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单词 rind
释义

rindn.1

Brit. /rʌɪnd/, U.S. /raɪnd/
Forms:

α. Old English hrind (rare), Old English–1600s rinde, Old English– rind, Middle English rynede (transmission error), Middle English 1600s rynd, Middle English–1500s riend, Middle English–1500s rynde, 1700s–1800s rhind; Scottish pre-1700 rynde, pre-1700 1700s– rind, pre-1700 1800s rynd, 1800s rhind, 1900s– reend, 1900s– reind.

β. Middle English ryn, 1500s–1600s (1700s English regional (Dorset)) (1900s– English regional (Dorset)) ryne, 1500s– rine (now chiefly regional), 1600s rhyne, 1600s–1700s (1900s– English regional (Dorset)) rhine, 1800s– roin (English regional (Leicestershire)); Scottish pre-1700 ryn, pre-1700 ryne, 1800s– reen, 1900s– rhin'.

Origin: A word inherited from Germanic.
Etymology: Cognate with Old Dutch rinda (Middle Dutch rinde , early modern Dutch rinne , rin ; also in Middle Dutch as run , runne , runde (Dutch run ) and rende (Dutch regional renne , ren )), Old Saxon rinda (Middle Low German rinde ), Old High German rinta (Middle High German rinde , rinte ; German Rinde ), Old Danish rind (Danish rind ), probably < the same Germanic base as rend v.1, ultimately < the same Indo-European base as Sanskrit rándhra- crack, fissure.In senses 4b and 5 perhaps partly resulting from association with rime, variant of rim n.2 and rim n.1 respectively. In sense 6 apparently after Italian cartoccio volute (16th cent. in this sense: see cartouche n.). In Old English usually a strong feminine (rind); a weak feminine by-form (rinde) is also attested.
I. Concrete uses.
1. The bark of a tree or plant. Also as a count noun. Also figurative. Now chiefly Canadian.Sometimes applied to the inner layer of bark (periderm), as contrasted with the outer layer (rhytidome). Also occasionally applied to the thickened parenchyma found around the stems of certain monocotyledonous plants which has a bark-like appearance (see quots. 1857 at α. , 1861 at α. ).
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
α.
eOE King Ælfred tr. Boethius De Consol. Philos. (Otho) (2009) I. xxi. 480 Eall se dæl se ðe þæs treowes on twelf monðum gewexð, þæt he onginð of þæm wyrtrumum and swa upwea[r]des grewð oð ðone stemn and siððan a[nd]lang þæs piðan and andlang þære rinde [o]ð ðone helm.
eOE Bald's Leechbk. (Royal) (1865) i. xlv. 114 Wið nædran slite gif he beget & yt rinde, sio þe cymð of neorxna wonge, ne dereð him nan atter.
OE Crist III 1175 Ða wearð beam monig blodigum tearum birunnen under rindum, reade ond þicce.
?c1225 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 119 Þeos..haueð ipiled Mi figer irent alþe rinde þer of.
c1275 (?c1250) Owl & Nightingale (Calig.) (1935) 602 (MED) Ac wat etestu..Bute atter-coppe..An wormes, ȝif þu miȝte finde Among þe uolde of harde rinde?
c1330 in T. Wright Polit. Songs Eng. (1839) 333 And bringe rotes and rindes [a1400 Peterhouse rynds] bret ful a male.
a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1869) II. 303 Iacob took grene ȝerdes..and pyled of þe rynde in som place of þe ȝerdes.
?c1425 tr. Guy de Chauliac Grande Chirurgie (Paris) (1971) 427 (MED) He haþ made heres blakke with..þe ryndes of a plomme tree soden to þe thikkenesse of hony.
c1450 Mandeville's Trav. (Coventry) (1973) 2018 (MED) Alle the canelle that men sene Is of the rynde of thoo treene.
c1500 King & Hermit in M. M. Furrow Ten 15th-cent. Comic Poems (1985) 252 (MED) I won here in wyldernes With rotys and ryndes among wyld bestes.
1555 R. Eden tr. Peter Martyr of Angleria Decades of Newe Worlde iii. xi. f. 161v The leaues wherof are made of the inner ryndes or barkes of trees.
1578 H. Lyte tr. R. Dodoens Niewe Herball 167 The roote is..couered with a thinne..barke or rinde.
1600 R. Surflet tr. C. Estienne & J. Liébault Maison Rustique iii. lxiii. 576 All aromatical rindes or woods, as cinnamom.
1638 R. Brathwait Barnabees Journall (new ed.) iv. sig. Dd2 Osyers freshly showing With soft mossie rinde or'e-growing.
1689 H. Pitman Relation Great Sufferings 20 We thought it time to..stop the Leaks of our Boat, and to raise a Deck over her with Rinds of Trees.
1712 J. James tr. A.-J. Dézallier d'Argenville Theory & Pract. Gardening 83 Lines made of the Rinds of Lime-Tree.
1725 J. Swift Riddle in Wks. (1735) II. 397 Depriv'd of Root, and Branch, and Rind, Yet Flow'rs I bear of evry Kind.
1789 G. White Nat. Hist. Selborne 2 The most lovely of all forest trees, whether we consider it's [sc. a beech tree's] smooth rind or bark, it's glossy foliage, or graceful pendulous boughs.
a1845 R. H. Barham Poplar in Ingoldsby Legends (1847) 3rd Ser. 351 Here stands the Poplar..On whose tender rind..We carved her initials.
1857 A. Henfrey Elem. Course Bot. 530 The rind of the Monocotyledonous stem, totally different from true bark, is generally little developed.
1861 R. Bentley Man. Bot. i. iii. 90 The whole is covered externally by a fibrous and cellular layer, called the false bark or rind.
1930 Sci. News Let. 31 May 350/1 All that the natives needed to do was cut a long gash in the rind of the tree and let the latex ooze out.
a1933 J. A. Thomson Biol. for Everyman (1934) II. 1197 The country lad strips the rind from a mountain ash to make a whistle.
1936 N. Smith Fifty-two Years of Labrador Fishery 17 [The fish] would be made up in twenty-quintal piles, and well covered with rinds on top and tarpaulins round the napes to keep it thoroughly dry.
1958 M. A. Ormsby Brit. Columbia i. 44 Birch rind, still preferred to the fine Coast cedar for canoe construction, was shipped all the way from Montreal to London and round the Horn.
1999 D. Morrissey Kit's Law (2001) ix. 88 With waddles of birch rind and bark, and a few splits of wood, I got a fire going.
β. a1500 (?c1400) Sir Triamour (Cambr.) (1937) l. 392 (MED) To berye hym was hys purpos, And scraped on hy[m] bothe ryn and mosse.1547 A. Borde Breuiary of Helthe i. f. xviiiv Take the inwarde ryne or barke of an oke.1579 E. Spenser Shepheardes Cal. Feb. 111 Now the gray mosse marred his rine.?1602 Narcissus (MS Bodl. Rawl. poet. 212) (1893) 339 To passe from braunch to barke, from rine to roote.1657 G. Thornley tr. Longus Daphnis & Chloe 26 Chawing in her mouth the green ryne of the Elme.1765 Museum Rusticum 4 107 The harle or rine of our hemp and flax.?1772 J. Ball Odes 88 With Linden's glossy Rine Laurer-Tresses intertwine.1844 W. Barnes Poems Rural Life in Dorset Dial. 164 True love's the ivy that da twine Unweth'ren roun' his mæshy rine, When winter's zickly zun da sheen Upon its leaves o' glossy green.1854 A. E. Baker Gloss. Northants. Words II. 175 Rine, rind, or bark.1886 W. H. Long Dict. Isle of Wight Dial. Rine, rind, the bark of a tree.1964 in Dict. Newfoundland Eng. (1982) 411/2 With sap in the tree the rine would come off.
2.
