单词 | sinker |
释义 | sinkern.1 I. A person who sinks things. 1. orig. Scottish. A person who impresses designs or figures on dies, for stamping coins, medals, etc.; esp. the official charged with this duty at the royal mint (more fully sinker of the irons: cf. iron n.1 10). Now historical.die-sinker: see die n.1 Compounds 1b. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > worker > workers according to type of work > manual or industrial worker > worker performing process or spec. task > [noun] > workers performing other tasks or processes river?c1475 melter1511 sinker1526 folder up1552 wiper1552 scourer1574 heaver1587 stoverc1600 rasper1611 ripper1611 roller1616 smearer1632 waterleadera1650 scooper1668 smiter1670 puncher1681 staker1688 crusher1794 hardener1796 reamer1822 piledriver1826 catcher1832 waterproofer1837 middler1847 culler1850 hanger-on1858 pitcher1865 bumper1871 fine liner1871 bricksetter1883 waxer1890 bottle-oh1898 edger1909 bottle-o-er1915 caster1921 recycler1970 linesperson1973 1526 in Rec. Parl. Scotl. to 1707 (2007) 1526/11/74 The sayaris fe and the sy [n] karis of the irnis fee. 1582 in D. Masson Reg. Privy Council Scotl. (1880) 1st Ser. III. 481 The generall, maister cunyeoure, warden, sincar and assayer. 1605 in D. Masson Reg. Privy Council Scotl. (1885) 1st Ser. VII. 27 The Lords..commands Thomas Foulis, sinkar of His Majesties irones, to mak ane new greit seale. 1656 in Grose's Antiquarian Repertory (1808) II. 411 The offices of under-engraver and sinker of our saide stamps. 1674 in G. Dallas System Stiles (1697) 110 Constituting the said T. W. Graver and Sinker of his Majesties said Mint. 1977 H. W. A. Linecar Brit. Coin Designs & Designers i. 16 A Mint smith was appointed..together with a sinker, whose work was that of impressing the dies with the designs cut by the engraver of the irons or puncheons. Both the smith and the sinker were paid by the Mint Warden. 2000 G. L'E. Turner Elizabethan Instrument Makers i. ii. 20 He could have worked first as a moneyer, before taking the comparatively senior position of sinker of the irons, also known as die-sinker or under-graver. 2. A workman employed to sink wells, mine shafts, or other excavations. Cf. sink v. 7. Now chiefly historical. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > worker > workers according to type of work > manual or industrial worker > earth-movers, etc. > [noun] > one who digs other structures hill-digger1521 sinker1584 pondcaster1602 navigator1775 dammer1816 navvy1829 muck-shifter1856 1584 R. Hakluyt Disc. Western Planting (1993) xxi. 124 Artesanes, servinge our firste planters..for buildinges... Synkers of welles and finders of springes. 1629 in J. Imrie & J. G. Dunbar Accts. Master of Wks. (1982) II. 228 Ane kewell..to the sinkeris of the well. 1708 J. C. Compl. Collier 7 in T. Nourse Mistery of Husbandry Discover'd (ed. 3) Perhaps the Sincker (or Labourer) has..12d. or 14d. a Day. 1710 Act 9 Anne c. 30 §9 in Statutes of Realm (1963) IX. 499 No Coal Owner..shall knowingly employ..any Overman..Pitman Sinker Carriage-man [etc.]. 1816 W. Smith in J. Phillips Mem. W. Smith (1844) 81 These stony nodules the sinkers have called rock, but no regular rock has yet been found. 1862 S. Smiles Lives Engineers III. 51 Kit Heppel, who was a sinker at the pit. 1897 Daily News 8 Mar. 3/1 Fourteen sinkers..were at work in the bottom of the Simpson Shaft. 1955 Mining World Dec. 64/1 Martin J. Tucker, master sinker, and his crew in September 1955 established the astounding new monthly world shaft sinking record of 763 feet. 2006 Nottingham Evening Post (Nexis) 9 Aug. 54 My great-grandfather..had been a sinker at Pleasley pit, starting new pits. 3. A person who or thing which causes something to sink; (figurative) one who brings others to ruin. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > [noun] > one who or that which destroys baneOE losera1340 leeserc1380 stroyerc1380 destroyer1382 ravenerc1390 castera1400 confounder1401 wastera1425 stroyc1440 undoerc1440 unmakerc1450 confounderess1509 hydraa1513 stroy-good1540 abolisher1548 thunderbolt1559 disannullera1572 stroy-all1573 ruiner1581 down-puller1583 murdererc1585 spendingc1595 blaster1598 assassin1609 ruinater1609 dissolver1611 minerc1614 destructioner1621 fordoer1631 sinker1632 destructive1640 deletery1642 assassinatea1658 ruinator1658 destroyeress1662 destructora1691 dissolvent1835 solvent1841 wrecker1882 destructant1889 the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > downward motion > causing to come or go down > [noun] > causing to sink > one who sinker1632 1632 R. Sherwood Dict. sig. Ii. iii/1 in R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues (new ed.) A Sinker of poore people with exactions, oppresseur. 1823 Ld. Byron Don Juan: Canto XII lxxxix. 49 Meantime, read all the National Debt-sinkers. 1868 E. D. E. N. Southworth Fair Play xxxix. 531 What! the freebooter, throat-cutter, the ship-sinker, under the same roof with you? 1929 M. A. Gill Underworld Slang 11/1 Sinker, judge. 1999 W. J. R. Gardner Decoding Hist. iv. 67 There was a marked German focus on the submarine as a sinker of merchant ships. II. A weight that causes something to sink, and related uses. 4. a. Cheese-making. A heavy board for pressing cheese. Now historical. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > food manufacture and preparation > preparation of dairy produce > [noun] > formation of cheese > weight for pressing cheese sinker1561 1561 in P. C. D. Brears Yorks. Probate Inventories 1542–1689 (1972) 12 3 skeles 16 bowles 2 synkers 5 chesfatts with dyshes 1 Chesepresse. 1596 in W. Greenwell Wills & Inventories Registry Durham (1860) II. 271 iij sinckers for to couer cheese. 1688 in E. Hall Michael Warton of Beverley (1986) 28 In the Dayry..4 Cheese Fatts 4 Sinckers 3 milke syles. 1772 M. Smith Compl. House-keeper 311 Lay the cloth in a cheese-vat, cover the cheese over with the cloth, and lay on the sinker with a weight of six pounds, to press it. 1844 C. W. Johnson Farmer's Encycl. I. 317/2 The sinker of the chessel or vat being pressed against the cross top, squeezes or stanes the cheese. 1889 Jrnl. Royal Agric. Soc. 50 444 Place it (the hoop) upon a piece of board..a sinker made of wood, and just sufficiently large to pass easily inside the mould, being placed on the top of curd. As a rule, no other weight should be used. 1969 E. H. Pinto Treen 102 When pressing a cheese, a heavy board, in early times known as a sinker, was fitted in the vat on top of the cheese. 2008 P. C. D. Brears Cooking & Dining in Medieval Eng. v. 83 Once a piston-like sinker had been placed on top, this was put into a cheese press so that the whey would be expelled. b. In a stocking frame or knitting machine: each of a series of thin metal plates which move both horizontally and vertically between the needles in order to form loops or perform knock-overs or hold-downs.Frequently with modifying word, as jack sinker, lead sinker, etc. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > textile manufacture > manufacture textile fabric or that which consists of > manufacture of textile fabric > [noun] > knitting > knitting machine > parts of sinkerc1689 jack sinkera1749 Jack1750 slur1796 needle1829 slay-bar1843 verge1854 ribber1877 thread-carrier1877 c1689 Observ. Hammermen of Edinb. in Trans. Soc. Antiquaries Scotl. (1792) 1 180 [The framesmith's essay] six sinkers. 1772 W. Bailey Advancem. Arts, Manuf., & Commerce I. v. xiv. 212 The needles, sinkers, jacks, &c. are formed nearly in the same manner as in common Stocking Frames. 1843 Mechanic's Mag. 9 Dec. 428/2 There are no moving jacks, as usual; the sinkers are lowered or locked up by the alternate changing of a sliding bar from a horizontal to a vertical position. 1952 D. F. Paling Warp Knitting Technol. i. 6 The presser is now withdrawn.., thus causing the fabric loops to pass further up the needle beards until finally they are knocked-over the needle heads as the latter pass below the level of the sinkers. 