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单词 pannier
释义

panniern.1

Brit. /ˈpanɪə/, U.S. /ˈpænjər/, /ˈpæniər/
Forms:

α. Middle English paner, Middle English panere, Middle English paneyer, Middle English panȝare, Middle English panȝer, Middle English panȝere, Middle English panyere, Middle English panyȝer, Middle English panyher, Middle English paunyar, Middle English paynar, Middle English payneȝere, Middle English payner, Middle English payngnier, Middle English–1500s 1700s panyar, Middle English–1600s panyer, Middle English–1700s pannyer, Middle English– panier, 1500s pannear, 1500s paniod, 1500s–1600s paniar, 1500s– pannier, 1600s panniar; also Scottish pre-1700 panȝeour, pre-1700 panigȝear, pre-1700 panigȝeour; N.E.D. (1904) also records a form late Middle English panȝar.

β. 1600s paniard, 1600s panniard, 1600s–1700s panyard, 1600s–1700s panyerd.

γ. Scottish pre-1700 panȝell, pre-1700 panyeal, pre-1700 panyhell.

Origin: A borrowing from French. Etymon: French panier.
Etymology: < Anglo-Norman panier, paner, panere and Old French, Middle French, French panier (c1170) < classical Latin pānārium panary n.; compare -ier suffix. Compare post-classical Latin panerium, panerius (from late 12th cent. in British sources), Old Occitan panier (mid 12th cent., Occitan panier), Catalan paner (c1360), Italian paniere (late 13th cent.).In sense 4 probably after French panier (1690 in this sense). In sense 5 probably partly a reborrowing of French panier (1720 in this sense). It is uncertain whether the following should be taken as showing the Middle English or the Anglo-Norman word:1278–9 in P. D. A. Harvey Manorial Rec. Cuxham (1976) 131 In j panier empto ob. q.1290 in Archaeologia (1806) 15 354 Pro uno paner gurnardi..iiij s.c1356 in J. T. Fowler Extracts Acct. Rolls Abbey of Durham (1899) II. 558 In uno pari de Panyars..pro coquina. With the β forms compare -ard suffix.
I. A basket or container used for transportation.
1.
a. A basket; esp. a large basket for carrying foodstuffs or other commodities. Now chiefly: spec. a basket carried by a beast of burden (usually one of a pair placed one on either side of its back) or on a person's shoulders. Also: such a basket together with its contents.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > equipment > receptacle or container > basket > [noun] > large
pannierc1300
hamper1392
hotte1825
society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > conveyance carried by person or animal > [noun] > baskets borne by persons or beasts of burden
dosserc1384
pot1388
hota1400
creelc1425
panniera1656
dossel1755
c1300 Havelok (Laud) (1868) 813 (MED) He..cast a panier on his bac, With fish giueled.
1381 in L. Morsbach Mittelengl. Originalurkunden (1923) 5 (MED) A semsadel, a cartsadel and ii grete panieres.
c1450 (c1380) G. Chaucer House of Fame 1939 Al thys hous..Was mad of twigges..Swiche as men..maken of these panyers.
a1475 (?a1430) J. Lydgate tr. G. Deguileville Pilgrimage Life Man (Vitell.) 21050 Vp-on hyr hed, a gret paner.
a1500 (?a1450) Gesta Romanorum (BL Add. 9066) (1879) 414 All thofe I solde the þe fyshe, I solde the not the panyere.
1578 H. Lyte tr. R. Dodoens Niewe Herball iv. lii. 511 The frayle Rushe..they vse to make figge frayles and paniers therwithall.
1598 R. Hakluyt Princ. Navigations (new ed.) I. 488 Baskets made like bakers panniers.
1636 in S. M. Ffarington Farington Papers (1856) 14 6 Loads of fresh fishe. 1 Barrell of Sturdgeon. 3 panniers of Sea ffowle. 1 pannier of Moore-Poults and Partridges.
a1656 J. Ussher Ann. World (1658) vi. 272 Beasts of..carriage, some for pack~saddles, and some for panniards.
1698 J. Fryer New Acct. E.-India & Persia 309 Kedgways, or Wooden-Houses, one on each side of a Camel, tied like Panniers.
1727 J. Gay Fables I. xxxvii. 125 Betwixt her swagging panniers' load A farmer's wife to market rode.
1754 E. Burt Lett. N. Scotl. II. xviii. 66 His Horse loaden with Creels, or small Panniers.
1859 W. M. Thackeray Virginians xxii A costermonger with his donkey and a pannier of cabbage.
1886 H. Caine Son of Hagar (1887) I. i. i. 21 Mounted on a pony that carried its owner on a saddle immediately below its neck, and a pair of panniers just above its tail.
1946 W. S. Maugham Then & Now xii. 66 The lane..was so narrow that a donkey with panniers could hardly have scraped its way through.