a. The outer crust, skin, or integument of anything; an outer or superficial layer or coating.In later use probably often as an extended use of sense 2b or 3.earth-rind: see earth n.1 Compounds 8b.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > covering > coating or covering with a layer > [noun] > a coat or covering layer
rindOE
cloth1398
tayc1440
skina1475
coat1567
slough1610
hulling1708
surtout1732
OE Ælfric Catholic Homilies: 2nd Ser. (Cambr. Gg.3.28) viii. 70 We hedað þæra crumena ðæs hlafes, and ða Iudeiscan gnagað þa rinde.
a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1869) II. 217 Þey alle oþere þat beeþ i-made haue schilles, ryndes [?a1475 anon. tr. barke; L. cortices], skynnes, wolle, heer, bristles, feþeres, wynges oþer scales.
a1400 tr. Lanfranc Sci. Cirurgie (Ashm.) (1894) 161 Þanne þou schalt leie in the wounde..oile of rosis til al þe rynde of þe brennyng falle awei [L. ad casum escare].
?a1425 tr. Guy de Chauliac Grande Chirurgie (N.Y. Acad. Med.) f. 173v (MED) Medicyne cicatriȝatiue & sigillatif..is þat þat drieþ þe superficite of a wounde so þat þer be made a corke, i. bark or rinde, vpon it.
?c1475 Catholicon Anglicum (BL Add. 15562) f. 104v A Rynde of A negge.
?1550 H. Llwyd tr. Pope John XXI Treasury of Healthe sig. X.iiv Take the horne of a gote and burne it..and ye rind that ryseth therof at that tyme take and stampe it.
1555 W. Waterman tr. J. Boemus Fardle of Facions i. ii. 30 Those humours so riped, drawyng vp to the rinde of the earth.
1600 W. Cornwallis Ess. I. i. sig. B7 The lapidary is not sory when he hath gotten the rinde, or barke of a Iewell from what is precious.
1778 W. Pryce Mineralogia Cornubiensis 78 The inside of those Fissures are commonly glidered or coated with a hard, crystalline, earthy substance or rind.
1794 R. Kirwan Elements Mineral. (ed. 2) I. 225 Surface..covered with a greyish white rind.
1811 J. Parkins Young Man's Best Compan. 27 Scrape off the thin rind of the quill.
1822 J. M. Good Study Med. IV. 598 Simple Fish-skin. The incrustation forming a harsh papulated or warty rind.
1849 Executive Documents U.S. House of Representatives (31st Congress, 1st Sess.) No. 5. ii. 609 The rock is ‘rind’, and can probably be penetrated to the depth of two or three hundred feet before striking a greenstone vein.
1857 D. Livingstone Missionary Trav. S. Afr. xxvii. 542 Large rounded masses of granite, containing black mica... The outer rind of it inclines to peel off.
1881 St. G. Mivart Cat 23 The central part of the hair, or pith, is less dense than its rind, or cortical substance.
1914 Bull. Amer. Geogr. Soc. 46 300 The brown protective rock rind generally known as ‘desert varnish’.
1974 Nature 4 Oct. 428/2 The ganglia have a cell rind formed by nerve cell perikarya.
1999 C. Zimmer At Water's Edge iv. 108 A growing amphibian embryo lies inside a porous membrane that in turn is coated in a thick rind of jelly.
b. spec. An outer layer or coating on the surface of a cheese, esp. one formed by the hardening of the outer surface from contact with the atmosphere, or (on various types of ripening soft cheese) by a thin, soft layer of mould whose growth is encouraged in order to help the cheese mature and produce a distinctive flavour. Also as a count noun: a piece of this.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > dairy produce > cheese > [noun] > rind of cheese
tripc1386
rind1577
heel1656
1577 B. Googe tr. C. Heresbach Foure Bks. Husbandry iii. f. 148 Let it [sc. cheese] be rubbed ouer with Meale of vndryed Barley..and after, the outer rynde scraped of.
1588 B. Dowe Dairie Bk. Good Huswiues sig. B, in T. Kyd tr. T. Tasso Housholders Philos. (new ed.) The moystest part of the Cheese will be neere the rinde, or vtter part thereof.
1669 W. Aglionby Present State United Provinces xxiii. 329 Here [i.e. Edam] is made the best Holland Cheese with red Rinde, so much sought after by all Nations.
1683 J. Pettus tr. L. Ercker ii. xx. 155 in Fleta Minor i Take Milldust, 4 Loths, Bole Armoniak, one Loth, white dryed Cheese without Crust or rind, two Loths, and of Sanguis Draconis, one Loth.
1700 Moxon's Mech. Exercises: Bricklayers-wks. 45 Take ½ a Pound of Old Cheshire-Cheese, pair of the Rine, and throw it away.
1747 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 44 5 In eight Days it dried away to an hard cheesy Substance, and in fourteen Days became quite dry, like the Rind of Gloucester Cheese.
1790 S. Deane New-Eng. Farmer 49/1 The nitre not only gives a reddish cast to the rind of the cheese, but makes it more tender.
1825 T. Hook Sayings & Doings 2nd Ser. III. 195 ‘How's your throat, child?’.. ‘Oh, quite well, Pa,..it was a bit of the rind of the cheese that stuck.’
1866 Rural Amer. (Utica, N.Y.) 15 Mar. 85/1 The hoop is slipped off and a thin rind from the upper side of the cheese trimmed off with a sharp knife.
1922 Auk 39 419 The bird fed heartily on such fare as baked beans, cheese-rind, cooked carrots and parsnips, bread and spoilt grapes.
1959 P. D. Cummins tr. D. Dolci Rep. from Palermo (U.S. ed.) 63 They save up scraps of ham, chicken wings picked clean, slivers of pork skin, cheese rinds, the heel of a salami, and so on.
2004 San Diego Union-Tribune (Nexis) 18 Nov. 39 Soft rinds like those on brie are generally eaten; tough or waxy rinds should be trimmed off.
3. The peel or skin of a fruit, vegetable, root, etc., now esp. when forming a tough, fleshy outer casing or layer; (as a count noun) a piece of this. Also: the fibrous husk of a coconut (cf. coconut rind at coconut n. Compounds 1a).In quot. ?c1425 at α. : †the hard shell of a nut (obsolete).urchin rind: see urchin n. Compounds 1b.
ΘΚΠ
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
α.
eOE King Ælfred tr. Gregory Pastoral Care (Hatton) (1871) xv. 95 Sua se æppel bið betogen mid anfealdre rinde, & ðeah monig corn oninnan him hæfð, sua sio halige cirice unrim folces befehð mid anfealde geleafan.
eOE Bald's Leechbk. (Royal) (1865) ii. xvi. 194 Wyrc him þonne wyrtdrenc of finoles wyrttruman rinde.
?a1200 ( tr. Pseudo-Apuleius Herbarium (Harl. 6258B) cixx. 161 Syle drincan on rinde [OE Hatton rinde] þas æpples þe man malum granatum nemneð.
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 229v In euery grayne is boþe piþþe and rynde.
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add. 27944) (1975) II. xvii. c. 991 Þe rynde of þe roote ysode and ydronke laxeþ þe wombe.
a1400 tr. Lanfranc Sci. Cirurgie (Ashm.) (1894) 181 Frote it wiþ ryndis [L. corticibus] of an oynoun.
?c1425 tr. Guy de Chauliac Grande Chirurgie (Paris) (1971) 391 (MED) Take picche and wexe and terbentyne and þe ryndes of notes ybroken..and sethe hem.
c1475 ( Surg. Treat. in MS Wellcome 564 f. 100 Waische þe place with white wyn medlid wiþ hony in whiche þat ben soden inne balaustie gallis and þe ryndis of pomegarndis.
1541 T. Elyot Castel of Helthe (new ed.) ii. 23 The ryndes [of oranges] taken in a littell quantitee, doo comfort the stomacke.
