a horse.
1895 W. Rye Gloss. Words E. Anglia Grain, to gripe the throat; to strangle.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1900; most recently modified version published online December 2020).
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n.a1250v.1613
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