单词 | mant |
释义 | mantn.1 Now historical. 1. a. A fabric of a type originally made in Mantua; = Mantua n.1 2 (cf. quot. 1764 at that sense). rare.Attested only with reference to the petition of Hector Hamon and his fellow Huguenots to the city council of Canterbury in 1575. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > textile fabric or an article of textile fabric > textile fabric > textile fabric from specific place > [noun] irislams1375 westvale1383 hinderland1465 ypir?1517 Normandy1529 Ghentish1545 mant1575 Scots cloth1581 northerna1592 turquesques1594 Westphalia1612 nilla1614 phota1616 Norwich stuff1618 Venus1629 nicanee1652 East India1659 caffoy1678 Bengal1681 Mantua1699 coffoy1703 Chello1712 negannepaut1725 Russia drab1741 Wilton1744 toile de Jouy1784 sorting-cloth1847 rum-swizzle1851 sarong1858 Yokohama1879 Turkoman1881 Mexican1883 kanga1895 Milanese1926 leso1961 1575 H. Hamon et al. Petition in W. Somner Antiq. Canterbury (1640) 175 Artes ad quas exercendas sunt vocati, et in quibus laborare cupit tota societas..sunt Florence, Serges, Bombasin,..Silkwever, Mouquade, Mauntes, Bages, &c. 1898 F. W. Cross Hist. Walloon & Huguenot Church at Canterbury ii. 15 The arts in which they have been trained and in which the whole company desire to engage..are Florence Serges, Bombasin,..Silkwever, Mouquade, Mauntes, Bages &c. 1987 I. Scouloudi Huguenots in Brit. 59 The strangers arrived in Canterbury in June 1575...They asked..leave to make Florence serges, Orleans serges, Frotz, silk, Mouquade, Mauntes, [etc.]. b. A cloak or robe; = manteau n. 1, mantua n.2 ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > clothing for body or trunk (and limbs) > [noun] > loose clothing > other overslopOE golionc1290 jupec1290 herigaut1297 rocketc1300 tabardc1300 rocheta1325 suckeny?a1366 hanselinc1386 slopc1386 stolea1387 houpland1392 frockc1400 gipec1400 under-frock1547 vochette1548 shirt1553 rubashka1587 camis1590 gorbelly1598 kebaya1598 tunic1609 sotana1622 supertunic1626 simar1636 manteau1638 peplum1656 peple1658 semar1673 mantua1678 manty1678 mant1694 vest1700 banian1725 galabiya1725 peplos1738 paletota1796 pellard1799 blouse1828 chiton1850 diploidion1850 shirtwaist1859 camorra1869 diplois1887 smock1907 kurta1913 Punjabi1937 kameez1955 kente cloth1957 camouflage smock1964 kanzu1969 1694 L. Echard tr. Plautus Epidicus ii. ii, in tr. Plautus Comedies 95 What a confounded Jargon o' names!.. There's your light Mant plated, your Stiff-bodied-Gown, &c. 1709 Tatler No. 32. ⁋2 Her blue Mant and Petticoat is her Azure Dress. 1752 A. Murphy Gray's Inn Jrnl. No. 2 To recal a straggling Hair, to settle the Tucker, or compose the Mant. 1960 C. W. Cunnington et al. Dict. Eng. Costume 132/1 Mant, 17th and 18th c's... Short for Manto, Mantua. 1969 R. T. Wilcox Dict. Costume 202/2 Mantes, beruffled scarf-like capes of gold and silver tissue imported from Mantua in Italy in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Such mantes were worn by ladies of the various European courts and society... The mante is still to be seen in various countries today. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > headgear > [noun] > veil > types of flockard1465 power1526 crispa1592 fall1611 mant1651 mantilla1717 bridal veil1769 litham1839 voilette1842 yashmak1844 weeper1845 birdcage veil1888 fingertip veil1888 ghoonghat1916 spiderveil1922 niqab1936 full veil1937 1651 tr. F. de Quintana Hist. Don Fenise 238 He..told him..to return to the Inne to fetch the three Ladies who were there, making them..put their Mants upon them (that is a great vail which the women have in Spain,..which covereth all their bodies unto their heels). This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2000; most recently modified version published online March 2022). mantn.2 Scottish, English regional (northern), and Irish English (northern). A stammer, a stutter; a speech impediment. