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单词 pan
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pann.1

Brit. /pan/, U.S. /pæn/
Forms: early Old English pannae, Old English–Middle English ponne, Old English–Middle English (in compounds) 1500s– pan, Old English–Middle English (in compounds) 1600s pon, Old English–1600s panne, Middle English panna, Middle English payn- (in compounds), Middle English penne, Middle English (chiefly in compounds) 1500s–1700s pann, Middle English–1500s pane, 1500s pannez (plural), 1500s panntz (plural), 1500s pene, 1500s pone; English regional (chiefly west midlands) 1800s– paan, 1800s– pon; Scottish pre-1700 pane, pre-1700 pann, pre-1700 panne, pre-1700 paun, pre-1700 pawn, pre-1700 1700s– pan.
Origin: A word inherited from Germanic.
Etymology: Cognate with Old Frisian panne , ponne , Middle Dutch panne (Dutch pan ), Old Saxon panna (Middle Low German panne , German regional (Low German) pann , panne ), Old High German phanna , pfanna (Middle High German phanne , pfanne , German Pfanne ), further etymology uncertain; perhaps < classical Latin panna a kind of earthenware vessel (in a number of inscriptions from Germany and southern France), a kind of iron vessel (in an undated glossary), in post-classical Latin also kettle (12th cent. in a German source), dripping-pan (mid 16th cent. in a British source), although this is itself of uncertain origin (it is perhaps a variant of patina , patena (see paten n.), with elision of the vowel of the 2nd syllable and assimilation of -tn- to -nn-, but the localization of the early examples perhaps argues against this). Since the word has undergone the sound shift from p to pf in Old High German and occurs in Old English as well as in continental West Germanic languages, it must have been an early loan, if borrowed from Latin. Compare (probably < Middle Low German) Old Icelandic panna (in late sources), Old Swedish panna (Swedish panna), Danish pande.Irish panna is probably borrowed from English, and Welsh pann from Latin panna . Sense 7c was probably reinforced by South African Dutch pan small lake. With sense 10b compare pan v.3 4. Sense 12, according to local traditions, originated before the end of World War II but is apparently unattested in writing at this date.
I. A shallow vessel, and related senses.
1.
a. A vessel made of metal or (formerly) earthenware, often open and (in later use) usually broad or shallow, used for cooking and other domestic purposes. Frequently in plural in collocation with pots, as pots and pans.bed, frying, milk, sauce, stew, warming-pan, etc.: see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > equipment > receptacle or container > vessel > [noun] > broad, shallow vessel or pan
paneOE
the world > food and drink > food > food manufacture and preparation > equipment for food preparation > cooking vessel or pot > [noun] > pan
paneOE
patel1480
pounea1500
eOE King Ælfred tr. Gregory Pastoral Care (Hatton) (1871) xxi. 165 Mid ðisse pannan hierstinge wæs Paulus onbærned.
OE Antwerp Gloss. (1955) 83 Patella, panne.
OE tr. Medicina de Quadrupedibus (Vitell.) v. 250 Wiþ feallendum feaxe haran wambe seoð oþþe bræd on pannan on godum ele.
lOE Laws: Gerefa (Corpus Cambr.) xvii. 455 Cytel, hlædel, pannan, crocca, brandiren.
1340 Ayenbite (1866) 23 (MED) Ambicion..is þe dyeules panne of helle, huerinne he makeþ his sriinges [read friinges].
c1400 (?a1300) Kyng Alisaunder (Laud) (1952) 4930 (MED) Hij nymeþ þe fyssh and eteþ it þanne, Wiþouten fyre, wiþouten panne.
c1405 (c1390) G. Chaucer Reeve's Tale (Hengwrt) (2003) l. 24 With hir he yaf ful many a panne a bras.
c1450 tr. Palladius De re Rustica (Bodl. Add.) i. 909 So it be thicke and poured in a ponne.
?a1475 Noble Bk. Cookry in Middle Eng. Dict. at Panne Cast them into a pan with watir boiling on the fier.
a1529 J. Skelton Tunnyng of Elynour Rummyng in Certayne Bks. (?1545) 317 A good brasse pan.
1596 J. Dalrymple tr. J. Leslie Hist. Scotl. (1888) I. 94 To karie pottis, panis, and vthir kitchine veshels.
1646 B. Ryves Mercurius Rusticus (new ed.) 164 They steale his Pots, Pannes and Kettles.
1664 Inventory A. Smith in J. S. Moore Goods & Chattels Forefathers (1976) 90 1 greate brasse kettle, 4 brasse pons.
1718 Mrs. Mary Eales's Receipts 3 Lay a thin Strainer in a flat earthen Pan.
1768 J. Lees Jrnl. 10 [In Providence, R.I.] a good many Potts, Pans, Anchors, and such work is manufactured.
1809 M. Edgeworth Ennui xii, in Tales Fashionable Life I. 275 Let him get home and to bed: I'll run and warm it with the pan myself.
1897 Outing Aug. 438 A very beautiful fish, excellent for the pan.
1937 Amer. Home Apr. 50/2 Remove the cake from the pan and slice in half crosswise.
1996 BBC Good Food Oct. 112/2 Melt the butter in a pan, add the garlic and bread cubes and cook.
b. An amount of something held in a pan; the contents of a pan; a panful.
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the world > relative properties > measurement > the scientific measurement of volume > measure(s) of capacity > amount defined by capacity > [noun] > amount that fills a receptacle > pot or pan
panfula1325
potfulc1390
pot1530
pigful1590
pan1762
saucepanful1825
billyful1866
1558 in J. M. Bestall & D. V. Fowkes Chesterfield Wills & Inventories 1521–1603 (1977) 74 Sertyn plegges of John Beyles..a panne of penistones..a pott of George Selvesters.
1640 J. Howell Δενδρολογια 166 Love is like a Panne of Charcole, which meeting with the wind its contrary, makes it turne more ardent.
1673 J. Ray Coll. Eng. Words 175 Out of two pans of forty eight gallons they expect seven pecks of Salt.
1762 O. Goldsmith Citizen of World II. 23 He..had found a pan of money under ground.
1796 in S. Vince Princ. Hydrostat. xi. 142 By means of a pan of coals, we brought the water to the same degree of heat.
1839 A. Ure Dict. Arts 1142 Six or seven days are required to complete the formation of a pan of hard soap.
1915 St. Nicholas June 737/2 A pan of batter quickly prepared that..was converted into nicely-browned cakes.
1994 R. Paulsen Winterdance i. 53 The door on the cabin opened and Ruth came outside with a pan of dirty water.
c. Chiefly Irish English. = pan-loaf n.
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the world > food and drink > food > dishes and prepared food > bread > loaf > [noun] > pan- or tin-loaf
tinned loafc950
brick1698
brick loaf1723
brick bread1762
pan-loaf1846
pan bread1856
tin-loaf1858
tin1957
pan1978
1978 D. Murphy Place Apart xi. 235 The eldest child..was sent up the road for a cooked chicken and a sliced pan.
1982 B. MacLaverty Time to Dance (1985) 100 They had run out of bread except for a heel of pan.
1991 R. Doyle Van (1992) 226 They fed seventeen large sliced pans to the ducks.
2. A vessel resembling a pan used in various technical processes.
a. Originally Scottish. A vessel used for boiling, evaporating, etc.; spec. a large, shallow vessel in which brine is evaporated, usually by heating over a fire, to obtain salt. In early use frequently in plural: a salt works. Cf. sense 7a.Earliest in salt-pan n. (see sense 2).
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the world > the earth > minerals > mineral sources > [noun] > salt or soda lake
salinec1450
salt-pan1494
pan1573
salt-wich1610
salina1697
salt-pond1697
salt lake1763
natron lake1821
soda lake1839
bitter lake1843
shott1878
soda pan1976
society > occupation and work > equipment > receptacle or container > vessel > [noun] > airtight vessel
air holder1795
pan1821
1428 in W. Fraser Memorials Family Wemyss (1888) II. 56 Gyf the said Robert or Dauid lykis to ger mak or laboure a saltpan of thaire awne.
1472 in J. Fullarton Rec. Burgh Prestwick (1834) 20 For the wrangwis manuring of Johne Simsounis saye in the pannis.
c1480 (a1400) St. Justina 731 in W. M. Metcalfe Legends Saints Sc. Dial. (1896) II. 173 & [in] a gret pane..be done blak pic & gert brynstane bla, & vndir it a fyre gert ma.
1507 in J. B. Paul Accts. Treasurer Scotl. (1902) IV. 76 For ane pan in Strivelin for the quinta essencia and potingary thare, vj s.
1573 in J. H. Burton Reg. Privy Council Scotl. (1878) 1st Ser. II. 286 It being menit be the awnaris and pan maisteris of certane pannis on the coist sydes.
1673 J. Ray Coll. Eng. Words 174 They..leave about a pottle or gallon of Brine in the pan, lest the Salt should burn and stick to the sides of the pan.
1682 J. Collins Salt & Fishery 96 Our Planters [1670 did] remove and carry away the Boats, Rayles, Cask, Salt, Nets, and Pans for Boyling of Oyle.
1721 London Gaz. No. 6006/4 A Moiety of Salt-works, containing 12 Pans.
1821 A. Ure Dict. Chem. at Evaporation The evaporating pan, or still, is a hemispherical dish of cast-iron..furnished with an air-tight flat lid.
1854 E. Ronalds & T. Richardson Knapp's Chem. Technol. (ed. 2) I. 280 Open pans..are heated by the waste heat of the pan-furnace.
1955 K. Hutton & A. Swallow Chem. for Gen. Sci. x. 131 Solid salt was heated with concentrated sulphuric acid in iron pans, making salt cake and freeing hydrogen chloride.
2003 Independent (Nexis) 3 May 29 The concentrated brine is then transferred into shallow pans where a gas heater replicates the Mediterranean sun and gently warms the liquid for 24 hours.
b. Soap-making. A shallow container in which the fat or oil is mixed with alkali or in which saponification takes place, and from which soap can be skimmed or spent alkali drained off.
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society > occupation and work > equipment > equipment for making other articles > [noun] > soap-making equipment
frame1725
pan1742
Jack1845
sess1853
soap-boiler1863
fan1885
1742 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 42 74 Lest the Iron, which is corroded by the Lye, should enter into the Composition of the Soap, one need only to evaporate the Lyes in earthen Pans put over a Balneum Mariæ.
1813 E. Picken Misc. Poems II. 79 In vain was fill'd the saipman's pan.
1927 T. P. Hilditch Industr. Chem. Fats & Waxes iii. iv. 227 The actual charge of finished soap will only be about two-thirds of the total capacity of the pan.
1989 Encycl. Brit. X. 916/3 Two other methods are used by small factories: in the cold method a fat and oil mixture is agitated with an alkali solution in an open pan until it thickens.
c. A shallow bowl in which gold is separated from gravel, mud, etc., by agitation and washing.
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society > occupation and work > equipment > equipment for treating ores > [noun] > for washing ore > for gold
scour1619
rocker1828
cradle1833
pan1835
Long Tom1839
Tom1839
wash-bowl1848
gold washer1849
sluice1851
wash-pan1851
tub1853
gold pan1854
mining pan1858
pan mill1869
Tommy1892
1835 in C. H. Gilman Poetry of Travelling in U.S. (1838) 290 A workman went through this process in its simplest form, that of ‘panning’. This is merely to fill an iron pan with the gravel among which the gold is found, and to stir the pan about with the hands for some time, under water, throwing out the gravel from time to time.
1849 Alta California (San Francisco) 21 June 2/3 Scores of dispirited looking objects are wandering up and down the Arroyo to-day, with their pans and picks upon their shoulders.
1879 Encycl. Brit. X. 745 The most characteristic [appliance] being the ‘pan’, a circular dish of sheet-iron with sloping sides about 13 or 14 inches in diameter.
1957 M. Lowry Let. 4 Apr. (1967) 406 When the last old sourdough has traded in his divining rod and gold sifting pan for a geiger counter.
1995 Denver Post 11 June t6/3 Shake the pan so the gold sinks, swirl the water so lighter material slips over the edge, and ‘tail’ so the gold separates from the other material.
d. Metallurgy. A container in which ores are ground and the metal separated by amalgamation; (also) a vessel in which ore is smelted.
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society > occupation and work > equipment > equipment for treating ores > [noun] > for amalgamating
pan1839
pan-amalgamator1874
amalgamator1875
table plate1877
society > occupation and work > equipment > furnace or kiln > furnace > parts of furnace > [noun] > vessels
crossletc1386
testc1386
cruciblea1475
spoon1496
melting pot1545
cruset1558
fining pot1560
hooker1594
cupel1605
crusoile1613
crisol1622
melt pot1637
muffle1644
crevet1658
coffin1686
sand-pot1758
Hessian crucible1807
pan1839
shank1843
casting-pot1846
king pot1862
converter1867
washpot1879
1670 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 5 1197 They put the mass remaining upon a perforated Plate, which they set over a deep pan placed in the earth, in the bottom of which pan they also put quicksilver: This pan they cover..and then make a charcoal-fire upon it; they drive down the Quicksilver yet remaining in the Gold to the rest in the bottom of the pan.]
1839 A. Ure Dict. Arts 1133 The crystallization refinery of Mr. Pattinson is an extremely simple smelting-house... Each pan has a discharge-pipe, proceeding laterally from one side of its bottom, by which the melted metal may be run out when a plug is withdrawn.
1874 R. W. Raymond Statistics Mines & Mining 193 The roasted ore is amalgamated in 8 pans, with as many settlers.
1938 R. Hum Chem. for Engin. Students xx. 537 In the American or Washoe Process, the ore is crushed, powdered, and then made into a pulp, by grinding in a pan, holding between one and two tons.
e. In the manufacture of tin plate: the fourth in a series of five cast-iron rectangular pots used in tinning, having a grated bottom, in which the sheets plated with tin are placed on edge to drain and cool. Obsolete.
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society > occupation and work > equipment > metalworking equipment > [noun] > plating equipment
pan1839
washpot1839
plating bath1866
trough1877
branner1902
1839 A. Ure Dict. Arts 1253 A range of rectangular cast-iron pots is set over a fire-flue in an apartment called the stow... The first rectangle in the range is the tin-pot; the second is the wash-pot, with a partition in it; the third is the grease-pot; the fourth is the pan, grated at bottom; the fifth is the list-pot.
f. Painting. Originally: a small, shallow dish used to hold a cake of watercolour pigment. Later: a cake of watercolour pigment sold in such a dish.
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society > occupation and work > equipment > receptacle or container > vessel > [noun] > shallow vessel or dish > specific types
balancea1522
cuvette1706
necromancer1747
holm-dish1771
patina1814
pan1843
coolamon1846
lanx1857
pitchi1896
1843 Hand-bk. Water-colours (Winsor & Newton) 39 The Moist Colour is contained in thin porcelain pans.
1906 F. Delamotte Amateur Artist 42 Moist colours, placed in earthenware pans.
1959 A. Hill Beginner's Bk. Watercolour Painting 12 The pans, if pans you buy, can when empty be refilled with fresh colours from tubes.
1978 C. Hayes Compl. Guide Painting & Drawing Techniques viii. 123 Pans or half pans..can be bought as individual items.
1991 Artist Nov. 19/1 Looking at many of the darker pigments..in their unwatered pan form, it is clear just how deep the colours obtainable with watercolour can be.
3. Scottish. A vessel or bowl containing the fuel and wick of a lamp. Also: a candleholder. Now historical.
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society > faith > artefacts > implement (general) > candleholder > [noun]
trendle1423
paschal1426
shaft?c1450
pan1511
trestle1523
strestell1531
hearse1563
Jesse1706
menorah1886
hanukkiah1939
society > faith > artefacts > implement (general) > vessel (general) > pan or bowl for oil lights > [noun]
pan1511
1511 Edinb. Hammermen f. 73v, in Dict. Older Sc. Tongue (at cited word) For ane pane of latoun to the lamp.
1554 in J. D. Marwick Extracts Rec. Burgh Edinb. (1871) II. 345 Item, for xiiij faddome of corde to hing the pan in the meids of the kirk, iiijs. iiijd.
1556 in J. D. Marwick Extracts Rec. Burgh Edinb. (1871) II. 247 The sowme of xxs. for x half pund wecht candill furnist be tham to the pane on the hie altar.
1694 Inchmahome Pr. 161 Of brass snuffers and panns conforme.
1972 Kingston (Ont.) Whig-Standard 23 Aug. 7/2 Crusie is derived from a Scottish term and refers to a pan which does not have a special separate trough for the wick.
4. British. Originally: a pot for use in a close stool; (in later use) the bowl of a toilet.
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the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > sanitation > privy or latrine > [noun] > water-closet or lavatory > W.C. appliances > pan
pan1586
pot1706
toilet bowl1850
lavatory bowl1915
1586 Inventory Sir Edward Littleton in J. West Village Rec. (1982) iv. 113 Item, one pewter pan and one brass pann for two close stools.
1611 R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues Bassin à selle percée, the pan of a close stoole.
1693 T. Urquhart tr. F. Rabelais in Wks. (1694) iii. xxii. 183 Streight under Proserpina's Close-stool, to the very middle of the self-same infernal Pan..within which she..voideth the fecal stuff.
1869 E. A. Parkes Man. Pract. Hygiene (ed. 3) i. i. 4 More water must be used for thoroughly flushing the pan and soil-pipe.
1882 S. S. Hellyer Lect. Sci. & Art Sanitary Plumbing v. 193 These water-closets were made of marble— a the pan; b the waste-plug; c the service-pipe; d the overflow.
1919 R. Fry Let. May (1972) II. 451 A real Victorian W.C. with a pull up plug... But..there's no sham Chinese landscape in the pan.
1993 I. Welsh Trainspotting 26 Ah fall off the pan, ma knees splashing oantae the pishy flair.
5. English regional, Irish English (northern), and Caribbean. A deep vessel, usually for containing liquid; spec. a container, a box.
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society > occupation and work > equipment > receptacle or container > vessel > other specific vessels for holding liquids > [noun]
canOE
tynel1336
gallona1382
pinbouke1555
pan1868
jerrycan1943
1868 J. C. Atkinson Gloss. Cleveland Dial. 371 Pan, a vessel for containing water, not necessarily or usually shallow.
1953 M. Traynor Eng. Dial. Donegal 206/2 A pan full of water.
1967 F. G. Cassidy & R. B. Le Page Dict. Jamaican Eng. Cash pan, a cash box; milk pan, a milk churn.
1996 C. I. Macafee Conc. Ulster Dict. 246/1 Pan, a pail.
1996 R. Allsopp Dict. Caribbean Eng. Usage 425/1 Pan, a can; a bin; a large empty metal container turned to domestic use; a box.
II. Something resembling a pan in shape.
6.
a. The skull, esp. the upper part of the skull. Also, more generally: the head. Cf. harn-pan n. Now chiefly Scottish.Recorded earliest in compounds, as brainpan n., head pan n.
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the world > life > the body > structural parts > bone or bones > skull > [noun]
head boneeOE
head paneOE
panOE
brainpanOE
skull?c1225
harn-pan1340
brain skulla1400
calvairc1420
pot of the head?a1425
pan-bone1545
cranew1555
pannicle1590
pericranium1590
cranion1611
poll1721
braincase1726
brain-box1789
pericrane1804
cobbra1832
cranium1842
neurocranium1907
OE tr. Medicina de Quadrupedibus (Vitell.) xiv. 270 Hundes heafodpanne gecnucud.
OE Aldhelm Glosses (Digby 146) in A. S. Napier Old Eng. Glosses (1900) 76/1 Cerebri : brægenpanne.
c1330 (?a1300) Arthour & Merlin (Auch.) (1973) 9353 (MED) Arthour on þe helme him smot; Þe dent sanke þurth..þe pelet to þe panne.
c1380 Sir Ferumbras (1879) 853 (MED) He..smot him boþe þorw hed & pan.
?a1400 (a1338) R. Mannyng Chron. (Petyt) (1996) i. l. 10699 In þe forhede Arthure he smote þorgh þe flesche vnto þe pan.
c1400 (a1376) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Trin. Cambr. R.3.14) (1960) A. iv. 64 (MED) Pees putte forþ his heued & his panne [v.r. ponne] blody.
a1500 in G. Henslow Med. Wks. 14th Cent. (1899) 98 (MED) For to knowen whanne a man is smytten with a staf on the hede, ȝif the panne be broken or non, and the flesche hool abouen.
