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单词 pinning
释义

pinningn.1

Brit. /ˈpɪnɪŋ/, U.S. /ˈpɪnɪŋ/
Forms: late Middle English pinyng, late Middle English pyning, late Middle English–1500s pynnyng, late Middle English–1500s pynnynge, 1500s pynning, 1500s pynyng, 1500s– pinning, 1700s pining; Scottish pre-1700 penning, pre-1700 pinien, pre-1700 pining, pre-1700 pyinin, pre-1700 pynnyng, pre-1700 1700s– pinning, 1800s– pinnan, 1800s– pinnin.
Origin: Formed within English, by derivation. Etymons: pin v.1, -ing suffix1.
Etymology: < pin v.1 + -ing suffix1.
I. The action of fixing or securing with a pin or pins, and related senses.
1.
a. Building. The action of fastening, constructing, or repairing with pins, pegs, or nails; the supporting of a wall or foundation with nails or wedges; the insertion of small stones or mortar into the joints or interstices of masonry. Also with in, up. Cf. underpinning n. 1.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > support > [noun] > action or fact of supporting > by other specific means
pinning1418
stanchioning1528
beaming1538
pillaring1607
tomming1858
levitation1939
surface mount1954
society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > building or providing with specific parts > [noun] > building foundations
foundationc1385
pinning1418
underpinning1486
groundselling1579
society > occupation and work > industry > working with tools or equipment > fastening > [noun] > with pins or pegs > constructing or repairing with
pinning1418
1418–19 in Archæol. Jrnl. (1899) 6 65 Item, solut' Johanni lokere pro altaribus ecclesie pinyng.
1427–8 in H. Littlehales Medieval Rec. London City Church (1905) 67 (MED) For ij masons ij dayes for pynnynge of þe new pewes & leyeng of þe same tyle takyng a man a day viij d. ob. xxxiiij d.
1533 Accts. St. John's Hosp., Canterbury (Canterbury Cathedral Archives: CCA-U13/4) To John Bryght for tyllyng and dabyng & outher pynyng xs.
1552 R. Huloet Abcedarium Anglico Latinum Pynnynge of houses, substructio.
1655 T. Fuller Church-hist. Brit. ii. 133 Some Devise used by him about pinning and propping of the Room.
1728 E. Chambers Cycl. Pinning, in Building, the fastening of Tiles together, with Pins of Heart of Oak; for the Covering of a House, &c.
1842 J. Gwilt Encycl. Archit. Gloss. 1016 Pinning Up, in underpinning the driving the wedges under the upper work so as to bring it fully to bear upon the work below.
1940 Chambers's Techn. Dict. 645/2 Pinning-in, the operation of inserting small splinters of stone in the joints of coarse masonry.
1993 J. H. Maclean & J. S. Scott Penguin Dict. Building (ed. 4) 326/1 Pinning, (1) fixing joinery by nailing with panel pins; (2) securing a woodwork joint by driving in dowels.
b. More generally: the action of fastening or fixing something, esp. clothes, with a pin or pins. Also: the manner in which a thing is pinned. Also with out, up.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > industry > working with tools or equipment > fastening > [noun] > with pins or pegs
keying?1427
pinning?1544
peggage1611
pegging1611
pinnage1611
?1544 J. Heywood Foure PP sig. B.iv But prycke them [sc. women] and pynne them as nyche, as ye wyll And yet wyll they loke for pynnynge styll.
a1566 T. Hoby Trav. (1902) 23 By the pinninge uppe of the hanging.
1601 A. Dent Plaine Mans Path-way to Heauen 45 They haue spent a good part of the day in..pricking and pinning.
1676 London Gaz. No. 1106/4 Two black pinning-up Petticoats, one being of Sarcenet, the other of Alamode.
1730 W. Burdon Gentleman's Pocket-farrier (1735) 77 He should take Care (in the Pinning) that he leaves not a drop of Blood between the Flesh and the Skin.
c1772 Lady Polwarth in A. Buck Dress in 18th-Cent. Eng. (1979) vi. 169 She only wanted..the art of hairdressing to make a good servant, and now..she must be perfectly skilled in the art of frizing and pining, etc.
1809 W. Dimond Foundling of Forest ii. i. 39 A third..calls the modest blood to my finger's ends, by requesting me ‘to adjust some error in the pinning of her 'kerchief.’
1905 Sci. Amer. 30 Sept. 262/1 The second-sizing and pinning-out is done by hand at so-called batteries.
1987 E. W. Burr Compan. Bird Med. xxiv. 159/2 The advantages of intramedullary pinning include simplicity, economy, accurate alignment of fractures, and ease of implant removal.
2. Chess. The action of trapping an opposing piece so that it cannot be moved without exposing a more valuable piece to capture. Cf. pin v.1 7b.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > board game > chess > [noun] > move > type of move
neck1557
stroke1735
key1845
forced move1847
key-move1847
fianchetto1848
queening1860
pinning1900
mutate1922
valve1930
zwischenzug1941
1900 Westm. Gaz. 26 May 3/3 I have composed for your irresistible museum of chess freaks an example of pinning ad absurdum.
1951 V. Nabokov Speak, Memory xiv. 217 Themes in chess..are such devices as forelaying, withdrawing, pinning, unpinning and so forth.
