单词 | pill |
释义 | pilln.1 Now English regional (south-western) and Welsh English (Pembrokeshire). A tidal inlet on the coast, a small creek or bay; a pool, spec. one in an inlet or at the confluence of a tributary stream. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > land > land mass > shore or bank > bend in coast > [noun] > inlet in river or sea > in river fleetc893 pillOE pow1481 creek1577 crick1608 pokelogan1848 the world > the earth > land > land mass > shore or bank > bend in coast > [noun] > inlet in river or sea > in sea fleetc893 pillOE arm of the seaOE sounda1300 lougha1387 bracec1400 lough1423 firthc1425 loch1427 resort1477 estuarya1552 inshot1555 mere1574 portlet1577 fret1587 frith1600 sea-gate1605 creek1625 sea-lochc1645 wick1664 fjord1674 voea1688 backwater1867 strait gulf1867 ocean-arm1871 ria1887 fjard1904 geo1934 OE Bounds (Sawyer 401) in W. de G. Birch Cartularium Saxonicum (1887) II. 344 Of bradan bricge þæt on holan pyl, & of holan pylle on wincan hammes dic, & of wincan hammes dic innan miclan pyl, & of miclan pylle þæt æft on sæferne. OE Royal Charter: Offa of Mercia to St. Mary's Church, Worcester (Sawyer 126) in D. Hooke Worcs. Anglo-Saxon Charter-bounds (1990) 87 Of seges mere in þæs pulles heafod..of ðorn bryc[ge] in þone pull, & æfter þam pulle in baka brycge. c1175 (?OE) Bounds (Sawyer 664) in W. de G. Birch Cartularium Saxonicum (1893) III. 113 Andlang dice west on gerihte on smita pull, of smita pylle west rihte on blaca ford,..eft on gerihte innan myccla pyll, of myccla pylle on smala pyll,..on ða dic innan hola pyll, and lang hola pylles eft on ða mær dic. ?a1300 Iacob & Iosep (Bodl.) (1916) 18 (MED) Hi floten swiþe riued bi dich & bi pulle. c1425 in E. Edwards Liber Monasterii de Hyda (1866) 87 (MED) Thanne fro Mychildefer to the pole..thanne fro the hornewey to the forseyd pylle [c1425 (OE) pylle; L. puteum]. tr. Palladius De re Rustica (Duke Humfrey) (1896) i. 1032 (MED) A sobur brook amydde or ellis a welle With pullis [L. lacunas] faire. a1500 (a1400) Ipomedon (Chetham) (1889) 6363 (MED) I can not verely tell the daye, Whedur hit were pul or pande [rhyme lande]. 1542–3 Act 34 & 35 Hen. VIII c. 9 §1 Dwellers next vnto the streme of Seuerne, & vnto the crikes & pilles of the same. 1587 W. Harrison Hist. Descr. Iland Brit. (new ed.) i. xii. 63/2 in Holinshed's Chron. (new ed.) I In like maner from saint Iustes pill or creeke (for both signifie one thing). 1603 G. Owen Descr. Penbrokshire (1892) 66 At the Mouthe of Millford havon..at a place called west pill: where the one side of the pill you shall perceave the lyme~stone. a1640 T. Risdon Chorogr. Surv. Devon (1811) (modernized text) §272 282 Whereby the sea shooteth up with many branches, men call them piles, very commodious for mills. 1704 in B. Y. Mod. Pract. Court Exchequer (1730) 114 All the Rivers, Creeks, Pills and Streams on both sides of the Harbour or River up to the Key of Truro. 1787 J. Byng Diary 30 July in Torrington Diaries (1934) I. 278 It was impossible to prevent smuggling, as all their vessels run into the pills (the small bays) of the coast. 1832 Act 2 & 3 William IV c. 64 Sched. O. 23 Along the river Usk to the point at which the same is joined by a pill opposite the castle. 1840 Archaeologia 28 19 The term Pyll is still used, and means a Creek subject to the tide. The pylls are the channels through which the drainings of the marshes enter the river. 1880 T. Q. Couch E. Cornwall Words in M. A. Courtney & T. Q. Couch Gloss. Words Cornwall 96 Pill, a pool in a creek. 1969 M. Wiggin Cottage Idyll iii. 59 This rare, weird game of wild-fowling, lying out on marshes and saltings, struggling through mud and across treacherous pills and creeks. 2001 Western Daily Press (Nexis) 4 Aug. 14 The village had been served by a sheltered tidal creek or ‘pill’ which was subject to extreme rises and falls in the water level. Compounds pill-reed n. (in form pull-reed) English regional (Somerset) = pool reed n. at pool n.1 Compounds 2. ΚΠ 1847 J. O. Halliwell Dict. Archaic & Provinc. Words II Pull-reed, a long reed used for ceilings instead of laths. Somerset. pill yawl n. now rare a sprit-rigged, three-masted boat used in the Bristol Channel. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > vessel propelled by sail > [noun] > vessel with specific number of masts > types of vessel with three masts > other three-masted vessels ranterpike1862 pill yawl1883 1883 Boats of World 30 The Bristol Channel, where the Pill Yawls, large or small, decked or undecked, hold their own with any craft of their size. 1929 F. C. Bowen Sea Slang 103 Pill Yawl, a Bristol Channel pilot boat. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2006; most recently modified version published online March 2022). pilln.2 1. A covering or outer layer of a fruit or vegetable; a skin, husk, rind, or shell; the bark of a tree, or a layer of bark; spec. (a piece of) the thin rind or peel of a fruit or a tuberous or bulbous root (= peel n.3 1a). Now regional (midlands and northern).figurative in c1300: the skin. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > part of plant > part of tree or woody plant > wood > [noun] > bark rindeOE barka1300 pillc1300 scorch1480 utter-bark1530 skin1558 shell1561 tree-bark1910 the world > plants > part of plant > reproductive part(s) > seed > [noun] > parts of > covering or skin pillc1300 huskc1400 shell1561 tunicle1601 parchment1682 tunic1760 seed coat1776 aril1785 testa1796 perula1825 spermoderm1841 endopleura1842 test1846 arillode1854 tegmen1857 the world > plants > part of plant > reproductive part(s) > fruit or reproductive product > [noun] > parts of > skin or roughening of skin rindeOE skina1398 peel?a1450 pill1530 shell1561 peeling1598 sloughc1660 russet1817 epicarp1819 exocarp1845 russeting1851 shuck1869 c1300 Body & Soul (Laud Misc. 108) (1889) 39 (MED) Þey þouȝ be rotin pile [v.r. pil] and pid..ȝeot schaltouȝ come wiþ lime and lyþ Agein to me on domesday. a1325 Gloss. W. de Bibbesworth (Cambr.) (1929) 1075 Mes ne me chaut s'il nascie, Kar il ne vaut pas un aillie [glossed] a pile of garlec. a1425 (c1395) Bible (Wycliffite, L.V.) (Royal) (1850) 2 Kings xvii. 19 A womman..spred abrood an hilyng of the mouth of the pit, as driynge barli with the pile takun a wey [v.r. pild barli; L. ptisanas]. a1492 W. Caxton tr. Vitas Patrum (1495) ii. f. ccxviii/1 By me I do ley a quantyte of small palmes of the whiche I pare of the pylles & therof I make mattes. 1530 J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 254/1 Pyll of fruyte, pellevre. ?1541 R. Copland tr. Galen Terapeutyke sig. Hij The huske or pyl of the pomgarnet. 1558 W. Ward tr. G. Ruscelli Secretes Alexis of Piemount f. 42 Take..a piece of the pille of a Citron confiete. 1574 J. Baret Aluearie P 330 The pille of woodde betwene the barke and tree. 1613 S. Purchas Pilgrimage ix. iv. 841 Boughes tied together with the pills of trees. 1653 H. Cogan tr. F. M. Pinto Voy. & Adventures (1663) xxxi. 123 Boats likewise laden with dried orange pils. 1671 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 6 3041 All simple Barks, Piths, Parenchyma's and Pulps, and, for substance, Pills and Skins also, all but one Body. 1716 M. Davies Athenæ Britannicæ II. 350 An Onion with many Pills or Skins. 1872 Harvest Song in R. O. Latham Dict. Eng. Lang. (new ed.) Broom..bears a little yellow flower, Just like the lemon pill. 1896 G. F. Northall Warwickshire Word-bk. 175 Pill, peel, skin, bark; as ‘Orange-pill’, ‘tater-pill’. 1898 G. Miller Gloss. Warwickshire Dial. Taking the pill off the oziers. 1901 F. E. Taylor Folk-speech S. Lancs. sig. O8v Pill, the peel or rind of fruit. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > invertebrates > bodies or parts > [noun] > hard outer covering skellc1330 pill1565 dermoskeleton1836 1565–73 T. Cooper Thesaurus Crusta.., pilles of certaine fishes, as of crauishes, &c. 1601 P. Holland tr. Pliny Hist. World I. 242 Some be couered ouer with crusts or hard pills, as the locusts: others haue..sharpe prickles, as the vrchins. 1608 E. Topsell Hist. Serpents 268 Aristotle is of opinion, that the matter is outward as it were a certaine Shell or pill. 1656 T. Blount Glossographia Crustaceous,..pertaining to the crust, hard shell or pill of any thing. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > mammals > group Ungulata (hoofed) > group Ruminantia (sheep, goats, cows, etc.) > male > [noun] > body and parts > antler > skin covering velveta1425 pell1699 pill1727 1575 G. Gascoigne Noble Arte Venerie lxxix. 242 His heade when it commeth first out, hath a russet pyll vpon it, the whiche is called Veluet. 1727 R. Bradley Chomel's Dictionaire Oeconomique (Dublin ed.) Fraying,..[of] Deer,..their rubbing and pushing their Horns against Trees, to cause the Pills of their new Horns to come off. 1771 Encycl. Brit. II. 631/1 A deer is said to pray its head, when it rubs against a tree, to cause the pills of the new horns to come off. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > hawking > quarry > [noun] > dead > the skin and other refuse pill1614 1614 S. Latham Falconry Explan. Wordes sig. ¶2v Pill, and pelfe of a fowle, is that refuse and broken remaines which are left after the Hawke hath been releiued. 1678 E. Phillips New World of Words (new ed.) Pelf, or Pill of a Fowl. 1706 N. Cox Gentleman's Recreation (ed. 5) ii. 8 Pill or Pelf, is what the Hawk hath left of her Prey after she is relieved. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2006; most recently modified version published online March 2022). pilln.3 1. a. Originally: a small compressed ball or globular mass containing a medicinal substance, intended to be taken by mouth and usually of a size convenient for swallowing whole. Later also: any of various other solid forms of oral medication (tablet, capsule, etc.).Pills were originally made by mixing the drug with an inert substance and rolling it into a spherical shape.blue, female, Holloway's, liver-, morning-after pill, etc.: see the first element. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > medicines or physic > medicines of specific form > pills, tablets, etc. > [noun] > pill pellet1381 pilla1400 a1400 tr. Lanfranc Sci. Cirurgie (Ashm.) (1894) 250 He schal ofte be purgid wiþ pillis [L. pilulis] cochie rasis; Þat is þe beste þing laxatif þat mai be for iȝen. 1484 W. Caxton tr. Subtyl Historyes & Fables Esope x A phisycyen..had a seruaunt..whiche made pylles. 1580 J. Lyly Euphues f. 51 In steede of a Pill to purge his hoat bloude, he gaue him a choake-peare to stoppe his breath. 1607 E. Topsell Hist. Foure-footed Beastes 375 If it be in winter, purge him with these pilles. c1696 M. Prior Remedy worse than Dis. i He felt my pulse, prescrib'd his pill. 1727 R. Bradley Chomel's Dictionaire Oeconomique (Dublin ed.) at Back-worm Make 'em into a Pill, which give her in the Morning. 