1582 N. Lichefield tr. F. L. de Castanheda 1st Bk. Hist. Discouerie E. Indias 146 Cayro is the caske or rind of a nut they have in the India called Caco.
1594 H. Plat Diuers Chimicall Concl. Distillation 39 in Jewell House Lettinge the cloues & riendes [of oranges and lemons] remaine in oile.
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost iv. 249 Others whose fruit burnisht with Golden Rinde Hung amiable. View more context for this quotation
1676 J. Worlidge Vinetum Britannicum 160 One of the most solid Apples that grows, of a tough rind.
1727 A. Hamilton New Acct. E. Indies I. xxiv. 296 Of the Rind of the Nut they make Cayar.
1748 B. Robins & R. Walter Voy. round World by Anson iii. ii. 310 The fruit..is covered with a rough rind.
1764 E. Moxon Eng. Housewifery (new ed.) 163 Take three or four seville oranges,..and boil the rinds.
1830 M. Donovan Domest. Econ. I. viii. 301 Those [apples] whose flesh and rind are green are very inferior.
1831 G. Clarke Pompeii I. ix. 322 Like the section of a horse-chestnut, showing a small portion of the nut where the rind is partially split.
1871 B. Jowett tr. Plato Dialogues II. 605 The fruits having a hard rind.
1907 T. R. Sim Forests & Forest Flora Cape Good Hope 274 Fruit size of an orange, or larger, with rind green when young, yellow when ripe.
1910 Encycl. Brit. VI. 631/1 The external husk or rind [of the coconut] yields the coir fibre, with which are fabricated ropes, cordage, brushes, &c.
1951 J. Kerouac On the Road: Orig. Scroll (2007) 194 We had a watermelon; we ate it on the spot and threw the rinds on the old man's dirt sidewalk.
2003 Food & Drink Summer 153/1 Use 11 oz (350 g) regular chocolate with the addition of some grated orange rind.
β. 1558 W. Ward tr. G. Ruscelli Secretes Alexis of Piemount iv. f. 75v Take the ryne [Fr. l'écorce] or the scrapynges of Rubarbe.1588 R. Parke tr. J. G. de Mendoza Comm. Notable Thinges in tr. J. G. de Mendoza Hist. Kingdome of China 393 It is in forme like vnto a mellon, whose ryne is somewhat harde.1605 A. Willet Hexapla in Genesin 215 The fruit..is outwardly like other fruite, but within the rine there is nothing but dust and ashes.1682 R. Boyle Contin. New Exper. Physico-mech.: 2nd Pt. 183 The pieces of Apple were much corrupted, for their skin or rine was taken off.1730 T. Saldkeld tr. B. Gracián y Morales Compleat Gentleman xxii. 206 By the Rine and Outside of Fruit, which is visible to the Eye, we conjecture and judge of its Nature and Quality.1758 J. Thacker Art Cookery 28 Some put in Brandy, and the outside Rine of a Lemon, with a Stick of Cinnamon.1849 Sci. Amer. 6 Oct. 1/4 (heading) Water melon rine preserves.1867 G. W. Harris Sut Lovingood p. ix Smells tu me sorter like a durned humbug, the hole ove hit—a littil like cuttin ove the Ten Cummandmints intu the rine ove a warter-million.1900 C. H. Shoeman Dream (ed. 2) 193 While de water melyons gleamin', An' a growin' on de bine, Will yo' tink ob me, ma Rosa, While yo' eats it toe de rine?1916 J. W. Riley Compl. Wks. III. 815 You don't want no punkins nigh your wortermelon vines... I've seed 'em taste like punkins, from the core to the rines.2003 in O. Jemie Yo' Mama! i. 100 Now southern fried chicken Might taste mighty fine But nothin' taste better Than a watermelon rine.
4.
a. The skin of a person. Now rare (English regional in later use).In quots.: 1868: †spec. the dermis, as opposed to the epidermis (obsolete).
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > skin > [noun]
swardc725
fellOE
hidea1000
leather1303
skina1325
rinda1413
swarth?c1450
swadc1460
thackc1480
skin coat1589
hackle1609
flesha1616
pelta1626
integument1664
barka1758
exoskeleton1839
a1413 (c1385) G. Chaucer Troilus & Criseyde (Pierpont Morgan) (1881) ii. l. 642 His sheld to-dasshed was..In which men myghte many an arwe fynde That þrilled hadde horn and nerf and rynde.
1513 G. Douglas tr. Virgil Æneid ix. vii. 99 With the dynt the rynde is revin sua, Hys hart pipis the scharp hed persyt in tua.
?1536 R. Copland Hye Way to Spyttell Hous sig. A.iiiv Scabby & scuruy, pocke eaten flesh and rynde.
1828 W. Carr Dial. Craven (ed. 2) Rine, the skin, or thin membrane under the skin.
1868 J. C. Atkinson Gloss. Cleveland Dial. App. 607 Rind, the inner or true skin in opposition to the cuticle or scarf-skin.
1886 W. H. Long Dict. Isle of Wight Dial. 58 I het my lig agen that skote jest now, and I zee it took a bit o' the rine off.
1995 J. M. Sims-Kimbrey Wodds & Doggerybaw: Lincs. Dial. Dict. 246/1 Rind, Skin; even of people.
b. †A membranous layer or lining within the body, esp. the peritoneum (obsolete); (also) the outer layer (cortex) of an organ (see cortex n. 3).
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > internal organs > cavities occupied by internal organs > [noun] > abdomen > membranes of
neteOE
caul1382
siphac1398
zirbusa1400
womb cloutc1400
mesentery?a1425
omentum?a1425
peritoneum?a1425
paunch clout1440
epiploön?1541
mesenterium?1541
mesaraeum1543
rim1565
kell1578
rind1585
belly-piece1591
coif1597
cell1607
reticulum1615
mesocolon1684
mesogaster1807
mesocaecum1835
ruffle1846
mesogastrium1848
mid-gut1875
mesovarium1882
mesocyst1890
the world > life > the body > nervous system > cerebrospinal axis > [noun] > membranes > pia mater
pia matera1398
soft (also dear, mild, near) mothera1398
rind1585
godly mother1594
pia1877
pia-arachnoid1881
1585 J. Higgins tr. Junius Nomenclator 32/1 The inner rine of the belly, which is ioyned to the cawll, and wherewith all the entrailes are couered.
1598 J. Florio Worlde of Wordes at Omento The rinde or thin skin inwrapping the braine.
1668 N. Culpeper & A. Cole tr. T. Bartholin Anat. (new ed.) iii. iii. 135 I am of Opinion that in the Brain, properly so called, or the Rinde, is contained Animal Spirit for Sense.
1684 tr. S. Blankaart Physical Dict. 251 Rhegma is a Breaking or Bursting of any part, as of a Bone, the inner Rine of the Belly, the Eye, &c.
1739 Attempt to explain Œcon. Human Frame 42 Its Force..extends the Rind of the lower Belly outwards.
1859 C. D. Meigs Woman (ed. 4) xliv. 658 Bright's disease in its first stage is neither more nor less than engorgement of the rind of the kidney.
1863 J. Gamgee Our Domest. Animals Health & Dis. II. xiv. 230 The pony had been kicked during the night, and the ‘rind’ of his belly was broken.
1920 A. Keith Engines Human Body xxi. 230 Such a manifestation is always accompanied by a profuse overgrowth of the rind of the adrenal glands.
a1933 J. A. Thomson Biol. for Everyman (1934) I. xxi. 749 The cortex or rind of the mammalian fore-brain or cerebrum shows a great advance on that of birds and reptiles.
1997 Daily Tel. 13 June 9/7 Earlier finds include..differences in the thin rind on the surface of the brain responsible for higher intellectual abilities.
2002 H. U. Kauczor in U. J. Schoepf Multidetector-row CT of Thorax vi. 90/1 Regarding pulmonary physiology the categorization of the pulmonary core (medulla) and rind (cortex) is also useful.