2000 Boston Globe (Nexis) 21 July (Globe West section) 1 Monthly chess tournaments in which hungry minds engage in castling, pinning, and capturing queens.
3. U.S. colloquial. An informal type of engagement or pledge of affection between two young people, marked by an exchange of fraternity or sorority pins; the exchange of such pins.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > love > courtship or wooing > [noun] > exchange of pins to indicate relationship
pinning1942
1942 Chicago Sunday Tribune 13 Sept. (Suppl.) 4/6 Pinning on this campus is not generally considered as binding as an engagement. That pin you give or take announces to the world at large..that you are no longer in circulation.
1961 Ann. Amer. Acad. Polit. & Social Sci. Nov. 85/1 There are boxed proclamations in the newspaper [of Brooklyn College] of watchings, pinnings, ringings, engagements and marriages.
1967 Punch 13 Sept. 378/1 Pinning—a kind of informal engagement to be engaged, signified by the exchange of fraternity and sorority pins.
1990 W. Wasserstein Bachelor Girls 58 Is it too late to return to the old system of fraternity pinning?
4. Physics. The immobilization or trapping of magnetic flux in a particular region of a semiconductor, e.g. at a defect in its crystal structure.
ΚΠ
1962 Physical Rev. Lett. 9 310/1 An arbitrary structure-sensitive parameter of our theory will be the average amount of pinning.
1985 Science 5 July 13 Energy losses can also be lowered by removing sources of domain wall pinning, primarily second-phase particles and regions of elastic or plastic deformation.
2001 Adv. Ceramics Rep. (Nexis) 1 Dec. 3 The vortices did not line up with the defects below 12 K... A different pinning mechanism could be responsible for this effect.
II. Concrete senses.
5. Building.
a. Chiefly Scottish. A small stone used to fill the joints or interstices of masonry. Also (occasionally): a pin, peg, or bolt, used for fastening. Also figurative. Usually in plural.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > materials > raw material > stone or rock > [noun] > building stone > small or undressed stones for filling in
pinning1534
rubble1542
rubble work1675
rubble stone1833
hearting1837
spalled rubble1839
hardcore1842
scruff-stone1869
moellon1875
society > occupation and work > equipment > building and constructing equipment > fastenings > [noun] > pin or peg
preenOE
prickOE
kevel1251
pina1275
prag1354
key1434
peg1440
tholec1440
thole-pinc1440
lock1514
cotterel1570
pivot1730
pinning1742
steady pin1791
gib1795
needle1811
lockdown1832
cotter1842
peglet1890
pushpin1903
1534 R. Wingfield Let. 1 Nov. in State Papers Henry VIII (P.R.O.: SP 1/86) f. 151 A great noumbre of folks..ovyrthrew a house of myne of whych they had pullyd out the pynnyngs vpon..the syde ij dayes before.
1591 Edinb. Dean of Guild Accts. 440 Small stanes..to be pynnyngis to the maissounis.
a1666 R. Blair Life (1848) (modernized text) ii. 50 As pinnings laid in to be foundations.
1682 A. Peden Serm. (1782) 7 Our Lord's enemies have not broken a pinning off, or dung a pin out of the work of God.
1742 J. Willison Balm of Gilead (1800) xii. 136 Not a stone moved, nor a pinning in it moved.
1799 J. Robertson Gen. View Agric. Perth 114 Persons who understand the building of dry stone-walls properly, find a bed for the larger stones, not by means of pinnings..but by resting them firmly upon one another; and afterwards they close up the interstices with pinnings to ornament the wall.
1808 J. Jamieson Etymol. Dict. Sc. Lang. Pinning, a small stone for filling up a crevice in a wall.
1964 J. S. Scott Dict. Building 231 Pinnings (Scotland), stones of different colour or texture set in a rubble wall to give a chequered effect.
1990 Daily Tel. 10 Nov. (Weekend) p. iii/3 The inward sloping sides are built of big ‘doubles’ of different shapes and sizes... The gaps between the doubles are filled with small ‘pinnings’.
b. English regional. = underpinning n. 2a. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > building or providing with specific parts > specific parts built or constructed > [noun] > foundation(s)
staddlea900
ground-stathelnessa1300
foundation1398
groundsel1433
ground-pinning1448
underpinning1538
groundworka1557
footing1611
substruction1624
under-filling1624
substructure1726
found1818
pinninga1825
well1832
soling1838
masonite1840
ground-statheling-
a1825 R. Forby Vocab. E. Anglia (1830) Pinning, the low masonry which supports a frame of stud-work.
6. A part fastened with pins; (also) a fastening made with pins. Also with up. Obsolete. rare.
ΚΠ
c1759 Lady Anson Let. in A. Buck Dress in 18th-Cent. Eng. (1979) vi. 160 Direct her..to put a little [lace trimming] on the pinning up of the Gown behind.
1882 R. Mulholland Four Little Mischiefs viii We must stand with our faces to the people always, or they might see the pinning.