1763 Brit. Mag. 4 436 The cannon~shot, and doctor's pill With equal aim are sure to kill. 1838 T. Thomson Chem. Org. Bodies 580 Aloes..is usually administered in pills. 1899 E. Phillpotts Human Boy 174 He said a man who sold pills and toothbrushes..could not be considered a classy chemist. 1945 N. Mitford Pursuit of Love xv. 121 A packing-case full of vitamin pills. 1982 O. Evans in Everyday Matters 122 It all boiled down to the fact that they felt they shouldn't have prescribed you a sleeping tablet the previous night, on top of all those other pills. 1994 Guardian Good Health Guide Fall–Winter 6/2 Homeopathic remedies which come in the form of pills, drops, granules, globules, powders, suppositories, syrups, tablets, ointments, etc. are made by diluting small amounts of substances in large amounts of liquid or other medium. b. A pill or tablet of a recreational or non-medicinal drug, spec. a barbiturate or amphetamine. Cf. earlier pep pill n.goof pill: see goof n. Compounds. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > use of drugs and poison > an intoxicating drug > [noun] > sedative drug or tablet tranquillizer1800 goof ball1938 goof pill1948 pill1951 bomber1962 rainbow1963 downer1966 downie1966 down1967 disco biscuit1981 the world > physical sensation > use of drugs and poison > an intoxicating drug > [noun] > stimulant drug(s) > pill or tablet of pill1951 amphetamine1955 dexie1956 dex1961 minstrel1966 popper1967 white1967 1951 E. Paul Springtime in Paris (U.K. ed.) xiii. 285 Twice I bought barbiturate pills, enough to finish anyone, and once I wrote a suicide note. 1956 Wisconsin Rapids Daily Tribune 1 Sept. 9/5 Amphetamine is not a narcotic or barbiturate, but is used in what is sometimes referred to as ‘thrill pills’. 1967 Trans-action Apr. 7/1 Pills are ‘reds’ and ‘whites’—barbiturates and benzedrine or dexedrine. 1972 Guardian 5 Dec. 15/3 It's impossible to discover how many adolescents use the more common illicit soft drugs—cannabis, LSD, ‘pills’ (amphetamines, barbiturates or mixtures of both). 1976 M. Deakin & J. Willis Johnny go Home ii. 38 The suburban kids' drugs: pills, uppers and downers, bennies and blueies. 1986 S. Churcher N.Y. Confidential vii. 145 The hard stuff—coke, heroin, pills, LSD, and methadone—was so readily available from dealers. 2003 Guardian 18 Jan. (Weekend Suppl.) 58/3 Ecstasy takers thought they'd found the perfect drug and used to take a pill and then dance and drink water. c. With the. Frequently with capital initial. (a) Oral contraceptive in tablet form. Cf. minipill n.Without modifying adjective the pill generally implies a contraceptive taken by a woman, but cf. male pill n. at male adj. and n.1 Compounds 1c. The first oral contraceptive became available to women in 1960. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > sexual relations > contraception or birth control > [noun] > a contraceptive > contraceptive pill birth control pill1916 birth pill1956 pill1956 minipill1968 1956 Times 20 Jan. 9/6 What the people who attended the Tokyo conference wanted to hear..was that the miracle ‘pill’ had been discovered which would permit of fertility being turned on and off like a tap... Even if the ‘pill’ were to materialize one day, [etc.]. 1957 ‘C. H. Rolph’ Human Sum 6 He gives a modestly exciting account of the quest now going on..for what laymen like myself insist on calling ‘the Pill’. 1958 A. Huxley Brave New World Revisited (1959) xii. 156 ‘The Pill’ has not yet been perfected. 1964 ‘J. Melville’ Murderers' Houses vii. 116 Emily knew all about the Bomb and the Pill. 1970 Daily Tel. 17 July 2/8 Investigations showed that the increased risk of thrombo-embolism declined rapidly after the patient stopped taking the pill. 1975 Woman's Jrnl. Sept. 110/1 Emma's burgeoning again... It seems she can't remember to take the pill. 1985 Mail on Sunday 3 Feb. 45/2 There is much discussion about whether or not girls under 16 should be given the Pill without the consent of their parents. 2001 Pure Aug.–Sept. 25/3 Natural Family Planning (NFP) has been prevented from being a major contender to the pill largely because of ignorance and a lack of reliable information. (b) on the pill: regularly taking an oral contraceptive; protected by means of this; to come (also go) off the pill: to cease using an oral contraceptive. ΚΠ 1972 D. Delman Sudden Death iv. 96 I suppose he didn't truly rape me... I mean I'm on the pill and everything. 1977 Daily Mirror 15 Mar. 7/4 In some cases when women come off the Pill, we can stimulate the return of periods with an ovulatory drug. 1986 Sunday Tel. 16 Mar. 10/6 A survey in Australia showed that working women had fewer accidents..on the Pill. 1990 D. Bailey Sunflowers Never Sleep vi. 86 Shall I use a rubber, or are you on the pill? 1997 C. Shields Larry's Party (1998) x. 196 During that time she'd gone off the pill and switched to a diaphragm. 2. a. A small rounded object, esp. formed from a soft or malleable substance; a pellet, a dropping.In quot. c1450: a pellet found in a pigeon's gizzard. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > animal body > general parts > substance or secretion and excretion > [noun] > dung sharnc825 thostc1000 dungOE dirta1300 croteysa1425 lessesa1425 grotesc1450 pillc1450 fumishing1527 trattles1547 fiants1575 dunging1582 dropping1596 soil1607 soiling1610 stercoration1694 pellet1884 mire1922 pat1937 scat1950 the world > space > shape > curvature > curved three-dimensional shape or body > [noun] > sphericity or globularity > sphere > very small sphere or pellet pellet1381 pillc1450 bullet1578 boulet1605 peloton1716 bolus1782 pilole- c1450 in W. R. Dawson Leechbk. (1934) 254 (MED) Take..the kernellis of chery stones..and þe pile þat is in þe stomake of douse [read doufe] byrdis and make poudre þer of & vse it. 1575 G. Turberville Bk. Faulconrie 228 Gyue hir..a pyll as bygge as a nutte of butter washt seuen or eyght tymes in freshe water. 1601 P. Holland tr. Pliny Hist. World I. 511 After that the little balls or pills (which be the fruit thereof) be gathered, they are laid in the Sun to dry. 1658 E. Phillips New World Eng. Words Pastilication, a making any thing into the form of a pill or round ball. 1735 Dict. Polygraph. I. S v ij Mix these two powders well,..make little pills of them with common water [in diamond-making]. 1765 tr. G. van Swieten Comm. Aphorisms Boerhaave XII. 399 Their excrements are voided in small round balls like pills. 1875 R. Hunt & F. W. Rudler Ure's Dict. Arts (ed. 7) III. 1059 Let the mixture boil, until..it will roll into hard pills. 1926 D. H. Lawrence David xii. 89 They have passed, letting fall promises as the goat droppeth pills. 1991 Garden (Royal Hort. Soc.) Mar. 122/1 Secure the pin-holder towards the back of the dish with three ‘pills’ of dry Plasticine. b. slang. In plural: the testicles; (figurative) nonsense (cf. ball n.1 12a).Frequently (in early use) with punning allusion to sense 1a. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > intelligibility > absence of meaning > nonsense, rubbish > [noun] magged talea1387 moonshine1468 trumperyc1485 foolishness1531 trash1542 baggage1545 flim-flam1570 gear1570 rubbisha1576 fiddle-faddle1577 stuff1579 fible-fable1581 balductum1593 pill1608 nonsense1612 skimble-skamble1619 porridge1642 mataeology1656 fiddle-come-faddle1663 apple sauce1672 balderdash1674 flummery1749 slang1762 all my eye1763 diddle-daddle1778 (all) my eye (and) Betty Martin1781 twaddle1782 blancmange1790 fudge1791 twiddle-twaddle1798 bothering1803 fee-faw-fum1811 slip-slop1811 nash-gab1816 flitter-tripe1822 effutiation1823 bladderdash1826 ráiméis1828 fiddlededee1843 pickles1846 rot1846 kelter1847 bosh1850 flummadiddle1850 poppycock1852 Barnum1856 fribble-frabble1859 kibosh1860 skittle1864 cod1866 Collyweston1867 punk1869 slush1869 stupidness1873 bilge-water1878 flapdoodle1878 tommyrot1880 ruck1882 piffle1884 flamdoodle1888 razzmatazz1888 balls1889 pop1890 narrischkeit1892 tosh1892 footle1894 tripe1895 crap1898 bunk1900 junk1906 quatsch1907 bilge1908 B.S.1912 bellywash1913 jazz1913 wash1913 bullshit?1915 kid-stakes1916 hokum1917 bollock1919 bullsh1919 bushwa1920 noise1920 bish-bosh1922 malarkey1923 posh1923 hooey1924 shit1924 heifer dust1927 madam1927 baloney1928 horse feathers1928 phonus-bolonus1929 rhubarb1929 spinach1929 toffeea1930 tomtit1930 hockey1931 phoney baloney1933 moody1934 cockalorum1936 cock1937 mess1937 waffle1937 berley1941 bull dust1943 crud1943 globaloney1943 hubba-hubba1944 pish1944 phooey1946 asswipe1947 chickenshit1947 slag1948 batshit1950 goop1950 slop1952 cack1954 doo-doo1954 cobbler1955 horse shit1955 nyamps1955 pony1956 horse manure1957 waffling1958 bird shit1959 codswallop1959 how's your father1959 dog shit1963 cods1965 shmegegge1968 pucky1970 taradiddle1970 mouthwash1971 wank1974 gobshite1977 mince1985 toss1990 arse1993 the world > life > the body > secretory organs > gland > specific glands > [noun] > testicle or testicles bollockeOE codOE stone1154 balla1325 cullionc1386 genitoriesa1387 pendantsa1400 bollock stone?a1425 testiclec1425 jewelc1475 dimissariesa1513 dowsetc1560 pill1608 bauble1654 Aaron's bells1681 nutmegs1690 codlings?1691 testis1704 spermarium1861 spermary1864 marblesa1866 nut1865 knackers1866 rock1918 cobbler1934 plum1934 gooly1937 nad1964 cojones1966 nadgers1967 noonies1972 1608 T. Middleton Famelie of Love ii. i. sig. B4 Master Doctor should (indeed) minister to her: to whose pills she is so much accustomed, that now her body looks for them as duely, as the Moone shakes off the ould, and borrowes new hornes. 1678–80 My Dog & I in Pepys Ballads IV. 229 If any Maiden troubled be, With overgrown Virginity, I quickly can two Pills apply. 1707 E. Ward London Terræ-filius No. 3. 28 Physick for Barren Wives and Buxom young Lasses. Two Pills are as much at once as any reasonable Woman can well dispense with. 1752 ‘W. Bolus’ Quackade ii. 25 One Hand superbly grasp'd a Box of Pills, As smart his other Fist an Inkhorn fills. 1852 C. A. Bristed Five Years Eng. University (ed. 2) 24 Pill, twaddle, platitude. 1935 I. Miller School Tie xiv. 270 ‘No, it really is true. Not doing much good here, you know.’ ‘Pills! Bags of pills!’ 1980 B. Mason Solo 204 All day long, on your knees, or up to your pills in freezing water. 2001 University Wire (Nexis) 3 May A good shot to the nuts is a sure-fire laugh getter. ‘America's Funniest Home Videos’ was all about getting hit in the pills. c. slang. A bullet; a shell, cannonball, grenade, or bomb; (in plural also) ammunition.Frequently with punning allusion to sense 1a. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > missile > ammunition for firearms > [noun] > bullet or ball > cannonball stone of iron1511 bullet1557 bombard1575 round shot1576 cannonball1606 pill1618 shot1622 bumbass1663 round1707 thunder-stone1822 bolt1871 nigger baby1872 1618 N. Field Amends for Ladies v. i. sig. H3 He that stirs first [stage direct. draws & holds out a pistoll] I'le pop a leaden pill into his guts Shall purge him quite away. c1626 Dick of Devonshire (1955) 465 I have halfe a score pills yet for my Spanyards—better then purging Comfitts. 