1577 Vicary's Profitable Treat. Anat. sig. C.iv They be numbred seuen bones in the pan or skul of the head.
1658 W. Johnson tr. F. Würtz Surgeons Guid ii. vi. 62 All Wounds in the head are dangerous..especially..when the pan or scull is broken.
1839 D. M. Moir Life Mansie Wauch (rev. ed.) xxiv. 306 I feared the fall had produced some crack in his pan, and that his seven senses had gone a wool-gathering.
1847 J. Paterson Ballads & Songs Ayrshire 2nd ser. 115 Ae stroke wi' sic prodigious strength The deil's harns frae the pan flew!
a1956 G. Adam in R. Adam Mair Rhymes fae Weary Roadman (2015) 18 Ye rat I'll batter in yer pan.
1967 N. Mailer Why are we in Vietnam? ix. 160 Y'need a little Texas oil in the pan, in the brainpan, Samantha.
1992 I. Banks Crow Road xv. 378 This guy's knocking his pan in for you for nothing.
b. The patella.Earliest, and now only, in knee-pan n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > structural parts > bone or bones > bones of arm or leg > bones of leg > [noun] > knee-cap
eye of the kneea1400
rotulaa1400
knee-pan14..
whirling-bone14..
knee-bonec1410
pan?a1425
rotule?a1425
rowel?a1425
whirl-bone1530
patel1552
shive1598
kneeshive1599
lid of the knee1632
patella1634
cap1767
kneecap1869
?a1425 tr. Guy de Chauliac Grande Chirurgie (Hunterian) f. 71v Abouen is a rounde brode bone þe whiche is cleped þe panne off þe knee [?c1425 Paris kne panne; L. patella genu].
1543 B. Traheron tr. J. de Vigo Most Excellent Wks. Chirurg. f. 183v Of the dislocacion of the panne or rowell of the knee.
1657 W. Rumsey Organon Salutis (1659) xi. 63 The said Pitch-plaister, applyed to cover the pans of both knees.
1701 tr. D. Tauvry New Rational Anat. 286 Upon the articulation of the Thigh-bone with that of the Leg, there's a flat round bone call'd Patella, the Pan.
1753 A. Murphy Gray's Inn Jrnl. No. 53 Manifest Danger of..hurting the Pan of the Knee, or some such Disaster.
c. Originally: the socket of the hip or shoulder joint. In later use: a socket for a hinge (rare). Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > structural parts > bone or bones > bones of arm or leg > bones of leg > [noun] > bone of thigh > socket of
pan1598
society > occupation and work > equipment > building and constructing equipment > fastenings > [noun] > hinge > parts of hinge > other parts
vartiwell1763
pan1875
1598 J. Florio Worlde of Wordes Also the hollownes or pan wherein the huckle bone turneth.
1605 A. Willet Hexapla in Genesin 335 We may name it acetabulum, the panne of the hucklebone.
1637 K. Digby Let. 11–21 Sept. in T. Hobbes Corr. (1994) I. 50 My arme..Was out of ioynt; & so long before j could haue it sett, that a gelly growing in the panne hath made it apt to slippe out againe.
1770 J. Robertson Clavis Pentateuchi 207 Acetabulum. The pan, or hollow in the joint of bones.
1875 E. H. Knight Amer. Mech. Dict. III. 1601/1 Pan,..the socket or sole for a hinge.
d. U.S. The broad posterior end of the lower jawbone of a marine mammal. Now more fully pan bone.
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the world > animals > mammals > order Cetacea (whales) > [noun] > large member of (whale) > parts of > bones of mouth
whalebone1834
pan1884
1884 J. T. Brown Whale Fishery in Bull. U.S. National Mus. No. 27. 293 These cases contain the ‘pans’ (posterior portions of the jaw-bone of the sperm-whale).
1902 N.Y. Times 25 May 12/3 In scrimshawing so large an object as the sperm whale ‘pan’ or broad part of the jawbone,..free-hand drawing or engraving is resorted to by the artist.
1975 N.Y. Times 6 Apr. bqli10/3 The process begins with a piece of ivory, which is either a whole tooth or pan bone of the jawbone of a sperm whale.
1995 C. J. Howard Dolphin Chron. (1996) vi. 143 Sound enters the ear via the ‘pan bone’ of the jaw.
e. slang (originally U.S.). [Perhaps influenced by to shut (one's) pan at sense 8a.] The face. Also (U.S.): the mouth. See also deadpan adj.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > external parts of body > head > face > [noun]
leera700
nebeOE
onseneeOE
wlitec950
anlethOE
nebshaftc1225
snouta1300
facec1300
visage1303
semblantc1315
vicea1325
cheera1350
countenance1393
front1398
fashiona1400
visurec1400
physiognomyc1425
groina1500
faxa1522
favour1525
facies1565
visor1575
complexiona1616
frontispiecea1625
mun1667
phiz1687
mug1708
mazard1725
physiog1791
dial plate1811
fizzog1811
jiba1825
dial1837
figurehead1840
Chevy Chase1859
mooey1859
snoot1861
chivvy1889
clock1899
map1899
mush1902
pan1920
kisser1938
boat1958
boat race1958
punim1965
1920 N.Y. Tribune 14 June 8/5 Some drops from it fell on her pan.
1924 in H. Galewitz Great Comics (1972) 140 Open yer pan afterwards about this and you'll be in stir for the next thousand years.
1931 E. Linklater Juan in Amer. iii. viii. 262 I never want to see that pan of yours again!
1931 J. T. Farrell Young Lonigan (1965) v Paulie's pan was stuffed with tobacco.
1972 Jazz & Blues Nov. 11/4 This must have been funny enough when it happened; relayed through the medium of Rich's sourly contemptuous pickled-walnut pan.
1992 J. Torrington Swing Hammer Swing! xxxi. 281 Even back at his house I'd sat there with the usual cheap sneer on my pan.
7.
a. A hollow or depression in the ground, esp. one in which water stands; spec. a natural or artificial basin in which salt is obtained by evaporation of sea water; a salt pan. Cf. sense 2a.Earliest and now usually in salt-pan n. (cf. sense 1).
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > land > landscape > low land > hollow or depression > [noun] > containing water
pan1494
peat pota1500
waterhole1688
basin1712
tinaja1835
swag1848
water pocket1863
rock hole1869
the world > the earth > land > landscape > low land > hollow or depression > [noun] > saline depression
salinec1450
pan1494
salt-pan1494
salt-wich1610
salina1697
salt-pond1697
playa1854
sabkha1878
shor1888
1494 in J. T. Fowler Chartularium Abbathiæ de Novo Monasterio (1878) 195 iiij salt pannes standynge vp on the north syde of ye water of Blyth.
1562 Edinb. Burgh Deeds in Dict. Older Sc. Tongue f. 65v, (at cited word) Nyne riggis of land..liand eist and west in the watter pannes.
1594 H. Plat Diuerse Sorts of Soyle 32 in Jewell House Of all Channels, Pondes, Pooles, Riuers, and Ditches, and of all other pannes and bottomes whatsoeuer.
1706 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 25 2265 The Sea-Water being in hot Countries grained in Pans called Salt-Marshes.
1790 Trans. Soc. Arts 8 88 Frequent pools of sea-water in the middle of the Saltings. These are not improperly called the Pans.
1832 A. E. Bray Let. in Descr. Part Devonshire (1836) I. iv. 57 Mis-tor, a height of whose..rocks there is found so large and perfect a rock-basin as to be called by the peasantry Mis-tor Pan.
1852 J. Wiggins Pract. Embanking Lands 96 Fill up the nearest of such hollows or ‘pans’, as they are called, with the stuff out of the circular dyke.
1884 R. Jefferies Red Deer x. 199 Another kind of hollow in the hills is called a pan.
2001 San Francisco Chron. (Nexis) 12 July d9 34 acres of new ‘pans’—catchment basins for freshwater rains that will form seasonal ponds.
b. A hard and typically impermeable substratum of soil. Cf. hardpan n. 1.clay-, iron, moor, peat-, plough pan: see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > structure of the earth > constituent materials > earth or soil > [noun] > subsoil > hard subsoil
pan1667
moor-band1800
hardpan1803
moor-band pan1844
moor pan1846
ortstein1903
1630 tr. G. Botero Relations Famous Kingdomes World (rev. ed.) 372 The soile barren:..being onely a flat Rocke with a pan of earth a foot or two thicke.]
1667 N. Fairfax Let. 5 Dec. in H. Oldenburg Corr. (1967) IV. 11 [Suffolk] In ye breaking up of good olland, ye last furrow will somtyms cut ye pann or dead soyle.
1751 J. Eliot Contin. Ess. Field-husbandry in New Eng. 22 [Ploughing] will effectually break up the Pan-bottom, so that the Water will Soak away.
1784 J. Belknap Belknap Papers (1877) II. 180 It [sc. the water] descends to the hard stratum, commonly called the pan.
1805 R. W. Dickson Pract. Agric. I. 413 Upon all light soils it is necessary to preserve, at six or eight inches below the surface, what farmers call a pan; that is, the staple, at that depth, should be kept unbroken.
1846 Mr. Parkes in J. Baxter Libr. Pract. Agric. (ed. 4) II. 303 The pan, or old plough-floor, of this field.
1875 C. Lyell & L. Lyell Princ. Geol. (ed. 12) II. iii. xliv. 508 At the bottom of peat mosses there is sometimes found a cake, or ‘pan’, as it is termed, of oxide of iron.
1976 E. Scarrow N.Z. Veg. Gardening Guide 8 A pan, or layer of consolidated soil, can occur as the result of continued rotary hoeing.
1990 Gardener Nov. 27/3 If..you found a hard impervious pan of subsoil, then this could best be improved by trenching to that level and thoroughly forking the subsoil to break up the pan.
c. South African. A shallow natural depression containing water or mud in the rainy season; a dried-up salt marsh or pool bed. Also: a periodic lake formed by rainwater in such a depression.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > land > landscape > low land > hollow or depression > [noun] > containing water > in rainy season
pan1809
1809 H. Alexander in G. M. Theal Rec. Cape Colony (1900) VII. 16 It is hereby permitted to all persons to bring Salt into Cape Town..without paying any compensation to the farmer of the Pans.
1850 R. Gordon-Cumming Five Years Hunter's Life S. Afr. I. vii. 135 Heavy rains fill the pan or basin with water, and, the dry season succeeding, the water disappears, and large deposits of salt are found. These pans or salt-licks are met with in several parts of South Africa.
1871 W. G. Atherstone in A. M. L. Robinson Sel. Articles Cape Monthly Mag. (1978) 147 A natural drainage flowing off by rivers, or, where obstructed by rock dykes or mounds, forming ‘pans’ and periodical lakes and ‘vleis’.
1900 Daily News 26 Apr. 5/6 The Boers,..surrounding the pan, opened a murderous fire.
1911 L. Cohen Reminisc. of Kimberley vii. 112 Partridge, plover, pau, which last, in flocks of hundreds, each morning hovered over the pans (huge ponds) to drink the waters.
1988 Motorist 4 Nov. The animals are often concentrated around the waterholes, but large herds can also be seen on the plains and the shimmering white pans.
2018 TimesSelect (S. Afr.) (Electronic ed.) 5 Apr. More than half of the sewage that should be treated is not reaching the plant, but leaking into the veld and other natural pans.
d. South African. = pipe n.1 18c. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > structure of the earth > structural features > volcanic formations > [noun] > volcanic vent
chimneyc1374
vent1604
firepit1651
spiraculum1670
spiracle1671
solfatara1764
sulphur1764
volcanic crater1776
fumarole1811
air volcano1814
mud volcano1816
salse1831
blowhole1858
pipe1877
soufrière1879
bocca1881
mofette1887
pan1888
blowing-cone1895
smoke-hole1899
fault-vent1903
1888 Diamond Fields Advertiser 24 Sept. On Saturday at eleven o'clock the very last ‘spoonful’ of blue ground on the floors which extend beyond the Pan..was washed.
1899 W. H. Hobbs in Pop. Sci. Monthly Nov. 73 The mines are located in ‘pans’... These ‘pans’ are known to be the ‘pipes’, or ‘necks’, of former volcanoes, now deeply dissected by the forces of the atmosphere.
8.
a. A small hollow at the side of the lock which holds the priming in various types of gun. to shut (one's) pan: see Phrases 1.flash in the pan: see flash n.2 1a.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > device for discharging missiles > firearm > parts and fittings of firearms > [noun] > lock > priming-pan
pan1590
touch pan1599
fire pan1613
priming pan1650
1590 J. Smythe Certain Disc. Weapons 21 b Because the same doth..wett the powder in their pannes and touch holes.
1631 in R. Sanderson Rymer's Fœdera (1732) XIX. 315 For a whole Worke, consisting of the Pan, the cover of the Pan, the Scutchion and the screw Pynn.
1662 W. Gurnall Christian in Armour: 3rd Pt. 515 Like false fire in the pan of an uncharged gun, it gives a crack but hurts not.
1761 Brit. Mag. 2 110 The pistol flash'd in the pan, and a spark flew into the cask.
1871 W. H. G. Kingston On Banks of Amazon (1876) 368 If I had tinder I could get [a light]..with the help of the pan of my gun.
1984 J. J. Pontillo in Comments on Etymol. 13 vii.–viii. 3 This depression, called a pan, lies against the side of the barrel.
1992 A. W. Eckert Sorrow in our Heart 853 It involved..pouring another small bit [of] powder into the pan to create the flash that would ignite the gunpowder in the breech.
b. More generally: a hollow or depression forming part of various structures and devices.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > shape > curvature > curved surface > [noun] > concavity > concave part or object
hollowc897
bowla1398
pan1611
shoulder1618
wamea1765
scooping1862
the world > space > shape > curvature > curved surface > [noun] > concavity > concave place or area > hollow or depression as part of structure
pan1611
1611 R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues Le bassinet d'un reschaut, the pan of a chafing dish.
1764 Museum Rusticum (1765) 3 lvii. 240 A spade made about four inches broad, and eighteen inches long in the bit, or pan.
1823 P. Nicholson New Pract. Builder 406 At the end of the table, nearest to the copper, a box, called the Pan, is adapted.
1852 tr. J. J. Seidel Organ & its Constr. 38 Where the pedal comes in contact with the beam, the latter has a deepening in the form of a half-circle (called the pan).
1869 Eng. Mechanic 24 Dec. 352/3 On the top [sc. of a harmonium] is the ‘pan’ containing the reeds.
1888 Harper's Mag. June 139/1 Flinging off his gossamer, and hanging it up to drip into the pan of the hat rack.
1901 Chambers's Jrnl. Sept. 577/1 A German firm brought out a folding letter-balance, on the pan of which were engraved the British postal rates.
1993 Canad. Interiors Oct. 34/2 (caption) The seat pan and back have independent lockable tilt controls.
9. Armour. A steel cap. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > military equipment > armour > helmet > [noun] > metal skullcap
basinetc1300
coifc1380
capeline1488
skull1522
hat piece1598
pan1638
pot1639
skull-cap1820
bassinet-
1638 W. Mountagu in Buccleuch MSS (Hist. MSS Comm.) (1899) I. 282 A pan for the head, back and breast piece, and gaunts.
10.
a. Originally Canadian. A small ice floe.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > water > ice > body of ice > [noun] > floe > small
pan1771
1771 G. Cartwright Jrnl. (1792) I. 78 I attempted to cross over at a place where the ice lay in small pans, and appeared to be firm.
1843 Trans. Lit. & Hist. Soc. Quebec 4 50 Upon the pans were many hundreds of young seals, just pupped.
1863 A. C. Ramsay Physical Geol. & Geogr. Great Brit. (1878) xxiv. 396 The pans rise over all the low-lying parts of the islands, grinding and polishing exposed shores.
1892 W. Pike Barren Ground N. Canada 240 Ice was running in large pans, and steering was difficult.
1933 Geogr. Jrnl. 81 60 Drift-ice was pretty thick and we were constantly under helm to avoid the ‘pans’, as the seamen and fishermen call them.
1967 W. Herbert Across Top of World xiii. 194 We would reach a lead where there would be many pans of ice, but the whole thing would be gyrating.
1992 B. Morgan Random Passage ii. 40 One change in wind,..a foot landing two inches nearer the edge and a pan will tip, sending them to their deaths.
b. Originally and chiefly Newfoundland. A stack of dead seals or sealskins, marked by the owner with a pennant and left on the ice for later recovery.
ΚΠ
c1872 in E. P. Morris Newfoundland Law Rep. 1864–74 (1899) V. 446 On arriving at the flag they found it to be a house-flag of Messrs Job Brothers, placed apparently..for the purpose of distinguishing three pans of piled and sculped seals.
1874 Nature 6 Aug. 265/2 When taken to the pan the pelts are unlaced and stored flat.
1907 J. G. Millais Newfoundland 41 We didn't form ‘pans’ (piles) of seals as they do now, but stuck pretty close to the vessel and hauled two seals a man.
1994 S. Ryan Ice Hunters iii. 182 One captain had a pan of several thousand pelts with his firm's flag over them.
11. Baseball. = home plate n.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > baseball > baseball ground > [noun] > slab marking home base
home1845
home base1855
plate1867
home plate1869
rubber1889
pan1891
platter1892
1891 N.Y. Sporting Times 23 May These three men make the pitchers put them over the pan day in and day out.
1911 Z. Grey Young Pitcher xi. 122 If you get in a hole with runners on bases use that fast jump ball, as hard as you can drive it, right over the pan.
1994 H. C. Sisson & D. W. Rowe Coots, Codgers & Curmudgeons 45 He maintained that he had..a knuckler that was so slow that the first baseman could run in and autograph the ball before it crossed the pan.
12. Music. Originally and chiefly in Trinidad: a percussion instrument made out of a steel oil drum with one end hammered in and divided into sections that are tuned to produce different notes when struck; a steel drum. Hence: steel band music.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > music > type of music > [noun] > steel band music
pan1955
society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > percussion instrument > drum > [noun] > metal drum
ping-pong1948
pan1955
1955 New Commonw. 28 Nov. (Suppl.) p. xix/1 To make a ‘pan’ the end of a metal oil drum is cut off and the bottom of the circular pan so formed is shaped into sections by beating and chiselling.
1960 Times 17 Sept. 7/7 The intermarriage of musical cultures—the offspring of which is pan. Pan is the core of national culture and the first expression of a truly West-Indian art-form.
1973 Trinidad Guardian 1 Feb. 8/5 The question of having tuners specialise in particular pans.
1981 F. Charles Signposts of Jumbie xxiii. 143 Look at dat Moko Jumbie twistin up e waist to de beat of de sweet pan.
2002 Down Beat Aug. 52/1 In Europe, pans have really taken off. There's a big European steel band festival at Sete, France.
13. = skid-pan n. at skid n. Compounds.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > transport > transport or conveyance in a vehicle > movement of vehicles > [noun] > skidding > a surface to enable practise of skid-control
skid-pan1958
pan1966
1966 T. Wisdom High-performance Driving ii. 30 The first skid pan was introduced at Chiswick [in 1922]. On this ‘pan’ solid-tyred K and D buses were put through their paces.
1966 T. Wisdom High-performance Driving ii. 31Pans’—circular areas covered with a mixture of grease or oil and water—were by now out of date.
III. Extended uses.
14. colloquial (originally U.S.). A severely critical or dismissive review. In early use frequently in on the pan: (of a person) under reprimand or adverse criticism. Cf. pan v.3 6.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > disapproval > criticism > [noun] > severe
biting1382
tomahawking1777
sledgehammering1853
grief1891
pan1899
panning1908
excoriation1924
flak1968
1899 W. J. Kountz Billy Baxter's Lett. 20 She just put everybody in town on the pan and roasted them to a whisper.
1908 K. McGaffey Sorrows of Show Girl xviii. 209 All get the pan for the actions of a few.
1923 H. C. Witwer Fighting Blood v. 140 Even when the newspapers puts him on the pan..the safe-playing, money-grabbing middleweight king just laughs at us.
1967 M. Howard Call me Brick 37 Now that she was on the pan, the saccharine façade was quickly stripped from Miss Bullfinch's face.
1972 N.Y. Times 3 Nov. 24/5 This Hunanese restaurant... Appraisals..included the whole possible spectrum of opinion from rave to pan.
1992 Village Voice (N.Y.) 28 Jan. 58/1 The New York Times began their pan by observing that ‘many a mystery is less bewildering than Heroes for Sale’.