Compounds

C1.
pinning iron n. Obsolete
ΚΠ
1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory iii. 265/2 Pinning Iron, to widen the hole in the Slate to put the Pin in.
pinning-stone n. Obsolete
ΚΠ
1708 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 26 37 Part of the Plaister and Pinning Stones of the adjoyning Wall, was also broken off and loosened.
1829 Trans. Geol. Soc. 2nd Ser. 2 133 (table) Provincial Terms..Ground Pinning-Stone.
1838 McIlwham Papers 13 They'll no let ye pick out ae pinnin-stone frae the auld house, till ye hae..furnished them a new ane.
C2.
pinning blanket n. U.S. (now rare) a blanket for wrapping around a baby, held in place by pins.
ΚΠ
1850 T. L. Nichols Introd. to Water-cure 52 The child is born... Its dress seems purposely contrived..to make it uncomfortable; and its feet are rolled close in a pinning blanket.
1906 F. Lynde Quickening 24 So now we see to what high calling Thomas Jefferson's mother purposed devoting him while yet he was a helpless monad in pinning-blankets.
1994 Wisconsin State Jrnl. (Nexis) 3 Oct. 2 b Remember pinning blankets? Every well-dressed baby had a lot of those.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2006; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

pinningn.2

Brit. /ˈpɪnɪŋ/, U.S. /ˈpɪnɪŋ/
Forms: 1500s pynnyng, 1500s pynnynge, 1500s 1800s– pinning, 1600s pining.
Origin: Formed within English, by derivation. Etymons: pin v.2, -ing suffix1.
Etymology: < pin v.2 + -ing suffix1. Compare slightly earlier pinding n. 1b.
1. The action or an act of shutting up or enclosing something; spec. the impounding of stray animals. Also attributive in pinning-fee. Obsolete (archaic and rare after 16th cent.).
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > enclosing or enclosure > enclosing or confining > [noun]
closurec1420
pinning1503
closing1580
seclusion1623
penning1626
impoundage1954
1503 in M. Bateson Rec. Borough Leicester (1901) II. 364 For pynnyng of cattall in the Castell.
1521 Petition in Hereford Munic. MSS (transcript) (O.E.D. Archive) I. ii. 5 Ther is grete ennennyte here amongs us Citezens of the said Citie in preferrynge the Bisshoppes officer rather then the thynge that shuld showe to the profit of this Citie in pynnynge of cattell.
1574 J. Baret Aluearie P 353 A Pinning or pounding of cattaile. Vide Pounde.
1892 J. S. Fletcher When Charles I was King (1896) 55 The pinder..made answer..that the horses..should not go thence until the pinning-fee were paid.
2. The condition of becoming stopped or clogged up.
a. Scottish. A condition of sucking lambs in which the anus is obstructed by an encrustation of excrement on the tail as a result of severe diarrhoea. Cf. pinding n. 2. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1802 C. Findlater Gen. View Agric. County of Peebles 389 Diarrhœa, or Looseness. This disorder is commonly called, by the shepherds, pinning.
1814 Gen. Rep. Agric. State & Polit. Circumstances Scotl. III. 154 This disease, or rather accident, is called pinding or pinning, and may be prevented in a great measure, by docking the lambs early.
b. The clogging of the teeth of a file with fragments of metal. Cf. pin v.2 3.
ΚΠ
1964 S. Crawford Basic Engin. Processes i. 10 Coating the file with chalk will help to minimise pinning when filing ductile metals.
1982 O. Untracht Jewelry Concepts & Technol. iv. 107/1 Clogging (also called pinning), or allowing the file to become filled with..metal chips, greatly reduces file efficiency.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2006; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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