1758 R. Tyrrell Let. 9 Nov. in Naval Chron. (1760) 3 311 The largest Frigate being very troublesome, I gave him a few of my lower-deck pills. 1780 in F. Moore Songs & Ballads of Revol. (1856) 336 Just then our trusty rifles sent A dose of leaden pills. 1823 Ld. Byron Don Juan: Canto VIII xii. 117 Thirty thousand musqets flung their pills Like hail. 1883 United Service June 652 That serpent was rather hard on the pills... How do you account for that fellow's swallowing those shells so easily? 1921 Amer. Legion Weekly 15 Apr. 22 Damn the Boche that threw the pill. 1939 P. G. Hart Hist. 135th Aero Squadron 135 When I got over the town I let my pills go. 1988 Guns & Weapons Winter 25/2 The other .38 pill was a bevel based round nosed bullet of a nominal 158 grains. d. A pellet of opium prepared for smoking. Now chiefly historical. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > use of drugs and poison > an intoxicating drug > [noun] > a) narcotic drug(s) > opium > pellet of pill1786 yen pock1934 1786 tr. F. de Tott Mem. I. i. 141 The Company..became intoxicated with a languishing Enthusiasm, the smoke of their Pipes, and Pills of Opium. 1851 Internat. Mag. Lit., Art, & Sci. Aug. 73/2 We take our long stilettoes, prick off a little pill of opium from its ivory reservoir, and burn it, dexterously, in the spirit lamp. 1887 Lantern (New Orleans) 21 May 4/2 The longer end of the stem is handed the person opposite and so the pill is consumed by the party drawing in their breath, which some call the ‘long draw’. 1926 J. Black You can't Win xvii. 238 He feverishly rolled the first ‘pill’... Each succeeding pill is smaller, more carefully browned over the lamp, and smoked with increased pleasure. 1991 L. Sante Low Life ii. ii. 147 The generic opium that came in ‘pin-head’ pills that cost a quarter. e. slang. A ball used in a sport or game; (in plural) a game played with balls, spec. billiards. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > billiards, pool, or snooker > [noun] billiards1591 pool1797 snooker1889 pill1896 nine-ball1915 society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > [noun] > ball ball?c1225 pellet1744 game ball1834 pill1896 1896 Westm. Gaz. 28 Oct. 1/3 We can play pills then till lunch, you know. 1908 Atlantic Monthly Aug. 224/2 The finger-tips, as the ‘pill’ leaves the hand, endow it with its rotary genius. 1922 P. G. Wodehouse Clicking of Cuthbert ix. 203 ‘I don't mind her missing the pill,’ said the young man. ‘But I think her attitude toward the game is too light-hearted.’ 1946 B. Marshall George Brown's Schooldays 6 As a matter of fact, I think that's the dirty cad hacking that footer pill over there. 1991 N.Y. Rev. Bks. 24 Oct. 50/4 Bobby Thomson came up, unfurled his bat to October's breeze, and hit the pill hard round the world. f. slang (originally U.S.). A cigarette. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > use of drugs and poison > tobacco > smoking > articles or materials used in smoking > [noun] > thing which may be smoked > cigarette cigarito1832 paper cigar1833 cigarette1842 papelito1845 coffin-nailc1865 fag1885 butt1893 pill1901 scag1915 nail1925 quirly1932 tab1934 burn1941 draw1946 tube1946 snout1950 cancer stick1958 straight1959 ciggy1962 square1970 bifter1989 lung dart1990 dart2000 1901 Anaconda (Montana) Standard 15 Sept. 13/2 Say, you ought to see him roll a pill. He tried to look like he knew how, and he makes a bobble of it. 1927 D. Hammett in Black Mask Feb. 31/2 Those pills you smoke are terrible. 1953 R. Chandler Long Good-bye lii. 314 He smiled faintly, lit another pill himself, and blew smoke. 1966 ‘L. Lane’ ABZ of Scouse 82 Pill, a cigarette. 1991 Independent 9 Nov. (Mag.) 28/1 They endlessly light up their pungent, rolled ‘pills’ of dark tobacco, but there is little food. 3. a. figurative. A remedy or solution, esp. one which is unpleasant but necessary; (more generally) something unpleasant which has to be accepted or endured. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > suffering > displeasure > [noun] > unpleasantness > that which is unpleasant unthankc897 offensiona1382 offencec1425 displeasure1470 pill1548 phlegm1567 water in a person's shoes1624 a whip and a bell1644 nastiness1718 disagreeable1726 watera1734 embitterer1752 disagreement1778 disagreeablism1835 grit1876 bad news1918 nasty1959 scuzz1968 napalm1984 1548 N. Udall et al. tr. Erasmus Paraphr. Newe Test. I. Luke iv. f. 47 Yet cannot they abide to swallowe down the holsome pille of the veritie beeyng bittur in their mouthes. 1595 Blanchardine & Eglantine ii. I iv b Learne by me to disgest the hard and harsh pilles of vnhappie fortune. 1644 (title) A medicine for malignancy: or Parliament pill serving to purge out the malignant humours of men disaffected to the Republic. 1660 Hist. Charles II 83 Those hard Covenant Pills which the Kirkmen made him swallow. 1728 E. Young Love of Fame: Universal Passion (ed. 2) i. 231 Call it diversion, and the pill goes down. 1779 H. Walpole Last Jrnls. (1859) II. 338 It was a bitter pill for the King and Lord Mansfield to swallow. 1814 J. Austen Mansfield Park II. xii. 269 Mrs. Rushworth will be very angry. It will be a bitter pill to her. View more context for this quotation 1893 Times 30 May 9/3 He must make up his mind to swallow the bitter pill without delay. 1928 L. North Parasites 87 There are lots of folks to give you a lift down in the morning... It's getting up that hill at night is the pill. 2000 R. Barger et al. Hell's Angel xi. 192 I found the prospect of spending the rest of my life in prison a tough, though not impossible, pill to swallow. b. [From the former practice of gilding a bitter pill so that it may be more easily swallowed.] figurative. to sugar (also gild, sweeten) the pill and variants: to disguise, or offset with compensatory benefits, the nature of something unpleasant. ΚΠ 1612 T. Dekker If it be not Good ii. i. 32 Your guilded pills..slip so smoothly downe Your Subiects throates, that all (vpon a sudden) Are loosely giuen.] 1625 K. Long tr. J. Barclay Argenis ii. i. 70 Selenissa had priuately guilded those pills of suspition, which shee gaue the King against Timoclea. 1654 J. Thurloe Let. in T. Birch Coll. State Papers John Thurloe (1742) II. 206 In the mean time there will be a good many provisoes..which will gild or sweeten this pill. 1685 tr. B. Gracián y Morales Courtiers Oracle 189 Princes are not cured by bitter Medicines. It requires art to guild their Pill. 1704 J. Toland tr. P. de Boissat Fables of Æsop ciii. 356 He chose..to set forth the Maxims of Morality under a Shell of several Fictions, with intent to Sugar the Pill for weak Men. 1710 H. Bedford Vindic. Church of Eng. 210 To declare against Popery..is only the old Artifice of gilding the Pill, to make it go down the better. 1794 Ld. St. Helens Let. 14 Oct. in A. Paget Paget Papers (1896) I. 66 They [sc. the Prussian Cabinet] have no right to complain, as I observe that you continued to gild and sugar over the pill which you were directed to administer. 1857 A. Trollope Barchester Towers xxvi It gilded the pill which Mr. Slope had to administer. 1881 Times 31 Oct. 9/4 Will the City and its dignitaries consent thus to be eclipsed?.. The choice..is offered them in the most civil terms. Nothing is omitted that could sweeten the pill and make it palatable. 1936 V. W. Brooks Flowering of New Eng. xv. 287 He liked to administer doses of moral quinine, and he never thought of sugaring his pills. 1977 R.A.F. News 11 May 7/1 Even the resettlement grant does not sweeten the bitter pill. 1992 Guardian 2 Jan. 28/6 Musically, the sugaring of the Wagnerian pill for the Milanese is the presence of Placido Domingo in the title role. 2004 Virginian-Pilot (Norfolk, Va.) (Nexis) 22 Feb. b3 The comics that The Virginian-Pilot still lavishly treats you with...continue to gild the pill of everyday living today. 4. slang (chiefly Military). A doctor, a surgeon; a medical officer or orderly. Frequently in plural as a form of address. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > healer > physician > [noun] physician?c1225 leecherc1374 practiserc1387 doctora1400 flesh-leecha1400 leechman14.. mediciner?a1425 miria1425 M.D.1425 medicine?c1450 practitioner?1543 minister1559 doc1563 artist1565 medicus1570 medicianera1578 Aesculapius1586 Dra1593 pisspot1592 medician1597 physicianer1598 medicinary1599 pisspot1600 velvet-cap1602 healer1611 Galena1616 physiner1616 clyster1621 clyster-pipe1622 hakim1623 medic1625 practicant1630 medico1647 physicker1649 physicster1689 Aesculapian1694 nim-gimmer1699 pill-monger1706 medical man1784 meester1812 medical1823 pill-gilder1824 therapeutist1830 pill1835 pill roller1843 med1851 pill-peddler1855 therapeutic1858 squirt1859 medicine man1866 pill pusher1879 therapist1886 doser1888 internist1894 pill-shooter1911 whitecoat1911 quack1919 vet1925 the world > health and disease > healing > healer > physician > [noun] > military physician > army surgeon1591 medical board1796 pill1835 1835 Mil. & Naval Mag. U.S. Jan. 357 Pills, why dont you buy more vegetables? 1859 G. W. Thornbury in Househ. Words 5 Mar. 318/2 There was no one there but a pill (doctor). 1866 Harper's Mag. July 268/1 One day..the two young ‘pills’ were arguing some case. 1890 M. Williams Leaves of Life I. iii. 30 The ‘pill’ of the regiment..had come out to inspect the men. 1915 ‘Bartimeus’ Tall Ship ix. 159 They seized the Young Doctor, who was a small man, and deposited him on the deck. ‘Couldn't you see I was asleep, Pills?’ demanded the other. 1961 P. de Vomécourt Army of Amateurs xii 143 When ‘Pills’ started pouring the chloroform on the pad, the man looked terrified. 5. slang (originally U.S.). A foolish or contemptible person; a bore. Cf. sense 3a. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > suffering > feeling of weariness or tedium > [noun] > tedious or dull person grub1653 noddeea1680 insipid1699 rocker1762 bore1812 Dryasdust1819 insipidity1822 prose1844 bagpipe1850 vampire1862 pill1865 jeff1870 terebrant1890 poop1893 stodger1905 club bore1910 nudnik1916 stodge1922 dreary1925 dreep1927 binder1930 drip1932 douchebag1946 drear1958 drag1959 noodge1968 anorak1984 the mind > emotion > suffering > displeasure > [noun] > unpleasantness > unpleasant person let-gamec1374 displeaser1641 troll1697 spoil-sport1801 pill1865 foul ball1918 Scrooge1940 slag1943 grinch1966 grot1970 knob jockey1989 1865 ‘Spectator’ Snoblace Ball Contents p. v How Pill concluded to leave bad enough alone. 1886 Galaxy 1 Oct. 272 Various sorts of contemptible young men are designated as..‘pills’, ‘squirts’, [etc.]. 