Phrases

P1. slang (originally U.S.). to shut (one's) pan: to hold one's tongue, keep silent. Cf. sense 6e. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > voice or vocal sound > loss or lack of voice > lose the voice [verb (intransitive)] > not utter
to shut (also close) one's mouthc1175
to hold (also have, keep) one's peacea1275
peacec1395
muffa1500
to put a sock in ita1529
whista1547
to say not muff1652
to hold one's whisht1786
to shut (one's) pan1799
to shut up1840
to hold one's whistc1874
to shut (one's) head, face1876
to wrap up1943
1799 Mass. Spy 2 Jan. in R. H. Thornton Amer. Gloss. (1912) 795 Instead of saying grace decently, as he used to do, he called out attention—handle arms—and for grace after dinner—now shut pans.
1834 F. Marryat Peter Simple II. i. 9 Shut your pan.
1864 A. Lincoln in Cent. Mag. (1889) Sept. 704/1 I shall be very ‘shut pan’ about this matter.
1977 R. Coover Public Burning xxiv. 418 Shut pan and sing dumb, you beauties, before I rear back and whop an iniquitous belch outa ya sharp enough to stick a pig with.
P2. out of the pan into the fire: escaping one misfortune only to encounter an even greater one.Now predominantly with frying pan: see frying pan n. Phrases.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > harm or detriment > danger > there is danger in a course of action [phrase] > out of a small danger into a great one
(to jump, leap, etc.) out of the frying pan into the fire1532
out of the smoke into the fire1547
out of the pan into the firea1599
a1599 E. Spenser View State Ireland 80 in J. Ware Two Hist. Ireland (1633) This..were but to leap out of the pan into the fire.
a1644 F. Quarles Solomons Recantation (1645) ii. 60 Those Bellowes mount the blaze the higher, Thou leap'st but from the Pan into the fire.
1656 J. Harrington Common-wealth of Oceana 268 To behold a people casting themselves out of the pan of one prince, into the fire of another.
1772 D. Garrick Irish Widow ii. 43 Out of the pan into the fire! there's no putting him off.
1845 D. Trumbull Death Capt. Nathan Hale ii. i. 9 You know that to jump out of the pan into the fire, is a very poor trick.
2003 Scunthorpe Evening Tel. (Nexis) 11 Aug. 12 That we throw in our economic lot with a Federal Europe can only mean, I believe, we jump out of the pan into the fire.
P3. colloquial (chiefly British). to go down the pan: to deteriorate, disappear, go to waste. Also down the pan: in a hopeless position; wasted. Cf. sense 4.
ΚΠ
1961 E. Partridge Dict. Slang (ed. 5) II. 1212/2 Down the pan... A Cockney equivalent of down the drain, ruined with no chances left.
1974 Listener 14 Mar. 347/3 ‘It's just money down the pan,’ said one pensioner.
1986 Artseen Dec. 30/1 So much quality time down the pan waiting on some dozy airhead.
1992 Bicycle Feb. 63/3 You will have an affair..which will cause..your marriage to go down the pan.

