单词 | sewin |
释义 | sewinn.1 A fish of the Salmon tribe ( Salmo cambricus or eriox), the bull-trout, found in Welsh rivers. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > fish > class Osteichthyes or Teleostomi > order Salmoniformes (salmon or trout) > family Salmonidae (salmon) > [noun] > genus Salmo > trout (unspecified and miscellaneous) > salmo eriox (bull-trout) whitlinglOE scurf1483 sewin1532 sullayne1570 bull-trout1653 shuin1655 sea-trout1745 truff1818 grey fin1839 swallow-smolt1847 1532 in G. T. Clarke Cartæ Glamorgan IV. 454 Yeldyng and paynge yerely to the sayd abbotte..x. samones v. gyllynges and xliiijte suwynges..or elles..for euery cuple sewinges 1. d. 1603 G. Owen Descr. Penbrokshire (1892) 117 Sueinges, Mullettes and botchers. a1641 J. Smyth Berkeley MSS (1885) III. 319 The salmon, wheat trout or suen. 1769 T. Pennant Brit. Zool. (new ed.) III. iv. 248 Taken in the river Wye, where it is known by the name of Sewin, or Shewin. 1805 J. Duncumb Agric. Herefordsh. 17 The botcher resembles the suin taken in the Welsh rivers. ?1834 Hist. Berwickshire Naturalists' Club 1 No. 2. 52 The sewin will most likely prove our Scotch hirling or whiting. 1861 Act 24 & 25 Victoria c. 109 §4. 1900 Field 28 July 153/1 There is not a better sea trout or sewin river in North Wales. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1913; most recently modified version published online March 2022). sewinn.2 = shewel n. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > equipment > [noun] > thing placed to turn deer shewelc1250 blancher1535 shewelling1575 blenchera1640 sewin1886 1886 Ld. Walsingham & R. Payne-Gallwey Shooting (Badminton Libr. of Sports & Pastimes) I. 201 A substitute for nets in covert shooting, where it is desirable to stop the winged game rather than the ground game, is commonly known as ‘sewin’. 1898 Earl of Suffolk et al. Encycl. Sport II. 85/2 (Pheasant) The number of stops may be materially reduced by the use of the sewin. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1913; most recently modified version published online March 2022). > as lemmassew-in 1. Forming nouns in combination with a verb stem, denoting a protest in which a number of people carry out the action expressed by the first element, e.g. camp-in, hate-in, kiss-in, kneel-in, pray-in, sew-in, stand-in, wade-in; occasionally with an adjective as the first element, e.g. fat-in, gay-in, nude-in. Also forming nouns designating a participant in the protest or gathering, e.g. kneeler-in, wader-in.Originally, in the early 1960s, such protests were carried out by African Americans against racial segregation in the United States.See also die-in n., fish-in n., live-in n. 2, love-in n. 1, paint-in n., read-in n.2 1, sick-in n., sleep-in n. 1, stall-in n., streak-in n. at streak v.2 Derivatives, swim-in n. ΚΠ 1960 Newsweek 16 May 34/1 Into the already-roiled waters of the South, Negroes will wade this summer in a campaign to break down segregation at public beaches—a wade-in counterpart to the widespread lunch-counter sit-ins of recent weeks. 1960 in Amer. Speech (1961) 36 282 Negro college students have initiated a new ‘kneel-in’ campaign..by attending services at white protestant Atlanta churches. 1961 in Amer. Speech 36 282 He called for walk-ins in art galleries and museums, drive-ins at segregated motels and roadside ice cream stands, sit-ins in court rooms, study-ins at segregated schools, and bury-ins to integrate cemeteries. 1961 in Amer. Speech 36 282 Negro teen-aged boys in an impromptu swim-in at an undesignated beach drew a crowd of 300 shoving, shouting Memorial Day bathers and boaters yesterday. 1963 Time 30 Aug. 12 The ‘pray-in’ at churches. 1967 Daily Tel. 3 Mar. 23/7 A ‘kiss-in’ to protest against Michigan University's stern regulations on ‘public displays of affection’ was described by students last night as the most enjoyable form of demonstration yet devised. 1967 Observer 11 June 10 If everyone was fat there'd be no war. No one would pass the physical.—A speaker at the New York Central Park ‘Fat-in’. 1967 Listener 10 Aug. 188/3 This is a very exciting inversion of psychedelic soulfulness, a hate-in. 1968 Lebende Sprachen 13 68/1 Their action fits into a wave of unofficial, unconnected nude-ins so far this year in Golden Gate Park, starting with freebeachers dancing nude at the great be-in. 1968 N.Y. Times 26 May 71/3 As illustrated by the extra squads of policemen patrolling the Capitol, there is a latent fear in Congress that the camp-in will set off violence. 1970 Rochester (N.Y.) Democrat & Chron. 20 May 10 c/4 A march to Central Park for a ‘gay-in’. 1973 Daily Tel. 3 Dec. 13/8 College catering would be disrupted by students alternately boycotting canteens and then holding mass eat-ins. 1991 Chicago Tribune 30 Nov. i. 5/3 Gay rights activists staged a ‘marry-in’ at the County Building's Marriage Bureau. 2003 Oxf. Amer. Jan. 22/1 Aleck's Barbecue Heaven in Atlanta, where Martin Luther King Jr. and his lieutenants plotted marches and sit-ins, kneel-ins, and wade-ins. sew-in 2. More generally, forming nouns in combination with a verb stem, denoting a gathering for the purpose of the action expressed by the first element, e.g. cook-in, forge-in, sew-in, wed-in.See also be-in n., laugh-in n., love-in n. 2, rave-in n., read-in n.2 2, slim-in n., smoke-in n., talk-in n., teach-in n., think-in n. ΚΠ 1966 Daily Tel. 12 Aug. 11/3 William Bryden-Smith, aged 10, who wrote to us, wants to take part in the cook-in. 1967 Telegraph (Brisbane) 30 June 12 Nine young couples are determined to go ahead with New York's latest open air opus—a ‘wed-in’. 1987 E. Fair Right Stuff for New Hang Glider Pilots xviii. 108 Group ‘moan-ins’ about the weather are fun. 1997 High Country News 8 Dec. 3/2 To head off a mine during the '70s, locals held dances and ski-ins. 1999 Brit. Blacksmith Summer 20/1 The first forge-in that Tony and his wife Sue attended was Bob Oakes' opening of his new forge. 2003 Quilter's Newsletter Mag. July 11/1 The magazine's fourth all-day sew-in. < n.11532n.21886 as lemmas |
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