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单词 pouch
释义

pouchn.

Brit. /paʊtʃ/, U.S. /paʊtʃ/
Forms: Middle English poche, Middle English pouuche, Middle English puche, Middle English pulche (transmission error), Middle English 1600s (1800s– English regional (northern)) pooch, Middle English–1600s pouche, Middle English–1600s powch, Middle English–1700s powche, Middle English– pouch, 1500s poych, 1500s pvche, 1500s–1600s (1800s English regional (Herefordshire)) poutch, 1600s puch; Scottish pre-1700 peuch, pre-1700 poiche, pre-1700 pouche, pre-1700 poutche, pre-1700 pouthe (transmission error), pre-1700 powtche, pre-1700 puitche, pre-1700 push, pre-1700 putch, pre-1700 putche, pre-1700 1700s puch, pre-1700 1700s–1800s poutch, pre-1700 1700s– pouch, 1700s– pootch, 1800s– pooch.
Origin: A borrowing from French. Etymons: French pouche, poche.
Etymology: < Anglo-Norman and Old French (northern), Middle French pouche (French pouche (now regional: chiefly Normandy, also western)) small bag or sack in which things are kept or carried (1180 as puche ), bag or sack in general, e.g. for grain (beginning of the 14th cent.), variant of Old French, Middle French, French poche bag, sack (14th cent.), purse (14th cent. or earlier), small cavity in an organism which resembles a bag, of natural or pathological origin (1377 in an isolated attestation, subsequently from 1694), distensible sac used for food storage beneath the bills of some birds (1530 in Palsgrave), pocket in a garment (1573), baggy area of skin underneath a person's eye (1862 or earlier; usually in plural) < an unattested Old Dutch form *pokka (see poke n.1). Compare post-classical Latin pocha , pochia , pucha , puchea , puchia bag, pouch (from 13th cent. in British sources), Old Occitan pocha pocket in a garment (14th cent. in an isolated attestation; Occitan pòcha ). Compare poke n.1 and earlier pough n. Compare also pocket n.Apparently attested earlier as a surname, although it is unclear whether this reflects currency of the Middle English or the Anglo-Norman word: Gillebertus Poche (1184). With sense 2a(b) compare classical Latin marsūpium marsupium n.; this sense is apparently not paralleled in French until later (1764). With sense 5 compare earlier pouch v. 5.
1.
a. A small bag or sack used esp. for carrying personal items; (spec.) a small bag for tobacco. Also: a (detachable) pocket worn outside a garment. Also figurative.With quot. a1325 cf. pig in a poke n. at pig n.1 Phrases 4.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > equipment > receptacle or container > bag > [noun] > small
poucha1325
pautenerc1330
satchela1362
sachet1483
potewera1650
caba1833
baglet1885
baggie1934
a1325 (c1250) Prov. Hendyng (Cambr.) xxxvi, in Anglia (1881) 4 189 (MED) Wan man ȝevit þe a pig, opin þe powch.
1327 in M. T. Löfvenberg Contrib. Middle Eng. Lexicogr. & Etymol. (1946) 41 (MED) [A silken] pouch.
c1405 (c1390) G. Chaucer Reeve's Tale (Hengwrt) (2003) l. 11 A ioly popper baar he in his pouche [v.r. puche].
Promptorium Parvulorum (Harl. 221) 411 Powche, marsupium.
tr. Palladius De re Rustica (Duke Humfrey) (1896) iv. 408 (MED) The graynes ripe..Putte in a poche [L. fiscella] of palme, and with the wrynge Let presse hem.
a1500 in R. H. Robbins Hist. Poems 14th & 15th Cent. (1959) 139 (MED) Galaunt, with thy daggar a-crosse, And thy hanggyng pouche vpon thy narse, Thow art ful abyl to stele a horse.
1574 J. Baret Aluearie P 557 A Pouche: a great bagge or sachell.
1611 R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues Empocher, to impouch, to put into a pouch or budget.
1663 S. Butler Hudibras: First Pt. i. ii. 88 By his side a Pouch he wore Replete with strange Hermetick Powder.
1733 D. Neal Hist. Puritans II. 234 Seven pictures of God the Father in form of a little old man in a blue and red coat with a pouch by his side.
1799 J. Smith Acct. Remarkable Occurr. 11 A pouch, which..contained tobacco, killegenico, or dry sumach leaves which they mix with their tobacco.
1823 T. Jefferson Let. 12 June in Writings (1984) 1474 The Indian Chief said he did not go to war for every petty injury by itself, but put it into his pouch, and when that was full, he then made war.
1861 Englishwoman's Domest. Mag. 3 119/1 The little Pouches..still continue to be worn, suspended from the waistband by a chain and hook, and sometimes by a cord.
1894 A. Conan Doyle Mem. Sherlock Holmes 146 I handed him my pouch, and he seated himself opposite to me, and smoked for some time, in silence.
1948 Glasgow Herald 6 Sept. 2/1 To his standard equipment of pipe, pouch, and cigarette case, he has now added a little tin box for dowts.