1984 F. Kuppner Bad Day for Sung Dynasty cxi. 37 One carries a huge pannier of rice upon his shoulders.
1993 Beaver Oct. 6/2 Peats from the hill and grain for the mill could be carried on horseback, in panniers slung from wooden clibber saddles.
b. The amount contained in a pannier. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > measurement > the scientific measurement of volume > measure(s) of capacity > amount defined by capacity > [noun] > amount that fills a receptacle > basket
leapfulc1380
flasket1540
skepfulc1570
basketful1574
pad1579
basket1631
pannier1714
maundful1760
hamperful1812
creelful1824
maund1869
1714 tr. French Bk. of Rates 43 Glass in Metal per Cart-load, containing 4 Panniers.
1880 B. Disraeli Endymion I. xi. 89 The gardener's wife..threw..a pannier of cones upon the logs.
2. Military.
a. A large covered basket or case for holding surgical instruments, medicines, etc., usually one of a pair placed on either side of the back of a mule, etc. Also more fully field pannier. Now historical.Quot. 1895 refers to a presumed misapprehension by Sidney Herbert in 1854, although in fact Herbert was using pannier in a different sense (see quot. 1854 at sense 2b).
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > healing > medical appliances or equipment > medicine chest, bag, etc. > [noun] > basket
pannier1854
1854 Times 21 Feb. 10/2 The latter have supplied 12 large medicine chests and 30 panniers, to be carried on mules and donkeys, and neatly packed with every description of medical and surgical appliance.
1859 Times 14 Sept. 10/1 Improved medical field panniers... The baskets hitherto in use have been found deficient... The new panniers are like M. Houdini's inexhaustible bottle... By a simple contrivance, each pannier being furnished with a double lid, an excellent operating table may be..set up.
1895 E. Wood Crimea in 1854 & 1894 11 I suppose it would be difficult now to find any one in the House of Commons, who could mistake a medical pannier, i.e. a covered basket for holding surgical instruments and drugs, for an ambulance.
1918 E. S. Farrow Dict. Mil. Terms 431 Panniers,..the cases used for carrying medicines.
1992 R. A. Gabriel & K. S. Metz Hist. Mil. Med. III. v. 173 The regimental hospital [in the Crimea]..was equipped with only twelve beds with blankets and sheets, a medical chest, and a pannier for horse carriage of medical supplies.
b. A wicker cradle carried by a mule, etc., (usually one of a pair placed one on either side of its back) for the conveyance of the wounded. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1854 S. Herbert in Hansard 25 July 719 Almost the first thing upon which my eye glanced was forty pair of panniers, for the conveyance of the sick.
1880 A. W. Kinglake Invasion of Crimea (ed. 4) VI. ii. 7 He was carried in the invalid's pannier.
1882 Times 20 July 6/2 Special bed litters, as well as chair litters, are being prepared for carriage by mules as panniers.
3. A bag or other container attached beside one or other of the wheels of a bicycle, motorcycle, etc. (usually one of a pair positioned one on either side of the rear wheel). Also pannier bag.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > vehicle propelled by feet > [noun] > cycle > parts and equipment of cycles > accessories
bicycle pump1892
bike pump1896
saddlebag1920
pannier bag1939
1939–40 Army & Navy Stores Catal. 783/3 Cycle accessories..pannier bags and carriers.
1959 I. Jefferies Thirteen Days (1961) i. 9 I was forced to pull off the road... I had a bottle of cold beer..in the pannier.
1975 J. Wood North Kill x. 139 The speaker kicked his bike into life... The others were storing their cleaning materials into side pannier bags.
1992 Bicycle Feb. 77/1 The rear panniers have a combined capacity of 7 litres, while the front bag has seven.
II. Extended uses.
4. Architecture. = corbeille n. 2. Obsolete.In quot. 1842 corbel is apparently a misprint for corbeil, as the glossary s.v. gives only the latter form.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > architecture > architectural ornament > [noun] > fruit or flowers
lily-work1611
encarpa1662
rose1664
rosette1718
flower1730
corbeille1734
lotus1750
honeysuckle1770
pannier1781
lotus blossoma1794
lilying1874
1781–6 Chambers's Cycl. Pannier, in Architecture. See Corbel.
1842 J. Gwilt Encycl. Archit. Gloss. Pannier, the same as Corbel. [Also in later dictionaries.]