c. The tough outer layer of skin and fat on a cut of pork, esp. that on the edge of a rasher of bacon; (as a count noun) a piece of this. Cf. bacon-rind n. at bacon n. Compounds 1.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > animals for food > pork > [noun] > bacon > rind
swarthc725
bacon skin1580
bacon-rind1606
rind1607
swath1873
1607 E. Topsell Hist. Foure-footed Beastes 690 To rub the tongue with the inner side of the rines of Bacon.
1689 W. Salmon tr. Y. van Diemerbroeck Anat. Human Bodies ii. 22 Rind of Pork or Bacon if the Pits be rub'd therewith, smooth the Skin and fill up the Pits.
1767 A. Shackleford Mod. Art Cookery Improved p. vii The surest mark of old pork, is the thickness and stubborness of the rind.
1793 tr. Menon French Family Cook 16 The Peasant's Pot a la Couine is made in the same manner, except that instead of the bacon you make use of the rind.
1837 Times 1 June 7/5 The poor country labourers are very often betting of him for pot liquor.., for cold potatoes, and even for the rind or peeling of bacon.
1866 ‘M. Twain’ in Harper's Mag. Dec. 111/1 We have only left a lower end of a ham-bone, with some of the outer rind and skin on.
1916 Amer. Jrnl. Nursing 17 68 It is recommended that strips of tough meat, bacon rinds, bones, bread crusts, etc., be given the child to chew.
1946 E. Weeks Open Heart (1955) iv. xxvi. 168 I have seen one of these steel rods bring in thirty tinker mackerel by trolling pork rind through the schools over which the terns work so beautifully.
1973 L. Russell Everyday Life Colonial Canada viii. 89 The mixture was flavoured with pork dripping and topped off with pieces of fried-out pork rind.
2007 Western Morning News (Plymouth) (Nexis) 2 June 8 Cut the rind from the gammon and cut the meat into small dice.
d. The skin or hide of an animal; esp. the blubber of a whale, porpoise, etc. Now rare (archaic in later use.)
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > animal body > general parts > covering or skin > [noun]
mantlea1475
hackle1609
integument1664
rind1667
leather1883
the world > animals > mammals > order Cetacea (whales) > [noun] > large member of (whale) > parts of > blubber or flesh
fritters1631
speck1743
flench-gut1808
fenks1820
kent1820
whale blubber1844
plum pudding1851
rind1870
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost i. 206 The Pilot..With fixed Anchor in his skaly rind Moors by his side. View more context for this quotation
1730 T. Boreman Descr. Three Hundred Animals i. 66 Its [sc. the crocodile's] body is rough, being covered all over with a certain bark, or rind, so thick, firm, and strong that it will not yield..to a cart wheel, when the Cart is loaded.
1784 J. Cook & J. King Voy. Pacific II. iv. iii. 260 The porpoise..the flesh and rind of which they cut in large pieces, dry them as they do herrings, and eat them.
1839 Christian Lady's Mag. July 71 The sword..shivered like glass against the ‘scaly rind’ of this accursed creature.
1870 E. P. Wright tr. L. Figuier Mammalia 59 To separate the oil from this enormous greasy rind.
1986 I. Wedde Symmes Hole (1988) 62 The third whale's rind feeds down into the blubber-room.
e. An upper layer of soft rock. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1848 Presid. Mess. Congr. II. 609 The rock is ‘rind’, and can probably be penetrated to depth of two or three hundred feet before striking a greenstone vein.
5. The edge, verge, or rim of something; the border of a country. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > edge, border, or margin > [noun]
brerdc1000
hemc1200
barmc1340
cantc1375
margina1382
boardc1400
borderc1400
brinkc1420
edgea1450
verge1459
brim1525
rind1530
margent1538
abuttal1545
marge1551
skirt1566
lip1592
skirt1598
limb1704
phylactery1715
rim1745
rand1829
the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > edge, border, or margin > boundary > [noun] > land-boundary > of a region or territory
terma1382
frontier1413
rind1530
terminus?1605
barrier1709
bound-line1850
borderline1869
society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > district in relation to human occupation > a land or country > part of country or district > [noun] > border district(s) > border(s)
frontier1413
limitationa1475
skirt1488
limity1523
rind1530
border1535
ambit1597
verges1680
county line1776
land-board1790
1530 Act 22 Hen. VIII c. 11 The sayde Dykes, or..any other banke, beyng parcele of the rynde & uttermost parte of the sayde contrey of Marshe lande.
1552 R. Huloet Abcedarium Anglico Latinum Rynde of a countrey, fines.
1584 R. Scot Discouerie Witchcraft xii. xvii. 262 Sticke a paire of sheeres in the rind of a siue.
1608 E. Topsell Hist. Serpents 216 Vppon the ridge of his backe..and vnderneath vppon the ryne or brimme of his belly, are certaine haires growing.
6. Architecture. The part of an Ionic capital which lies immediately beneath the abacus (abacus n. 2) and terminates in the scrolls or volutes. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > architecture > column > [noun] > capital > parts of
abacus1563
echinus1563
plinth1563
fusarole1664
fuse1715
coussinet1728
rind1728
abaciscus1778
horn1847
1728 E. Chambers Cycl. at Capital The middle Part is called a Rind, or Bark, from its suppos'd Resemblance to the Bark of a Tree laid on a Vase.
?1730 G. Leoni tr. L. B. Alberti Della Architettura: Architecture II. vii. viii. f. 33/2 The breadth of the rind [It. cartoccio] which is to terminate in the Scroll must..be equal to the Abacus. This rind must fall down on each side winding round like a Snail-shell.
1768 Ware's Compl. Body Archit. (new ed.) ii. xiii. 182 The abacus of the Ionic capital consists of an ogee and fillet: the rind is hollow under this, and presses upon the ovolo or quarter-round.
1826 J. Gwilt Rudim. Archit. v. 189 The Ionic Capital consists of three principal parts: an abacus composed of an ogee and fillet, a rind which forms the scrolls, and an ovolo and astragal at bottom.
7. Mycology. A hard outer covering on the fruiting or resting body of a fungus, consisting of a layer of thickened, densely packed cells, typical of earth balls (genus Scleroderma).
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > fungi > [noun] > parts of
pileus1760
hat1775
rind1788
spherule1796
Rhizomorpha1802
stipe1821
peridium1823
umbo1836
ambrosia1840
holdfast1841
rhizomorph1848
peridiole1857
trama1857
pileole1858
pileolus1858
byssus1866
rhabdus1866
conidiophore1874
appressorium1897
1788 J. Bolton Hist. Fungusses Halifax I. p. vii. Lycoperdon (Puff-ball). A Fungus, roundish, consisting of a bark or rind, which breaks generally in the summit, and discharges an impalpable dust or farina.
1839 Penny Cycl. XIII. 211 The Geasters, or starry puff-balls, are much less common; instead of bursting irregularly at the apex when ripe, their outer rind separates into a definite number of lobes.