2003 Melliand Internat. Sept. 232/2 All the needles and sinkers supplied are of the highest quality. c. A wooden or metal weight attached to the chain or rope of a horse's stall-collar to keep it short. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > farming > animal husbandry > keeping or management of horses > horse-gear > [noun] > weight on stall-collar sinker1840 1840 Sporting Mag. Nov. 400 The ‘blocks’ attached to the ends of the collar-reins are generally called ‘sinkers’. 1844 H. Stephens Bk. of Farm I. 127 A leather stall-collar, having an iron-chain collar-shank to play through the ring.., with a turned wooden sinker at its end, to weigh it to the ground. 1903 Sheriff Court Rep. 356 in Sc. Law Rev. & Sheriff Court Rep. 19 The furnishings of the [horse-]box were different from those of others, in respect that the ropes were very much longer than is usual and safe, being about 41 inches in length, whereas 16 to 25 inches is an ordinary length of free rope from sinker to head stall. 1982 T. K. Ewer Pract. Animal Husbandry i. 16 The shank..is put through a ring or hole in the manger, with the end attached to a metal or wooden ‘sinker’ to prevent the horse from putting his foot on the head rope. 5. a. A weight of lead, stone, or other material for sinking a fishing line or net beneath the water. Also figurative. Cf. sinkstone n. 2.hook, line and sinker: see hook n.1 Phrases 4. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > fishing > fishing-tackle > weight > [noun] plumbc1450 plummet1577 leada1609 sinker1785 swan-shot1856 sinkstone1857 net sinker1865 net-weight1865 sink1865 bullet1867 block-shot1883 shotting1979 1785 J. Anderson Acct. Present State Hebrides App. No. 2. 341 One end of the line, to which is fixed a proper sinker, is then thrown into the sea. 1844 W. H. Maxwell Wanderings in Highlands & Islands I. App. 331 The loops in the lower baulk are loaded with sinkers of stone. 1849 H. W. Longfellow Kavanagh xx. 120 I perceive you fish with a heavy sinker,—down, far down in the future. 1888 G. B. Goode Amer. Fishes 7 A large float and heavy sinker and a worm or minnow for bait. 1981 P. Theroux Mosquito Coast (1982) ii. x. 155 One man down the beach threw a limp round net... Then he dragged it out, shook its sinkers and held it in his teeth while he untangled it. 2010 Coarse Fisherman Apr. 47/2 I, personally, prefer to have a sinker that will just allow me to work my bait at my chosen depth. b. A weight, typically of lead or concrete, used to sink a sounding line, buoy, or mine in the water. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > properties of materials > weight or relative heaviness > [noun] > ponderable matter > that which is heavy or a heavy mass > used on account of its weight > specific pea1671 Hercules1794 chock1842 sinker1852 1852 R. H. Horne in Househ. Words 27 Mar. 22/2 A buoy is kept in its place by a large chain..fastened to a large flat iron slab, called a ‘sinker’. 1892 Daily News 29 July 6/6 It occupied about five minutes to haul in his sinker and compare the indication of his tube with the scale. 1944 Pop. Sci. Mar. 107 (caption) Sinkers made of concrete replace anchors of scarce steel for mooring buoys. 1972 New Scientist 1 June 492 The mines are usually launched attached to the sinker which goes down to the seabed carrying the mine with it. 2012 H. H. Kothe Grandpa was Sailor 65 Buoys were anchored in position with cube-shaped concrete sinkers that came in sizes of three to nine tons. 6. slang. A base or counterfeit coin. Also: a shilling; (U.S.) a silver dollar. Now rare. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > money > medium of exchange or currency > coins collective > false coin > [noun] > a false coin bad pennyc1400 countera1529 slip1592 black dog1665 swimmer1699 Brummagem1838 sinker1839 smasher1851 wrong 'un1899 wooden nickel1927 wrongo1937 society > trade and finance > money > sum of money > [noun] > specific sums of money > a dollar skin1834 rock1837 buck1856 scad1856 simoleon1881 plunk1885 clam1886 slug1887 bone1889 plunker1890 ace1900 sinker1900 Oxford1902 caser1907 iron man1907 man1910 berry1918 fish1920 smacker1920 Oxford scholar1937 loonie1987 1839 H. Brandon Dict. Flash or Cant Lang. in W. A. Miles Poverty, Mendicity & Crime 165/1 Sinker, bad money. 