2003 Plain Dealer (Cleveland, Ohio) (Nexis) 5 Oct. b1 The local Indians retrieved stones that represented special memories and kept them in pouches.
b. spec. A small bag in which money is carried; a purse.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > money > place for keeping money > money-bag, -purse, or -belt > [noun]
pungeOE
by-girdlec1000
purselOE
almonerc1330
pouch1355
almonryc1450
penny purse1523
cherry-bag1539
money bag1562
bung1567
jan1610
penny pouch1650
coda1680
zone1692
spung1728
money purse1759
spleuchan1787
skin1795
sporran1817
fisc1820
moneybelt1833
poke1859
purse-belt1901
1355 in Cal. Fine Rolls (1921) VI. 438 [3] pouches [and 3 belts].
c1425 Bk. Found. St. Bartholomew's (1923) 55 (MED) Ye presente God and his seyntes wytnes to youre wyckednes, consumynge othir mennys poochys to fulfill your pursys.
c1450 (c1380) G. Chaucer House of Fame 1349 The halle Was plated half a foote thikke Of gold..As fyn as ducat in Venyse, Of which to lite al my pouche is.
1483 Catholicon Anglicum (BL Add. 89074) (1881) 289 (MED) A Powche, vbi A purse.
c1530 A. Barclay Egloges iii. sig. Pv These..dare I nat playnly towche For all these crosses and syluer in my powche.
1602 W. Shakespeare Merry Wives of Windsor i. iii. 82 Teaster Ile haue in pouch When thou shalt want.
1678 S. Butler Hudibras: Third Pt. iii. ii. 158 Could Catechise a Money-Box, And prove all Powches Orthodox.
1722 D. Defoe Moll Flanders 417 But I press'd it on him, and made him accept it, and it was not much less worth than his Leather-pouch full of Spanish Gold.
1832 H. Martineau Ella of Garveloch i. 14 Out comes the pouch, as sure as I show myself to gather the rent.
1871 R. Ellis tr. Catullus Poems xiii. 8 Know he boasts but a pouch of empty cobwebs.
1931 P. S. Buck Good Earth i. 9 He took from his girdle a small greasy pouch of grey cloth and counted the money in it.
1982 N.Y. Times (Nexis) 6 Oct. b3 Some people were confident, carrying pouches of money or certified checks.
c. A pocket sewn into a garment. Chiefly Scottish.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > parts of clothing > [noun] > pocket
pocketc1450
pouch1539
pit1811
1539 in J. B. Paul Accts. Treasurer Scotl. (1907) VII. 253 For bukrem to be ane tulat and ane pouche to it [sc. a coat].
a1617 J. Melville Mem. Own Life (1827) 65 He had alwayes a New Testament in Englis in his poutche.
1686 tr. J. Chardin Trav. Persia 87 For fear of spoiling their Caps..in the Rain, they will put 'em in their Pouches, and go Bare-Headed.
a1726 D. Craufurd Poems (1798) 81 I'm grown up sae big a fallow, That Andrew Shirrefs an' his crutch, Could maist creep in o' my coat-pouch.
1820 W. Combe Second Tour Dr. Syntax xxvii. 64 From his pouch his sketch-book drew.
1887 R. F. Burton tr. Arabian Nights' Entertainm.: Suppl. Nights III. dxxvii. 75 But the lad (forasmuch as he had placed it at the bottom of his breast-pocket and his other pouches being full of gems bulged outwards) could not reach it with his fingers to hand it over.
1889 J. M. Barrie Window in Thrums xix. 180 She saw 'im twa or three times put his hand in his pouch.
1901 Scotsman 12 Mar. 5/4 Standing about..‘wi' naething in his pouches but his hauns’.
1929 Peace's Orkney Almanac 138 I keep da bit o' breek here i' me pooch tae dicht my specs.
1932 ‘L. G. Gibbon’ Sunset Song iii. 166 He'd put him his Highland pride in his pouch and muttered All right.
1949 N. E. Jacob Mary of Delight v. 299 Ah've brought ma siller, a' Ah have i' the worrld; it's aboot seven pun' i' ma pooch.
2004 R. Shepherd & N. Harper Dash o Doric: One for Road 102 ‘Is that bottle the only consolation you have left in the world?’ ‘No,’ said the drunk. ‘I've anither een in ma pooch.’
2013 @eirinntaylorx 10 Dec. in twitter.com (O.E.D. Archive) Never walkin we ma hands in ma pooch again. Just fell flat on my face walkin up the stairs.
d. Firearms. A bag or case (formerly of leather, now usually of canvas or synthetic webbing) used for carrying gunpowder, shot, bullets, etc. Also in earlier use: a wooden cartridge box.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > device for discharging missiles > firearm > equipment for use with firearms > [noun] > cartridge-box or -pouch
bandoleer1611
cartridge1627
pouch1627
vandaliroa1660
collar1672
patrontash1685
cartouche-box1697
cartridge-box1699
cartridge-case1769
salt-box1803
cartouche1807
patron1829
thimble-belt1901
stall1906
1627 J. Smith Sea Gram. xii. 57 You must be carefull to cleare the decks with..fire-pots, poutches of powder.
1669 S. Sturmy Mariners Mag. i. ii. 19 Their Bandaliers fill'd with Powder, and Shot in their Pooches.
1719 D. Defoe Life Robinson Crusoe 24 He brought a great Leather Pouch which held about a Pound and half of Powder,..and another with Shot.
1726 J. Swift Gulliver I. i. ii. 45 I delivered up both my Pistols in the same manner, as I had done my Scymiter, and then my Pouch of Powder and Bullets.
1810 Duke of Wellington Dispatches (1836) VI. 209 A letter..complaining of certain pouches lately sent out from England for the use of the Portuguese troops.
1853 J. H. Stocqueler Mil. Encycl. 219/2 Pouch, a case of strong leather, lined with tin divisions, for the purpose of carrying a soldier's ammunition.
1896 C. G. D. Roberts Forge in Forest v. 64 ‘I don't,’ replied Marc, simply, as he handed me out a pouch of bullets and a pouch of slugs.