1875 M. C. Cooke Fungi ii. 47 The rind..is an entangled uninterrupted tissue of fungus filaments, which gradually obtain very solid, hard cartilaginous coats.
1927 H. Gwynne-Vaughan & B. F. Barnes Struct. & Devel. Fungi 1 The hyphae..may give rise to root-like strands known as rhizomorphs, or to a compact resting body, the sclerotium, the outer cells of which are modified to form a rind, protecting the inner regions from desiccation.
1951 J. A. Macdonald Introd. Mycol. ii. 14 In a few cases the mycelial cord is surrounded with a dark rind similar to that which surrounds a sclerotium.
1974 Canad. Jrnl. Bot. 52 1128/2 About 5½ days after inoculation, a definite organization of mycelia to form the rind was observed.
2003 W. C. Roody Mushrooms W. Virginia & Central Appalachians vii. 437 Earthballs are similar to puffballs but have a hard, firm flesh when young and a thick outer rind.
II. Abstract and figurative uses.
8. The external, literal, or superficial aspect of something. Also in plural in same sense.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > [noun] > the outside or exterior > external aspect as opposed to internal
rindeOE
barkc1374
shell1377
husk1567
cortex1660
swarth1807
without1899
α.
eOE King Ælfred tr. Gregory Pastoral Care (Hatton) (1871) ix. 55 Ðeahtigað on hiera modes rinde monig god weorc to wyrcanne, ac on ðam piðan bið oðer gehyded.
1340 Ayenbite (1866) 99 Vor zuyche..ne couþe bote þe rynde [c1450 Bk. Vices & Virtues schelle] wyþoute, þet is, þe lettre.
1551 T. Wilson Rule of Reason sig. Oiiijv The Gospell resteth..not in the outwarde rynde, but in the very hart.
1591 J. Harington Briefe Apol. Poetrie in tr. L. Ariosto Orlando Furioso sig. ¶iiij For the litterall sence (as it were the vtmost barke or ryne).
1618 E. Elton Complaint Sanctified Sinner xiv. 292 They rest in the outward rind and barke of the Law.
1646 J. Hall Horæ Vacivæ 57 Histories for the most part pick but at the Rind of businesse.
1704 J. Swift Tale of Tub i. 46 Many Readers..who will by no means be persuaded to inspect beyond the Surface and the Rind of Things.
1758 J. Armstrong Sketches 53 A bearish Figure is almost certainly the Rhind or Husk of a rude rough Soul.
1813 S. T. Coleridge Remorse ii. ii. 29 You are no dullard, But one that strips the outward rind of things!
1841 R. W. Emerson Ess. 1st Ser. (Boston ed.) ix. 227 With each divine impulse the mind rends the thin rinds of the visible and finite.
1957 Amer. Lit. 28 447 Cole..combined Emerson's regard for the pulsing life which underlay the rind of things with Hawthorne's knowledge of evil.
2004 L. Panizza tr. A. Tarabotti Paternal Tyranny ii. 108 Under the outer rind of fiction, the ancients disguised an inner core of truth.
β. 1582 R. Stanyhurst tr. Virgil First Foure Bookes Æneis Ded. sig. Aij Gnibling vpon thee owtward ryne of a supposed historie.1628 J. Doughty Disc. Divine Myst. 16 Those things which we doe vnderstand, we know but in the rine & slightly.1681 H. More Plain Expos. Daniel App. ii. 285 The Reader must learn to distinguish..betwixt the Rine and the Pulp of these..Symbolical Visions.1738 tr. S. Guazzo Art of Conversat. 173 I very well perceive, that you regard nothing more than the outward Rine.
9. Chiefly literary in later use. The outward form of a person; the body or flesh as opposed to the mind, spirit, etc. Frequently with modifying word.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > sight and vision > thing seen > appearance or aspect > [noun]
onseneeOE
bleea1000
shapeOE
ylikeOE
laitc1175
semblanta1225
sightc1275
fare1297
showingc1300
specea1325
parelc1330
guise1340
countenance1362
semblance?a1366
apparel1377
regardc1380
apparencec1384
imagec1384
spicec1384
overseeminga1398
kenninga1400
seemingc1400
visage1422
rinda1450
semenauntc1450
'pearance1456
outwardc1475
representation1489
favour?a1500
figurea1522
assemblant1523
prospect?1533
respect1535
visure1545
perceiverance1546
outwardshine1549
view1556
species1559
utter-shape1566
look1567
physiognomy1567
face1572
paintry1573
visor1575
mienc1586
superficies?1589
behaviour1590
aspect1594
complexion1597
confrontment1604
show1604
aira1616
beseeminga1616
formality1615
resemblancea1616
blush1620
upcomea1630
presentment1637
scheme1655
sensation1662
visibility1669
plumage1707
facies1727
remark1748
extrinsica1797
exterior1801
showance1820
the cut of one's jib1823
personnel1839
personal appearance1842
what-like1853
look-see1898
outwall1933
visuality1938
prosopon1947
a1450 (c1412) T. Hoccleve De Regimine Principum (Harl. 4866) (1897) 3576 (MED) God took vppon him humble buxumnesse Whan he him wrappid in our mortell rynde.
1600 R. Cawdrey Treasurie Similies 420 The..Iewes, did seeme to haue eyes, but in deed they were blinde, and Idle and emptie skins, and rindes without sight.
1637 J. Milton Comus 23 Thou canst not touch the freedome of my mind.., Although this corporall rind Thou hast immanacl'd.
1766 Christian's Mag. Sept. 487 Besides the total alteration I had observed in consequence of the small-pox, I had been witness to the fatal effects of disordered senses upon the ‘corporal rind’.
1824 W. S. Rose tr. L. Ariosto Orlando Furioso II. lxi. 23 Forbid not of the noblest souls the birth..Sprung from thy stock, and clothed in corporal rind.
1854 R. G. MacGregor tr. Petrarch in Indian Leisure 202 Alas! why left me in this mortal rind That first of peace, of sin that latest day?
1905 W. Campbell Poems 286 My world-worn spirit drinks thy calm delight, And, chrysalis-like, lets slip its earthly rind.
1995 R. Ducornet Phosphor in Dreamland i. 13 If the soul disembarks at death, why must the corporal rind stay behind to corrupt the earth?
10. slang. Impudence, effrontery, cheek. Cf. crust n. 7b.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > pride > impudence > [noun]
hardiessec1300
boldness1377
malapertness?a1439
over-boldnessc1450
insolencya1513
protervitya1527
impudency1529
sauce malapert1529
petulancy1537
procacitya1538
audacity1545
sauceliness1552
forehead1564
hardihead1579
hardihood1594
outfacing1598
audaciousness1599
impudentness1599
petulancea1600
impertinency1609
impertinence1612
impudencea1616
procacya1620
affrontedness1640
brow1642
front1653
insolence1668
affrontery1679
assurance1699
effrontery1715
affrontiveness1721
swagger1725
imperence1765
cheek1823
sassiness1834
cheekiness1838
pawk1855
gall1882
chutzpah1886
face1890
mouth1891
crust1900
rind1901
smarting1902
hide1916
brass neck1937
1901 G. Ade in Anaconda (Montana) Standard 8 Sept. 21/6 Do you have the immortal Rind to say that a galvanized Bun and one little Oasis of Ham are worth ten cents?
1915 P. G. Wodehouse Something Fresh v. 154 You have the immortal rind to suppose that I will stand being nagged and bullied.
1977 Times Lit. Suppl. 1 July 791/1 The Björn Borg Story (I'm glad they didn't have the rind to use the word ‘Life’).
2005 P. Green tr. Catullus Poems 189 That guest of yours from some seaside snooze-pit,..Who's now your darling, whom you've the rind to value Over us?