Compounds

C1. General attributive.
pan-dish n. Obsolete rare
ΚΠ
1886 H. Cunliffe Gloss. Rochdale-with-Rossendale Words & Phrases 68 Pondish, a round shallow iron dish for placing in an oven.
pan-furnace n. Obsolete
ΚΠ
1854 E. Ronalds & T. Richardson Knapp's Chem. Technol. I. 280 The open pans..are heated by the waste heat of the pan-furnace.
pan-house n.
ΚΠ
1531–2 in D. Laing Reg. Domus de Soltre (1861) 196 The land and ane salt pan of Blair, the pan hous granall.
1625 in W. Muir Notices Rec. Dysart (1853) 68 Salt pansteads panhouse and pan potts.
1748 W. Brownrigg Art of making Common Salt 50 The saltern..is a long, low building, consisting of two parts; one of which is called the fore-house, and the other the pan-house or boiling-house.
1808 H. Holland Gen. View Agric. Cheshire i. 51 There is a separate pan-house to each pan.
1993 H. N. Thomas Spirits in Dark v. 43 They surrounded the panhouse.
pan lid n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > closed or shut condition > that which or one who closes or shuts > [noun] > closure for a vessel, tube, etc. > lid > types of
pot-lid1404
paten-bred1501
buckler1674
Moor's head1677
screw top1697
sarpush1698
Moor-head1712
saucepan lid1801
screw cap1806
pan lid1841
capsule1858
shutter-front1887
crown cap1898
shutter-lid1901
kettle-lid1903
under-lid1907
1841 Mrs. Clemons Manners & Customs India xvii. 163 Tongs, shovel, poker, and pan-lid, would have been much more harmonious, and yet the natives consider that they only excel us in one thing, which is music!!
1902 M. Barnes-Grundy Thames Camp 72 Jane polishes the pan-lids and scours the kitchen tables.
1978 Biotropica 10 238 We set an aluminum pan lid on the ground, among herbaceous vegetation.
pan-load n.
ΚΠ
1939 J. Steinbeck Grapes of Wrath xxii. 414 Ma had taken up a panload of brown pone.
2000 Herald (Glasgow) (Nexis) 8 July 19 Excruciating puns by the panload.
pan-metal n. Obsolete
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > metal > types of metal generally > [noun] > metal of which pots and pans were made
pot brass1422
pan-metal1552
potin1601
1552 in W. Page Inventories Church Goods York, Durham & Northumberland (1897) 65 One crosse of pane mettall, one challes of pane mettell gilt.
1669 S. Sturmy Summary of Penalties & Forfeitures in Mariners Mag. 6 Bell-mettle, Pan-mettle, Gun-mettle, or Shroof-mettle.
pan-prospect n. Obsolete
ΚΠ
1877 R. W. Raymond Statistics Mines & Mining 328 The Del Norte has yielded exceedingly rich pan-prospects.
pan-sherd n. chiefly Archaeology
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > clay compositions > baked clay > pottery or ceramics > [noun] > fragment or part of
shardc1000
potsherda1325
pot-lid1404
potscarc1450
test1545
shred1616
crock1850
pan-sherd1851
tesson1858
pot-shell1865
1851 H. Mayhew London Labour II. 284 The potsherds and pansherds, as the rubbish-carters call them.
1880 R. Jefferies Round about Great Estate 194 The hives..were all in a row, each protected by large ‘pansherds’ from heavy rain.
1960 C. M. Watkins N. Devon Pottery & Export to Amer. 17th Cent. (Bull. U.S. National Mus. 225) 54 (caption) Pan sherd from Jamestown (Colonial National Historical Park).
1993 T. R. Pauketat Temples for Cahokia Lords iv. 85/2 Fine-ware sherds from the south mound (F78) and from Mound 10 (EA1) might be related to mound-top activities, as may the pan sherd from F93.
pan system n. now rare
ΚΠ
1870 Overland Monthly Sept. 217/2 The miner carefully washes it [sc. loose quicksilver].., picking out with his fingers the iron pyrites and other débris—a process which is the only vestige we have of the old pan system.
1918 in E. L. D. Seymour Farm Knowl. I. xli. 454 Four cows and a separator are therefore equal for buttermaking purposes to 5 cows of the same quality and the shallow pan system.
1937 Gold Coast Colony: Blue Bk. 1936 144 (table) System of Sewerage. Pan system.
C2.
pan-amalgamator n. Metallurgy Obsolete a pan in which ores are ground and the metal separated by amalgamation (cf. sense 2d).
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > equipment > equipment for treating ores > [noun] > for amalgamating
pan1839
pan-amalgamator1874
amalgamator1875
table plate1877
1874 R. W. Raymond Statistics Mines & Mining 429 Dodge's pan-amalgamator and settler.
pan bread n. = pan-loaf n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > dishes and prepared food > bread > loaf > [noun] > pan- or tin-loaf
tinned loafc950
brick1698
brick loaf1723
brick bread1762
pan-loaf1846
pan bread1856
tin-loaf1858
tin1957
pan1978
1856 Sci. Amer. 8 Mar. 203/3 Those that got their ration in pan bread would eat it all for their breakfast..; while those that got their ration of oven bottom baked bread would have enough for breakfast, dinner, and sometimes a little for supper.
1928 Jewish Bakers' Voice 13 Jan. 11/2 He reduces the prices of biscuits..and cup cakes to 12 cents per dozen, and a large pan bread to 6 cents.
1994 B. Gilroy Sunlight on Sweet Water 56 A man who was loud-mouthed, broad-shouldered and had a head shaped like a pan bread, hence his name.
pan-charge n. Metallurgy Obsolete the contents of an amalgamating pan (cf. sense 2d).
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > industry > working with specific materials > working with metal > [noun] > other types of metal product
pierce-work1833
pan-charge1868
wicket1893
1868 J. R. Browne Rep. Mineral Resources States West of Rocky Mts. 43 in Rep. Mineral Resources U.S. (U.S. Dept. of Treasury) The pulp..is ground in charges of 400 or 500 pounds for three or four hours in various pans, without quicksilver, and two pan charges are amalgamated in a separator for the same length of time.
1882 Rep. Precious Metals (U.S. Bureau of Mint) 651 The pan-charge is drawn into the settlers and thinned down.
pan-closet n. now historical a water closet, a lavatory.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > sanitation > privy or latrine > [noun] > water-closet or lavatory > types of
pan-closet1855
trough-closet1870
tumbler closet1870
pan-latrine1897
flush toilet1950
Porta Potti1968
Johnny-on-the-spot1971
1855 Sci. Amer. 28 Apr. 264/2 This valve is used with the common well-known pan closet.
1884 Cent. Mag. Dec. 262/2 The absolute inadmissibility of the almost universal pan-closet.
1992 C. Hardyment Home Comfort xi. 182 Such simple pan-closets continued in use all through the nineteenth century.
pan cover n. the piece covering the priming pan in certain types of gun.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > device for discharging missiles > firearm > parts and fittings of firearms > [noun] > lock > priming-pan > cover
pan cover1852
1852 Internat. Mag. Jan. 33/1 The magazines for priming and the pan covers were continually blown off on the explosion of the charge.
1869 C. Boutell tr. J. P. Lacombe Arms & Armour xi. 246 This [flint of a flintlock] is made to strike against a movable steel pan-cover.
1986 Gun Mart Dec. 115/4 On the rainproof version, the pan was made devoid of extraneous metal, and so shaped to allow rain water to flow away from that area once the pan cover has been closed.
pan digger n. South African Obsolete rare a miner who extracts diamonds from a pan (sense 7d).
ΚΠ
1888 Diamond Fields Advertiser 24 Sept. On the 22nd September 1888, the last individual ‘Pan’ digger finished here his money-making moil.
pan drippings n. (also pan dripping) North American Cookery = pan juices n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > fat or oil > [noun] > fatty juices from meat or fish
eliquament1623
pan drippings1883
pan juices1914
1883 Hopewell (New Jersey) Herald 19 Dec. 6/5 Sew the turkey up tightly, and dredge with flour. Baste at first with butter and water, afterward with pan dripping.
1907 What-to-Eat Dec. 212/2 Chop the cooked giblets fine and put them in the gravy made with the pan dripping and water.
1936 I. S. Rombauer Joy of Cooking (ed. 2) 201 Make gravy with part of the pan drippings and Vegetable Stock.
2001 Good Housek. Cookbk. v. 232/1 Roast turkey..45 to 60 minutes longer, occasionally basting with pan drippings.
pan head n. a head of a rivet, bolt, screw, etc., shaped like an inverted flat-bottomed pan; frequently attributive.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > shipbuilding and repairing > [noun] > shipbuilding > nails, rivets bolts
rove and clench1336
scupper-nail1485
wrakling1494
ribbing-nail1703
filling-nail1784
Blake's screw1840
in-and-out bolts1841
scarp-bolt1867
pan head1869
1869 E. J. Reed Shipbuilding xvii. 328 The common form of rivet head employed for shipbuilding is that known as a pan head.
1947 T. J. Reynolds & L. E. Kent Struct. Steelwork (ed. 8) iii. 38 Snap heads and pan heads form a projection beyond the plate face.
1986 Handyman Dec. 19/1 If you're looking for a power-drive screw with a shoulder.., try Phillips pan head sheet metal screws.
pan ice n. chiefly Canadian (originally Newfoundland and Labrador) pieces of ice which have broken away from large floes; such pieces collectively forming an expanse of ice.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > water > ice > [noun] > loose
loose ice1774
sailing-ice1820
pan ice1865
1865 J. F. Campbell Short Amer. Tramp 92 The mouth of Hamilton Inlet..was full of heavy drift, ‘pan-ice’.
1916 N. Duncan Billy Topsail & Company 139 When he was within two fathoms of the pan-ice a foot broke through and tripped him flat on his face.
1995 J. Houston Confessions Igloo Dweller liii. 187 The vastness of the Arctic Ocean came into view with huge sheets of pan ice floating in the cold, blue reflection of the sky.
pan juices n. Cookery the liquid residue obtained when meat is fried or roasted in a pan.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > fat or oil > [noun] > fatty juices from meat or fish
eliquament1623
pan drippings1883
pan juices1914
1914 F. R. Keefer Text-bk. Mil. Hygiene & Sanitation ix. 152 The temperature of the oven is reduced and the meat frequently ‘basted’ with the pan juices.
1944 Science 11 Feb. 114/1 Any leakage of the meat subsequent to defrosting merely results in increased pan juices.
1950 L. H. Gross Meats, Poultry & Game 243 The ideal gravy is..deliciously flavored with pan juices.
2004 R. Reichl Gourmet Cookbk. 354/1 Turn chicken breast side up, baste with pan juices, and continue to roast.
pan-latrine n. Obsolete rare = pan-closet n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > sanitation > privy or latrine > [noun] > water-closet or lavatory > types of
pan-closet1855
trough-closet1870
tumbler closet1870
pan-latrine1897
flush toilet1950
Porta Potti1968
Johnny-on-the-spot1971
1897 M. L. Hughes Mediterranean Fever ii. 58 An inspection..disclosed a leaking pan-latrine.
panlicker n. Obsolete a parasite, a sycophant.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > esteem > approval or sanction > commendation or praise > flattery or flattering > servile flattery or currying favour > [noun] > servile flatterer > parasite
clienta1393
lick-dishc1440
maunche present1440
scambler?a1513
smell-feast1519
parasite1539
hanger-on1549
parasitaster1552
waiter at the table1552
lick-trencher1571
hang-by1579
shadow1579
trencher-fly1590
trencher-friend1590
fawnguest1592
pot-hunter1592
lick-spigot1599
trencherman1599
shark1600
tub-hunter1600
zany1601
lick-box1611
by-hangera1626
cosherer1634
shirk1639
panlicker1641
clientelary1655
tantony1659
led friend1672
sponger1677
fetcher and carrier1751
myrmidon1800
trencher-licker1814
onhanger1821
tag-tail1835
sponge1838
lick-ladle1849
lick-platter1853
sucker1856
freeloader1933
bludger1938
ligger1977
joyrider1990
1641 Bull from Rome A iij Panlickers are those who are Flatterers of Kings, Princes.
pan-maker n. a person who makes pans.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > worker > workers according to type of work > manual or industrial worker > producer > makers of domestic utensils > [noun] > maker of pots or pans
pottera1225
pan-maker?c1475
?c1475 Catholicon Anglicum (BL Add. 15562) f. 92 A panne makere, patinarius.
1635–6 MS Canterbury Marriage Licences Thomas Lashfeild of S. Mary Northgate,..panmaker.
1996 Mod. Asian Stud. 30 92 There were 88 brick-makers, 24 pan-makers and 160 potters in Madiun by 1840.
pan master n. Scottish Obsolete the owner or manager of a salt pan.
ΚΠ
1573 in J. H. Burton Reg. Privy Council Scotl. (1878) 1st Ser. II. 286 It being menit be the awnaris and pan maisteris of certane pannis on the coist sydes.
1573 in J. H. Burton Reg. Privy Council Scotl. (1878) 1st Ser. II. 286 The awnaris and panmaisteris of the salt pannis.
pan-meat n. Obsolete food which has been cooked in a pan.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > dishes and prepared food > food by way of preparation > [noun] > cooked food
pan-meateOE
curea1400
curyc1460
cooking1798
eOE Cleopatra Gloss. in J. J. Quinn Minor Lat.-Old Eng. Glossaries in MS Cotton Cleopatra A.III (Ph.D. diss., Stanford Univ.) (1956) 64 Viuertitum, ponmete.
eOE Cleopatra Gloss. in W. G. Stryker Lat.-Old Eng. Gloss. in MS Cotton Cleopatra A.III (Ph.D. diss., Stanford Univ.) (1951) 208 Ferculum, ælces cynnes panmete.
pan mill n. a shallow pan in which ore or other material is ground; (originally) spec. one used for separating precious metal by amalgamation.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > equipment > equipment for treating ores > [noun] > for washing ore > for gold
scour1619
rocker1828
cradle1833
pan1835
Long Tom1839
Tom1839
wash-bowl1848
gold washer1849
sluice1851
wash-pan1851
tub1853
gold pan1854
mining pan1858
pan mill1869
Tommy1892
1869 J. R. Browne Resources of Pacific Slope 69 The ample head and flow of water will permit the company at any future time to set up a pan mill.
1973 Proc. Royal Soc. A. 333 141 The pan-mill used..for grinding the dolomite..was essentially similar to that used by the Egyptians.
2002 World Mining Equipm. (Nexis) 1 July 8 IMS describes the Omniscreen as a simple high acceleration, low mass, cost effective linear screen, which..will be used for screening high moisture clay off the pan mill.
pan-mug n. English regional (now chiefly north-western) a large earthenware vessel used to hold milk, butter, etc.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > container for food > [noun]
vessel1340
binc1405
butt1423
pancheon1601
preserving glass1628
conchac1660
pan-mug1688
conch1839
pankin1864
food vessel1866
food-vase1871
kuei1935
caddy1960
1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory ii. 173/1 Cream, the top of Milk standing in a pot or pan-mug.
1877 E. Leigh Gloss. Words Dial. Cheshire 150 Panmug, the coarse red crockery used in family operations for cheese, milk, butter, &c.
1896 P. H. Emerson On Eng. Lagoons 121 Two old men, carrying baskets of cheap earthenware. ‘They have travelled these roads for years selling pan mugs’.
1901 Notes & Queries 8 406/2 A thick glazed earthenware vessel..called a pancheon in the Midland counties,..a pan-mug in Cheshire, and a kneading-pan in most cookery books.
pan music n. originally and chiefly Caribbean steel band music.
ΚΠ
1960 Times 17 Sept. 7/7 Pan music casts a spell of enchantment on the Trinidadian... The essential feature of pan music is that the melody is carried by one instrument at a time while the others play more or less ‘free’ variations on the theme.
1994 Vincentian 22 July 14/4 If this should happen, we can successfully bring back pan music to Carnival and then truly say Carnival is pan-kali-mas, the three elements that make our carnival celebrations.
pan-pulp n. Metallurgy Obsolete ground ore in an amalgamating pan (cf. sense 2d).
ΚΠ
1882 Rep. Precious Metals (U.S. Bureau of Mint) 651 This is found entirely sufficient to heat the pan-pulp.
pan-roasted adj. Cookery roasted in a roasting pan either in an oven or on a hob; (also) cooked by being seared in a pan on a hob before being transferred to the oven.
ΚΠ
1926 Washington Post 9 Jan. 12/7 Menu..Sunday..Rib Roast of Beef..Pan Roasted Potatoes..Creamed White Onions.
1996 Food & Wine Dec. 99/1 Some menus use the term loosely, calling dishes pan-roasted when they are simply roasted or braised. But I'm a purist: I always start the food in a hot pan on top of the stove to form a crispy browned crust that seals in the juices. Then the pan goes into a preheated oven.
pan rock n. U.S. rare a striped bass, Morone saxatilis (family Moronidae), of a suitable size for frying.
ΚΠ
1890 Cent. Dict. Pan-rock, the rockfish, Roccus lineatus, when of a size suitable for frying.
1995 Capital (Annapolis, Maryland) (Nexis) 4 June (Sports section) c10 Twenty years ago, Susquehanna River guide Earl Ashenfelter was fishing the Airplane Wreck near the Choptank's mouth, catching pan rock, spot, white perch and hoping for a plump hardhead.
pan sand n. rare (typically in plural) (a) the sand-sized sediment in a mechanical separation or panning device; (b) the sandy bottom of a naturally-formed depression or basin.
ΚΠ
1898 Westm. Gaz. 25 Nov. 2/1 Oyster culturists and connoisseurs would..find..giants from the ‘pan sands’.
1950 Georgia Mineral News Let. May (Georgia Geol. Surv.) 73 The pan sands here contain a considerable amount of ilmenite.
1987 Afr. Archaeol. Rev. 5 87 (caption) Geological map of the southern part of the Bir Tarfawi basin. Key:..7. Middle Palaeolithic pan beach line; 8. Middle Palaeolithic pan sands.
1990 Sedimentary Geol. 69 7 An example is given using particle size data from dune ridge crest and pan sands from the Kalahari desert of central southern Africa.
1993 C. L. Hill in F. Wendorf et al. Egypt during Last Interglacial iv. 75/1 The later-stage deposits reflect a period of increased moisture, expansion of the playa and subsequent stabilization of the redeposited pan sands.
pan scale n. scale which accumulates on the bottom of a pan.
ΚΠ
1810 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 100 92 A part, subsiding to the bottom, forms a solid incrustation, termed by the workmen pan-scale.
1885 R. Holland Gloss. Words County of Chester (1886) Pan scale, salt-making term; the thick scale that forms on the bottom of a pan.
2018 Current Archaeol. June 20/2 Particularly concentrated traces of metalworking—slag, fuel debris, panscale—have been found around one building.
pan scourer n. a wire pad or other scourer for cleaning a pan.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > cleaning > scouring, scrubbing, or rubbing > [noun] > implement for scouring or scrubbing > pan-scourer or -scrubber
Brillo1916
pan scrubber1926
pan scourer1959
1959 ‘A. Gilbert’ Death takes Wife ix. 112 ‘Packet of pan-scourers,’ she said.
1988 R. Rayner Los Angeles without Map (1989) 16 He wore an awful hairpiece that was like a pan scourer.
pan-scratch n. Obsolete = pan scale n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > dirtiness > pollution or defilement > [noun] > specific impurities > incrustation > on metal > scale or fur
pan-scratch1779
limescale1841
scale1875
scurf1884
scurfing1884
furring1885
birdnesting1893
1779 M. Boulton & J. Watt in E. Robinson & A. E. Musson James Watt & Steam Revol. (1969) 131 If your lime be not of that species which stands water, it will be well to mix some Dutch or Italian terrass, or pan scratch from the salt works with it.
1808 H. Holland Gen. View Agric. Cheshire i. 61 The carbonates of lime, and of iron..subsiding to the bottom,..form an incrustation there, called by the workmen pan-scratch or scale.
1879 Cassell's Techn. Educator (new ed.) IV. 338/1 The carbonate and sulphate of lime..gradually accumulates on the bottom of the pan... This pan-scratch has therefore to be removed periodically.
pan scrubber n. = pan scourer n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > cleaning > scouring, scrubbing, or rubbing > [noun] > implement for scouring or scrubbing > pan-scourer or -scrubber
Brillo1916
pan scrubber1926
pan scourer1959
1926–7 Army & Navy Stores Catal. 118/3 Pan scrubber. A Metal Sponge for cleaning pots, pans, etc.
1983 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) B. 300 387 Lindsay & Yeoman..immobilized cells..in alginate gels.., the gels being supported by nylon pan-scrubber material.
pan-seared adj. Cookery (usually of meat) fried quickly in a hot pan.
ΚΠ
1982 N.Y. Times 28 Nov. xxi. 27/3 An assortment of shredded vegetables with beef, pork, chicken and shrimp complemented the yan chow pan-seared noodles extremely well.
2001 Trav. Afr. Autumn 39 We dine on delicacies including soufflé of gorgonzola, fillet of gemsbok with saffron and roast butternut risotto, pan-seared scallop salad, stuffed quail and cognac, mushroom and rosemary mousse.
pan side n. Caribbean a steel band.
ΚΠ
1960 Times 17 Sept. 7/7 In Trinidad a steelband is known as a ‘pan-side’ and the word ‘pan’ has two connotations. The first refers to the instrument, the second to a way of musical life. Pan, the instrument, is..a tuned gong, made from the top of a 44-gallon steel barrel.
1993 R. Baptiste Trini Talk 123 De whole pan side had was to practise whole night long.
pan tuner n. originally and chiefly Caribbean a person who makes and tunes steel band pans.
ΚΠ
1978 Bomb (Port of Spain, Trinidad) 6 Jan. 22 But the pan-tuners are somehow convinced that he is taking too much of the bread; that he is virtually exploiting them since he sells a tuned pan for approximately three times what he pays the tuner.
1995 S. Stuempfle Steelband Movement ii. 71 In the course of the 1940s the steelband was rapidly transformed by pan tuners engaged in a continual process of replication and alteration.
pan-washing n. the action or process of separating gold from gravel, etc., by stirring it in water in a pan (sense 2c); the gravel, etc., being washed in this manner.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > industry > mining > [noun] > washing or streaming > for gold
gold washing1683
panning1838
pan-washing1850
rocking1850
ground-sluicing1857
gold panning1882
wash-up1890
blacksanding1906
1850 E. G. Buffum Six Months in Gold Mines 89 The process of pan-washing is the simplest mode of separating the golden particles from the earth with which it is amalgamated.
1865 S. Bowles Across Continent 35 We saw pan washings that turned out one, two and three dollars to the pan.
1880 G. Sutherland Tales of Goldfields 4 They got a lesson in pan-washing.
1960 C. Neider in ‘M. Twain’ Autobiography 300 The pocket-miner washes a pan of dirt..until..his pan-washings furnish no longer the speck of gold.
pan yard n. originally and chiefly Caribbean an area where a steel band practises and stores its pans.
ΚΠ
1980 T. Eigeland in Isles of Caribbean (National Geographic Soc.) 28 There are also visits to the ‘pan-yards’ where the steel bands practice before the big Carnival parades.
1995 Caribbean Week Jan. 25/1 The action now steams up in the panyards, the calypso tents and the Mas Camps.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2005; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