1947 Port Arthur (Texas) News 3 Aug. 5/5 He saw a man standing on the corner with a rifle, and there was a pouch of ammunition at his side.
1971 B. W. Aldiss Soldier Erect 261 In my ammo pouch, against the sten magazines, I had stuffed the picture of Hanuman.
1997 Daily Record (Nexis) 5 Mar. 15 Detectives..found a silencer for the gun and a pouch of bullets hanging from the dashboard.
e. = mail pouch n. at mail n.2 Compounds 3.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > correspondence > postal services > equipment for sending or delivering mail > [noun] > mail-bag
letter baga1655
bag1702
postbag1706
mailbag1812
pouch1833
mail pouch1843
mail sack1869
1833 Niles' Reg. 44 337/2 The letter mail bag, or ‘Pouch’, was missed between New Brunswick (N.J.) and New York.
1879 Post Master General's Rep. in Parl. Papers 1878–9 (C. 2405) XXI. 197 The..number of pouches exchanged with these Travelling Post Offices..in 24 hours is now 1090.
1889 Cent. Mag. 38 606/2 At 3 o'clock a.m. the European mails closed, and the pouches put on board the Aller carried the usual copies for the foreign circulation.
1921 Daily Colonist (Victoria, Brit. Columbia) 9 Apr. 17/7 Three bandits..last night held up a United States mail truck here and robbed it of three pouches of registered mail.
1963 Western Kansas Press 22 Aug. 8/1 You can always tell them you're late and have to keep going to get your whole pouch of mail delivered.
1997 Orlando (Florida) Sentinel (Nexis) 29 June 3 Men and women don't have to have skin like a mailman's pouch.
f. = diplomatic bag at diplomatic adj. 3.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > correspondence > postal services > equipment for sending or delivering mail > [noun] > mail-bag > diplomatic bag
bag1816
diplomatic bag1956
pouch1958
1958 L. Durrell Mountolive vi. 140 When the Syrians want to be clever, they don't use a diplomatic courier; they confide their pouch to a lady, the vice-consul's niece.
1968 ‘D. Torr’ Treason Line 163 I've been down here for the past hour checking the airgrams for the Washington pouch.
1994 Life (Nexis) Apr. 114 I'm a diplomatic courier and I've got pouches on the plane. I have to stay and get 'em out.
2.
a. Anatomy and Zoology. An enclosed cavity or hollow structure in an animal body that resembles a bag or pocket; a sac; spec. (a) the stomach of a fish (obsolete); (b) a cavity enclosed by a fold of tissue in which certain animals, esp. marsupial mammals, carry their young; a marsupium; (c) a distensible sac for food storage, as beneath the bill of some birds (e.g. pelicans and cormorants) and in the cheeks of some mammals (esp. rodents and certain monkeys).cheek-, Douglas's, gill, Rathke's pouch: see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > fish > parts of fish > [noun] > stomach
poucha1399
pokec1450
the world > animals > birds > parts of or bird defined by > [noun] > neck or throat > appendage or pouch on
wattle1513
gill1596
rattles1611
gorget1703
pouch1774
parapatagium1887
palea1890
the world > animals > animal body > general parts > [noun] > pouch or receptacle
pouch1803
the world > animals > animal body > general parts > head and neck > [noun] > cheek-pouch
cheek pouch1653
pouch1803
a1399 in S. Pegge Forme of Cury (1780) 47 Take the Powche and the Lyuour of haddok, codlyng, and hake and of ooþer fisshe, parboile hem, take hem and dyce hem small.
c1450 in T. Austin Two 15th-cent. Cookery-bks. (1888) 101 (MED) And þen take a pike..And slyt the pouuche..And whan þe sauce biginneth to boyle..wassh þe pike and cast him þere-in, and caste þe pouche and fey there-to.
?a1475 Noble Bk. Cookry in Middle Eng. Dict. at Pouche Sethe the pouche as ye do of a pik and mynce it with the grave.
1622 R. Hawkins Observ. Voiage South Sea xix. 43 [The shark] is the most ravenous Fish knowne in the Sea... In the Puch of them hath beene found hatts, cappes, shooes, shirts, leggs and armes of men.
1698 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 20 107 A Denomination might be best given to it, from that Particular, wherein 'tis most distinguished..which is that remarkable Pouch or Marsupium.
1774 O. Goldsmith Hist. Earth V. 197 This is a pouch, the entrance of which lies immediately under the tongue, and capable of holding near seven quarts of water.
1803 W. Bingley Animal Biogr. I. 47 The Barbary Ape has a face not much unlike that of a dog... The cheeks are furnished with pouches.
1834 H. McMurtrie tr. G. Cuvier Animal Kingdom (abridged ed.) 299 Isopoda. The females carry their ova under the second and third segments of the body, in a pouch formed of approximated scales.
1888 G. Rolleston & W. H. Jackson Forms Animal Life (ed. 2) 435 The respiratory system consists of gill-pouches or sacs, seven on each side in the Lampreys.
1930 W. M. Mann Wild Animals in & out of Zoo xviii. 219 Baby kangaroos are very tiny, and after they get into the pouch they attach themselves to the mother's nipples and remain there.
1967 D. Morris Naked Ape (1969) i. 27 No food storage takes place except, in a very temporary way, in the bulging cheek pouches of certain monkeys.
