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单词 larder
释义

lardern.1

Brit. /ˈlɑːdə/, U.S. /ˈlɑrdər/
Forms: Middle English, 1600s lardere, Middle English, 1600s lardre, Middle English lardar, lardyr(e, lardure, laardere, lardder, larddre, (1500s lawder), 1600s Scottish lairder, Middle English— larder.
Etymology: < Old French lardier, Anglo-Norman larder < medieval Latin lardārium , < lardum lard n. Compare Old French lardoir, lardouer ‘garde-manger’.
1.
a. A room or closet in which meat (? originally bacon) and other provisions are stored.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > place for storing food > [noun]
cellar?c1225
larderc1305
pantrya1325
butleryc1325
spencec1386
larder-house1390
aumbrya1398
lardinera1400
meatfettle1440
spinde1481
selyer1483
pantyr?a1500
vault1500
eschansonnery1514
lardrya1552
lard-house1555
coveyc1593
brine-house1594
dispense1622
reservatory1647
provedore1694
ice cellar1735
spring house1755
provision house1787
futtah1834
pataka1842
c1305 St. Kenelm 236 in Early Eng. Poems & Lives Saints (1862) 54 Þeȝ his larder were neȝ ido & his somer lese lene.
c1330 R. Mannyng Chron. (1810) 28 Alle Northwales he set to treuage hie. Tuenti pounde of gold be ȝere.. & þer to fyue hundreth kie ilk ȝere to his lardere.
1390–1 Earl Derby's Exped. (Camden) 60 Pro ligno et clauis per ipsum emptis ibidem pro la lardre.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Trin. Cambr.) l. 4688 Moo þen a þousande seleres Filled he wiþ wynes..And larderes [Gött. lardineris] wiþ salt flesshe.
c1440 Promptorium Parvulorum 288/1 Laardere, lardarium.
1468–9 in J. T. Fowler Extracts Acct. Rolls Abbey of Durham (1898) I. 92 1 axe pro le lardar.
1541 Act 33 Hen. VIII c. 12 §13 The serieant of the larder for the time being of the same household.
1567 J. Maplet Greene Forest f. 105 Espying hir time when and how she may come to the Lawder or Vittailehouse.
1623 W. Shakespeare & J. Fletcher Henry VIII v. iii. 4 Good M. Porter I belong to th' Larder . View more context for this quotation
a1630 D. Hume Hist. Houses Douglas & Angus (1644) 28 This Cellar is called yet the Douglas Lairder [cf. lardiner n. 1. 1375].
1768 A. Tucker Light of Nature Pursued II. i. 303 The hen gratifies her desires in hatching and breeding up chickens for the larder.
1785 W. Cowper Task ii. 615 Dress drains our cellar dry, And keeps our larder lean.
1838 W. H. Prescott Hist. Reign Ferdinand & Isabella III. ii. xx. 280 The larders of Savona were filled with the choicest game.
1858 R. S. Surtees Ask Mamma lxx. 311 The whole repast bespoke the exhausted larder peculiar to the end of the week.
1877 ‘Mrs. Forrester’ Mignon I. 50 Utterly unmindful of the probable condition of the larder at home.
b. transferred and figurative. Something serving as a storehouse.
ΚΠ
1623 W. Lisle in tr. Ælfric Saxon Treat. Old & New Test. Ded. 34 Forth, Taw, Cluyd, Tems, Severne, Humber, Trent, And foure great Seas, your Larders be for Lent.
1864 J. S. Harford Recoll. W. Wilberforce 195 It [the antediluvian mammoth] had only been hanging in Nature's larder for the last five thousand years.
1877 M. Oliphant Makers of Florence (ed. 2) viii. 220 His table became the larder and patrimony of the poor.
c. The collection of prey formed by a butcher-bird or shrike.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > animal food > [noun] > food eaten by birds > collection of prey
larder1919
the world > animals > birds > order Passeriformes (singing) > non-arboreal (larks, etc.) > [noun] > family Laniidae (shrike) > collected prey of
larder1919
1919 H. F. Witherby Pract. Handbk. Brit. Birds (1920) I. 277 J. H. Gurnsey also records a shrew impaled in a ‘larder’ and Oldham a young bank-vole.
1964 A. L. Thomson New Dict. Birds 733/1 Many species [of shrike] have the habit of impaling their prey on thorns..or of hanging it from the fork of a branch... This provision of a ‘larder’ is responsible for the English popular name ‘butcher bird’.
2. figurative. Chiefly in to make larder of: to turn into meat for the larder; to bring to the slaughterhouse, hence, to slaughter; to larder, to the slaughterhouse. Also occasionally simply = slaughter. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > death > killing > slaughter > [verb (transitive)]
to bathe in bloodc1300
murderc1325
to make larder ofa1330
spend1481
to lick upa1500
slaught1535
butcher1562
wipe1577
slaughter1586
massacre1588
dispeople1596
shamble1601
depeople?1611
mow1615
internecate1623
dislaughter1661
mop1899
pogrom1915
decimate1944
overkill1946
the world > life > death > killing > killing of animals > [noun]
slaughtera1300
to make larder ofa1330
murdering?a1475
fall1575
butchering1609
ovicide1828
felicide1832
poultrycide1841
piscicide1847
vealing1847
kill1850
slaughterage1854
birdicide1862
apricide1864
insecticide1865
vulpicidism1865
vulpicide1873
serpenticide1882
tauricide1882
vaccicide1887
leporicide1914
culling1938
cull1958
the world > life > death > killing > [adverb] > to or for killing
to or for the slaughtera1400
to larder1532
a1330 Otuel 1129 Al the Kinges ost..maden a foul larder.
a1340 R. Rolle Psalter lxxxii. 10 Zebee, that is, swilke þat þe deuyl makis his lardere of.
c1380 J. Wyclif Eng. Wks. (1880) 251 Prelatis courtis þat ben dennys of þeues & larderis of helle.
1390 J. Gower Confessio Amantis III. 124 Than [in November] is the larder of the swine.
c1430 Syr Gener. (Roxb.) 7228 Of oon he hoped larder to make.
a1500 (?c1450) Merlin xx. 337 The knyghtes of the rounde table made soche lardure thourgh the felde as it hadde ben shepe strangeled with wolves.
1532 (c1385) Usk's Test. Loue in Wks. G. Chaucer ii. f. cccxlixv Thus drawen was this innocent, as an oxe to the larder.

