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单词 norsel
释义

norseln.

Brit. /nɔːsl/, U.S. /ˈnɔrs(ə)l/
Forms:

α. early Old English nostlæ, Old English–early Middle English nostle, Middle English nostul, Middle English nostyl, Middle English nostylle.

β. Old English–early Middle English nosle, 1600s nossel, 1600s nozzel, 1600s 1800s– norsel, 1800s– nossil (English regional (Cornwall)), 1900s– noozle (Scottish (eastern)), 1900s– norsell, 1900s– norsle (English regional (south-western)), 1900s– nozzle (English regional (south-western)).

γ. Scottish and English regional 1700s 1900s– ossel, 1800s ozle, 1800s ozzel, 1800s– osel, 1800s– ossil, 1800s– ussel (Northumberland), 1900s– horsel (Cornwall), 1900s– orsel (Cornwall), 1900s– orsell, 1900s– orsle (Cornwall), 1900s– osal, 1900s– ozel.

Origin: A word inherited from Germanic.
Etymology: Cognate with Old High German nustil buckle, clasp < the Germanic base of Old High German nusta clasp + the Germanic base of Old High German -ilo -el suffix1; compare (with o -grade and with diminutive suffix) Old Frisian nestla , Middle Dutch nestel , nastel (Dutch nestel ), Middle Low German nestel , Old High German nestel , nestila , nestilo (German (now regional) Nestel ), early modern Swedish nästel , Old Gutnish nestli , all in sense ‘band, tie, cord’, (with o -grade and without suffix) Old High German nast- (only in the compound nast-eid oath sworn by a woman on her plaits), Old Icelandic nest brooch, pin, Old Danish neste brooch, clasp, Old Gutnish nast buckle, clasp, and (with e -grade) Old Icelandic nist , nisti brooch, pin; further etymology uncertain: probably ultimately related (in a way that has not been satisfactorily explained) to the Indo-European base of node n. The Germanic word was borrowed into Finnish as nasta pin, peg, and (with diminutive suffix) into post-classical Latin as nastula (from 7th cent.; c1440 in a British source), nastola (from 9th cent.), nastale (12th cent. in a British source), nastila (12th cent.), nastilus (c1180 in a British source), nastulus (from 13th cent. in British and continental sources), in various senses including ‘brooch, clasp, cord’, and into Italian as nastro band, ribbon, tape (a1321).The stem vowel in the Scots form noozle has perhaps been altered after noose n. (compare quot. 1906 at sense 3). The γ. forms show metanalysis (see N n.). The word is found in various forms widely round the coast of Great Britain, especially in Cornwall and Devon in the south-west, and along the North Sea coast from East Anglia to the Shetland Isles.
Now British regional.
1. A band, a fillet. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > headgear > [noun] > head- or hair-band
snoodc725
norseleOE
hair-lacea1300
filleta1327
tressurea1350
hair-bandc1440
headbanda1522
forehead-cloth1561
fascia1587
filleting1648
forehead-band1809
taenia1850
bandlet1883
eOE King Ælfred tr. Gregory Pastoral Care (Hatton) (1871) xiii. 77 On Arones breostum sceolde beon awriten sio racu ðæs domes on ðæm hrægle þe mon hæt rationale, & mid noslum gebunden.
OE Antwerp Gloss. (1955) 88 Fascia, nostle.
c1225 ( Ælfric Gloss. (Worcester) in T. Wright & R. P. Wülcker Anglo-Saxon & Old Eng. Vocab. (1884) I. 125 Fascia, nostle.
c1225 ( Ælfric Gloss. (Worcester) in T. Wright & R. P. Wülcker Anglo-Saxon & Old Eng. Vocab. (1884) I. 153 Fasciola, nosle.
2. A loop on the traces of a harness. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > animal husbandry > general equipment > [noun] > harness of draught animal > traces > attachments for
norsela1300
pipe?1309
tug1417
tug-hook1417
spreadbat1775
trace-ring1795
trace-tug1795
spreader1810
cock eye1819
stretcher1828
tug-buckle1851
roller1856
piping1875
tug-carrier1877
tug-slide1877
trace-iron1902
trace-loop-
a1300 Gloss. W. de Bibbesworth (Bodl.) (1929) 879 (MED) Nostles [v.rr. yze of trayse, hankes of trais; AN. braceroles].
3. Each of numerous short pieces of cord by which a rope is attached to the sides of a fishing net.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > hunting > fishing > fishing-tackle > net > [noun] > ropes on nets
norsel1440
head-roping1615
nostelling1615
warrope1615
way-rope1641
head rope?1748
warp1835
balk1847
trawl-warp1864
ground-rope1874
brail1883
shoreline1887
shore-rope-
Promptorium Parvulorum (Harl. 221) 359 Nostylle of nettys [v.rr. nostul, nostyl], nastula, instita, nasculus.
1615 E. Sharpe Britaines Busse sig. B3 Each net is to be fastned to her ropes with short peeces of Cords or lines of two foote long a peece called Nozzels.
1641 S. Smith Herring-bvsse Trade 4 For Norsels at 8d. a Net, being 130 to a Net.
1682 J. Collins Salt & Fishery 112 To each of these are fastned 20 Snoods, alias Nossels.
1750 in Sc. National Dict. (1965) VI. 495/3 The Ossels..each 18 inches long..are fixed to two Mashes at one end by an Eye.
1881 Proc. Soc. Antiquaries Scotl. New Ser. 3 150 The nets..are attached to a strong..rope by means of thinner cords known as ‘ozzels’.
1883 Great Internat. Fisheries Exhib. Catal. 7 Simple Machine, for making Norsels or Snoods of any length.
1894 R. O. Heslop Northumberland Words Ussel, the short cords in a herring-net that attach it to the ‘balk.’
1906 D. M'Iver Eyemouth 198 When a net is being prepared for use it..has to be suspended to a long rope by so many ‘noozles’, or small pieces of twine which are tied to the rope by means of nooses.
1921 Dict. Occup. Terms (1927) §398 Net orseller, norseller, attaches orsells or norsells (short lines about ten inches long) to top and bottom of fishing net at regular intervals.
1972 J. Y. Mather in M. F. Wakelin Patterns Folk Speech Brit. Isles 18 Figure 2 shows the sole-rope as made fast to the net by the ossils.
1973 W. Elmer Terminol. Fishing ii. 54 The bait..is put on a skewer..or hung on an orsle..(a short piece of line), and the whole is weighted with stones.
1999 R. Malster Mardler's Compan. 54/1 Ossel, norsel, a length of twine fitted to the head of a drift net.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2003; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

norselv.

Forms: 1600s norsell.
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: norsel n.
Etymology: < norsel n.
Obsolete. rare.
transitive. To fit with norsels.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > hunting > fishing > fishing-tackle > net > fishing nets [verb (transitive)] > fit with norsels
norsel1641
1641 S. Smith Herring-bvsse Trade 11 To bring the Nets to their ropes, and Norsell and Corke them.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2003; most recently modified version published online December 2020).
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n.eOEv.1641
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