1996 Time 28 Oct. 85/3 Pteranodon is thought to have scooped up its prey and stashed it in a pelican-like throat pouch.
b. Botany. A bag-shaped structure in a plant; spec. (a) a short, rounded or bag-shaped seed vessel; a silicle (now rare); (b) a baglike cavity in the corolla of certain plants, esp. orchids.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > part of plant > reproductive part(s) > seed > seed-vessel or pericarp > [noun]
knop1398
seed vessel1562
pouch1577
bottle1609
uterus1682
pericarpium1691
vessel1691
pericarp1759
crust1776
1577 in B. Googe tr. C. Heresbach Foure Bks. Husb. iv. f. 191v It creepeth lowe by the ground,..with a seede inclosed in little powches, like a shepeheards purse.
1717 P. Blair Let. to Dr. Baynard 105 The manner of the opening of the Pouches and pouring out of the Seeds.
1776 W. Withering Brit. Plants (1796) III. 48 Isatis. Pouch deciduous.
1861 A. Pratt Flowering Plants & Ferns Great Brit. I. 9 The silicle or pouch is a shorter, broader pod [than the silique].
1862 C. Darwin On Var. Contrivances Orchids Fertilised ii. 69 As soon as the disc is drawn out of the pouch the movement of depression commences.
1952 A. R. Clapham et al. Flora Brit. Isles 1306 Ophrys..pollinia 2, narrowed downwards into long caudicles which are attached basally to separate ± globose viscidia enclosed in the distinct rostellar pouches.
1987 Ann. Rev. Ecol. & Systematics 18 361 Angelonia..is known to be visited by Centris species that insert their legs into these floral pouches to extract the oil film.
c. Medicine. An abnormal or artificially created structure or space in the body that resembles a bag or pocket; an aneurysm, a cyst (now rare); a sac, a diverticulum.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > internal organs > [noun] > of specific shape or formation
pocketa1450
cystis1543
vesike1577
vesicle1578
belly1594
ventricle1641
vesicula1705
pouch1712
cyst1721
sac1741
leaflet1826
calyx1828
node1892
the world > life > biology > physical aspects or shapes > indentation or cavity > [noun] > depression or cavity
pita1275
holec1300
cella1398
den1398
follicle?a1425
purse?a1425
pocketa1450
fossac1475
cystis1543
trench1565
conceptory1576
vesike1577
vesicle1578
vault1594
socket1601
bladderet1615
cistern1615
cavern1626
ventricle1641
bladder1661
antrum1684
conceptaculum1691
capsule1693
cellule1694
loculus1694
sinus1704
vesicula1705
vesica1706
fosse1710
pouch1712
cyst1721
air chamber1725
fossula1733
alveole1739
sac1741
sacculus1749
locule1751
compartment1772
air cell1774
fossule1803
umbilicus1811
conceptacle1819
cœlia1820
utricle1822
air sac1835
saccule1836
ampulla1845
vacuole1853
scrobicule1880
faveolus1882
1712 Bibliotheca Anatomica II. 423/1 The Dilatation of an Artery, which being distended and enlarg'd by little and little, forms a Bag or Pouch that is fill'd up with Arterial Blood.
1793 M. Baillie Morbid Anat. xiv. 200 These pouches are often large enough to admit the end of the finger, and contain occasionally small calculi.
1901 Lancet 18 May 1387 (title) A pharyngeal pouch of large size removed by operation.
1974 V. B. Mountcastle et al. Med. Physiol. (ed. 13) II. li. 1186/2 A Heidenhain pouch or vagally denervated pouch responds to humoral but not to parasympathetic stimuli.
1991 Lancet 25 May 1295/2 A 29-year-old woman who had a subtotal colectomy and ileostomy in 1988 for fulminant ulcerative colitis, subsequently had an ileoanal pouch constructed a year later.
d. A baggy area of skin underneath a person's eye.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > skin > fold of skin > [noun] > at eyes
epicanthus1833
bag1867
pouch1891
Mongolian fold1908
1891 Mountain Democrat (Placerville, Calif.) 21 Mar. His lips were parted and pale, and there were deep pouches under the eyes.
1920 C. Carswell Open Door! i. vii. 128 The loose flesh of his face hung down under his cheeks and chin, like a hound's dew-laps, and he had great pouches under his eyes.
a1953 E. O'Neill Hughie (1959) 8 His blue eyes have drooping lids and puffy pouches under them.
1997 Y. M. Murray Locas 78 Ladies with brown blotches on their skin and pouches under their eyes.
3. The name of a game. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > other specific games > [noun] > others
sitisota1400
papsea1450
half-bowl1477
pluck at the crow1523
white and black1555
running game1581
blow-pointa1586
hot cocklesa1586
one penny1585
cockelty bread1595
pouch1600
venter-point1600
hinch-pinch1603
hardhead1606
poor and rich1621
rowland-hoe1622
hubbub1634
handicap?a1653
owl1653
ostomachy1656
prelledsa1660
quarter-spellsa1660
yert-point1659
bob-her1702
score1710
parson has lost his cloak1712
drop (also throw) (the) handkerchief1754
French Fox1759
goal1765
warpling o' the green1768
start1788
kiss-in-the-ring1801
steal-clothes1809
steal-coat1816
petits paquets1821
bocce1828
graces1831
Jack-in-the-box1836
hot hand1849
sparrow-mumbling1852
Aunt Sally1858
gossip1880
Tambaroora1882
spoof1884
fishpond1892
nim1901
diabolo1906
Kim's game1908
beaver1910
treasure-hunt1913
roll-down1915
rock scissors paper1927
scissors cut paper1927
scissors game1927
the dozens1928
toad in the hole1930
game1932
scissors paper stone1932
Roshambo1936
Marco Polo1938
scavenger hunt1940
skish1940
rock paper scissors1947
to play chicken1949
sounding1962
joning1970
arcade game1978
1600 T. Nashe Summers Last Will 2048 Thou and I will play at poutch, to morrow morning for a breakfast.
4. Nautical. A small bulkhead or partition in a ship's hold, for stowing corn or other loose cargo. Now historical.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > parts of vessels > body of vessel > bottom or part under water > [noun] > hold > division made by bulkheads or partitions
pouch1625
1625 H. Mainwaring Nomenclator Navalis (MS BL Add. 21571) f. 105 Pouches, are small Bulk-heads made in howld either thwart ships or longst Ships.