Phrases

root and rind: see root n.1 Phrases 5.

Compounds

rind fungus n. an ascomycete fungus, Phaeocytostroma sacchari, which causes a disease of sugar cane characterized by the formation of black patches on the stem.
ΚΠ
1893 Bull. Misc. Information (Royal Gardens, Kew) 350 We saw plants selected for sowing that had the rind fungus on many of them.
1928 F. S. Earle Sugar Cane & its Culture v. 154 Canes attacked by this fungus are also soon invaded by the rind fungus, Melanconium, with its conspicuous black pustules which completely mask the Coletotrichum.
1984 I. Stone Canal Irrigation Brit. India (2001) viii. 300 The spectacular success of agaul was later to be dampened by the repeated appearance of the rind fungus.
rind gall n. a defect in timber caused by injury to the bark of the growing tree, visible as a patch of abnormal growth incorporated into the wood.
ΚΠ
1794 D. Steel Elements & Pract. Rigging & Seamanship I. 8 Rind-gall, a damage the tree received when young.
1869 W. J. M. Rankine Cycl. Machine & Hand-tools App. 66Rind-galls’, or wounds in a layer of the wood, which have been covered and concealed by the growth of subsequent layers over them.
1970 E. Joyce Encycl. Furnit. Making ix. 118/1 Rind galls, etc. Patches of ingrowing bark, probably caused by exterior damage to the growing tree.
rind-graft n. Horticulture (now rare) a graft made by rind grafting.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > gardening > management of plants > propagation of plants > [noun] > grafting > place where graft inserted
clefta1398
stockc1400
grafting1601
seed stock1702
crown graft1706
graft1802
root graft1824
saddle graft1830
rind-graft1907
1907 Jrnl. Hort. & Home Farmer 12 Sept. 258/2 He considered the four best methods..would be the whip, tongue, wedge and rind grafts.
1951 Dict. Gardening (Royal Hort. Soc.) II. 918/1 All those [branches and spurs] left are grafted by whip-and-tongue or rind-grafts according to size.
rind grafting n. Horticulture grafting in which the scion is inserted between the bark and the wood of a stump; = crown grafting n. at crown n. Compounds 3a.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > gardening > management of plants > propagation of plants > [noun] > grafting > other methods of grafting
emplastering?c1425
emplastration?1440
infoliation1577
semination1589
emplaster1601
packing1615
shoulder-grafting1669
side grafting1704
crown grafting1706
root grafting1707
rind grafting1722
tipping1763
saddle grafting1792
wedge-grafting1838
1722 R. Bradley Gen. Treat. Husbandry II. 321 They graffed the Wallnut between the Bark and Wood, which I suppose is your Rind-graffing.
1881 Encycl. Brit. XII. 236/2 Crown-grafting or rind-grafting..is preferable to cleft-grafting, inasmuch as it leaves no open spaces in the wood.
1969 E. Afr. Agric. & Forestry Jrnl. 35 144/2 An attempt was made to try ‘rind grafting’ on the species at breast height..under field conditions.
2007 D. Squire Propagation Specialist (2008) 40 Crown grafting, also known as rind grafting, is the main form of topworking.
rind hoop n. Obsolete a hoop made from the bark of a tree, esp. for use in the making of barrels.
ΚΠ
1670 J. Smith England's Improvem. Reviv'd 89 From the Remainder of the Chesnut..may be chosen 63600 Rods for bark or ryne hoops.
1717 W. Sutherland Prices Labour in Ship-building 261 Coolers with Rind Hoops 8 Inches deep and 40 Inches over.
1795 Lett. & Papers Agric. (Bath & West of Eng. Soc.) VII. i. 3 Rind-hoops for barrels and for rigging of ships.
1882 Bristol Mercury 11 Jan. 1/1 Firkin, kilderkin, and hogshead staves; rolled and hooped iron, rind hoops, and other goods necessary to carry on the trade of a Cooper.
rind-tabberer n. [ < rind n.1 + tabberer, variant of taborer n.] English regional the green woodpecker, Picus viridis (cf. tapper n.2 1).
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > birds > perching birds > order Piciformes > [noun] > family Picidae > genus Picus (woodpecker)
woodhackc1440
woodwall1490
woodpecker1530
woodhacker1548
woodpeck1552
woodspite1555
woodspeckc1560
modwall1572
eat-bill1598
speck1601
tree-jobber1601
hecco1604
eat-bee1608
knag1639
French pie1783
pie1783
nicker-pecker1787
rind-tabberer1848
peckerwood1859
nickle1885
nicker1886
1848 A. B. Evans Leicestershire Words 75 Roin-tabberer,..i.e. the ‘rind-tabberer’, or tapper, viz. the woodpecker.
1862 C. A. Johns Brit. Birds Index 621 Rind-tabberer, the Green Woodpecker.
1890 Nature Notes 1 158 (table) Green woodpecker. Roin (rind) tabberer, Rainbird or Woodspite.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2010; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

rindn.2

Brit. /rʌɪnd/, U.S. /raɪnd/
Forms:

α. Middle English 1600s ryne, Middle English– rine; also Scottish pre-1700 reine, pre-1700 ryn, pre-1700 ryne.

β. Middle English 1700s– rynd, Middle English–1500s rynde, 1500s–1600s 1800s– rind, 1600s rinde, 1800s roynd (English regional (Yorkshire)); also Scottish pre-1700 rend, pre-1700 rind, pre-1700 rynd, pre-1700 rynde.

Origin: Either (i) a word inherited from Germanic. Or (ii) a borrowing from Dutch. Or (iii) a borrowing from Middle Low German. Etymons: Dutch rijn, rīne; Middle Low German rīn, rīne.
Etymology: Either cognate with or borrowed < Middle Dutch rijn, masculine (Dutch rijn ), rīne, feminine (Dutch regional (West Flemish) rijne ) or Middle Low German rīn, masculine (German regional (Low German: East Friesland) rīn ), rīne, feminine; further etymology unknown. Compare post-classical Latin reyna , rina , rinus , ryinus , rynia (from 1276 in British sources). These forms appear to prove that the final d in the β. forms is excrescent (compare pound v.1 and see discussion of γ. forms at that entry). Compare mill-rind n.
Now chiefly historical.
An iron fitting serving to support an upper millstone; = mill-rind n. 1.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > food manufacture and preparation > preparation of grain > milling or grinding > [noun] > corn-mill > millstone > upper > support
bridge treea1300
rind1318
ink1572
1318 in P. D. A. Harvey Manorial Rec. Cuxham (1976) 319 Custus Molendinorum..In ferro empto pro vno nouo rine inde faciendo vna cum veteri rine vj d.
?c1343 in J. T. Fowler Extracts Acct. Rolls Abbey of Durham (1899) II. 543 2 Ryndes fac. de proprio ferro.
1453–4 in J. T. Fowler Extracts Acct. Rolls Abbey of Durham (1898) I. 191 Pro renovacione de le spyndellez et rynd.
1472 in J. C. Hodgson Percy Bailiff's Rolls (1921) 6 (MED) Expensis..super..emendacione fusilli et le rynde et le tryndyll eiusdem molendini.
1552 Dundee Burgh Court Bks. II. f. 187v, in Dict. Older Sc. Tongue at Rind Sen the pwynding of the rynd of the common myln.
1598 Reg. Privy Council Scotl. V. 495 [They] brak his said myln,..tuke away with thame the spyndill, rynd and trymmill brodis of the said miln.
1639 T. Fuller Hist. Holy Warre v. xxiv. 271 [Cross] Molinée, because like to the rind of a mill.
1764 J. Ferguson Lect. Select Subj. 47 The top part of the spindle..goes into a square hole in a strong iron cross..called the rynd.
1835 A. Cregeen Dict. Manks Lang. 165/1 Taill, the rynd that bears the millstone.
1888 Jrnl. Derbysh. Archaeol. Soc. 10 54 The spindle being either of the same piece as the ‘rine’ or keyed into it.
1901 J. T. Fowler in Extracts Acct. Rolls Abbey of Durham III. 897 (Gloss.) The term Brandret was applied to the ink or rind of a millstone.
1937 Antiquity 11 138 An iron bridge, called in English the rynd, was placed across the narrowest part of the opening between the two hollow cones [i.e. millstones], and rested on the top of the spindle.
1995 E. W. MacKie in M. J. Green Celtic World (1996) x. xxxiv. 663 The spindle slots into the bridge or rind fixed across the bottom of the hole of the upper stone.
2006 A. Lucas Wind, Water, Work i. 29 A vertical shaft..was fastened to the upper millstone with an iron sleeve or rynd.