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > speech > defective or inarticulate speech > [noun] > stammer or stammering stammering1357 wlafferinga1387 mammeringa1425 stuttingc1430 stackeringc1440 stotingc1440 tattling1481 staggering1565 manting1568 maffling1577 stuttering1595 buffing1600 stammeringness1637 titubation1641 balbuties1655 traulism1678 hesitation1709 hammering1731 hobbling1753 stammer1773 mant1801 stutter1843 Hottentotism1871 hesitatingness1890 1801 J. Thomson Poems Sc. Dial. 119 He..tell'd you a' his sermon down Without a maunt. 1839 Wilson's Hist. Tales Borders V. 189 The former having what we call in Scotland a mant, a sullen visage, and a brawling temper. 1894 P. H. Hunter James Inwick ii. 19 That ane said he had a mant, an' the tither ane that he clippit his words. 1917 C. Murray Sough o' War 41 He slivvers, an' has sic a mant, an' ae clog-fit as weel. 1935 W. Soutar Poems in Scots 26 It's no for makars to upvant Themsel's; lat mummers mak a mant O'a' their makins. 1979 J. J. Graham Shetland Dict. Mant, a stammer. 1996 C. I. Macafee Conc. Ulster Dict. 216/2 Mant, a stammer, a stutter. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2000; most recently modified version published online March 2022). mantv. Scottish and English regional (northern). 1. intransitive. To stutter, to stammer; to have a speech impediment. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > speech > defective or inarticulate speech > speak inarticulately or with a defect [verb (intransitive)] > stammer or speak hesitantly stammerc1000 wlaffe1025 stotec1325 humc1374 mafflea1387 stut1388 rattlea1398 famble14.. mammera1425 drotec1440 falterc1440 stackerc1440 hem1470 wallowa1475 tattle1481 mant1506 happer1519 trip1526 hobblea1529 hack1553 stagger1565 faffle1570 stutter1570 hem and hawk1588 ha1604 hammer1619 titubate1623 haw1632 fork1652 hacker1652 lispc1680 hesitate1706 balbutiate1731 haffle1790 hotter1828 stutter1831 ah1853 catch1889 1506 [implied in: 1506 in J. B. Paul Accts. Treasurer Scotl. (1901) III. 199 Item, to mantand Adam to pas to Dunbertane with ane writing of the Kingis. (at manting adj.)]. c1586 J. Stewart Poems (1913) 241 Scho lost hir speitche and mycht no moir bot mant. 1629 Z. Boyd Last Battell Soule (new ed.) 985 Hee who manteth or stammereth in his speach. 1716 A. Ramsay On Wit 12 There was a manting lad in Fife, Wha..never manted when he sang. 1802 Edinb. Mag. July 56 They gape an' glowr, an' humph an' hae, An' wonder what I mean to say, As I were mantin. 1805 J. Stagg Misc. Poems (ed. 2) 130 An you young woman promise here To honour and obey Your spouse in all he may require, The breyde said mantan n—yea. 1873 Guidman Inglismaill 33 Noo an' than he mantit in his sang. 1935 Sc. Notes & Queries 3rd Ser. 13 24 Habberin' Jock mantet bit didna say't. 1979 J. J. Graham Shetland Dict. (at cited word) Whin he got kinda wrocht up he wid mant a grain. 2. transitive. To speak or utter (words, etc.) with a stutter or stammer. rare. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > speech > defective or inarticulate speech > utter inarticulately [verb (transitive)] > utter hesitantly or stammer hem1553 mant1568 stammer1587 to hack out1602 stammer1608 fribblea1627 lisp1627 stutter1655 hesitate1734 to falter forth or out1762 hobble1813 falter1851 1568 A. Scott Poems (1896) i. 92 Thai tyrit God..With owklie abitis to augment þair rentalis, Mantand mort momlingis mixt wt monye leis. 1857 J. Stewart Sketches 99 Till hell-born echoes trumlin' maunt Their wilderin' shout. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2000; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.11575n.21801v.1506 |
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