1627 J. Smith Sea Gram. vii. 33 The Ballast wil sometimes shoot, that is, run from one side to another, and so will Corne and Salt, if you make not Pouches or Bulk-heads.
1704 J. Harris Lexicon Technicum I Powches, so the Seamen call small Bulkheads made in the Hold of a Ship, to stow Corn, Goods, or the like, that it do not shoot from one side to the other.
1867 W. H. Smyth & E. Belcher Sailor's Word-bk. 540 Pouches, wooden bulk-heads across the hold of cargo vessels, to prevent grain or light shingle from shifting.
1976 P. Kemp Oxf. Compan. Ships & Sea 665 Pouches, an old name for the small bulkheads, often temporary, erected in the holds of a cargo ship when a shifting cargo, such as corn or coal, is taken on board, their purpose being to prevent movement of the cargo when the ship rolls or pitches.
1985 P. Clissold Ansted's Dict. Sea Terms (ed. 3) 219 Pouches, in vessels which are laden in bulk, strong bulkheads (called pouches) are placed across the hold to prevent the cargo from shifting.
5. colloquial. A present of money; a tip. Cf. pouch v. 5. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > giving > gift or present > [noun] > gift of money
largessea1325
gratuity1540
behoof1596
benevolency1698
pouch1880
handout1882
handshake1958
society > trade and finance > fees and taxes > payment for labour or service > [noun] > tip
bountethc1440
gratitude1535
vail1605
gratulance1608
gratilitya1616
spill1675
baksheesh1686
simony1707
perquisite1721
tip1755
grace1769
buckshee1773
mancia1798
bonus1834
pouch1880
gravy1910
étrenne1928
sling1948
small1962
toke1971
1880 B. Disraeli Endymion III. iii. 25 Your grandfather..pouched me at Harrow, and it was the largest pouch I ever had.
1909 Daily Chron. 23 July 3/2 Filled with the ‘pouch’ from generous relatives the boys went off with a volley of peashooters, and the old Etonians—fathers—admired.

Compounds

C1.
a. General attributive and similative.
pouch-belt n.
ΚΠ
1754 Regimental Standing Orders in Syst. Camp-discipline (1757) 82 When the Men lay down on the Guard Bed, they shall always turn their Pouch Belts wrong-side outwards, by which they will be preserved much cleaner.
1812 Sporting Mag. 39 167 Cavalry uniform, a pouch belt, and a sabre-tache.
1974 ‘B. Mather’ White Dacoit v. 50 Rankine, his escort, had arrived, dressed..with..pouchbelt and sword.
pouch-lid n. Obsolete
ΚΠ
?1541 R. Copland Guy de Chauliac's Questyonary Cyrurgyens iii. sig. Liij As ye wolde fasten a nedle with threde on your bosome or pouche lid.
1835 J. D. Carrick Laird of Logan 162 The common gauge o' the fur was my pouch-lids.
1891 R. Ford Thistledown 296 Better at padding pouch-lids than handlin' the goose.
pouch-shaped adj.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > shape > curvature > curved surface > [adjective] > concave > like specific object
camois1664
pouch-likea1676
scaphoidal1681
spoon-likea1686
umbilicated1693
umbilicate1698
saucer-shaped1753
boat-shaped1760
pouchy1786
cupped1796
urn-shaped1796
naviform1816
spoon-shaped1817
urn-like1826
vase-shaped1832
bag-shaped1836
basin-like1836
trough-like1839
urceiform1840
vase-like1840
saucered1847
bag-like1849
sac-like1849
pouch-shaped1854
basin-shaped1859
trough-shaped1871
bucketed1886
spooned1890
1854 H. Stephens Farmer's Guide 188/2 These eggs, which are very numerous, 400 or 500 being sometimes placed on a single horse, are somewhat pouch-shaped, and chagreened with transverse and longitude striae.
1938 Econ. Geogr. 14 242/1 St. John's.., lying on a well-protected, pouch-shaped coastal indentation was early used as a fishing base in the days when settlement was prohibited.
1996 Chiltern Seeds Catal. 41 This superb plant for the rockery, forming cushiony masses of foliage and bearing in summer pouch-shaped flowers.
b. In the sense ‘having a pouch-like or baggy shape’.
pouch shirt n.
ΚΠ
1898 St. James's Gaz. 12 Jan. 12/1 The pouch shirt is the last new make.
1991 Associated Press Newswire (Nexis) 11 Feb. Casual pebble-knit sweaters, jersey toppers, pouch shirts and pull-on pants and shorts by Merona, at Target Stores.
pouch waist n.
ΚΠ
1895 Daily Republican (Decatur, Illinois) 7 Mar. The pouch-waist is the ugly name of an ugly fashion, but one which just now is the rage. It is to have the front of the waist hang over the skirt just in the front line, and the most elegant gowns are made in this way.
1902 Daily Northwestern (Oshkosh, Wisconsin) 4 Sept. 5/2 The bride-to-be..might get herself a coat of velvet and put it with long skirts and with a pouch waist, open all the way to the belt to show the waist of the gown.