Compounds

attributive and in other combinations:
larder beetle n. an insect which devours stored animal foods, Dermestes lardarius (Cent. Dict.).
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > order Coleoptera or beetles and weevils > [noun] > Polyphaga (omnivorous) > superfamily Diversicornia > family Dermestidae > dermestes lardarius (larder beetle)
bacon beetle1832
skin beetle1842
larder beetle1895
1895 J. H. Comstock & A. B. Comstock Man. Study Insects xxi. 539 The Larder Beetle, Dermestes lardarius..is the most common of the larger members of this family.
1942 E. O. Essig College Entomol. xxxii. 559 Small convex scaly beetles usually feeding on dead or dry animal matter. (Skin or Larder Beetles.) Dermestidæ.
1974 Times 16 Apr. 12/7 The larder beetle has been left on the shelf, but a related species..is piling up its numbers.
larder bird n. = butcherbird n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > birds > order Passeriformes (singing) > non-arboreal (larks, etc.) > [noun] > family Laniidae (shrike)
warianglec1386
nine-murder1544
shrike1544
butcherbird1666
murdering bird1666
nine-killer1778
larder bird1948
1948 Brit. Birds 41 200 Because of the habit of pinning up spare food on thorns the Red-backed Shrike (Lanius c. collurio) was far better known in Essex when I lived there, as the Larder Bird.
larder-fly n. ? = larder beetle n.
ΚΠ
1836–9 Todd's Cycl. Anat. & Physiol. II. 872/2 In the maggot of the larder-flies..the mouth is formed..differently.
larder-house n. Obsolete = sense 1.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > place for storing food > [noun]
cellar?c1225
larderc1305
pantrya1325
butleryc1325
spencec1386
larder-house1390
aumbrya1398
lardinera1400
meatfettle1440
spinde1481
selyer1483
pantyr?a1500
vault1500
eschansonnery1514
lardrya1552
lard-house1555
coveyc1593
brine-house1594
dispense1622
reservatory1647
provedore1694
ice cellar1735
spring house1755
provision house1787
futtah1834
pataka1842
1390–1 Earl Derby's Exped. (Camden) 24 Duobus valettis pro mundacione le larderhous, vj d.
1460–1 in J. T. Fowler Extracts Acct. Rolls Abbey of Durham (1898) I. 90 Pro le pavyng in le larderhouse.
c1540 A. Borde Bk. for to Lerne B j b The celler, the kytchyn, the larderhowse with al other howses of offices.
a1568 R. Ascham Scholemaster (1570) i. f. 11 This similitude is not rude, nor borowed of the larder house.
larder-silver n. Obsolete some kind of manorial dues (cf. larding money n. at larding n. Compounds).
ΚΠ
1486–7 Bailiff's MS. Acc. Dunster Boro'. De iiijs vjd de proficuis cujusdam consuetudinis vocati Larder sylver.

Derivatives

ˈlarderless adj. without a larder.
ΚΠ
1852 Ford in Q. Rev. Mar. 436 The barren larderless venta..without shelter or food for man or beast.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1902; most recently modified version published online December 2020).

lardern.2

Etymology: < lard v. + -er suffix1.
One who lards.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > food manufacture and preparation > preparation for table or cooking > preparation of meat > [noun] > inserting strips of bacon > one who lards meat
larder1598
1598 J. Florio Worlde of Wordes Lardatore, a larder, one that lardes meate.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1902; most recently modified version published online January 2018).

larderv.

Etymology: < larder n.1Previous versions of the OED give the stress as: ˈlarder.
rare.
transitive. To store up as in a larder.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > place for storing food > [verb (transitive)]
barrel1631
cellar1677
larder1904
the mind > possession > supply > storage > store [verb (transitive)]
again-layOE
to put upc1330
to lay up?a1366
bestow1393
to set up1421
reserve1480
powder1530
store1552
uplay1591
garnera1616
storea1616
revestry1624
reposit1630
barrel1631
magazine1643
stock1700
to salt down1849
reservoir1858
tidy1867
larder1904
the world > food and drink > food > place for storing food > [verb (transitive)] > of birds or insects
larder1904
1904 H. R. Haggard Gardener's Year (1905) July 251 The first wasp which came into being must have paralysed caterpillars and lardered them in key-holes.
1948 Brit. Birds 41 200 The male bird..is much more given to lardering than the hen.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1933; most recently modified version published online June 2019).
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n.1c1305n.21598v.1904
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更新时间:2024/11/13 12:10:22