pann.2

Brit. /pan/, U.S. /pæn/, Scottish English /pan/
Forms: Middle English–1500s panne, Middle English (in compounds)–1700s (1800s– English regional) pan; Scottish pre-1700 pane, pre-1700 1700s–1800s pawn, pre-1700 1700s– pan, pre-1700 1900s– pand, 1700s–1800s pann, 1900s– paun.
Origin: Of multiple origins. Partly a borrowing from Latin. Partly a borrowing from French. Etymons: Latin panna; French panne, pasne.
Etymology: < post-classical Latin panna squared timber, wall-plate (from late 12th cent. in British sources, from early 14th cent. in continental sources) and its probable etymon Anglo-Norman panne and Old French pasne, parne, panne (c1160), Middle French, French panne, probably < post-classical Latin patena manger (late 4th cent.) or its etymon ancient Greek ϕάτνη (in Hellenistic Greek also πάθνη , which may in fact be the earlier form) manger, in Hellenistic Greek also coffered work in a ceiling, of uncertain origin; perhaps < the same Indo-European base as bin n. Compare Old Occitan padenal part of a mill (1375), Occitan panna, parna strap hinge of a door, pana horizontal beam, wall-plate, Galician padea wall-plate, and also German regional (south-western) Pfette beam supporting the rafters (16th cent.). Perhaps compare also post-classical Latin panna part of mill, (perhaps) socket (1293, 1301 in British sources), patina axle-plate (of mill) (1290 in a British source).What is apparently the same post-classical Latin word is very frequent in the 13th-cent. Close Rolls in the forms (as printed) pauna and palna , which are difficult (unless ultimately transmission errors or misreadings) to reconcile with panna and Anglo-Norman panne :1225 in T. D. Hardy Rotuli Litterarum Clausarum (1844) II. 65 Habere faciat..duos postes & duas paunas in bosco nostro.1225 in T. D. Hardy Rotuli Litterarum Clausarum (1844) II. 65 viij. postes viij. tabes viij. palnas et C. cheverones.1225 in T. D. Hardy Rotuli Litterarum Clausarum (1844) II. 104 Centum cheverones x. postes et xij. paunas.1225 in T. D. Hardy Rotuli Litterarum Clausarum (1844) II. 137 xxx. cheverones qatuor tabes et qatuor palnas. For the collocation with Latin postis in these quots. see the note on post and pan under main sense.
Architecture. Chiefly Scottish in later use.
In a timber-framed house: a horizontal beam fastened on or in a wall to support joists or rafters; a wall plate.Recorded earliest in pan-piece n. at Compounds.This appears to have been the original sense in the phrase post and pan (see post n.1 8), which is now taken in the sense of pan n.4 2. Sc. National Dict. (1968) records as still in use in Dumfriesshire in 1965.
ΘΚΠ
society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > a building > parts of building > framework of building > [noun] > members of
pan1284
balka1300
lacec1330
pautre1360
dorman1374
rib1378
montant1438
dormant?1454
transom1487
ground-pillar?a1500
barge-couple1562
spar foot1579
frankpost1587
tracing1601
sleeper1607
bressumer1611
master-beam1611
muntin1611
discharge1620
dormer1623
mounting post1629
tassel1632
baufrey1640
pier1663
storey post1663
breastplate?1667
mudsill1685
template1700
brow-post1706
brow-stone1761
runner1772
stretching beam1776
pole plate1787
sabliere1800
frame stud1803
bent1815
mounting1819
bond-timber1823
storey rod1823
wall-hold1833
wall-strap1833
truss-block1883
sleeper-beam1937
shell1952
society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > a building > parts of building > framework of building > [noun] > roof-beam
pan1284
roof-tree1321
wiverc1325
sile1338
wind-beam1374
bindbalkc1425
trave1432
purlin1439
side-waver1451
wind-balk1532
roof beam1551
post1567
crock1570
spercil1570
collar-beam1659
camber1679
top-beam1679
camber-beam1721
jack rafter1736
hammer-beam1823
tie-beam1823
spar-piece1842
viga1844
collar1858
spanner1862
cruck1898
1284 in L. F. Salzman Building in Eng. (1952) xiii. 203 [One] pannepece [of oak].
1303 in L. F. Salzman Building in Eng. (1952) xiii. 204 (MED) [Setting up the feet of the rafters..and..placing new] pannes [under them].
1420 in J. Raine Vol. Eng. Misc. N. Counties Eng. (1890) 15 In hys tenement in Coppergate in York walles even uppe thurgh fra the grunde uppe to the panne.
?c1475 Catholicon Anglicum (BL Add. 15562) f. 92 A Panne of A house, panna.
1501 Searchers Verdicts in Surtees Misc. (1888) 22 The sparrez & tymbre of ye said William, which is shot & hyngeth over ye ground of ye same Ric' ther by viijth ynchez & more anenst ye pan of his house.
1574–5 Treasurer's Accts. Burgh Haddington 28 Twa treis to be twa pannis..to the myll hous.
1600 in J. D. Marwick Extracts Rec. Burgh Glasgow (1876) I. 206 Sic as biggis with poist and pan and layes with blak morter.
1667 in C. S. Romanes Sel. Rec. Regality of Melrose (1915) II. 182 With seaven peaces of trees to be pans quherof fyve of them on the over yaird.
1746 in J. G. Burnett Powis Papers (1951) 288 To the Upper house on the Burn Side Inputting a pan in the Roof.
1761 in Trans. Dumfries & Galloway Nat. Hist. & Antiquarian Soc. (1929) 15 38 Alexander Herries in Claubelly cut a piece of birch for a pan to a house and some other pieces for staiks.
1813 W. Leslie Gen. View Agric. Nairn & Moray (new ed.) Gloss. Pan,..the great timbers of a cottage laid across the couples parallel to the walls, to support the laths or kebbers laid above the pans and parallel to the couples.
1874 W. Gregor Echo Olden Time N. Scotl. 15 Across the couples were fixed the pans, to the number of three or four on each side of the roof.