C2.
pouch-bone n. Zoology Obsolete rare = marsupial bone n. at marsupial adj. and n. Compounds 1a.Apparently only attested in dictionaries or glossaries.
ΚΠ
1890 Cent. Dict. Pouch-bone, a marsupial bone; one of the ossa marsupialia of marsupials and monotremes.
pouch-gill n. [after scientific Latin Marsipobranchii (see marsipobranch n. and adj.)] Zoology (a) rare the pouch-like gill of agnathan fishes (lampreys and hagfishes), which opens to the surface through a pore rather than a slit; (b) rare a fish having such gills, a marsipobranch (obsolete).Sense (b) is apparently only attested in dictionaries or glossaries.
ΚΠ
1887 Manitoba Daily Free Press 7 Mar. This specimen of the Marsipobranchii or pouch gill family has some peculiar features, and should be sent to Ottawa or Washington for a critical examination.
1890 Cent. Dict. Pouch-gill, 1. One of the Marsipobranchii; a lamprey or hag, having the gills in a pouch. 2. The so-called basket of the marsipobranchiates.
1944 Angry Penguins Autumn 34 The lamprey, eel-like pseudo-fish with sucker mouth, pouch gills, and seven spiracles on each side.., slithers insidiously to safety.
pouch-gilled adj. [after marsipobranch adj.] Zoology Obsolete rare having pouch-like gills, as characteristic of lampreys and hagfishes; = marsipobranch adj.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > fish > parts of fish > [adjective] > having specific type of gills
holobranchious1854
marsipobranch1874
marsipobranchiate1878
holobranchiate1885
pouch-gilled1885
purse-gilled1890
1885 W. K. Parker On Mammalian Descent ii. 45 In those pouch-gilled (marsipobranch) types..these parts are all separate, neat, finished tracts of cartilage.
pouch-hook n. U.S. (now rare) a hook on which a mailbag is hung.
ΚΠ
1907 N.E.D. at Pouch Pouch-hook.
1914 Newark (Ohio) Advocate 15 Sept. 5/4 Mr. James F. Pryor, mail clerk at the postoffice is suffering from injuries received when he ran a sharp mail pouch hook into his arm.
1950 Mansfield (Ohio) News-Jrnl. 21 Mar. 9/4 The mail pouch hook had missed a mailbag and contacted the water tower cable, causing it to whip around and hit Donald in the head.]
pouch-mouse n. rare (a) a marsupial mouse (cf. pouched mouse n. at pouched adj. Compounds 2); (b) a pocket gopher, Thomomys talpoides, of south-western Canada and the western U.S. (obsolete).
ΚΠ
1871 St. Pauls July 322 Hamilton presented me with a charming little grey quadruped with yellow feet, of about the size of a guinea-pig. It is known classically as the Antechinus flavipes, but goes popularly by the name of the yellow-footed pouch mouse.
1890 Cent. Dict. Pouch-mouse, one of the smaller pocket-gophers, Thomomys talpoides.
1981 Chromosoma 83 131 Gel analysis of KpnI digests of DNA from mouse, calf, horse, deer (muntjack) and a marsupial (flat-tailed pouch-mouse) showed that the KpnI-A-D segments characteristic of primate DNAs were absent in these mammals.
pouch pocket n. originally U.S. a large external pocket resembling or likened to a pouch.
ΚΠ
1892 Chicago Tribune 14 Aug. 4/4 The quaint little pouch pockets swinging from the girdle which went with our grandmothers' frocks... Let's have a renaissance of these chatelaine pockets.
1939 Times 22 May 20/3 The Royal Army Service Corps..uniform..comprises khaki blouse and trousers with pouch pockets for iron rations and field dressings.
2002 ‘H. Hill’ Flight from Deathrow xxv. 155 I..reached for the Daily Mirror that was tucked into the leather pouch-pocket on the back of the seat in front of me.
pouch-toad n. Obsolete rare = marsupial frog n. at marsupial adj. and n. Compounds 1b(b).Apparently only attested in dictionaries or glossaries.
ΚΠ
1890 Cent. Dict. Pouch-toad, a toad of the genus Nototrema,..which hatches its eggs and carries its tadpoles in a hole in its back.

Derivatives

ˈpouch-like adj. resembling a pouch.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > shape > curvature > curved surface > [adjective] > concave > like specific object
camois1664
pouch-likea1676
scaphoidal1681
spoon-likea1686
umbilicated1693
umbilicate1698
saucer-shaped1753
boat-shaped1760
pouchy1786
cupped1796
urn-shaped1796
naviform1816
spoon-shaped1817
urn-like1826
vase-shaped1832
bag-shaped1836
basin-like1836
trough-like1839
urceiform1840
vase-like1840
saucered1847
bag-like1849
sac-like1849
pouch-shaped1854
basin-shaped1859
trough-shaped1871
bucketed1886
spooned1890
a1676 J. Cooke Mellificium chirurgiæ 390 Next lies the Cawl, a Membrane thin, fat, double, disjoyned in some places, stretcht to the Navel, to the Groins preternaturally, also Womb, &c... Its rise is from the Mesentery, and is Pouch-like.
1808 J. E. Smith Eng. Bot. XXVII. 1875 Fruitstalks from little oblong, hairy, black, lateral, pouch-like sheaths, very remarkable for being pendulous from the branch.
1835–6 Todd's Cycl. Anat. & Physiol. I. 572/2 Two prolongations..of a pouch-like form.