Compounds

General attributive.
ΚΠ
1417 in J. T. Fowler Extracts Acct. Rolls Abbey of Durham (1898) I. 226 In j pari molarum..cum hopys et ryndspindellis.
1616–19 in J. Imrie & J. G. Dunbar Accts. Masters of Wks. (1982) II. 73 For sex lather quhengis to the rind spindell.
1958 Proc. Soc. Antiquaries Scotl. 89 263 The stones [of the quern] contained no lead, but the holes showed slight traces..and the rind socket very slight traces of lead.
1987 Hesperia 56 352 Parsons identified [the stone] as a top stone from its smooth concave grinding face and the remains of rynd cavities.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2010; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

rindn.3

Brit. /rʌɪnd/, U.S. /raɪnd/, Scottish English /rʌind/, /rɪnd/, /rind/
Forms: late Middle English ryndes (plural), late Middle English ryndez (plural); Scottish 1700s– rind, 1800s– rhind (north-eastern).
Origin: Probably a borrowing from early Scandinavian.
Etymology: Probably < early Scandinavian (compare Icelandic rindi , Norwegian regional rind , rinde ridge, bank: see rand n.1).E. Ekwall saw the word as a native element underlying several Old English place names (see E. Ekwall Conc. Dict. Eng. Place-names (ed. 3, 1947) at Randwick, and compare A. H. Smith Eng. Place-name Elements (1956) II. 83–4). However, all of the examples admit of alternative explanations, and the existence of an Old English place-name element rind is not generally accepted.
Now Scottish.
1. northern. A low ridge of earth; a bank, esp. the bank of a river.Only in Morte Arthure.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > land > landscape > high land > ridge > [noun] > ridge of earth
benchc1250
rindc1440
bink1568
ledge1658
ridgelet1774
ridget1791
backing1863
soil stripe1910
c1440 (?a1400) Morte Arthure 921 (MED) Than they roode by þat ryuerer..Þare þe ryndez ouerrechez with reall bowghez.
c1440 (?a1400) Morte Arthure 1884 Thane relyez þe renkes..For to ryotte þe wode..Ransakes the ryndez alle.
c1440 (?a1400) Morte Arthure 3363 (MED) Than raykes cho with roo..To þe ryndes of þe wode.
2. Scottish (now north-eastern). A ridge or strip of uncultivated land coming between strips of cultivated land, a baulk. Also: the edge of a peat-bank. Cf. rand n.1 1a.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > farm > farmland > land suitable for cultivation > [noun] > broken land > arable or ploughed land > land missed in ploughing
balkc1000
lynchet1674
rind1730
landshard1811
1730 in Trans. E. Lothian Antiquarian & Field Naturalists' Soc. (1966) 10 33 James Meek shue 2 Riges in the rindes and two riges ends.
1825 J. Mitchell Scotsman's Libr. 473/1 These rigs or dales were divided from each other by narrow or broad slips of uncultivated grass land, called rinds or baulks.
1898 T. Mair Narr. & Extracts Rec. Presbytery of Ellon vi. 420 The boundaries were defined by certain poles and Rhinds or roadways through the moss.
1931 H. W. Duncan in Sc. National Dict. VII. 449/2 Rind, [Aberdeenshire] the edge or top of a peat bank.
2005 A. Smith Fer Chauve (SCOTS) Knott girse came tae the tap an, jist like the peats were easy lifted wi the three taed fork. They were pit in ower a bogie an teen tae moss rhind.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2010; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

rindn.4

Brit. /rʌɪnd/, U.S. /raɪnd/, Scottish English /rʌind/
Forms:

α. 1500s rynd, 1600s (1800s– English regional) rind; Scottish 1800s rhynd, 1800s– rind, 1800s– rynd, 1900s– riend.

β. 1600s ryne, 1600s (1800s– regional) rine, 1700s rhine, 1800s rhyne (Scottish), 1900s– reyne (English regional).

Origin: Probably a variant or alteration of another lexical item. Etymon: rime n.1
Etymology: Probably a variant (with excrescent d) of rime n.1For similar variation compare English regional hind (recorded in Eng. Dial. Dict. from Durham and Yorkshire from the second half of the 19th cent. in the sense ‘hoar frost’), variant of hime (recorded in Eng. Dial. Dict. from Yorkshire, Lancashire, and Derbyshire from the late 18th cent. in the sense ‘hoar frost when it hangs on the trees, rime’), and compare also rinder n.3
Chiefly Scottish and English regional (northern).
Hoar frost, rime. Also as a count noun.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > weather and the atmosphere > weather > cold weather > [noun] > freezing or frosty weather > frost > hoar frost
rimeeOE
frosteOE
rime frostOE
hoar-frostc1290
rain-frostc1300
white frostc1384
griddled frosta1400
hoar-rimec1550
hoar1567
rind1575
frost-dewa1626
cranreuchc1686
α.
1575 G. Gascoigne Noble Arte Venerie xiii. 31 Whereas the ryndes, the water droppes, and other coldnesse doth fall vpon him continually.
1648 H. Hexham Groot Woorden-boeck Rijm, a Rind, or a small Frost.
1852 R. S. Surtees Mr. Sponge's Sporting Tour lix. 333 I should say it isn't a frost,—at least, not a frost to 'urt; there may be a little rind on the ground and a little rawness in the hair.
1864 Doubleday in J. Crawhall Coll. Garlands for North Country Anglers 299 'Mang the lang grass..The rind clings white and pearly.
1894 Hetton-le-hole Gloss. (at cited word) There's a heavy (or, thick) rind on.
1933 H. Orton Phonol. S. Durham Dial. 5 Typical examples [of [ɑi]] are: [krɑibl], curry favour; [rɑind], hoar-frost; [etc.].
1977 J. Y. Mather & H. H. Speitel Ling. Atlas Scotl. II. 178 Hoar frost, [Moray, Ayr, Midlothian, East Lothian, Berwick, Roxburgh] rind, [Stirling] rynd, [East Lothian] riend.
β. 1608 N. Bownd Vnbeleefe S. Thomas 133 To come thether in the depth of winter..and see all the bowes, white with the whore frost, and rine hanging vpon euery twigge.1642 H. More Ψυχωδια Platonica sig. C2v Like winter morn bedight with snow and rine And sunny rayes, so did his goodly eldship shine.1656 tr. T. White Peripateticall Inst. 147 Expecting Ice and a Rine the next day.1755 Philos. Trans. 1754 (Royal Soc.) 48 508 The rhine, or hoar-frost,..was composed of curious thin figured plates.1801 Farmer's Mag. Aug. 43 In exposed situations, they [sc. turnips] escaped, in consequence of the wind preventing the hoar-frost or rine from remaining upon them.1895 Trans. & Jrnl. Proc. Dumfriesshire & Galloway Nat. Hist. & Antiquarian Soc. 1893–4 154 Rime or Rine, the Dumfriesshire word for hoar frost.1898 Pop. Educator Feb. 260/1 Explain [the] difference between hoar-frost or rine and black frost.1977 J. Y. Mather & H. H. Speitel Ling. Atlas Scotl. II. 178 Hoar frost, [East Lothian, Berwick, Dumfries, Kirkcudbright, Northumberland] rine, [Wigtown, Northumberland] white rine, [Northumberland] wheyte reyne.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2010; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