Compounds

pan-piece n. English regional (northern) (now rare) (originally) †a piece of timber to be used as a wall plate (obsolete); (later) the wall plate itself.
ΚΠ
1284Pannepece [see main sense].
1648 in D. Embleton Barber-surgeons & Chandlers of Newcastle (1891) For the pann pieces for sawing..£3 3s. 6d.
1894 R. O. Heslop Northumberland Words 524 Pan-piece, a heavy beam thrown across the outer wall of a building.
pan-tree n. Scottish (now Orkney) (a) = pan-piece n. (obsolete); (b) Orkney a wooden beam used to suspend cooking pots, etc., over an open fire.
ΚΠ
1584 Burgh Court Perth 21 July in Dict. Older Sc. Tongue (1983) V. 281/2 Ane pan tre of aik.
1753 Session Papers in Sc. National Dict. (1968) VII. (at cited word) He was to make a Pann-tree to his Barn.
1794 W. Marshall Gen. View Agric. Central Highlands Scotl. 20 Upon these couples, lines of ‘pantrees’ or purlines are fixed.
1988 G. Lamb Orkney Wordbk. (at cited word) Pan-tree, Paun-tree, a bar hanging in the chimney of old fireplaces.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2005; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

Pann.3

Brit. /pan/, U.S. /pæn/
Origin: From a proper name. Etymon: proper name Pān.
Etymology: < classical Latin Pān < ancient Greek Πάν, the name of a god of flocks, herds and the pastoral world in Greek mythology.
1. (The name of) the god of flocks and herds of Greek mythology, usually represented with the horns, ears, and legs of a goat on the body of a man.Pan was the most widely known of Arcadian theriomorphic deities, and usually said to be the son of Hermes. He was quite early associated with Greek τὸ πᾶν ‘the all’ (see pan- comb. form), and in Roman times came to be seen as a universal god, or god of Nature. See also panpipe n., panic adj.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > deity > classical deity > [noun] > Pan
Pana1393
goat-foot1622
goat god1708
a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) v. 1007 (MED) The loresman of the Schepherdes..Was of Archade and hihte Pan.
c1450 ( G. Chaucer Bk. Duchess 512 Pan, that men clepe god of kynde.
c1500 (?a1475) Assembly of Gods (1896) 324 The rewde god Pan, of sheperdys the gyde.
a1586 Sir P. Sidney Arcadia (1590) i. sig. M6 The shepheards..made a right picture of their chiefe god Pan, and his companions the Satyres.
1678 J. Norris Coll. Misc. (1699) 55 The gentle God of the Arcadian plains, Pan that regards the sheep, Pan that regards the swains, Great Pan is dead.
1777 W. Jones Arcadia 105 And after Pan thy lips will grace it best.
1844 E. B. Barrett Dead Pan in Poems II. 262 Pan, Pan is dead.
1871 B. Taylor tr. J. W. von Goethe Faust II. i. iii. 64 Great Pan in cheerful mood stands by, Rejoiced the wondrous things to spy.
1942 G. M. Trevelyan Eng. Social Hist. x. 318 Only a small proportion of the villagers..ever visited town. Most people remained all their lives under the influence of Pan and his magic.
1991 CD Rev. Oct. 51/1 This choral invocation to Pan..would sound quite at home on a Sussex village green.
2. allusively. A person with responsibility for shepherds and flocks; a chief shepherd (occasionally applied to Jesus Christ). Also: an acolyte or follower of Pan; spec. = panisk n. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > deity > classical deity > [noun] > Pan > attendant of
Pan1579
panisk1616
panisca1850
the world > food and drink > farming > animal husbandry > sheep-farming > [noun] > sheep herding > shepherd
shepherda1023
sheep's herdc1175
shepc1381
herd-groomc1384
pastorc1400
pastorelc1440
groomc1550
Pan1579
sheepman1591
pastoral1607
sheep-ward1609
feeder1611
sheep-herder1872
1579 E. K. in E. Spenser Shepheardes Cal. Apr. 50 Gloss. Christ..is the verye Pan and God of Shepheardes.
1584 R. Scot Discouerie Witchcraft vii. xv. 153 They haue so fraied vs with bull beggers, spirits,..elues, hags, fairies, satyrs, pans, faunes.
1606 J. Sylvester tr. G. de S. Du Bartas Deuine Weekes & Wks. (new ed.) ii. iv. 65 Here, many a horned Satyre, many a Pan.
1625 S. Purchas Pilgrimes I. i. 69 Pans, Nymphs, Sileni, Cobali and Satyrs.
1724 Briton 29 Jan. 115 Old Homer's Gods in Britain's Isle are seen, While Pans and Satyrs frisk it o'er the Green.
1891 Athenæum 7 Mar. 313/3 In this paper Thoreau appears as a veritable Pied Piper among the children of Concord, while to their scholarly fathers he was Pan.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2005; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

pann.4

Brit. /pan/, U.S. /pæn/
Origin: A borrowing from French. Etymon: French pan.
Etymology: < French pan part of a vertical construction in building (c1150 in Old French), face of a bastion (1690), specific senses of pan pane n.2In sense 2 apparently partly the result of confusion between pan n.2 and pane n.2 9: see note at pan n.2 With sense 1, compare isolated borrowing of French pan coupé (1676):1876 G. E. Voyle & G. de Saint-Clair-Stevenson Mil. Dict. (ed. 3) 284/2 Pan Coupé,..the salient angle of a place-at-arms, filled up to form a short face or a curve for musketry fire on the salient, or for one or two guns placed en barbette.
1. Fortification. The face of a bastion. See bastion n. 2a. Obsolete. rare.Apparently only attested in dictionaries or glossaries.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > defence > defensive work(s) > earthwork or rampart > [noun] > bastion > parts of
orecchionc1585
pome1598
face1648
orillon1648
gola1663
neck1668
gorge1669
neckline1672
shoulder1672
epaule1702
demi-gorge1706
pan1707
throat1728
1707 Glossographia Anglicana Nova Pan, of a Bastion, is the same with the Face of a Bastion.
1721 N. Bailey Universal Etymol. Eng. Dict. Pan of a Bastion, see Face of a Bastion.
1802 C. James New Mil. Dict. Pan, likewise means the distance which is comprized between the angle of the epaule and the flanked angle in fortification.
1823 in G. Crabb Universal Technol. Dict. Pan.]
2. Architecture (originally and chiefly English regional (northern)). In the walls of a timber-framed or half-timbered house: any of the compartments or panels formed by the timbers of the framework, filled in with bricks or plaster. Chiefly in post and pan n. and adj. at post n.1 Phrases 2a. Cf. pane n.2 9.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > constructing or working with wood > [noun] > wooden structures or wooden parts of > as (part of) a structure > specific
studding1588
interdice1617
punch1623
intertie1679
angle tie1782
pan1788
nogging piece1819
needling1854
nogging1895
1788 W. Marshall Provincialisms E. Yorks. in Rural Econ. Yorks. II. 346 Post-and-pan, old half-timber buildings are said to be post-and-pan.
1855 F. K. Robinson Gloss. Yorks. Words 133 The posts being the framing, and the pan the flat surface or plastering with which the framing is filled up.
1975 Country Life 6 Feb. 319/3 Black and white timber and plaster work of the post-and-pan variety.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2005; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

pann.5

Brit. /pan/, /ban/, U.S. /pɑn/, /bɑn/
Inflections: Plural unchanged.
Forms: 1800s– pan, 1900s– ban.
Origin: A borrowing from Chinese. Etymon: Chinese bǎn.
Etymology: < Chinese bǎn (Wade-Giles transcription pan ) board, plank. Compare paiban n. O.E.D. Suppl. (1982) treats this as non-naturalized, and gives only the pronunciation (ban) /ban/.
A Chinese percussion instrument used for beating time, made of a number of wedge-shaped pieces of wood connected by a cord, one of which is struck against the others by flicking the wrist.Also called paiban (see paiban n.).
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > percussion instrument > [noun] > wood blocks
wood-block1837
pan1874
paiban1884
Chinese block1926
temple block1929
slit drum1933
slit-gong1938
1874 C. Engel Descr. Catal. Musical Instruments S. Kensington Mus. 190 The Chinese castanets, called pan, are made of a hard wood resembling mahogany.
1954 Grove's Dict. Music (ed. 5) II. 234/1 P'ai-pan (or pan), percussion clapper. A popular instrument consisting of two slabs of the red wood huai, attached by a silk cord, on which a third slab is struck to beat time.
1975 C. P. Mackerras Chinese Theatre in Mod. Times viii. 131 (caption) The pan (clapper) consists of three pieces of wood, two of them fastened together (patterned surface visible), the other behind.
1983 R. Riddle Flying Dragons, Flowing Streams ii. 80 Marshall makes note of an instrument that he could not see but which produced a sound ‘not unlike the popping of corks’. This may well have been the pan castanets.
2001 New Grove Dict. Music (Online ed.) at China The oldest type of clapper in contemporary usage, the paiban (or ban), is constructed of five or six strips of resonant hardwood.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2005; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

p'ann.6

Brit. /pan/, U.S. /pɑn/
Inflections: Plural unchanged.
Forms: 1900s– pan, 1900s– p'an, 1900s– p‘an.
Origin: A borrowing from Chinese. Etymon: Chinese pán.
Etymology: < Chinese pán (Wade-Giles transcription p'an) tray, plate, dish.
Archaeology.
A wide shallow bowl, made of bronze and usually having two handles, formerly used in China chiefly as a wash-bowl.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > equipment > receptacle or container > vessel > open vessels for liquids > [noun] > basin
basinc1220
laverc1394
stockc1450
pelvis1727
p'an1904
1904 S. W. Bushell Chinese Art I. iv. figure facing p. 84 (caption) Sacrificial Bowl. P'an. Chou dynasty. Bronze inlaid with Gold and Silver.
1919 J. C. Ferguson Outl. Chinese Art ii. 50 There are..17 p'an or platters, and 40 lavers.
1958 W. Willetts Chinese Art I. iii. 154 It is not altogether certain that p‘an date back as far as Shang-Yin times.
1990 Antique Collector May 108/3 Most important for the amateur of bronzes is a knowledge of their shapes: food vessels such as the ding, li, liding and gui;..water vessels including the pan, yi or lian.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2005; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

pann.7

Brit. /pan/, U.S. /pæn/
Origin: Either (i) formed within English, by conversion. Or (ii) formed within English, by clipping or shortening. Etymons: pan v.4; panorama n., panoramic adj.
Etymology: Either < pan v.4, or independently shortened < either panorama n. or panoramic adj. Compare panoram v.With sense 2 compare pan v.4 3.
1. Originally Film. The action or technique of panning a camera; a film sequence obtained in this way; a panning shot.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > cinematography > filming > camera movements > [noun]
panning1917
pan1922
panoraming1927
camera movement1929
zooming1934
tilting1938
tilt1959
whip-pan1960
1918 Editor 11 Feb. 87/2 A lady..objected to my use of the abbreviation ‘pam’, for ‘panoram’, which indicates the horizontal swing of a camera while shooting. Stripped of its biting language, her criticism was, that the abbreviation should be ‘pan’.]
1922 Opportunities Motion Pict. Industry 111 Pan.., moving the camera up and down or from side to side to follow the action from one place to another.
1962 Listener 5 Apr. 596/2 The opening shot of Exodus is a huge 200-degree pan across the landscape and coastline of Cyprus.
1995 Camcorder User Apr. 19/1 With arrival and departure shots in stations, it's sufficient to show the train approaching the platform, maybe with a pan to or from the station name board.
2. Sound Recording. In mixing: the facility to vary the apparent position of a sound source between the left and right stereo channels; a device providing this facility; (also) the position in which the signal is placed. Cf. panpot n.
ΚΠ
1986 Studio Week July 14/2 Auto-pan, one of the names used to describe one of the hundreds of studio effects.]
1987 Music Making July 37/1 Each return will have an associated pan control to position its signal between the left and right channel.
1994 Guitarist Sept. 167/2 The staggered group of controls consists of a forward pickup pan, with the notched-response volume rotary located directly under the rear pickup.
2003 Onstage Mar.–Apr. 42 The A-16 Personal Mixer..gives individual control over channel volume, grouping, pan, stereo spread, and master volume.