5. Originally: either of a pair of frames of whalebone, cane, etc., used to expand the skirt of a woman's dress at the hips. Later more generally: either of a pair of similar extensions to the sides of a dress or skirt, whether constructed around a frame, built up with padding, etc. In early use also: †a part of a skirt bunched or looped up at the back and sides; a bustle (obsolete). Cf. hoop n.1 6.See also Compounds 3.Such frames were fashionable in France in the 18th cent., when however the usual English term was hoop. In quot. c1739 the term is used with (perhaps ironic) allusion to the French fashion, but in a different sense reflecting a practice of having manservants dressed in elaborate uniforms and referring to the use of additional material pleated into the skirts of a man's coat and stiffened to make it fan out at the sides. See also:
1856 F. Saunders Salad for Social 127 The most ludicrous of these alterations were the triangular-shaped hoops..and the ‘pocket-hoops’, which looked like nothing so much as panniers on the side of a donkey.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > underwear > [noun] > contrivance for expanding skirts > other
pannier1796
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > clothing for body or trunk (and limbs) > [noun] > clothing for lower body > skirt > parts of > other
gorea1250
placard1549
pannier1796
pullback1870
c1739 J. Nixon Let. in E. Hamilton Mordaunts (1965) viii. 170 Imagin you see me strutting in a brown Cloath with Coat adorn'd with a double Row of Gold Buttons and swelling out with Paniers of a proper Extent on both sides, a drop Wig on my Head, [etc.].]
1796 M. Wollstonecraft Lett. Sweden, Norway & Denmark xxii. 235 Marguerite, it is true, was much amused by the costume of the [Danish] women; particularly by the panier which adorned both their heads and tails.
1869 Sci. Amer. 9 Jan. 26/1 The panier now so generally worn will serve to cushion the seat.
1869 Atlantic Monthly May 537/1 Paniers, do you say? Paniers first came in, I believe, about six months after the marriage of Louis XV.
1877 Encycl. Brit. VI. 472/2 Dresses..began to be made very full round the hips by means of large padded rolls; and these were still more enlarged by a monstrous arrangement of padded whalebone and steel, which subsequently became the ridiculous ‘paniers’ that were worn almost down to the present century.
1879 F. Hughes & M. Holmes Our German Senator (MS) ii. 6 Gracious! My panier's falling off... Have you a pin?
1902 Daily Chron. 11 Jan. 8/3 Paniers are among the very latest dress importations received in London. They..have been used on a gown of mahogany brown velvet in the form of a tunic, opened in front to show a petticoat, with sides sweeping into a train at the back.
1924 Times 14 Jan. 9/4 A small collection of attractive tea frocks in Nottingham lace..with low waist and side panniers.
1980 E. Jong Fanny ii. ii. 182 The sly old Fox,..telling me I was slender enough to share one [chair] with her, bounded into the Chair first, lifted her Panniers and Petticoats to make room, and said, ‘Here, me Love, there's plenty o' Space.’
1996 Dallas Morning News (Nexis) 10 Apr. 2 e Futurism was a recurring theme. (Think stretch jersey bodysuits with jutting panniers in see-through lucite or polished chrome.)
6. Civil Engineering. A wicker basket containing gravel or earth, used to strengthen the base of a dyke or earth-bank. rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > equipment > receptacle or container > basket > [noun] > other types of basket
ped1390
crestyna1400
figonalea1525
scoop1546
maise1624
petaca1648
murlin1788
pegall1796
hanging basket1850
pannier1875
kilta1876
1875 E. H. Knight Amer. Mech. Dict. III. 1602/1 Pannier..(Hydraulic Engineering), a basket or gabion of wicker-work containing gravel or earth,..used in forming a basis for earthy material in the construction of dikes or banks.
1940 Chambers's Techn. Dict. 611/2 Pannier, a kind of gabion.
7. Apparently: carriage resembling a basket in shape; a basket carriage. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > cart, carriage, or wagon > carriage for conveying persons > [noun] > types of carriage > basket-carriage
basket-carriage1870
pannier1880
1880 ‘Ouida’ Moths II. xvii. 195 Vere, with her husband, drove in the panier, with four white ponies.