1895 S. S. Buckman in Pop. Sci. Monthly Jan. 374 The pouchlike cheeks of a baby.
1958 Gardener's Golden Treasury 83 Rose purple, lip curious, somewhat pouch-like with a tuft of golden hair in the throat.
2001 Nat. New Eng. May 59/1 To jet through the water, each octopus will draw water into its pouch-like mantle until it swells like a balloon.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2006; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

pouchv.

Brit. /paʊtʃ/, U.S. /paʊtʃ/
Forms: see pouch n.
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: pouch n.
Etymology: < pouch n. Compare French pocher to put in a bag (1660: see poach v.2).
1.
a. transitive. To put into or enclose in a pouch; to put into one's pocket. Also in extended use: to take possession of, to ‘bag’.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > place > placing or fact of being placed in (a) position > insertion or putting in > insert or put in [verb (transitive)] > into a pocket, purse, or pouch
pursea1400
imbursec1530
poucha1566
pocket1588
impouch1611
budget1618
impocket1728
fob1818
trouser1865
the mind > possession > taking > taking possession > take possession of [verb (transitive)] > appropriate
ownOE
rimec1275
takec1300
appropre1366
to keep, take to or for one's own storec1385
to get awayc1480
proper1496
apprehenda1522
impropry1526
impropriate1567
carve1578
forestall1581
appropriate1583
propriate1587
pocket1597
impatronize1611
propertya1616
asself1632
appropriatea1634
swallow1637
to swallow up1654
sink1699
poucha1774
spheterize1779
sack1807
fob1818
to look back to1822
mop1861
annex1865
a1566 R. Edwards Damon & Pithias (1571) sig. Civ Cha [= I've] poucht them vp all ready, they are sure in hold.
1635 F. Quarles Emblemes i. ix. 38 Come bring your Saint, pouch'd in his leather Shrine.
1686 F. Spence tr. A. Varillas Ἀνεκδοτα Ἑτερουιακα 12 He had already pouched the half ring.
a1774 R. Fergusson Poems (1785) ii. 170 They pouch the gowd, nor fash the town For weights an' scales to weigh them.
1832 H. Martineau Ella of Garveloch iii. 38 He twisted their necks..and pouched them in his plaid.
1840 F. Trollope Widow Married I. ii. 39 A pretty sum you must have pouched last night.
1890 Sci. Amer. 25 Jan. 55/3 They [sc. letters] have next to be ‘pouched’... The packages of letters are thrown dexterously into the proper compartments.
1923 P. G. Wodehouse Inimitable Jeeves xii. 129 It was a cheque..made out to the order of R. Little. ‘What's that for?’ ‘Expenses,’ said Bingo, pouching it.
1995 Snooker Scene May 27/1 Rod Lawler pouched his fifth first prize from the monthly pro-ams at club Snooker.
b. transitive. figurative. To put up with. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > calmness > patience > endure patiently [verb (transitive)] > bear with or tolerate
forbearc897
tholec950
bearOE
abidec1300
bidea1325
takec1330
suffer1340
wielda1375
to have patience with (also in, toward)c1384
supportc1384
to sit with ——c1400
sustainc1400
thulgec1400
acceptc1405
to away with1528
brook1530
well away1533
to bear with —1538
digest1553
to comport with1565
stand1567
purse?1571
to put up1573
well away1579
comport1588
fadge1592
abrook1594
to come away1594
to take up with1609
swallow1611
embracea1616
to pack up1624
concocta1627
to set down bya1630
to take with ——1632
tolerate1646
brook1658
stomach1677
pouch1819
1819 W. Scott Ivanhoe III. iii. 85 I will pouch up no such affront before my parishioners.
c. transitive. Cricket. To catch (the ball); to perform (a catch); to dismiss (a batter) by catching the ball.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > cricket > fielding > field [verb (transitive)] > catch
to catch out1712
hold1752
catch1789
take1836
pouch1910
1910 A. A. Milne Day's Play 114 I heard Slip call ‘Mine’ and he pouched the ball.
1963 Times 13 June 13/3 A series of pulls which ended with a catch at the wicket would appear in this form: ‘After several cow-shots into the Great Beyond, Basher was neatly pouched by the timber-watcher.’
1983 Daily Tel. 3 Sept. 12 A high catch to a fielder can be ‘down his throat’ and—if it is caught—safely ‘pouched’.
2004 Statesman (India) (Nexis) 20 July Captain Brian Lara pouched a comfortable catch at first slip.
2. transitive. Chiefly of fish and certain birds: to take (something) into the stomach, to swallow; (also) to take into a pouch in the mouth or gullet. Also figurative. Cf. pouch n. 2a.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > fish > [verb (transitive)] > swallow
poucha1643
the world > animals > birds > actions or bird defined by > [verb (transitive)] > swallow
pouch1775
a1643 W. Cartwright Poems in Comedies (1651) sig. P6v Sir John did not nibble, but pouch'd the deceit.
1653 I. Walton Compl. Angler vii. 154 The Pike..will have line enough to go to his hold and powch the bait. View more context for this quotation
1713 W. Derham Physico-theol. i. 364 The common heron hath..a long neck..to reach prey, a wide extensive throat to pouch it.
1775 G. White in Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 65 267 Swifts when..shot..discover a little lump of insects in their mouths, which they pouch and hold under their tongue.
1787 T. Best Conc. Treat. Angling (ed. 2) 13 First allowing the fish, by a little slackening the line a small time to pouch the bait.
1818 J. Hogg Brownie of Bodsbeck II. 164 They'll..leave the good..ait-meal bannocks to..be pouched by them that draff an' bran wad better hae mensed!