Compounds

C1. General attributive.
pan shot n.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > cinematography > filming > shot > [noun] > types of
long shot1858
glass shot1908
close-up1913
aerial shot1920
angle shot1922
medium shot1925
far-away1926
travelling shot1927
zoom1930
zoom shot1930
process shot1931
close-medium shot1933
medium close-up1933
reverse angle1933
reverse shot1934
three-shot1934
tilt shot1934
medium-close shot1937
reaction shot1937
tracking shot1940
pan shot1941
stock shot1941
Dutch angle1947
cheat shot1948
establishing shot1948
master-scene1948
trucking shot1948
two-shot1949
bridging shot1951
body shot1952
library shot1953
master shot1953
mid shot1953
MS1953
pullback1957
MCU1959
noddy1982
arc shot1989
pop shot1993
1941 J. Steinbeck & E. F. Ricketts Sea of Cortez xxiii. 223 We made jerky little pan shots back and forth.
1998 L. Forbes Bombay Ice (1999) 166 The camera executes mainly pan shots, picking out..moments of extreme but controlled pain and pleasure.
pan-tilt n.
ΚΠ
1970 New Yorker 3 Oct. 108/3 Two..spots..could be directed by means of pan-tilt.
2002 Contract Jrnl. 19 June 17/5 Pan-tilt pipeline inspection cameras.
C2.
pan-and-scan n. a technique used for converting a widescreen film to the lower aspect ratio of a conventional television picture by selecting and reproducing only a part of each frame; frequently attributive.
ΚΠ
1982 Time (Nexis) 30 Aug. 78 The pan-and-scan technician moves optically over the film, creating tracking shots the director never intended; he can also delete, by necessity or miscalculation, vital pieces of visual information.
1987 Los Angeles Times (Nexis) 13 Dec. (Calendar section) 6 Why is ‘Rebel Without a Cause’ not in CinemaScope? Why is there no mention of its betrayal by pan-and-scan?
2001 Total DVD Feb. 49/2 This is still far better than the dreadful pan-and-scan jobs we've been treated to in the past.
pan-and-tilt adj. designating (part of) a tripod or other mount that allows the camera to move in both horizontal and vertical planes.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > cinematography > filming > filming equipment > [adjective] > camera > support for
pan-and-tilt1938
1937 H. B. Abbott Compl. 9·5-mm. Cinematogr. v. 69 The metal top has both pan and tilt movements with locking device for each.]
1938 G. H. Sewell Amateur Film-making iii. 34 The ideal tripod..should also incorporate a ‘pan-and-tilt’ head.
1991 Photo Answers May 74/2 The plastic head is a three way pan-and-tilt affair with a large quick release platform making it suitable for 35mm SLRs, video cameras and even medium format cameras.
pan head n. a mechanism at the top of a tripod or other mount that allows the camera to move in both horizontal and vertical planes; a pan-and-tilt head.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > cinematography > filming > filming equipment > [noun] > camera > support for
boom1931
rostrum1935
crane1937
pan head1940
1940 Amer. Speech 15 359/2 Pan head, the mechanism at the top of a tripod which permits the camera to be moved in both horizontal and vertical planes.
1991 Photo Answers July 86/2 Velbon make tripods especially for video cameras. The range includes features like fluid pan heads for super smooth action, four position handles, quick release, geared centre column.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2005; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

pann.8

Brit. /pan/, U.S. /pæn/
Origin: Formed within English, by clipping or shortening. Etymon: panguingue n.
Etymology: Shortened < panguingue n.
Originally and chiefly U.S.
= panguingue n.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > card game > other card games > [noun] > rummy, etc.
rum1871
coon-can1889
panguingue1904
rummy1910
pan1935
gin rummy1937
Michigan rum1942
Oklahoma rummy1945
gin1946
canasta1948
Oklahoma1948
1935 A. J. Pollock Underworld Speaks 85 Pan,..game of cards played with 8 or 10 decks without the 8's, 9's or 10's, correctly called pangingi.
1950 E. Culbertson Culbertson's Hoyle 47 Panguingue, called ‘Pan’ for short, grew out of Conquian.
1986 Amer. Speech 61 6 I interview pan, twentyone, roulette, baccarat, and poker dealers.
1991 D. Parlett Hist. Card Games xii. 145 Pan, a popular gambling game, makes do with at least five and preferably eight 40-card packs shuffled together.
This is a new entry (OED Third Edition, March 2005; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

panadj.n.9

Brit. /pan/, U.S. /pæn/
Origin: Formed within English, by clipping or shortening. Etymon: panchromatic adj.
Etymology: Shortened < panchromatic adj. Compare earlier ortho adj.2
Photography.
A. adj.
= panchromatic adj. 1.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > photography > plates and films > [adjective] > types of film
thirty-five millimetre1666
soft?1863
pushable1871
unexposed1892
lenticulated1925
prescreened1929
lenticular1934
pan1940
subminiature1977
1937 Science 11 June 570/2 Photomicrographs..can easily be taken by using a photomicrographic collar attachment set at infinity, with an exposure of from 3 to 10 seconds on Super-Pan film.]
1940 ‘C. I. Jacobson’ Developing 106 On no account must the dark green safelight provided for pan materials be used.
1954 C. Wallace Enjoy your Photogr. iv. 44 Pan films photograph reds well.
1993 Cell 73 306/1 Immunofluorescent cells were photographed using Tri-X Pan film.
B. n.9
Panchromatic film.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > photography > plates and films > [noun] > film > types of film
film negative1871
roll1889
roll film1895
reversal film1929
colour film1930
lenticular film1934
pan1940
test strip1940
flat film1950
integral tripack1953
lith1955
overhead transparency1966
1940 Amer. Speech 15 357 ‘Going to use pan or N.C.?’ ‘Neither. Ortho.’
1969 J. Elliot Duel i. iv. 82 I brought ten thousand feet of pan but only three of high speed for interiors.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2005; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

panv.1

Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: pan n.2
Etymology: < pan n.2
Scottish. Obsolete.
intransitive. To fit or put up pans (pan n.2). Only in phrases, as first and pan, pan and roof: to build.
ΚΠ
1489 in E. Beveridge Burgh Rec. Dunfermline (1917) 305 The said Thomas hawand licens to fyrst and pan in the foirhous.
1556 in R. Renwick Abstr. Protocols Town Clerks Glasgow (1897) V. 3 Thai..sall onlie power to rufe and pan on the said gavill.
1601 in W. M. Metcalfe Charters & Documents Burgh of Paisley (1902) 240 He nor..his airis..to the said tenement sal on nawayis big pan nor ruif in the said gavell.
1659 in Rothesay Town Council Rec. (1935) I. 33 That it of neads sould be buildet ere James culd pan or ruif therupon.
This is a new entry (OED Third Edition, March 2005; most recently modified version published online March 2019).

panv.2

Brit. /pan/, U.S. /pæn/, Irish English /pæn/
Origin: Of unknown origin.
Etymology: Origin unknown.For a suggested derivation < pan n.2 (compare pan v.1) see quot. 1894 at sense 1.
Chiefly English regional (northern) and Irish English (northern).
1. intransitive. To fit, tally, correspond, agree. Hence: to suit; to show an aptitude for.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > order > agreement, harmony, or congruity > agree/be in harmony/be congruous [verb (intransitive)]
accord1340
cord1340
concordc1374
agree1447
to stand togetherc1449
rhyme?a1475
commonc1475
gree?a1513
correspond1529
consent1540
cotton1567
pan1572
reciprocate1574
concur1576
meet1579
suit1589
sorta1592
condog1592
square1592
fit1594
congrue1600
sympathize1601
symbolize1605
to go even1607
coherea1616
congreea1616
hita1616
piece1622
to fall in1626
harmonize1629
consist1638
comply1645
shadow1648
quare1651
atonea1657
symphonize1661
syncretize1675
chime1690
jibe1813
consone1873
1572 in J. Cranstoun Satirical Poems Reformation (1891) I. xxxiv. 30 Say and promeis quhat thay can, Thair wordes and deidis will neuer pan.
1691 J. Ray N. Country Words in Coll. Eng. Words (ed. 2) 53 To Pan; to close, joyn together, agree. Prov. Weal and Women cannot Pan, but wo and Women can.
1825 J. T. Brockett Gloss. North Country Words Pan, to match, to agree, to assimilate.
1877 F. Ross et al. Gloss. Words Holderness 97 Jack an his wife didn't seem to pan togither at fost, but noo they get alang pratty weel.
1883 T. Lees Easther's Gloss. Dial. Almondbury & Huddersfield 105/2 Boards pan when they lie close together.
1894 R. O. Heslop Northumberland Words Pan, to correspond, to tally, to unite. Border idiom from pan, a cross beam in the roof of a house, closing with the wall.
a1903 S. P. Unwin in Eng. Dial. Dict. (1903) IV. 416/1 [West Yorkshire] Thou doesn't pan in to t'wark as I should like to see thee.
1936 B. R. Dyson Gloss. Words & Dial. Sheffield Trades 32 Pan, to fit neatly to anything. ‘See as t'coverins pans to t'scales.’
1996 C. I. Macafee Conc. Ulster Dict. 246/2 Pan, to agree, match, fit.
2. transitive. To fit, join, or unite together.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > fact or action of being joined or joining > join (together) [verb (transitive)]
gatherc725
fayOE
samc1000
join1297
conjoinc1374
enjoinc1384
assemble1393
compound1393
sociea1398
annex?c1400
ferec1400
marrowc1400
combinec1440
annectc1450
piece?c1475
combind1477
conjunge1547
associate1578
knit1578
sinew1592
splinter1597
patch1604
accouple1605
interjoina1616
withjoina1627
league1645
contignate1651
to bring on1691
splice1803
pan1884
suture1886
1884 Leeds Mercury Weekly Suppl. 31 May 8 Pan it down—press an article into its proper place.
1888 S. O. Addy Gloss. Words Sheffield 169 To pan boards together.
1996 C. I. Macafee Conc. Ulster Dict. 246/2 Pan, to fit, join (things) together.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2005; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