1925 P. G. Wodehouse Carry on, Jeeves iii. 61 What's to be done?.. That pill is coming to stay here. 1970 Women Speaking Apr. 5/1 If a man doesn't like a girl's looks or personality, she's a..pill. 1991 E. Lax Woody Allen 6 ‘God I look like such a pill’, he said after his return, laughing as he pointed to a photo of himself in a striped tie. Compounds C1. a. pill-maker n. ΚΠ 1845 J. Breakenridge Golden Age i. 37 Euphonious title! Most ambrosial name! That doth itself the Pill maker proclaim! 1993 National Trust Mag. Spring 13/2 Pill-makers were used right up to the beginning of the Second World War. pill-man n. ΚΠ 1865 ‘A. Ward’ Travels i. x. 70 Why didn't I bind him out to the Patent Travellin' Vegetable Pill Man? 1930 B. Darwin Dickens Advertiser ii. 19 The most blatant of modern pill-men would hardly venture to recommend his pills as a cure for the smallpox. pill-taking n. ΚΠ 1836 C. Dickens Sketches by Boz I. 211 Mr. Gobler and Mrs. Bloss conversed most affectionately on the subject of pill taking and other innocent amusements. 2001 Internat. Family Planning Perspectives 27 117/2 Difficult lives make daily pill-taking inconvenient. b. ΚΠ 1628 T. Venner Baths of Bathe 15 A Pil-boasting Surgeon..by his ill-qualified and preposterous Physicke, incurred an incureable and mortall lapse of his stomacke and Liuer. pill-dispensing adj. ΚΠ 1809 B. H. Malkin tr. A. R. Le Sage Adventures Gil Blas IV. vii. xvi. 220 I had taken..a dislike..to the pill-dispensing tribe. 1998 Social Text 57 147 There has been a shift..from bucolic surrounds and elongated couches to pill-dispensing hospitals and city streets. pill-shaped adj. ΚΠ 1824 J. C. Loudon Green-house Compan. i. 56 E[rica]laxa, pill-shaped purple flowers. 2003 Gazette (Montreal) (Nexis) 19 July f1 The..red conference table in the centre of the room is pill-shaped, a nod to the building's pharmacological past. C2. pill bag n. a bag in which pills are carried. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > medical appliances or equipment > medicine chest, bag, etc. > [noun] > bag sacculus1621 sacculet1694 pill bag1852 1852 Knickerbocker 40 470 After procuring his degree, he had not the wherewithal to buy him pill-bags. 1999 D. King Boxy an Star (2000) 1 The pill bag is a jumbo big bag an is massive an full up of pills. We like it loads. pill beetle n. any of various small rounded beetles of the family Byrrhidae which are able to retract the head and appendages, esp. Byrrhus pilula. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > order Coleoptera or beetles and weevils > [noun] > Polyphaga (omnivorous) > superfamily Diversicornia > member of family Byrrhidae pill beetle1816 1816 W. Kirby & W. Spence Introd. Entomol. (1818) II. xxi. 234 Another genus of insects..the pill-beetles (Byrrhus..), have recourse to a method the reverse of this. 1991 New Scientist 3 Aug. 29/2 Despite recent damage it is home to 14 endangered invertebrates, including three species endemic only to Thorne and Hatfield Moors, the mire pill beetle, Curimopsis nigrita, the thorne ground beetle, Bembidion humerale, and the hairy canary fly Phaonia jaroschewskii. pill bug n. U.S. = pill woodlouse n. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Crustacea > [noun] > subclass Malacostraca > division Arthostraca > order Isopoda > family Armadillilidae or genus Armadillo > member of cheslip1530 millipede1612 pill millipede1815 hog-beetlec1830 pill bug1843 pill woodlouse1863 pill worm1882 1843 Nat. Hist. N.Y., Zool. VI. 52 Armadillo Pillularis..is known under the name of Pill-bug, from its form, in a contracted state, completely resembling a pill. 1915 W. A. Bryan Nat. Hist. Hawaii xxxi. 408 An introduced species known to many as the pill-bug, slater, sow-bug or wood-louse. 1993 Albuquerque (New Mexico) Jrnl. 4 Feb. (Rio Entertainment Suppl.) 15/2 You..protect yourself from fallout sickness by assuming roughly the shape of a panicked pill bug. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > order Coleoptera or beetles and weevils > [noun] > Polyphaga (omnivorous) > superfamily Lamellicornia Scarabaeoidea > family Scarabaeidae > member of genus Ateuchus scarab1579 scarabee1591 pilulary1661 spring beetle1799 pill chafer1804 1804 W. Bingley Animal Biogr. (ed. 2) III. 245 The Pill Chafer..is one of the most remarkable of the beetle tribe. pill coater n. a machine for coating pills. ΚΠ a1884 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. Suppl. 682/1 Pill-coater, a machine..in which pills are coated with sugar. 1953 Wisconsin Rapids Daily Tribune 12 Dec. 2/7 The pellets were prepared in a druggist's pill coater using a type of cellulose. pill cooker n. slang a person who smokes opium (cf. sense 2d). ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > use of drugs and poison > [noun] > drug-user > user of opium opium-eater1785 opium taker1792 opium drinker1804 opium smoker1831 meconophagist1886 pill cooker1929 1929 M. A. Gill Underworld Slang 9/1 Pill cooker, opium smoker. 1984 E. L. Abel Dict. Drug Abuse Terms 125 Pill cooker, 1. Opium user. 2. Person who prepares opium for smoking. pill crab n. a soft crab at the time of moulting. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Crustacea > [noun] > subclass Malacostraca > division Thoracostraca > order Decapoda > suborder Brachyura (crab) > member of family Pinnotheridae (pea-crab) pinnothere1601 oyster crab1756 pea crab1836 pinna-guardian1854 pill crab1872 1872 Daily News 23 Aug. All flotsam and jetsam in connection with the sprat, the mussel, or the soft pill-crab is welcome to the hungry gull. 1956 M. Kennedy Salt-water Angling x. 321 The crab is perhaps most useful as a bait shortly before it moults—when it has developed the new shell beneath the old one,..the angler anticipating nature by stripping the old shell off it. In this stage it is known variously as a peeler, peel, pill or shedder crab. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > esteem > approval or sanction > commendation or praise > flattery or flattering > [adjective] > of words or manners fairOE honeyed1435 glozed1509 fair-tongued1541 fine1568 smoothed1568 smoothinga1592 sugary1591 slicked1594 rose water1598 rose-watered1599 candied1604 soft1609 courtlya1616 smooth-faced1626 oileda1640 blandished1671 sugar1687 fair-spoken1704 smooth-tongued1761 silky1778 pill-gilded1822 blarneyfied1830 greasy1848 blarneyed1861 soothering1866 soothing-syrupy1902 1822 T. Mitchell tr. Aristophanes Wasps in tr. Aristophanes Comedies II. 237 Such pill-gilded superfine speeches. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > healer > physician > [noun] physician?c1225 leecherc1374 practiserc1387 doctora1400 flesh-leecha1400 leechman14.. mediciner?a1425 miria1425 M.D.1425 medicine?c1450 practitioner?1543 minister1559 doc1563 artist1565 medicus1570 medicianera1578 Aesculapius1586 Dra1593 pisspot1592 medician1597 physicianer1598 medicinary1599 pisspot1600 velvet-cap1602 healer1611 Galena1616 physiner1616 clyster1621 clyster-pipe1622 hakim1623 medic1625 practicant1630 medico1647 physicker1649 physicster1689 Aesculapian1694 nim-gimmer1699 pill-monger1706 medical man1784 meester1812 medical1823 pill-gilder1824 therapeutist1830 pill1835 pill roller1843 med1851 pill-peddler1855 therapeutic1858 squirt1859 medicine man1866 pill pusher1879 therapist1886 doser1888 internist1894 pill-shooter1911 whitecoat1911 quack1919 vet1925 1824 T. Hook Sayings & Doings 1st Ser. I. 53 The words quack—pill-gilder—fool..flowed from his lips in a torrent of invective. 1896 Salem (Ohio) Daily News 7 May 5/2 A paper on ‘Relationship of Physician and Pharmacist, or Pill Venders vs. Pill Gilders’ was read. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > esteem > approval or sanction > commendation or praise > flattery or flattering > [adjective] ficklinga1240 glozing1297 blandingc1315 blandishingc1374 glaveringc1394 fleering?a1400 sleekedc1400 faginga1425 smoothc1450 flattering1484 cogging1542 flatterous1546 butterya1585 smooth-tongueda1593 oily1598 silken1598 slick-tongued1598 soothing1599 sleek1601 slick1606 blandiloquous1615 supellectile1615 colloguing1620 losengeous1632 oiled-tongued1632 daubing1655 blandiloquious1689 smooth-booted1706 palavering1764 pill-gilding1764 oily-tongued1788 buttering1789 sleeky1810 smooth-spoken1821 oleaginous1833 butteraceous1837 saponaceous1837 soft-soapy1849 soapy1854 blarneying1884 smarmy1924 sweet-talking1956 smoothie1959 smarming1970 blandiloquent- 1764 S. Foote Mayor of Garret i. 6 Pill-gilding puppy. 1825 Lancet 17 Dec. 417/2 What with..pill-gilding..all hands are filled. pillhead n. colloquial a person who takes pills (esp. barbiturates, amphetamines, etc.) to excess; a person addicted to pills. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > use of drugs and poison > drug addiction or craving > [noun] > drug addict head1856 narcotist1860 drugger1870 drug fiend1873 druggard1882 narcomaniac1888 dope-fiend1896 addict1899 dopehead1901 hypo1904 drug addict1905 drug abuser1915 junker1922 junkie1923 hype1924 needle artist1925 needleman1925 schmecker1931 dope-addict1933 ad1938 dopester1938 narco1958 pillhead1962 druggie1966 freak1967 drugster1970 1962 N.Y. Times 21 Sept. 36 l/4 Crimes by ‘pill heads’ frequently went undetected by law-enforcement officers. 1995 Harper's Mag. Feb. 28/2 It turned out she was a major pillhead, too, but the worst kind. pill machine n. a machine for making pills. ΚΠ 1848 Sci. Amer. 21 Oct. 34/2 A Pill machine is exhibited—a wonderful little catch, roll and snap apparatus. 2003 South China Morning Post (Hong Kong) (Nexis) 24 July 3 The metre-tall pill machine is designed to make legitimate medicine. ΚΠ 1884 Internat. Health Exhib. Official Catal. 112/2 Pill Massers [and] Powder Mixers for druggists. pill millipede n. †(a) = pill woodlouse n. (obsolete); (b) any of various millipedes of the order Glomerida which are able to roll into a ball, esp. Glomeris marginata. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Myriapoda > [noun] > order Oniscomorpha > member of cheslip1530 chestworm1544 pill millipede1815 the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Myriapoda > [noun] > order Oniscomorpha > member of > member of genus Glomeris millipede1601 pill millipede1815 the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Crustacea > [noun] > subclass Malacostraca > division Arthostraca > order Isopoda > family Armadillilidae or genus Armadillo > member of cheslip1530 millipede1612 pill millipede1815 hog-beetlec1830 pill bug1843 pill woodlouse1863 pill worm1882 1815 W. Kirby & W. Spence Introd. Entomol. I. iv. 139 The pill-millipede (Armadillo vulgaris), once a very favourite remedy. 1899 W. T. Fernie Animal Simples 236 Hoglouse, or Pill Millipede... This Hoglouse, or Millipede, was the primitive medicinal pill. 1983 Birds Summer 67/2 Practically all millipedes exude toxins and..the pill millipede is particularly toxic. pill-monger n. = pill-peddler n. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > healer > physician > [noun] physician?c1225 leecherc1374 practiserc1387 doctora1400 flesh-leecha1400 leechman14.. mediciner?a1425 miria1425 M.D.1425 medicine?c1450 practitioner?1543 minister1559 doc1563 artist1565 medicus1570 medicianera1578 Aesculapius1586 Dra1593 pisspot1592 medician1597 physicianer1598 medicinary1599 pisspot1600 velvet-cap1602 healer1611 Galena1616 physiner1616 clyster1621 clyster-pipe1622 hakim1623 medic1625 practicant1630 medico1647 physicker1649 physicster1689 Aesculapian1694 nim-gimmer1699 pill-monger1706 medical man1784 meester1812 medical1823 pill-gilder1824 therapeutist1830 pill1835 pill roller1843 med1851 pill-peddler1855 therapeutic1858 squirt1859 medicine man1866 pill pusher1879 therapist1886 doser1888 internist1894 pill-shooter1911 whitecoat1911 quack1919 vet1925 1706 E. Baynard in J. Floyer Anc. Ψυχρολουσια Revived (rev. ed.) ii. 207 This Pulp-pated Pil-monger. 1881 Science 5 Nov. 521/2 He..must be content to remain a mere ‘pill-monger’. 2000 Washington Times (Nexis) 17 Dec. b8 Before the new American president takes on the pill-mongers. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > particular plants > plants and herbs > according to family > Urticaceae (nettle and allies) > [noun] nettleeOE dock-nettlea1300 Greekish nettlec1450 Roman nettle1578 red nettle1611 ettle1688 urtica1706 bur-nettle1714 pill nettle1714 nettle plant1764 richweed1814 clearweed1822 sting-nettle1822 ongaonga1842 nettlewort1846 urtical1846 jinny1876 1714 Philos. Trans. 1713 (Royal Soc.) 28 35 Roman or Pill Nettle. pill-peddler n. derogatory slang (chiefly U.S.) a doctor or pharmacist. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > healer > physician > [noun] physician?c1225 leecherc1374 practiserc1387 doctora1400 flesh-leecha1400 leechman14.. mediciner?a1425 miria1425 M.D.1425 medicine?c1450 practitioner?1543 minister1559 doc1563 artist1565 medicus1570 medicianera1578 Aesculapius1586 Dra1593 pisspot1592 medician1597 physicianer1598 medicinary1599 pisspot1600 velvet-cap1602 healer1611 Galena1616 physiner1616 clyster1621 clyster-pipe1622 hakim1623 medic1625 practicant1630 medico1647 physicker1649 physicster1689 Aesculapian1694 nim-gimmer1699 pill-monger1706 medical man1784 meester1812 medical1823 pill-gilder1824 therapeutist1830 pill1835 pill roller1843 med1851 pill-peddler1855 therapeutic1858 squirt1859 medicine man1866 pill pusher1879 therapist1886 doser1888 internist1894 pill-shooter1911 whitecoat1911 quack1919 vet1925 the world > health and disease > healing > pharmacy > apothecary or pharmacist > [noun] spicer1297 apothecary1366 ointment makera1382 pothecaryc1387 pigmentarya1398 pottingar1474 pottingary1487 pothecar?a1505 ypothecar1509 potycaryar1533 pharmacopole?1541 drugger1594 confectioner1606 druggist1608 drugster1611 pharmacopoeian1618 druggister1632 druggard1637 chemica1642 pharmacopolist1651 pharmacopolitan1657 pharmacian1658 spicerer1665 pot-carrier1683 pharmacist1721 knight of the pestle1723 materialist1728 chemist and druggist1748 potter-carrier1764 drug man1769 gallipot1785 drug manufacturer1790 pharmaceutist1795 drug dealer1800 chemist1802 pharmaceutical chemist1821 essence-peddler1838 pill roller1843 pill-peddler1855 squirt1859 pill pusher1879 1855 U.S. Rev. Feb. 109 ‘Come on, you can't catch me, you old puffy pill-peddler’, rejoined precocity, taking hasty departure. 1993 G. Lyall Crocus List (BNC) 200 Practise in peace, Dr Baxter of Tunbridge Wells, he thought; you sound an honest pill-peddler to me. pill-popper n. colloquial a person who takes pills (esp. barbiturates, amphetamines, etc.) freely or excessively. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > use of drugs and poison > [noun] > drug-user > user of barbiturates or amphetamines pill-popper1963 popper1967 the world > physical sensation > use of drugs and poison > drug addiction or craving > [noun] > drug addict > addicted to barbiturates or amphetamines pill-popper1963 speed freak1967 1963 Time 1 Nov. 74 Can a lonely New Jersey pill popper who sleeps on a board find enduring happiness with an ebullient Hungarian gourmet who sleeps on a rug? 1991 Economist 23 Nov. 9/2 The pill-poppers must be restrained—France is the world-champion consumer of tranquillisers. pill-popping n. and adj. colloquial (a) n. profuse or excessive consumption of pills (of any type); (b) adj. characterized by the profuse consumption of pills. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > use of drugs and poison > [noun] > taking barbiturate or amphetamine pills pill-popping1966 1966 Washington Post 21 Aug. e1/4 Social and psychological addiction aren't seriously discussed because pill popping and pot smoking aren't viewed as evils. 2001 Daily Tel. 19 Feb. 19/2 The nervy, pill-popping, chain smoking director. pill pusher n. derogatory slang (chiefly U.S.) a doctor; (U.S. Military) a member of the medical corps, a medical orderly. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > healer > physician > [noun] physician?c1225 leecherc1374 practiserc1387 doctora1400 flesh-leecha1400 leechman14.. mediciner?a1425 miria1425 M.D.1425 medicine?c1450 practitioner?1543 minister1559 doc1563 artist1565 medicus1570 medicianera1578 Aesculapius1586 Dra1593 pisspot1592 medician1597 physicianer1598 medicinary1599 pisspot1600 velvet-cap1602 healer1611 Galena1616 physiner1616 clyster1621 clyster-pipe1622 hakim1623 medic1625 practicant1630 medico1647 physicker1649 physicster1689 Aesculapian1694 nim-gimmer1699 pill-monger1706 medical man1784 meester1812 medical1823 pill-gilder1824 therapeutist1830 pill1835 pill roller1843 med1851 pill-peddler1855 therapeutic1858 squirt1859 medicine man1866 pill pusher1879 therapist1886 doser1888 internist1894 pill-shooter1911 whitecoat1911 quack1919 vet1925 the world > health and disease > healing > pharmacy > apothecary or pharmacist > [noun] spicer1297 apothecary1366 ointment makera1382 pothecaryc1387 pigmentarya1398 pottingar1474 pottingary1487 pothecar?a1505 ypothecar1509 potycaryar1533 pharmacopole?1541 drugger1594 confectioner1606 druggist1608 drugster1611 pharmacopoeian1618 druggister1632 druggard1637 chemica1642 pharmacopolist1651 pharmacopolitan1657 pharmacian1658 spicerer1665 pot-carrier1683 pharmacist1721 knight of the pestle1723 materialist1728 chemist and druggist1748 potter-carrier1764 drug man1769 gallipot1785 drug manufacturer1790 pharmaceutist1795 drug dealer1800 chemist1802 pharmaceutical chemist1821 essence-peddler1838 pill roller1843 pill-peddler1855 squirt1859 pill pusher1879 1879 Washington Post 8 Dec. 2/6 These few disappointed pill-pushers have marshalled their clans. 1909 J. R. Ware Passing Eng. Victorian Era 196/2 Pill-pusher.., doctor. Fine example of the graphic in phraseology. 1969 E. Linn & J. Pearl Masque of Honor 66 Hell, I'm only a pill-pusher, Lieutenant. 1994 D. Cassidy & C. Deffaa C'mon, get Happy xv. 168 This doctor-to-the-stars who was the pill pusher of all time. pill roller n. a person who or thing which rolls pills, spec. (derogatory slang, chiefly U.S.) a doctor; (U.S. Military slang) a member of the medical corps, a medical orderly. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > healer > physician > [noun] physician?c1225 leecherc1374 practiserc1387 doctora1400 flesh-leecha1400 leechman14.. mediciner?a1425 miria1425 M.D.1425 medicine?c1450 practitioner?1543 minister1559 doc1563 artist1565 medicus1570 medicianera1578 Aesculapius1586 Dra1593 pisspot1592 medician1597 physicianer1598 medicinary1599 pisspot1600 velvet-cap1602 healer1611 Galena1616 physiner1616 clyster1621 clyster-pipe1622 hakim1623 medic1625 practicant1630 medico1647 physicker1649 physicster1689 Aesculapian1694 nim-gimmer1699 pill-monger1706 medical man1784 meester1812 medical1823 pill-gilder1824 therapeutist1830 pill1835 pill roller1843 med1851 pill-peddler1855 therapeutic1858 squirt1859 medicine man1866 pill pusher1879 therapist1886 doser1888 internist1894 pill-shooter1911 whitecoat1911 quack1919 vet1925 the world > health and disease > healing > pharmacy > apothecary or pharmacist > [noun] spicer1297 apothecary1366 ointment makera1382 pothecaryc1387 pigmentarya1398 pottingar1474 pottingary1487 pothecar?a1505 ypothecar1509 potycaryar1533 pharmacopole?1541 drugger1594 confectioner1606 druggist1608 drugster1611 pharmacopoeian1618 druggister1632 druggard1637 chemica1642 pharmacopolist1651 pharmacopolitan1657 pharmacian1658 spicerer1665 pot-carrier1683 pharmacist1721 knight of the pestle1723 materialist1728 chemist and druggist1748 potter-carrier1764 drug man1769 gallipot1785 drug manufacturer1790 pharmaceutist1795 drug dealer1800 chemist1802 pharmaceutical chemist1821 essence-peddler1838 pill roller1843 pill-peddler1855 squirt1859 pill pusher1879 1843 Bentley's Misc. July 20 A medical man's..bottles, pill-rollers, and spatulas. 1874 Thistleton's Illustr. Jolly Giant 4 July 10/1 The office of the latter is filled by ‘Lord Lawlor’, vulgarly termed a ‘pill roller’, or perhaps..the ‘bowel mover’ of the unfortunate poor people who are stricken down with disease. 1917 Editor 13 Jan. 33 Pill rollers, Hospital Corps. 1951 J. Jones From Here to Eternity xiv. 188 As a pillroller he might be all right. He's fat enough. But as a cook he's lousy. 1968 R. Hooker MASH (1969) 175 Let the pill rollers..do it. 2003 Times (Shreveport, Lousiana) (Nexis) 16 May 15 a Not from a highly touted economist but from a local ‘pill roller’. pill-rolling adj. and n. (a) adj. that rolls pills; (Medicine) involving a circular movement of the fingers and thumb, as though rolling a pill (of tremors, etc., as a symptom of certain disorders); (b) n. the action of making pills by rolling; (Medicine) circular movement of the fingers and thumb. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > pharmacy > [noun] > processes in pharmacy levigation1471 frixion1617 nutrition1617 extinction1646 confectioning1650 demersion1692 pill-rolling1838 succussion1848 pearl-coating1883 cryoprecipitation1955 microencapsulation1961 microencapsulating1970 1838 W. N. Glascock Land Sharks & Sea Gulls II. 94 Ye lubberly..blister-spreadin'—pill-rollin'—platter-faced pyeaw. 1853 M. F. Ward Eng. Items 349 In drug-mixing and pill-rolling..the learned professions far excel the less enlightened portion of their countrymen. 1954 Science 26 Mar. 417/1 Surgical occlusion of the anterior choroidal artery may produce varying degrees of alleviation of resting-type, or pill-rolling, tremor. 2002 Providence (Rhode Island) Jrnl.-Bull. (Nexis) 19 Aug. c2 His right hand moving back and forth—a symptom of Parkinson's Disease referred to as ‘pill rolling’. pill-shooter n. U.S. derogatory slang a doctor. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > healer > physician > [noun] physician?c1225 leecherc1374 practiserc1387 doctora1400 flesh-leecha1400 leechman14.. mediciner?a1425 miria1425 M.D.1425 medicine?c1450 practitioner?1543 minister1559 doc1563 artist1565 medicus1570 medicianera1578 Aesculapius1586 Dra1593 pisspot1592 medician1597 physicianer1598 medicinary1599 pisspot1600 velvet-cap1602 healer1611 Galena1616 physiner1616 clyster1621 clyster-pipe1622 hakim1623 medic1625 practicant1630 medico1647 physicker1649 physicster1689 Aesculapian1694 nim-gimmer1699 pill-monger1706 medical man1784 meester1812 medical1823 pill-gilder1824 therapeutist1830 pill1835 pill roller1843 med1851 pill-peddler1855 therapeutic1858 squirt1859 medicine man1866 pill pusher1879 therapist1886 doser1888 internist1894 pill-shooter1911 whitecoat1911 quack1919 vet1925 1911 Washington Post 15 Jan. 4/2 Once I give a dose or charge a cent the local pill shooters would chase me from hades to the matutinal meal. 1966 H. Marriott Cariboo Cowboy ix. 89 In those years, an average fellow was darn near down-and-out before he headed out to see a pill-shooter. pill slab n. a slab on which to roll pills. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > pharmacy > [noun] > pharmacist's equipment cyath?1543 slice1611 oculist's stamp1778 pharmacometer1830 medicine stamp1849 medicine seal1851 pill tile1852 cyathus1854 pill slab1893 1893 New Sydenham Soc. Lexicon Pill slab, a slab for rolling pills upon. 2002 Western Mail (Cardiff) (Nexis) 12 Jan. 27 Dishes, plates, cups and pill slabs were made in profusion. pill tile n. a tile on which to roll pills. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > pharmacy > [noun] > pharmacist's equipment cyath?1543 slice1611 oculist's stamp1778 pharmacometer1830 medicine stamp1849 medicine seal1851 pill tile1852 cyathus1854 pill slab1893 1852 N.Y. Jrnl. Pharmacy 1 398 (advt.) Evaporating dishes, filtering funnels, mortars and pestles, pill tiles, plain, Do. graduated. 2001 Scotsman (Nexis) 28 Aug. 8 A rare English delft oval pill tile used by pharmacists in the 18th century. pill woodlouse n. any of various woodlice of the family Armadillidiidae which are able to roll into a ball, esp. Armadillidium vulgare; = pill bug n. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Crustacea > [noun] > subclass Malacostraca > division Arthostraca > order Isopoda > family Armadillilidae or genus Armadillo > member of cheslip1530 millipede1612 pill millipede1815 hog-beetlec1830 pill bug1843 pill woodlouse1863 pill worm1882 1863 J. G. Wood Illustr. Nat. Hist. (new ed.) III. 632 The well-known Pill-woodlouse. 1931 W. T. Calman in W. P. Pycraft Standard Nat. Hist. ix. 169 The common Pill Woodlouse, Armadillidium, may often be seen crawling actively about on rocks in hot sunshine. 1999 Eng. Nature Mag. July 6/2 The Peak National Park's limestone screes support limestone fern and pill woodlouse. pill worm n. = pill millipede n. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Crustacea > [noun] > subclass Malacostraca > division Arthostraca > order Isopoda > family Armadillilidae or genus Armadillo > member of cheslip1530 millipede1612 pill millipede1815 hog-beetlec1830 pill bug1843 pill woodlouse1863 pill worm1882 1882 Ogilvie's Imperial Dict. (new ed.) III. 444/3 Pillworm, the popular name of the millipede, which can roll itself into a ball. 1992 Atlanta Jrnl. & Constit. (Nexis) 30 Oct. p1 If you find pill worms, bugs or ants in the soil, repot the plant completely. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2006; most recently modified version published online March 2022). pilln.4 A small ball of fluff formed by rubbing or wear on the surface of a fabric, esp. a knitted textile. Cf. pill v.3, and pilling n.3 ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > textile fabric or an article of textile fabric > textile fabric > [noun] > defects or irregularities in burlc1440 scawe1463 stour1472 brack1552 pirn1688 sheave1696 sprit1737 sprat1756 crow's foot1948 pill1954 soil1959 1954 Jrnl. Home Econ. 46 276 These unsightly pills may be fabric pills, containing only fibers from the fabric itself, or lint pills, containing foreign fibers as well. 1963 A. J. Hall Student's Handbk. Textile Sci. v. 273 The formation of a pill is primarily due to a rubbing of the fabric surface to cause a number of fibre ends to protrude and then become entangled. 1970 Cabinet Maker & Retail Furnisher 23 Oct. 173/2 While most worsted and woollen cloths, like a woollen carpet, tend to pill in the beginning, these pills wear off quickly and never recur. 1990 Sun (Brisbane) 18 July 41/1 Pills—those small balls of fibre that develop on some fabric and knitted garments—are caused by normal wear and handling. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2006; most recently modified version published online March 2022). pillv.1α. early Middle English pilewe (south-west midlands), Middle English pile, Middle English pilie, Middle English piliȝe, Middle English pyle, Middle English pylie. β. Middle English–1500s pille, Middle English–1500s pyl, Middle English–1500s pylle, Middle English–1600s pil, Middle English–1600s pyll, Middle English– pill; also Scottish pre-1700 pell, pre-1700 pyl. See also peel v.1 I. To peel, strip, pluck; cf. peel v.1 II. 1. intransitive. Of an outer layer or covering (skin, bark, etc.): to scale, peel, or come off; to become detached; to become loose or removable. Formerly also: †(of an animal, tree, etc.) to lose an outer layer or covering (skin, bark, etc.); to become bare (obsolete). Cf. peel v.1 5. Now English regional. ΘΚΠ the world > space > place > removal or displacement > become displaced [verb (intransitive)] > peel or scale off pill?a1200 the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > covering > uncovering > become uncovered [verb (intransitive)] > be lost as an outer layer > be lost as skin, husk, or bark pill?a1200 peel1634 the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > covering > uncovering > become uncovered [verb (intransitive)] > be lost as an outer layer > be lost as skin, husk, or bark > lose skin, husk, or bark pill?a1200 peel1592 α. β. ?1523 J. Fitzherbert Bk. Husbandry f. xliiiv To fall..all okes assone as they woll pyll.1545 T. Raynald in tr. E. Roesslin Byrth of Mankynde i. sig. D.v The which thynne skyn..skalith or pillith of, on the hands.1611 Bible (King James) Tobit xi. 13 The whitenesse pilled away from..his eyes. View more context for this quotationa1631 J. Donne Serm. (1957) III. 111 I have seen marble buildings, and..a face of marble hath pilld off, and I see brick-bowels within.1631 S. Jerome Arraignem. Whole Creature vi. 46 Neither doth the Tree wither so long as the sap is found at the roote, though the barke pill, the flowers fall.1657 N. Billingsley Brachy-Martyrologia 211 One William Swallow Lost all his hair; off all his nails did pill.1680 N. Lee Cæsar Borgia v. ii. 67 Till all my poison'd flesh like bark pills off, And my bare Trunck stands every brushing wind!1886 R. E. G. Cole Gloss. Words S.-W. Lincs. (at cited word) They'll not cut them [sc. oak trees] while [i.e. until] the bark'll pill.1928 A. E. Pease Dict. Dial. N. Riding Yorks. 96/1 T' bark's pill'd off t'treys we fell'd..[or] T' deead skin's pillin off.?a1200 (?OE) Peri Didaxeon (1896) 29 Þis lacecræft sceal to þan handan, þe þæt fell of pyleþ. a1400 tr. Lanfranc Sci. Cirurgie (Ashm.) (1894) 199 (MED) In þis maner al his fleisch wole pile [L. excoriatur], & alle hise heeris wolen falle awei. a1475 Sidrak & Bokkus (Lansd.) (Ph.D. diss., Univ. of Washington) (1965) 4967 (MED) Þat foule skyn shulde of him pile. 2. a. transitive. To strip (a fruit, vegetable, etc.) of its outer layer; to remove the skin, rind, or bark of; = peel v.1 4a. Now English regional. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > covering > uncovering > uncover or remove covering from [verb (transitive)] > strip or make bare > strip of outer layer > strip of skin, husk, or bark bipilc1230 unrinda1382 slipe?c1390 hull1398 pill1440 husk1562 flay1574 unhusk1598 decorticate1611 depilate1620 rind1623 excorticate1657 disbark1659 α. β. 1381 Diuersa Servicia in C. B. Hieatt & S. Butler Curye on Inglysch (1985) 76 Pyl onyons & seþ hem & ley hem al hol by þe lomprey.a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) (1959) Gen. xxx. 37 Þann Iacob takyng greene pople ȝerdez & of almonders & of planes, a-party vnryndide hem..in þilk þat wern pylld [a1425 L.V. maad bare; L. spoliata] semyd whitnes. Promptorium Parvulorum (Harl. 221) 399 Pyllyn, or schalyn nottys, or garlyk, vellifico.1483 Catholicon Anglicum (BL Add. 89074) (1881) 95 To pyll garlike, vellicare.?1523 J. Fitzherbert Bk. Husbandry f. xliiiv Yf there be any okes..fell them and pyll them, and sell the barke by it selfe.1530 J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 657/2 Pyll these oignons whyle I skumme the potte.1535 Bible (Coverdale) Gen. xxx. F The staues that he had pylled [1611 the rods which he had pilled, 1885 R.V. peeled].1600 W. Shakespeare Merchant of Venice i. iii. 83 The skilful sheepheard pyld me certaine wands, And..stuck them vp before the fulsome Ewes. View more context for this quotation1653 H. Cogan tr. F. M. Pinto Voy. & Adventures xxvi. 101 We met with three men that were pilling flax.1678 J. Ray Coll. Eng. Prov. (ed. 2) 53 Pill a fig for your friend, and a peach for your enemy.1721 N. Bailey Universal Etymol. Eng. Dict. To peel, to pill or take off the rind.1745 MS Indenture (Sheffield) The burgesses may pill and fell timber trees.1834 E. Brontë Diary 24 Nov. in L. Hinkley Charlotte & Emily (1945) i. 164 Taby said..Ya pitter pottering there instead of pilling a potate.a1864 J. Clare Later Poems (1984) II. 764 I pilled the straws for want o' words And plucked up bents to plait.a1903 J. P. Kirk in Eng. Dial. Dict. (1903) IV. 503 [South Nottinghamshire] A must pill ma taters.?c1225 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 119 Decorticauit ficum meam, nudans spoliauit eam, & proiecit..Þeos þet schaweð hire god haueð ipiled [c1230 Corpus Cambr. bipilet] Mi figer, irent alþe rinde þerof..istruped hire steortnaked. c1400 (?a1387) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Huntington HM 137) (1873) C. x. 81 (MED) The most needy aren oure neighebores..As..poure folke in Cotes..hem-selue suffren..wo..with wakynge a nyghtes..To rubbe and to rely, russhes to pilie [v.rr. piliȝe; pil]. b. transitive. To strip away or pare off (skin, bark, etc.); to remove (the outer layer of something); = peel v.1 3a. Now English regional. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > covering > uncovering > uncover or remove covering from [verb (transitive)] > strip or make bare > strip of outer layer > strip of skin, husk, or bark > strip (skin, husk, or bark) flayc1320 pilla1387 slip1535 excoriate1547 slipe1781 a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1869) II. 303 Þerfore Iacob took grene ȝerdes of populers, of almond trees..and pyled of þe rynde in som place of þe ȝerdes. ?c1425 Recipe in Coll. Ordinances Royal Househ. (Arun. 334) (1790) 436 (MED) Take checones..and sethe hom and, when thai byn half sothen, take hom up and pylle of the skynne. Promptorium Parvulorum (Harl. 221) 399 Pyllyn, or pylle bark, or oþer lyke, decortico. ?c1475 Catholicon Anglicum (BL Add. 15562) f. 95v To pyll barke, corticare, decorticare, exorticare. 