Compounds

C1.
a.
pannier basket n.
ΚΠ
1740 in Catal. Prints: Polit. & Personal Satires (Brit. Mus.) (1877) III. i. 284 In the Air is an Eagle flying with two Pannier baskets over its Body.
1892 Jrnl. Amer. Geogr. Soc. N.Y. 24 488 The..baker rides with two huge pannier baskets full of bread strapped across his sheepskin saddle.
1995 Kay & Co. (Worcester) Catal. Autumn–Winter 1034/3 Metro Police Motorcycle. Pedal drive with removable stabilisers, pannier baskets, mock microphone, antenna and horn with flashing blue light.
pannier-bearer n. Obsolete rare
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > transference > [noun] > conveying or transporting > action of carrying > one who carries > of specific thing
pannier-bearer1451
basket-bearer1530
bagman1531
burden-bearer1580
hamperman1631
budget-bearer1684
boat-bearer1706
card carrier1845
basket-carrier1849
bag-carrier1890
1451 in T. Sharp Diss. Pageants Coventry (1825) 206 (MED) Þe panȝerberrer, ij d.
pannier-maker n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > textile manufacture > manufacture textile fabric or that which consists of > manufacture of textile fabric > [noun] > manufacture of fabric from specific materials > manufacture of articles made from twigs, etc. > basket-making > one who
leap maker1360
pannier-maker1412
skepper1499
basket-maker1603
wand-weaver1896
1412 in F. Collins Reg. Freemen York (1897) I. 119 (MED) Petrus Attehall, panyermaker.
1958 F. Wolfson Pageant of Ghana (1965) iii. 185 The leather workers, basket and mat makers, saddle and pannier makers, water sellers, women selling various kinds of food.
pannier rush n. Obsolete rare
ΚΠ
1578 H. Lyte tr. R. Dodoens Niewe Herball iv. lii. 511 The fourth [rush] is called in Greke ὁλοσχοινος..: in Frenche Ionc a cabas, that is to say, The frayle Rushe or panier Rushe.
b.
pannier-shaped adj.
ΚΠ
1828 W. Kirby & W. Spence Introd. Entomol. (ed. 2) III. xxx. 229 The larva..constructs a pannier-shaped cocoon of the parenchyma of leaves.
C2.
pannier bag n. see sense 3.
pannier herring n. Obsolete rare a fresh herring.
ΚΠ
1641 S. Smith Herring-bvsse Trade 19 Fresh or Pannier Herring.
pannier-hilt adj. Obsolete rare (attributive) = basket-hilted adj.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > sharp weapon > side arms > sword > [noun] > hilt of sword > types of hilt
pannier-hilta1637
basket-hilt1663
sheep-head hilt1707
a1637 B. Jonson Tale of Tub ii. ii. 18 in Wks. (1640) III Your dun rustie Pannyer-hilt poinard. View more context for this quotation
pannier pocket n. a large pocket attached to the side of a skirt or dress.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > parts of clothing > [noun] > pocket > types of
French pocket1675
side pocket1678
breast pocket1758
suck1821
watch-pocket1831
patch pocket1895
insider1896
prat1908
sidekick1916
bellows pocket1922
pannier pocket1922
welt pocket1932
slit pocket1933
1922 J. Joyce Ulysses ii. xv. [Circe] 482 Those pannier pockets of the skirt..are devised to suggest bunchiness of hip.
1973 Times 11 Dec. 13/3 Bill's new skirt with its slung pannier pockets is pretty.
pannier tank n. a small steam locomotive with a protruding water tank on either side of the boiler.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > rail travel > rolling stock > [noun] > locomotive > steam locomotive > carrying own fuel and water
tank-engine1850
tank-locomotive1877
tank1891
pannier tank1949
1949 C. J. Allen Locomotive Pract. & Performance 20th Cent. vi. 65 Shunting on all railways is entrusted in large measure to small 0–6–0 tanks (pannier tanks on the Western Region).
1973 Country Life 8 Mar. 593 A type peculiar to the GWR—the pannier tank..these modest 0–6–0 engines, which carried their water in ‘panniers’ at either side of the boiler.
2001 Model Engineer 186 139/1 On the new 7¼in. track at Chelmsford..his 0–6–0 Great Western pannier tank..performed faultlessly during the day.
C3. Designating women's garments in which the skirt is expanded or made fuller at the sides, esp. by the use of an additional layer or layers of gathered fabric. Esp. in pannier dress. See sense 5.
ΚΠ
1869 Galaxy Mar. 448 The gored dress, with its lines of beauty..no longer delights urbane eyes. It is sent..to the provinces, and instead of it we have the pannier, or hump dress.
1914 Times 12 Aug. 9/7 (advt.) Tea frock, as sketch, in rich chiffon velvet with pannier skirt.
1954 M. Henrey Month in Paris vii. 54 The rue de Sévigné..leads me to the house of this delightful letter-writer with her powdered hair and pannier dress.
1992 Vancouver Sun (Nexis) 20 Feb. c7 Another [gown]..features a strapless lace bodice, detached, off-the-shoulder, puffed sleeves with bows and lace cuffs and a pannier overskirt gathered into side bustles.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2005; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