1892 E. Arnold Potiphar's Wife 96 That purple-winged hen-starling..Flies with a fat grub to her nested darling, Nor dreams to pouch it!
1902 Chambers's Jrnl. Nov. 702/1 The pike..declined to pouch the unsavoury morsel, and spat it out.
1948 Amer. Midland Naturalist 39 537 On two occasions squirrels..were seen to pause and eat small quantities which they had pouched.
1990 Ecology 71 2341/1 It might be that as [a kangaroo rat's] cheek pouches are filled increasingly more time is required to pouch individual seeds.
3. transitive. To purse (the lips); to push (the mouth) out; to pout. Frequently with out.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > anger > irascibility > ill humour > expression of ill humour > express ill humour [verb (transitive)] > pout (the lips)
pouch1647
the world > life > the body > external parts of body > head > face > mouth > [verb (intransitive)] > lips
poutc1484
pouch1647
blub1684
unpurse1838
moue1938
1647 R. Stapleton tr. Juvenal Sixteen Satyrs xiv. 266 If this make thee frown, And pouch thy lips out.
1753 S. Richardson Hist. Sir Charles Grandison V. x. 53 He pouched his mouth, and reared himself up, and swelled; but answered me not.
1867 G. W. Harris Sut Lovingood 213 He cum sighin an' groanin wif his mouf pouched out, up tu the coffin wifout seein Seize in the corner at all.
1999 G. Bear Darwin's Radio xxi. 103 She made an approving and speculative face, pouching out her lips, and said, ‘It's damned scary’.
4. intransitive. To form a pouch or pouch-like cavity. See sense 6b, and cf. pouching n.
ΚΠ
1683 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 13 364 On one side was a large passage into the second [ventricle or stomach]; which pouching out had its two ends winding like a horn.
1897 Philos. Trans. 1896 (Royal Soc.) B. 187 92 The polypal wall pouched itself upwards in a ring of radial folds.
1941 Trans. Amer. Microsc. Soc. 60 20 The tube where it arises from the body of the follicle is pouched out right and left.
1968 B. Hines Kestrel for Knave 20 The pocket pouched under the weight, but when he closed his jacket, there was no bulge on the outside.
1987 J. C. McElroy Bone Flames 34 You've learned to clean your plate your stomach pouching like the mating wattle of some featherless bird.
5. transitive. colloquial. To give a person (money) as a gift; to tip or bribe (a person). Cf. pouch n. 1b, 5. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > payment > pay money or things [verb (transitive)] > supply (person) with money
money1528
pouch1810
fund1900
the mind > possession > giving > give [verb (transitive)] > give money > as a gift
pouch1810
1810 P. B. Shelley Let. 1. Apr. in Compl. Wks. (1926) VIII. 5 Pouch the reviewers—£10 will be sufficient I should suppose, and that I can with the greatest ease repay when we meet at Passion week.
a1833 J. T. Smith Bk. for Rainy Day (1845) 66 Charles Townley, Esq...pouched me half a guinea to purchase paper and chalk.
1864 Eton School Days i. 4 ‘Did your governor “pouch” you?’ asked Purefoy, as they were going towards the Station.
1880 B. Disraeli Endymion III. iii. 25 Your grandfather..pouched me at Harrow, and it was the largest pouch I ever had.
6.
a. transitive. To make or arrange (an article of clothing, piece of fabric, etc.) so as to hang loosely in a pouch-like form.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > tailoring or making clothes > tailor or make clothes [verb (transitive)] > other
fur13..
buttonc1380
lashc1440
pointa1470
set1530
tuft1535
vent1547
ruff1548
spangle1548
string1548
superbody1552
to pull out1553
quilt1555
flute1578
seam1590
seed1604
overtrim1622
ruffle1625
tag1627
furbelow1701
tuck1709
flounce1711
pipe1841
skirt1848
ruche1855
pouch1897
panel1901
stag1902
create1908
pin-fit1926
ease1932
pre-board1940
post-board1963
1897 Daily News 6 July 8/4 The muslin is lightly pouched over the belt.
1905 P. Landon Opening of Tibet xvii. 337 The dress of both men and women is very similar; there is a single undergarment and one heavy native cloth robe..which both sexes pull in round the waist with a girdle—the men pouching it at the waist to form the only pocket that they use.
1986 Los Angeles Times (Nexis) 17 Oct. v.16/1 Blouses and jackets were simple and shapely, with definite emphasis on pants and skirts that were side-draped, gathered, pouched and flounced in various ways.
2003 BusinessWorld (Nexis) 3 Nov. 26 A tie-dyed striped cloth that was gathered, pouched and tied for variations of the Grecian goddess look.
b. intransitive. Of an article of clothing, piece of fabric, etc.: to hang in a pouch-like form.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > [verb (intransitive)] > hang or sit in specific way
poughc1325
frouncec1400
poke?a1425
to hang by geometry1584
sag1592
bag1824
bustle1824
cascade1861
flare1899
pouch1901
1901 Davenport (Iowa) Daily Republican 17 Mar. 13/1 Corsage blouse, pouching a trifle all around the ceinture.
1902 Daily Tel. 2 Aug. 3/3 The bodice is cut..tightly fitting at the back and sides and below the waist, yet pouching over in the front.
1921 Times 17 Aug. One such [dress], made for a young girl, is of black crêpe georgette, with a straight, square corsage, pouching a little at the sides, over a heavy girdle.
1994 N.Y. Times (Nexis) 1 Feb. a15 Trousers buckled at the knee and pouched at the waist. Some pant legs swooped like giant bells.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2006; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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