1542 A. Borde Compend. Regyment Helth xxi. sig. K.iii Yf..the skyn or the pyth [be] pylled of, they be nutty. 1594 W. Shakespeare Lucrece sig. H4v Ay me, the Barke pild from the loftie Pine, His leaues will wither. View more context for this quotation 1599 R. Fitch in R. Hakluyt Princ. Navigations (new ed.) II. i. 264 Cinamon..is pilled from fine yoong trees. 1604 E. Grimeston tr. J. de Acosta Nat. & Morall Hist. Indies iv. xxiv. 278 This fruite is most vsuall in Mexico, having a thinne skinne, which may be pilled like an apple. a1680 S. Butler Genuine Remains (1759) II. 81 If you do but pill the Bark off him he deceases immediately. 1705 Philos. Trans. 1704–05 (Royal Soc.) 24 1845 A Whitish sort of Bark..which falls off from the Wood as if it 'twas pill'd. 1742 Philos. Trans. 1739–40 (Royal Soc.) 41 152 Their practice is to beat the Tree, and then pill off the Bark, and so scrape the Gum. 1757 Bradley's Gen. Treat. Agric. (new ed.) i. v. 107 The outer coat or skin of them [must be] pilled off. 1887 E. Peacock Gloss. Words Manley & Corringham, Lincs. 405 I seed 'em pillin' bark e' Mr. Nelthorpe woods..to daay. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > plastic art > sculpture or carving > sculpt or carve [verb (transitive)] > an image or design carveOE gravec1000 pill1535 engrave1542 scrieve1542 chip1711 whittle1848 chip-carve1903 1535 Bible (Coverdale) Gen. xxx. F But Iacob toke staues of grene wyllies,..and pylled [1611 pilled, 1885 R.V. peeled] whyte strekes in them. a. transitive. To remove the hair from (a person or animal); to make bald. Also: to remove (hair). In early use occasionally with away. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > covering > uncovering > uncover or remove covering from [verb (transitive)] > strip or make bare > strip of hair pillc1350 unhair1382 depilate1575 bald1602 dishair1631 disthatch1654 glabrify1657 dehair1902 the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > covering > uncovering > uncover or remove covering from [verb (transitive)] > strip or make bare > strip of hair > strip (hair) pillc1350 c1350 [implied in: c1350 in London Mediaeval Stud. (1951) 2 43 Þey..callen me prust papelart, pilled as a pye. (at pilled adj.1 1a)]. a1400 tr. Lanfranc Sci. Cirurgie (Ashm.) (1894) 186 Whanne þou hast waische his heed herwiþ, þan þou schalt anoynte his heed wiþ þe oynement þat wole pile awei [L. remouet] þe heeris. a1425 Edward, Duke of York Master of Game (Digby) xii Þat one is cleped quyc maniewes, þe whiche pileth [a1612 Royal pelyth] þe houndes and breketh hyr skynnes in many places. a1450 Late Middle Eng. Treat. on Horses (1978) 101 (MED) Þe mangew wol bi-gynne bi-side þe necke in þe heere & þer wol genderi whelkus..and in þe same stede wol þe here pile awey. ?1515 A. Barclay Egloges (1928) iii. 125 When bushe or brambles pilled the shepes skin, Then had he pitie and..in newe fleces did tenderly them lap. 1591 R. Percyvall Bibliotheca Hispanica Dict. at Pelar To pill, to make balde, to make bare, depilare, deglabrare. 1612 Mr. King tr. Benvenuto Passenger i. iv. 265 Tell him that I will pill his beard, haire by haire. 1648 R. Herrick Hesperides sig. D Doe they first pill thee, next, pluck off thy skin? 1706 P. Motteux et al. tr. M. de Cervantes Hist. Don Quixote (ed. 2) III. x. 91 I'll e'en pill off my Beard by the roots an't be so. 1791 tr. Aristotle Wks. iii. 238 That kind of heat the matter of hair doth putrify, and by consequence they are quickly pilled. a1811 R. Cumberland tr. Aristophanes Clouds (1812) 83 The catamite's correction, pill'd and sanded And garnish'd with a radish in his crupper. b. intransitive. To lose hair; to become bald. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > covering > uncovering > become uncovered [verb (intransitive)] > lose the hair pill1523 1523 J. Fitzherbert Bk. Surueyeng xli. f. 54 Those beestis in the house haue short heer & thyn and towarde Marche they wyll pyll & be bare. 1614 G. Markham Cheape & Good Husbandry 50 The Closhe or Clowse, which causeth a beast to pyll and loose the hayre from his necke. ΚΠ c1358 in J. T. Fowler Extracts Acct. Rolls Abbey of Durham (1899) II. 561 (MED) Willelmo Randman pro pylyng et sortyng lane, pro labore suo, 10 s. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > tearing or tearing apart > tear [verb (transitive)] tearc1000 renta1325 reavea1400 lacerate?a1425 raise?a1425 rivea1425 shearc1450 unsoundc1450 ranch?a1525 rechec1540 pilla1555 wreathe1599 intertear1603 shark1611 vulture1628 to tear at1848 spalt1876 a1555 H. Latimer Let. in J. Foxe Actes & Monuments (1563) 1316/1 Who can pill Pilgrimages from Idolatry? 1566 T. Stapleton Returne Vntruthes Jewelles Replie Epist. Your Borrowed Fethers pilled awaye. 1605 W. Camden Remaines i. 235 Such which in Ordinaries..will pill and pull them by their wordes..as it were by the beards. a1678 A. Marvell Misc. Poems (1681) 58 How I loath'd to see my Neighbour glean Those papers, which he pilled from within Like white fleaks rising from a Leaper's skin! 1890 A. Lang Rhymes a la Mode 109 Their feathers you pill, and you eat them at will, yes, you plunder and kill the bright birds. 1999 A. Walker Encycl. Falconry 107/1 Pill..obs., to make prey of; or to pluck, pull at or tear (a kill, perhaps especially furred).] 6. transitive. To make (land) bare by removing vegetation, grazing, etc. Now rare (English regional in later use). ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > farming > cultivation or tillage > reclamation > reclaim [verb (transitive)] > clear land > clear of a crop pill1555 strip1844 1555 W. Waterman tr. Josephus in tr. J. Boemus Fardle of Facions sig. Y.iiij Pille ye not the countrie, cutting doune the trees. 1615 W. Lawson New Orchard & Garden (1623) 12 Whosoeuer makes such Walls, must not pill the ground in the Orchard, for getting earth. a1903 W. F. Rose in Eng. Dial. Dict. (1903) IV. 503/1 I put some sheep in to pill the field. II. To rob, extort, pillage; cf. peel v.1 I. 7. a. transitive. To strip (a person or place) of money or goods; esp. to rob or steal from (a person); to pillage or plunder (a place); (also) to oppress (a group of people, an institution, etc.) with excessive rents, taxation, fines, etc.; to extort money or goods from, to defraud; = peel v.1 1a. Now rare (archaic in later use). ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > taking > stealing or theft > robbery > spoliation or depredation > despoil or prey upon [verb (transitive)] reaveOE stripa1225 pill?c1225 robc1225 peela1250 despoil1297 raimc1300 spoilc1330 spoila1340 to pull a finch (also pigeon, plover, etc.)c1387 despoil1393 preya1400 spoila1400 spulyiea1400 unspoila1400 riflec1400 poll1490 to pill and poll1528 to poll and pill1528 exspoila1530 pilyie1539 devour?1542 plume1571 rive1572 bepill1574 fleece1575 to prey over1576 pread1577 disvaledge1598 despoliate1607 to make spoil of1613 expilate1624 to peel and poll1641 depredate1651 violatea1657 disvalise1672 to pick feathers off (a person)1677 to make stroy of1682 spoliate1699 pilfer1714 snabble1725 rump1815 vampire1832 sweat1847 ploat1855 vampirize1888 α. β. a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) 3 Esdras i. 36 Þe king of egipt..pilede [v.r. pilde; a1425 L.V. pilide; L. mulcavit] þe folc of an hundred talentis of siluer & a talent of gold.a1400 (c1303) R. Mannyng Handlyng Synne (Harl.) 5450 (MED) Y haue herde be-ȝonde þe see was a Iustyse..Gode men ofte hym besoght For þe pore..Þat he shulde..Pylle hem nat but mesurly.?c1450 Life St. Cuthbert (1891) 7717 (MED) Als þe bischops knyghts þar to Grete extorsiouns þai do, Many pepill þai robbid and pild [rhyme kyld].a1500 (c1340) R. Rolle Psalter (Univ. Oxf. 64) (1884) ii. 9 Þou sall noght be tyraunt til thaim to pil thaim & spoile thaim, as wicked princes dos.1530 J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 657/2 I pyll, I robbe, je pille... He hath pylled me of all that ever I have.1597 W. Shakespeare Richard II ii. i. 247 The commons hath he pild with grieuous taxes. View more context for this quotation1616 B. Jonson Epigrammes liii, in Wks. I. 782 Hauing pill'd a booke, which no man buyes, Thou wert content the authors name to loose.1693 J. Dryden tr. Juvenal Satires i, in Wks. (1887) XIII. 128 Indignation boils within my veins..When he who pilled his province 'scapes the laws.1722 W. Wollaston Relig. of Nature vii. 149 Unless to be unjustly treated, pilled, and abused can be happiness.1867 J. B. Rose tr. Virgil Æneis 250 The fields Ausonian they have held and pilled.1882 Littell's Living Age 30 June 807/1 He pilled and shaved the people with tribute, especially to spend about the Tower of London.1906 C. M. Doughty Dawn in Brit. VI. xxiii. 160 Were pilled all taberns, in the merchants' streets; Then burned.?c1225 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 69 Asire as þu dest wel for eauer me schal þe cheorl polkin [?a1289 Scribe D plokkin] & pilien [a1250 Nero peolien]. a1350 in R. H. Robbins Hist. Poems 14th & 15th Cent. (1959) 7 (MED) Þus me pileþ þe pore, þat is of lute pris. a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1882) VIII. 301 (MED) Þo were dymes alwey i-gadred and contribuciouns i-payde; spiritualte and temporalte was alway i-pyled. ?a1400 (a1338) R. Mannyng Chron. (Petyt) ii. 42 (MED) Fourti thousand pounde he did þam take, Þat non in alle þe cuntre more suld be piled [rhyme begiled]. a1500 (?c1450) Merlin 556 It is more than two yere that thei cessed neuer to robbe and pile oure londes. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > structure of the earth > constituent materials > earth or soil > soil qualities > [verb (transitive)] > render infertile barren1581 pill1594 disfertile1606 peel1610 embarren1628 unfructify1628 barrenize1652 mine1937 1594 H. Plat Diuerse Sorts of Soyle 51 in Jewell House Flax, whose seede..doth most burne, and pill the ground. 1610 W. Folkingham Feudigraphia i. ix. 23 Wilde Oates pestering and pilling of Tilthes. 8. intransitive. To commit robbery, extortion, or pillage; to levy fines, taxes, etc., to excess. Now rare (archaic in later use). ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > taking > stealing or theft > robbery > spoliation or depredation > commit depredation [verb (intransitive)] reaveOE preyc1325 pillc1390 spoilc1400 spreathc1425 rive1489 poinda1500 to rug and reavea1500 to pill and poll1528 pilfer1548 fleece1575 plunder1642 spulyie1835 α. β. a1535 T. More Hist. Richard III in Wks. (1557) 37/2 For whiche hee was fain to pil and spoyle in other places.1548 Hall's Vnion: Henry IV f. vij He..suffered them to robbe and pill without correction or reprefe.a1616 W. Shakespeare Timon of Athens (1623) iv. i. 12 Large-handed Robbers your graue Masters are, And pill by Law. View more context for this quotationa1649 W. Drummond Hist. Scotl. (1655) 12 There were men..who were accustomed to drive preys from the more civil Neighbours and Borders, pilling and spoiling, poluting and ravishing.1678 T. Shadwell Hist. Timon v. 86 They govern for themselves and not the People. They rob and pill from them.1847 H. Bliss Cicero iii. v. xxvii. 