panniern.2

Brit. /ˈpanɪə/, U.S. /ˈpænjər/, /ˈpæniər/
Forms: 1800s pannyer, 1800s– pannier, 1900s– panier.
Origin: Probably formed within English, by clipping or shortening. Etymon: pannierman n.
Etymology: Probably shortened < pannierman n., although differing somewhat in application.Compare:1904 F. A. Inderwick Let. to Editor (O.E.D. Archive) The term ‘pannier’ during the whole of my time, now extending over 45 years, has been used as meaning ‘waiter’, and applied to the attendants of the inn waiting at meals... I have not found the term used anywhere officially, but it has apparently long been employed by members of the inn. A connection with post-classical Latin panarius (bread-seller, in an undated glossary) or pannarius (cloth-seller, frequently 1258–1583 in British sources) has been suggested (compare quot. 1861), but is not supported by evidence.
Now rare.
A waiter at table in the Inner Temple.Use of the word as a synonym of pannierman n. 2, as stated in quot. 1823, is not attested outside dictionaries.
ΘΚΠ
society > law > legal profession > [noun] > Inns of Court > paid officers of
pannierman1483
laundress1592
pannier1823
1823 G. Crabb Universal Technol. Dict. Pannier or Pannier-man, a name..now commonly applied to all the domestics who wait in the hall at the time of dinner.
1849 J. Craig New Universal Dict. Pannier,..a name formerly given to the man who sounded the horn and rang the bell at Inns of Court.
1861 Illustr. London News 9 Nov. 481/1 The Inner Temple Hall waiters are called panniers, from the pannarii who attended the Knights Templars.
1930 H. Morris Barrister iii. 44 Paniers—the waiters in the Temple are so called after the bread baskets which they used to carry.
1980 Oxf. Compan. Law 915/2 Pannier, servants of the Inner Temple who serve at dinner are sometimes colloquially called pannier.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2005; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

pannierv.

Brit. /ˈpanɪə/, U.S. /ˈpænjər/, /ˈpæniər/
Forms: 1500s pannyer, 1800s panier, 1800s– pannier.
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: pannier n.1
Etymology: < pannier n.1 Compare panniered adj.
rare.
1. transitive. To place in, or as in, a pannier.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > equipment > receptacle or container > basket > [verb (transitive)] > furnish with or place as in a pannier
pannier1596
the world > space > place > placing or fact of being placed in (a) position > insertion or putting in > insert or put in [verb (transitive)] > into or as into other specific receptacles
sackc1405
pokea1425
pipe1465
barrel1466
cask1562
bag1570
vessel1577
basket1582
crock1594
cade1599
maund1604
impoke1611
incask1611
inflask1611
insatchel1611
desk1615
pot1626
cooper1746
kit1769
vat1784
pannier1804
vial1805
flask1855
tub1889
ampoule1946
1596 T. Nashe Haue with you to Saffron-Walden sig. T2v He hath so pannyerd and drest it [sc. an invective] that it seemes a new thing.
1804 C. Smith Conversat. II. 190 Panier'd in shells, or bound with silver strings Of silken Pinna.
1842 J. Wilson Recreations Christopher North III. 28 You get ready your angle—and by the time you have panniered three dozen, you are at a wooden bridge—you fish the pool above it.
1998 W. N. Herbert Laurelude i. 10 James Finlayson's a slow burn pop-eyed pike, Max Davidson and Charlie Chase are char Not potted yet nor panniered for the South.
2. transitive. To provide or load with a pannier or panniers. Also figurative.
ΚΠ
1853 C. Mathews Calmstorm, Reformer iii. iii. 35 But work gone to by needy men, in herds, at noon, Panniered with dull cold meals.
1989 N.Y. Times (Nexis) 3 Dec. vii. 9/1 At every level from the tourist primer to the learned archival study that comes panniered with footnotes.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2005; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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