rindv.1

Brit. /rʌɪnd/, U.S. /raɪnd/
Forms: see rind n.1
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: rind n.1
Etymology: < rind n.1 Compare earlier unrind v.Compare Old English berindan to strip the rind or bark from, peel (see rend v.1).
1. transitive. To strip the rind or bark from (a tree, log, etc.); to strip (rind or bark) in this way. Also (occasionally) intransitive. Now chiefly Canadian regional (Newfoundland).In quot. a1450 figurative: to strip the clothes from (a person).
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
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) (1959) Gen. xxx. 37 Iacob takyng greene pople ȝerdeȝ..& aparty vnryndide [a1425 Corpus Oxf., E.V. vnryendide; a1425 L.V. dide awei the rynde of; L. decorticavit] hem.]
a1425 Medulla Gram. (Stonyhurst) f. 18 Cortico, to rynde or barke.
a1450 in R. L. Greene Early Eng. Carols (1935) 257 They xuldyn hym rynde cote and hood, And make hym bare for to fle.
1623 E. Wynne in R. Whitbourne Disc. New-found-land 110 There haue bin rinded this yere not so few as 50000 trees.
1698–9 Coll. Statutes Admiralty, Navy, Shipping, & Navig. (1810) 27 That no Person..shall..rind any of the trees there standing or growing.
1717 G. Jacob Country Gentleman's Vade Mecum vi. 107 To keep Cattle from rinding Trees, paint them with a Paint made of Man's Dung, Pidgeon's Dung, and Hens Dung.
1775 G. Cartwright Jrnl. Resid. Coast Labrador 30 June (1792) II. 84 Some of the people were cutting wood for a salmon-house, and others rinding.
1793 J. Reeves Hist. Newfoundland i. 8 No person was to set fire to the woods, or rind the trees, except for cook-rooms.
1829 Mirror Lit., Amusement, & Instr. 14 149/2 All the birch trees in the vicinity of the lake had been rinded.
1852 G. Bancroft Hist. Amer. Revol. II. xvi. 361 Bearing long..staves, white from being freshly rinded.
1872 Will she bear It? II. viii. 133 The man..drew his master's attention to the fact that several plants had been ‘rinded’, the bark being recently cut through just above the ground.
1905 Bull. Imperial Inst. 3 272 The bark..is stripped off by methods very similar to those employed in rinding an oak to obtain the bark for tanning.
1971 in Dict. Newfoundland Eng. (1982) 412/1 She went in the wood to rind birch rinds (inner bark) for tanning sealskins.
1994 S. Ryan Ice Hunters Introd. 29 Other trees were rinded to provide water-tight bark for roofing material for the buildings.
2006 APT Bull. 37 18/2 (caption) Two residents of Tilting rinding wood with axes.
2. transitive. To scrape off the skin of (a person, a part of the body, etc.). rare (chiefly Canadian regional (Newfoundland) in later use).
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > ill health > injury > injure [verb (transitive)] > chafe or excoriate
flayc1250
to-shell1377
gallc1440
excoriate1497
chafe1526
to pare to (also beyond, etc.) the quick1538
spur-galla1555
gald1555
raw1593
begall1597
rub1618
rind1893
1893 Eng. Illustr. Mag. Sept. 872/1 Tom Walker used to rub his bleeding fingers in the dust after being rinded by David Harris.
1963 in Dict. Newfoundland Eng. (1982) 412/1 You're going to rind over your leg.
1973 G. Pinsent Rowdyman 9 I knew goddam well he should have wrapped the rope around his hands before his famous flight. ‘Dey're all rined out! Dey're all rined out!’ was what I thought he kept saying.
3. transitive. To remove the rind from (pork, bacon, etc.). Also (occasionally) intransitive.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > food manufacture and preparation > preparation for table or cooking > preparation of meat > prepare meat [verb (intransitive)] > do butchering
butch1846
butcher1865
rind1918
the world > food and drink > food > food manufacture and preparation > preparation for table or cooking > preparation of meat > dress animals for food [verb (transitive)] > insert fat bacon > remove bacon skin
rind1962
1918 Federal Reporter 251 627 The idea of slicing and rinding at the same time and by the same movement.
1962 Sunday Times 14 Jan. 30/3 Rind the bacon rashers and peel the bananas.
1999 South Wales Evening Post (Nexis) 21 Sept. 2 100g (4oz) belly pork, rinded and sliced.
2001 Sunday Tel. (Nexis) 10 Nov. 7 Organic smoked streaky bacon cut into thin strips and rinded.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2010; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

rindv.2

Brit. /rʌɪnd/, U.S. /raɪnd/, Scottish English /rʌind/
Forms: Scottish pre-1700 rynde, pre-1700 1700s ryne, pre-1700 1700s– rind, pre-1700 1700s– rynd, 1700s rein, 1700s reyn, 1800s rhynde, 1800s rin, 1800s– rinn; English regional (chiefly northern) 1800s rynd, 1800s– rin, 1800s– rind.
Origin: Of uncertain origin. Perhaps a variant or alteration of another lexical item. Etymon: rend v.2
Etymology: Origin uncertain; perhaps a variant of rend v.2, although this is only attested later in the relevant sense (see rend v.2 2), and presents phonological problems. Perhaps resulting from association with rin, variant of run v. (compare run v. 47). Compare later randing n.1 Sc. National Dict. (at cited word) records the word as still in use in various parts of Scotland in 1968.
Scottish and English regional (chiefly northern).
transitive. To prepare (tallow, butter, etc.) for preservation by melting and clarifying; to render; to melt. Also with down.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > industry > manufacturing processes > perform general or industrial manufacturing processes [verb (transitive)] > melt
meltc1450
rind1526
fuse1681
1526 Acts Parl. Scotl. (1814) II. 315/1 That na maner of mane fleschar nor vtheris..tak vpoune hand to rynd melt nor barell talch.
c1580 ( in J. D. Marwick Extracts Rec. Burgh Edinb. (1869) I. 107 It is..forbidden that any maner of persoun melt or rynde thair tawlche in fore housis on the hie gaitt.
1607 in D. Masson Reg. Privy Council Scotl. (1887) 1st Ser. VIII. 1 For getting knawledge of the talloun ryndet within this burgh.
1706 Mare of Collingtoun in J. Watson Choice Coll. Scots Poems i. 60 First shear it small, and rind it sine, Into a Kettle clean and fine.
1736 Session Papers in Sc. National Dict. (1968) VII. 449/3 The Candlemakers pay one and the same Price for all the Tallow they Rynd.
1844 H. Stephens Bk. of Farm II. 106 As long as it [sc. suet] is fresh it should be rynded or rendered, as it is termed.
1864 W. D. Latto Tammas Bodkin xvi. 195 Sic a day o' heat too! Like to rhynde the very creesh aff my banes!
1948 Huntly Express 14 May Potties for rinnin' doon the suet for skirlie.
1988 G. Lamb Orkney Wordbk. Rind, to melt down (suet etc).
1995 J. M. Sims-Kimbrey Wodds & Doggerybaw: Lincs. Dial. Dict. 246/1 I'll rind yon beef fat an' we'll ev drippin' toast fer us tea.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2010; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

rindv.3

Forms: 1600s rinde.
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: rind n.4
Etymology: < rind n.4Very much earlier currency in transitive use (in sense ‘to cover with rime’) has sometimes been implicitly assumed by editors of the following passage in Beowulf:OE Beowulf (2008) 1363 Nis þæt feor heonon milgemearces þæt se mere stanðeð [read standeð]; ofer þæm hongiað hrinde bearwas, wudu wyrtum fæst wæter oferhelmað.Old English hrinde , a hapax legomenon, has been explained as a syncopated form of the masculine nominative plural of a past participial adjective *hrinded , from an unattested weak verb *hrindan to cover with rime, i.e. an antecedent of rind v.3, which is usually cited in support; however, the apparent early modern English origin of this verb (and its immediate etymon rind n.4, a probable variant of rime n.1 with excrescent d) makes this highly unlikely. An alternative (and more attractive) explanation of Old English hrinde is as an adjective in sense ‘projecting forward, overhanging’ or ‘overgrowing, luxuriant’ ( < the same Germanic base as Old English hrindan, Old Icelandic hrinda, both in sense ‘to thrust, push’, probably ultimately < an ablaut variant (e-grade) of the same Indo-European base (with nasal infix) as ancient Greek κροτεῖν to beat, strike, knock); compare H. Middendorff Altenglisches Flurnamenbuch (1902) 76–7.
Obsolete. rare.
intransitive. To form rime or hoar frost.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > weather and the atmosphere > weather > cold weather > [verb (intransitive)] > form hoar frost
rind1648
1648 H. Hexham Groot Woorden-boeck Rijpen, to Rinde, as upon trees frozen.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2010; most recently modified version published online June 2021).
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