panv.3

Brit. /pan/, U.S. /pæn/
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: pan n.1
Etymology: < pan n.1With sense 2 compare slightly earlier panning n.1 2a.
1. intransitive. Scottish and English regional (midlands and East Anglian). Of soil: to cake on the surface; to form a compacted, impervious layer.
ΚΠ
a1825 R. Forby Vocab. E. Anglia (1830) 242 Pan, to be hardened, as the surface of some soil is, by strong sunshine suddenly succeeding heavy rain.
1844 H. Stephens Bk. of Farm I. 642 The subsoil has always a tendency to pan.
1889 J. Macdonald Stephens's Bk. of Farm I. 120/2 Such a subsoil has a tendency to pan.
1987 C. Lloyd Year at Great Dixter 46 If wet and then dry, the soil pans and cracks.
2. Originally U.S.
a. transitive. To wash (gold-bearing gravel, sand, etc.) in a pan, in order to separate the gold; to separate (gold) from gravel, etc., by washing in a pan. Originally also with out, now frequently with off.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > industry > mining > mine [verb (transitive)] > wash or stream > for gold
rock1825
pan1832
cradle1852
puddle1852
sluice1859
to wash up1869
yandy1937
to rock out1966
1832 Morning Courier & N.-Y. Enquirer 17 Oct. 2/3 When the lucky spot is pointed out to the gold hunter, and it is ‘panned’ as the term goes, particles of gold salted in a proper way [are found].
1839 Amer. Railroad Jrnl. 8 99 Old machines are invariably burnt up, and the ashes ‘panned out’ for the fine gold that has lodged in the joints of the wood.
1859 R. M. Ballantyne World of Ice 89 It was the Kablunak's custom, when the ice cleared away, to pan out a few bags of gold-dust there.
1880 Daily Tel. 3 Dec. They ‘panned’ the surface dirt for gold.
1962 D. Stuart Yaralie ii. 29 At the camp he panned it off carefully, and sure enough it had coarse gold showing heavily in it.
1983 J. McPhee In Suspect Terrain 13 One way to survive in Indiana was to become a pick-and-shovel miner and earn as much as five dollars a day panning gold from glacial drift.
b. intransitive. To search for gold by washing gold-bearing gravel, etc., in a pan. Also by extension of other precious substances.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > industry > mining > mine [verb (intransitive)] > wash or stream > for gold
pan1850
ground-sluice1862
1850 N. Kingsley Diary 27 May (1914) 123 About 200 Indians & squaws came down and began to pan all around us.
1872 ‘M. Twain’ Roughing It lxi. 443 We had panned up and down the hillsides till they looked plowed like a field.
1937 N. A. D. Armstrong After Game in Upper Yukon 179 Between intervals I did some prospecting in the cut, panning along the face.
1995 High Country News 16 Oct. 10/3 Ray recalls a childhood spent..panning for gold and chucking rocks at hobos.
3. Originally U.S.
a. intransitive. Of gravel, sand, etc.: to yield gold when washed in a pan. Hence, of a vein or mine: to yield precious metal. Usually with out. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > minerals > mineral sources > [verb (intransitive)] > yield gold
pan1849
society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > metal > precious metal > yield precious metal [verb (intransitive)]
pan1849
1849 J. D. Dana Mineral. (ed. 2) 317 Gravel or soil..is said to pan well or pan poorly according to the result.
1874 T. B. Aldrich Prudence Palfrey vii. 123 Though it did not yield so bounteously as the silver lode, it panned out handsomely.
1898 Daily News 8 Aug. 2/1 Assuming that all the land located on these creeks would pan out as well as the few claims that were opened.
b. intransitive. figurative. With out. To yield good results; to turn out well. Later also, without implication of a positive result: to work out, end up, conclude.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > prosperity > success > succeed or be a success [verb (intransitive)]
speedc1175
fayc1300
provec1300
flourishc1400
passc1425
prosper1434
succeedc1450
to take placea1464
to come well to (our) pass1481
shift?1533
hitc1540
walka1556
fadge1573
thrive1587
work1599
to come (good) speedc1600
to go off1608
sort1613
go1699
answer1721
to get along1768
to turn up trumps1785
to come off1854
pan1865
scour1871
arrive1889
to work out1899
to ring the bell1900
to go over1907
click1916
happen1949
the world > existence and causation > causation > effect, result, or consequence > result [verb (intransitive)] > turn out
goOE
farec1230
to come to proofc1330
shape1338
afarec1380
achievea1393
falla1398
sort1477
succeed1541
lucka1547
to fall out1556
redound1586
to come off1590
light1612
takea1625
result1626
issue1665
to turn out1731
eventuate1787
to roll out1801
to come away1823
to work out1839
pan1865
1865 S. Bowles Across Continent xxxi. 368 The mines furnish many new phrases: ‘Pan out’ for turning out or amounting to; as, a man will ‘pan out’ good or bad or an enterprise ‘pans out’ much or little.
1870 ‘M. Twain’ Lett. to Publishers (1967) 31 January and November didn't pan out as well as December.
1884 Brandon (Manitoba) Blade 24 Jan. 4/3 If the domineering Attorney-General ‘pans out’ well during the coming session he will probably be the man.
1923 P. G. Wodehouse Adventures of Sally xiv. 177 He was hoping all along that this fight would pan out big and that he'd be able to pay you back what you had loaned him.
1977 P. Dickinson Walking Dead i. v. 69 They decided to give it a year and see how it all panned out.
1990 Internat. Business Week 2 Apr. 32/3 Fears that forwarders would take their business to Federal's competitors have not panned out on the lucrative Far East routes.
c. intransitive. figurative. With out. To speak freely or at length; to expatiate. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > speech > loquacity or talkativeness > be talkative [verb (intransitive)]
to multiply words1340
gagglea1556
glib1596
to run on?c1663
gasha1774
to roll on1861
pan1871
rabbit and pork1949
motormouth1983
1871 J. Hay Little Breeches 11 I don't pan out on the prophets And free-will and that sort of thing.
1915 W. J. Locke Jaffery xxi. 291 I'm panning out about this, because it seems so deuced interesting.
1917 W. J. Locke Red Planet xv. 182 I had..made up my mind to pan out to you like this.
1928 Observer 18 Mar. 9/3 Mr. Lewis..resists even the temptation to ‘pan out’ about that obviously born temptress.
d. transitive. To bring forth, yield, produce. Usually with out.
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > creation > [verb (transitive)] > produce or bring forth > yield or produce naturally
fruita1382
engendera1393
breeda1398
gendera1398
yielda1400
proferc1425
to bring out1545
generate1563
produce1585
brooda1625
to send forth1626
propagate1699
pan1873
1873 Newton Kansan 16 Jan. 2/1 [His] business failed to ‘pan out’ enough profit.
1921 P. L. Haworth Trailmakers 267 The Colonel had told them that a cubic foot of gravel would pan out twenty dollars in gold.
1962 E. Lucia Klondike Kate viii. 167 That form of bribery panned ‘no color’ either.
2000 Times of India (Nexis) 15 Oct. For Bangalore Central Ladies Circle, even a festive mood can pan out huge projects for community service.
4. transitive. North American (chiefly Newfoundland). To stack (dead seals) in heaps on the ice. Also intransitive.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > industry > whaling and seal-hunting > seal-hunting > hunt seals [verb (transitive)] > catch seals
pan1860
1860–1 Jrnl. House of Assembly App. 531 Young seals may be panned and bulked after 20th March.
1887 G. B. Goode Fisheries U.S.: Hist. & Methods II. 477 The crew ‘panned’ about 10,000 seals.
1916 N. Duncan Billy Topsail, M.D. 236 All day long they killed and sculped and towed and panned the fat—all smothered in blood.
1924 G. A. England Vikings of Ice 113 If dey pans on big ice, mabbe de man has to drag sculps fer miles.
1979 in A. Anderson Salt Water, Fresh Water 54 I know they killed and panned fourteen thousand seals one day.
5.
a. transitive. To cook or prepare (food) in a pan.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > food manufacture and preparation > cooking > cook [verb (transitive)] > cook in specific vessel
griddlec1430
smore1562
oven1688
smother1707
grill1728
scallop1737
jug1747
pot1808
pan1871
slow-cook1904
casserole1930
oven-cook1953
1871 G. H. Napheys Prevention & Cure Dis. i. ii. 64 Shellfish are preferable either raw, roasted, or panned.
1978 D. MacKay Lumberjacks xii. 213 By the time I got my pies made I'd swing into the cookies and cupcakes and by then the bread would be ready to pan.
1996 Morning Call (Allentown, Pa.) 19 May f10 Fresh trout in a cashew crust with fresh herbs panned in brown butter with shallots and white wine.
b. transitive. To obtain (salt) by evaporation of brine in a pan. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > food manufacture and preparation > salt manufacture > [verb (transitive)] > perform other salt-manufacturing tasks
pan1870
poison1885
1870 ‘Ouida’ Puck III. viii. 239 We might perhaps get our salt panned, and our cotton carded.
6. transitive. colloquial (originally U.S.). To criticize severely; to express disapproval of; to judge (a performance, etc.) to be unsuccessful or inadequate.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > disapproval > criticism > criticize [verb (transitive)] > severely
to be sharp upon1561
crossbite1571
scarify1582
canvass1590
maul1592
slasha1652
fib1665
to be severe on (or upon)1672
scalp1676
to pull to (or in) pieces1703
roast1710
to cut up1762
tomahawk1815
to blow sky-high1819
row1826
excoriate1833
scourge1835
target1837
slate1848
scathe1852
to take apart1880
soak1892
pan1908
burn1914
slam1916
sandbag1919
to put the blast on (someone)1929
to tear down1938
clobber1944
handbag1952
rip1961
monster1976
1908 K. McGaffey Sorrows of Show Girl iv. 48 There is nothing I hate worse than to hear one lady pan another behind her back.
1911 G. Ade in Chicago Daily News 16 Dec. 28/2 They would open up on Rufus and Pan him to a Whisper.
1926 S. Lewis Mantrap xii. 150 I've never done one single thing to give her any excuse for panning me.
1960 Daily Mail 27 Apr. 8/8 The idea that critics like panning shows is a myth.
1995 Daily Mail Holiday Action Summer 26/2 In last September's issue we panned their 1994–5 brochure cover as the dullest we've ever seen.
7. transitive. slang (originally U.S.). To hit or strike (a person), to punch; (also) to knock (sense) into.
ΘΚΠ
society > education > teaching > instilling ideas > instil ideas [verb (transitive)] > inculcate
inculk1528
whet1528
to beat (a thing) into one's head1533
ding1555
inculcate1559
to beat in1561
lesson1602
screw1602
inconculcate1610
drum1648
instil1660
indoctrinate1800
drill1863
pan1940
1940 ‘J. Crad’ Traders in Women ii. 73 Who pans (fights) the guys wat don't cough up all they should?
1942 L. V. Berrey & M. Van den Bark Amer. Thes. Slang §322/5 Beat; thrash,..pan.
1959 I. Opie & P. Opie Lore & Lang. Schoolchildren x. 198 If a person does something which doesn't please us we cry ‘scrag him’, or ‘pan him’, or ‘floor him’.
1977 Transatlantic Rev. No. 60. 149 I start going down the steps to meet them, and maybe pan some sense into their skulls.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2005; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

panv.4

Brit. /pan/, U.S. /pæn/
Origin: Formed within English, by clipping or shortening. Etymons: panorama n., panoramic adj.
Etymology: Shortened < either panorama n. or panoramic adj. Compare slightly later panoram v. and panning n.2, and also pan n.7
1. Originally Film.
a. transitive. To follow or sweep over (a person, object, etc.) with a camera.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > cinematography > filming > camera movements > move camera [verb (transitive)] > follow thing or person with camera
pan1913
1913 Sat. Evening Post 1 Nov. 64/3 We'll ‘pan’ you right down the middle of the picture to the raft.
1960 N. Kneale Mrs. Wickens in Fall in D. Wilson Television Playwright 167 The Camera pans him away. He calls to the two Englishwomen.
2002 K. Jamie Among Muslims ii. 72 She held on to the bars with one hand and raised the camera, panned the valley and the river behind us.
b. intransitive. Of a camera: to swing, usually horizontally, esp. to give a panoramic view or to keep a moving subject in view. Also, of a camera operator: to take a panning shot.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > cinematography > filming > camera movements > [verb (intransitive)]
panoram1914
pan1928
truck1929
dolly1939
zoom1944
crane1957
track1959
whip-pan1960
1928 N.Y. Times 11 Mar. 112/3 To pan—to move the camera in a semi-circle and take panorama of the scene.
1931 R. Dykes Amateur Cinematographer's Handbk. iii. 31 The tilting handle..is used to panoram down into valleys... It is also used to ‘pan’ up cathedral spires.
1960 N. Kneale Quatermass & Pit i. 11 The camera pans, to take in all that remains of a little working-class street.
1975 New Yorker 19 May 81/1 Then the camera moves to a worker with a cart, and pans with him to the end of the assembly line.
1991 Sight & Sound Oct. 26/3 Scorsese chooses to pan away from Travis as he talks on the phone.
c. transitive. To swing (a video or film camera), usually in a horizontal plane, esp. to give a panoramic effect or to keep a moving subject in view.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > broadcasting > television > production of television broadcast > transmit by television [verb (transitive)] > camera movement
tilt1915
pan1930
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > cinematography > filming > camera movements > move camera [verb (transitive)]
tilt1915
pan1930
zoom1944
1930 Electronics Nov. 373/2 With the advent of sound, the operation of ‘panning’ the camera to afford a changing point of view became a more complicated process.
1973 P. L. Cave Speed Freaks v. 43 Gerry panned the camera slowly over the remnants of the once-beautiful TR6.
1991 Traveller Winter 32/1 The boat neared the shore and the French diplomat panned his Video 8 to the brightly-coloured Lao arrivals building.
d. intransitive. In extended use: to move one's eyes so as to observe widely spaced things or to follow a moving subject; (of the eyes) to move in a horizontal plane from one thing to another. Also transitive: to follow (a moving subject) with one's eyes.
ΚΠ
1968 B. Hines Kestrel for Knave 135 He panned across to the Toby Jug, sighting the grin, the belly, the beer mug.
1972 R. Tyrrell Work of Television Journalist (1981) v. 59 The human eye never pans unless it is following a moving subject, is searching for something or is measuring the distance between two points.
1987 T. Wolfe Bonfire of Vanities (1988) iii. 52 He was walking along at a good clip, his eyes idly panning the façades of the brownstone houses.
1991 D. Mortman Wild Rose iii. xxiii. 439 His eyes panned her body like an explorer reconnoitering new terrain.
1999 F1 Racing Nov. 76/2 In other words, they fix their eyes on the wheel centre-peg as you pull up, and ‘pan’ alongside, ready to lock-on the instant you stop.
2. transitive. Sound Recording. To swivel (a microphone) from side to side; to move (a microphone) so as to follow the movement of a sound source.
ΚΠ
1949 J. G. Frayne & H. Wolfe Elem. Sound Recording iii. 54 The various controls permit the operator to ‘pan’ the microphone, elevate or lower it.
1950 J. R. Cameron Sound Motion Pictures (ed. 7) 435 While the microphone is being advanced toward..the sound source it must simultaneously be raised or lowered while also it may have to be ‘panned’, that is, rotated about its vertical axis.
1992 R. Altman Sound Theory & Pract. i. 25 In order to maximize the intelligibility of the woman's words we might legitimately decide to ‘pan’ the microphone with her so that she is always talking directly into the mike.
3. transitive. Sound Recording. In mixing: to place (an individual sound signal) at the desired position between the left and right stereo channels. Cf. pan n.7 2.
ΚΠ
1970 A. Nisbett Technique Sound Studio (ed. 2) ii. 68 When monophonic sources are introduced into a stereo mixer their output has to be ‘steered’ or ‘panned’ to a particular position in the stereo image.
1976 J. Borwick Sound Recording Pract. v. 63 When a source is panned from one speaker to the other, the loudness will not vary.
1994 Guitarist Sept. 109 At the desk, these signals can be..panned left, right or centre in the stereo image.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2005; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

panprep.

Brit. /pan/, U.S. /pæn/, Caribbean English /pan/
Forms: 1900s– 'pan, 1900s– pan.
Origin: A variant or alteration of another lexical item. Etymon: pon prep.
Etymology: Representing a Jamaican pronunciation of pon prep.
Jamaican.
= upon prep.
ΚΠ
1950 L. Bennett et al. Anancy Stories & Dial. Verse 81 Me wash it, me starch it, me iron it, Me hang it pan pingwing macka.
1971 A. King One Love 27 My 'usband jus' gone out pan a little work.
1986 O. P. Adisa Duppy get Her in S. Brown Caribbean New Wave (1990) 7 Shet yuh mout, Richard, nuhbody nuh set nuh spell pan Lilly, nuhbody obeah er.
This is a new entry (OED Third Edition, March 2005; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

panint.n.10

Brit. /pan/, U.S. /pæn/
Forms: 1900s– PAN, 1900s– Pan, 1900s– pan. Also reduplicated.
Origin: A borrowing from French. Etymon: French panne.
Etymology: < French panne breakdown, standstill (see note), originally a variant of penne : see pen n.3French panne is originally the term for a part of the yard of a lateen sail (first quarter of the 16th cent. as pene; now applied to the boom) and is used in various phrases describing ships accidentally or voluntarily rendered immobile; compare e.g. †bouter vent a penne (1573). It is attested in transferred uses from 1755, and from 1879 in the sense ‘mechanical breakdown’ (1896 in the sense ‘breakdown of a vehicle’).
Used as an international radio urgency signal, esp. by ships and aircraft, to alert authorities that the vessel or aircraft requires assistance but is not in distress (cf. Mayday int.). Also as n.: a use of this signal.The signal usually now consists of three repetitions of ‘pan pan’ with a short pause between each of them.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > indication > signalling > [noun] > signal > other specific signals
return1835
go-ahead1849
highball signal1899
pan1927
go1933
alert1970
1927 Internat. Radiotel. Convent. 54 In the aircraft radio service the expression PAN is used as the urgency signal..when an aircraft station wishes to give notice of damage which compels the aircraft to land without requiring immediate assistance.
1965 Flight Training Handbk. (U.S. Federal Aviation Agency) (rev. ed.) v. 95/2 If he is only uncertain as to his position and wishes to alert ground stations, he may transmit the word pan several times before transmitting his message. Pan indicates a lesser urgency than mayday, but should get immediate attention.
1983 Daily Tel. 16 Mar. 3/2 My clients say the master of the coaster, had he had any sense, would have sent out an immediate May Day or at least a Pan. He did neither.
1995 Canad. Geographic Mar. 76/1 A pan-pan is a step below a Mayday... It's supposed to mean that no one's in personal danger. Usually a broken-down boat or something.
This is a new entry (OED Third Edition, March 2005; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

> see also

also refers to : pan-comb. form
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n.1eOEn.21284n.3a1393n.41707n.51874n.61904n.71922n.81935adj.n.91940v.11489v.21572v.3a1825v.41913prep.1950int.n.101927
see also
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