248 Here the mime plundered, there the mummer pilled.1875 J. Rhoades Timoleon ii. i. 55 Lewd parasites and lawless mercenaries, Robbed, hacked, and pilled.1912 E. Mason tr. Wace Rom. de Brut in Arthurian Chron. 7 The Picts entered the king's realm, with a great host, burning, wasting, and pilling at their will.c1390 G. Chaucer Parson's Tale 769 The pilours and destroyours of goodes of holy chirche..ne stynte neuere to pile [v.r. pillen]. a1450 (a1338) R. Mannyng Chron. (Lamb.) (1887) i. 6202 (MED) Traherne..In Scotland aryued & logged his ost & pylede & robbed at ilka cost. a1500 (?c1450) Merlin 191 (MED) For thei hadde so piled and robbed thourgh the contrey and the portes..and the marchaundise was so grete that vc someres were charged. 9. transitive. To take (property) through violence, extortion, fraud, etc.; to steal; = peel v.1 2. Now rare (archaic in later use.) ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > taking > stealing or theft > robbery > spoliation or depredation > despoil or prey upon [verb (transitive)] > make a spoil of (something) stripc1200 spoilc1380 riflec1391 pilla1393 spoila1400 bezzlec1430 peelc1450 despoil1483 spulyie1488 strip1594 prey1596 pillage1600 plunder1643 scoff1893 α. β. a1467 in Cal. Proc. Chancery Queen Elizabeth (1827) I. p.lxxviii (MED) They alwey resorted ynto the seid castell..and all that they myght robbe and pyll brought into the same.a1535 T. More Hist. Richard III in Wks. (1557) 62/1 So that there was dayly pilled fro good men & honest, gret substaunce of goodes.c1540 (?a1400) Gest Historiale Destr. Troy 2282 Why couet we combraunse..In enpayryng of our persons & pyllyng our goodes.1597 W. Shakespeare Richard III i. iii. 159 You wrangling Pyrats that fall out, In sharing that which you haue pild from me. View more context for this quotation1618 G. Wither Wither's Motto in Juvenilia (1633) 521 I have no Lands that from the Church were pild.1641 R. Brathwait Astraea's Teares sig. B5 These Chymicall Impostors..never surfet, till their mouthes be fill'd With that rich gravell their injustice pill'd.1710 W. Drummond Sc. Gentleman's Let. 5 Substance is daily plucked and pilled from honest Men, to be lavished out amongst Unthrifts.a1900 R. W. Dixon Last Poems (1905) 14 Unto that very stead..two robbers fled, There to divide the spoil which they had pilled.1939 T. S. Moore Unknown Known 34 Here, pilled from temples, clanging midnight gongs, And dragon-nostrilled censers.a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) Prol. 401 (MED) And what Schep that is full of wulle Upon his back, thei toose and pulle, Whil ther is eny thing to pile [rhyme skile]. c1400 (?c1380) Cleanness (1920) 1270 (MED) Þenne ran þay to þe relykes as robbors wylde & pyled alle þe apparement þat pented to þe kyrke. 10. transitive. to pill and poll (also to poll and pill): to strip (a person, place, or institution) bare by robbery or pillage; to plunder; to ruin by depredation or extortion. Also occasionally intransitive. Now rare (archaic or historical in later use).The literal sense is ‘to remove the skin and hair of’; cf. poll v. 1. ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > poverty > make poor or impoverish [verb (transitive)] > by depredations or extortions to poll and pill1528 to peel and poll1641 to pick feathers off (a person)1677 the mind > possession > taking > extortion > practise extortion on [verb (transitive)] ransom?a1425 to poll and pill1528 exact1534 bloodsuck?1541 extort1561 rack1576 flay1584 shave1606 wire-draw1616 punisha1626 sponge1631 squeeze1639 screwa1643 to screw up1655 bleed1680 torture1687 to screw down1725 to shake down1872 to squeeze (someone) until the pips squeak1918 to bleed white1935 rent1956 the mind > possession > taking > stealing or theft > robbery > spoliation or depredation > commit depredation [verb (intransitive)] reaveOE preyc1325 pillc1390 spoilc1400 spreathc1425 rive1489 poinda1500 to rug and reavea1500 to pill and poll1528 pilfer1548 fleece1575 plunder1642 spulyie1835 the mind > possession > taking > stealing or theft > robbery > spoliation or depredation > despoil or prey upon [verb (transitive)] reaveOE stripa1225 pill?c1225 robc1225 peela1250 despoil1297 raimc1300 spoilc1330 spoila1340 to pull a finch (also pigeon, plover, etc.)c1387 despoil1393 preya1400 spoila1400 spulyiea1400 unspoila1400 riflec1400 poll1490 to pill and poll1528 to poll and pill1528 exspoila1530 pilyie1539 devour?1542 plume1571 rive1572 bepill1574 fleece1575 to prey over1576 pread1577 disvaledge1598 despoliate1607 to make spoil of1613 expilate1624 to peel and poll1641 depredate1651 violatea1657 disvalise1672 to pick feathers off (a person)1677 to make stroy of1682 spoliate1699 pilfer1714 snabble1725 rump1815 vampire1832 sweat1847 ploat1855 vampirize1888 1528 W. Tyndale Obed. Christen Man Prol. f. xxijv They have no soch auctorite of God so to pylle and polle as they doo. 1550 R. Crowley One & Thyrtye Epigrammes sig. Biv Thus pore men are pold and pyld to the bare. 1583 P. Stubbes Second Pt. Anat. Abuses sig. E5v No man ought to poole and pill his brother. a1652 R. Brome City Wit iv. i. sig. E3, in Five New Playes (1653) Churches poule the People, Princes pill the Church. 1675 J. Crowne Countrey Wit ii. 25 'Tis a rare thing to be an absolute Prince, and have rich Subjects; Oh how one may Pill 'em and Poll 'em. 1788 J. Adams Def. Constit. Govt. U.S.A. III. 358 A grand catch-pole, to pill, poll, and geld the purses of the people. 1844 R. Browning Colombe's Birthday in Bells & Pomegranates No. VI i. 4/2 We tax and tithe them, pill and poll, They wince and fret enough, but pay they must. 1860 R. F. Burton Lake Regions Central Afr. I. 15 They..have full permission to ‘pill and poll.’ 1935 E. R. Eddison Mistress xix. 389 Them that followed and obeyed Prince Ercles, when he would poll pill and shave the Queen's subjects in these parts..we have bloodily overthrown. 1948 H. Maynard Smith Henry VIII & Reformation ii. iv. 363 He had found the Protestant nobles only out to ‘pill and poll’ the Church. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2006; most recently modified version published online June 2022). pillv.2 1. a. transitive. To dose (a person) with pills. In later use occasionally intransitive: to take pills. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > medical treatment > treatment by medicine or drug > treat with drugs [verb (transitive)] > treat with pills pill1736 1736 H. Fielding Pasquin iv. 46 Handle her Pulse, potion and pill her well. 1775 J. Adams in J. Adams & A. Adams Familiar Lett. (1876) 58 I found Dr. Young here, who..has pilled and electuaried me into pretty good order. 1850 Fraser's Mag. 42 345 The..patient is again pilled and purged. a1871 T. Robertson Birds of Prey (1872) i. i. 8 An old captain of dragoons, whom I broth'd, beef-tea'd, pilled and draughted. 1979 G. McDonald Fletch's Fortune xv. 105 This..pimp..[was] pilling them up, then shooting them up, putting them straight on the street. 1995 Atlanta Jrnl. & Constit. (Nexis) 30 Nov. 5 d He cheated, she persevered. He pilled, she primped. 2002 Express (Nexis) 21 Aug. 13 He was seen within two minutes and..injected, pilled and sampled within the hour. b. transitive. Military slang. To bombard (a person, a target) with shells, bullets, etc. Cf. pill n.3 2c. Now rare. ΚΠ 1858 A. Smith Diary 24 Aug. in To China & Back (1974) 31 They [sc. pirates] ‘pilled’ twenty-five junks—burned eighteen, and brought seven away to sell, with all their brass guns, etc. 1900 Daily News 14 May 3/2 Our fellows will probably pill you with their rifle fire. 1950 E. Partridge Soldiers' Slang 1914–18 in Here, There & Everywhere 74 Pill, to shell or bomb. 2. slang. a. transitive. To reject or exclude by ballot (a person) from membership of a club or society; to blackball. Now historical. ΘΚΠ the mind > will > free will > choice or choosing > expression of choice by some approved method > give (a vote) [verb (transitive)] > vote against to vote down1641 blackball1765 pill1853 downvote1876 pip1880 1853 G. J. Whyte-Melville Digby Grand II. 264 The three hateful black-balls, which constitute a rejection, announced that ‘Grand was pilled’. 1894 G. A. Sala London up to Date v. 68 A practically accurate opinion as to how many candidates will be elected..and how many will be ‘pilled’. 1898 H. Belloc Mod. Traveller 8 As for his clubs in London, he Was pilled at ten, expelled from three. 1991 P. Ziegler & D. Seward Brooks's: Social Hist. 65 The fact of his having been ‘pilled’, as the slang of the day [i.e. in 1854] had it, would have been widely known in the Club. b. transitive. To fail (a candidate) in an examination. Now rare. ΘΚΠ society > education > educational administration > examination > examine a candidate [verb (transitive)] > fail a candidate to turn by1653 pluck1713 flunk1843 plough1854 spin1860 fail1884 pill1908 pip1908 zap1961 1908 A. S. M. Hutchinson Once aboard Lugger i. i. 15 ‘Your examination?’ George half turned away. The bitterest moment of a sad day had come. He growled: ‘Pipped.’ ‘Pipped?’ ‘Pilled.’ ‘Pilled?’ ‘Spun... I failed. I was referred for three months.’ 1925 W. Deeping Sorrell & Son xxii. 208 Gorringe had a sick face... ‘Pilled,’ thought Kit, and was not sorry. ΚΠ 1883 Ogilvie's Imperial Dict. (new ed.) Pill,..to form into pills. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2006; most recently modified version published online March 2022). pillv.3 intransitive. Of a fabric (esp. a knitted fabric) or a garment: to become covered with small balls of fluff on the surface through wear or rubbing. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > textile fabric or an article of textile fabric > textile fabric > [verb (intransitive)] > develop defects or irregularities pill1955 snag1970 1955 Oshkosh (Wisconsin) Daily Northwestern 5 May 9/1 (advt.) This..fabric..has one of the most luxurious textures you've ever felt, yet it won't pill or fuzz! 1970 Cabinet Maker & Retail Furnisher 23 Oct. 173/2 While most worsted and woollen cloths, like a woollen carpet, tend to pill in the beginning, these pills wear off quickly and never recur. 1993 A. Dacyczyn Tightwad Gaz. iv. 187/2 Who hasn't had a new garment hopelessly pill, shrink, or fall apart after two or three washings? This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2006; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.1OEn.2c1300n.3a1400n.41954v.1?a1200v.21736v.31955 |
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