1864 J. C. Hotten Slang Dict. (new ed.) Sinkers, bad money—affording a man but little assistance in keeping afloat. 1900 ‘J. Flynt’ Tramping with Tramps (U.K. ed.) 342 ‘Give you a sinker (a dollar),’ I said. 1958 R. V. Cassill Buccaneer viii. 63 You don't give a sinker in hell for your people—just for your chance with the governor's daughter. 7. a. slang (originally U.S.). A heavy dumpling. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > dishes and prepared food > cake > [noun] > a cake > doughnut dough cakea1631 doughnut1782 olykoek1795 nutcake1801 poffertje1804 zeppole1835 krapfen1845 simball1865 sinker1870 doughnut hole1886 vetkoek1900 bear sign1903 koeksister1904 sinker1906 submarine1916 mandazi1937 1870 J. H. Beadle Life in Utah viii. 223 Our favorite dinner, when we could get the meat, was of fried ham and ‘sinkers’. 1908 Sat. Evening Post (Philadelphia) 24 Oct. 18/2 The sinker was, undoubtedly, the deadliest enemy of the growing boy. 1996 Dominion (Wellington, N.Z.) 24 May 12 Try them [sc. carrots]..with celery, stored onions and horseradish dumplings, which we used to call ‘10-minute sinkers’. 2014 L. Baxter In Love & War 69 ‘It's stew with sinkers.’ ‘Sinkers? What are they?’ ‘Dumplings, but when Mrs C makes them they really are sinkers. They're heavy and floury but they're filling.’ b. U.S. colloquial. A doughy cake; esp. a doughnut. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > dishes and prepared food > cake > [noun] > a cake > doughnut dough cakea1631 doughnut1782 olykoek1795 nutcake1801 poffertje1804 zeppole1835 krapfen1845 simball1865 sinker1870 doughnut hole1886 vetkoek1900 bear sign1903 koeksister1904 sinker1906 submarine1916 mandazi1937 1906 N.Y. Evening Post 10 Dec. 14 Without ‘sinkers’, corn cakes, cream puffs, ‘cookies’, and other standard foodstuffs at reasonable prices to appease the appetite between lectures, it is simply impossible to go on studying. 1926 E. Ferber Show Boat xiii. 268 The coffee was hot, strong, revivifying; the sinkers crisp and fresh. 1986 R. Ford Sportswriter vi. 156 Mr. Smallwood pulls into a white enamel drive-in..and asks if I want a sinker. I am full to the gills from breakfast. 2010 N.Y. Mag. 15 Mar. 64/4 Crisp-edged, moist-crumbed, and exuding pure doughnutty flavor at every pore, these sinkers come in two sizes and a variety of rotating flavors. III. A sink, a cesspool. 8. Originally: †a sink or washbasin (obsolete). Later (English regional (Lincolnshire)): a cesspool, a drain. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > sanitation > provision of sewers > sewage treatment > [noun] > use of cesspools or lagoons > cesspool or pit sink1413 midden pita1425 sinkhole1456 suspiralc1512 sentine1537 dung pit1598 muck pit1598 sinker1623 bumby1632 sump1680 sump hole1754 jaw-hole1760 recess1764 cesspool1783 dead-hole1856 soil-tank1861 cesspit1864 lagoon1909 sewage lagoon1930 1623 H. Cockeram Eng. Dict. i Lauatrine, a square stone in a Kitchin, with a hole to auoid water, a sincker. 1847 J. O. Halliwell Dict. Archaic & Provinc. Words II Sinker, a cesspool; used in the neighbourhood of Spilsby. Linc. 1866 J. E. Brogden Provinc. Words Lincs. Sinker, a drain to carry off dirty water, etc. 1866 J. E. Brogden Provinc. Words Lincs. 182 The rat has run down the sinker-hole. 1995 J. M. Sims-Kimbrey Wodds & Doggerybaw: Lincs. Dial. Dict. 269/2 Sinker, cess-pit. IV. Chiefly North American. A person who or thing which sinks, or goes downwards. 9. a. A person who or thing which sinks in water. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > downward motion > [noun] > sinking down > sinking or submerging in liquid > one who or that which sinker1851 1851 H. Melville Moby-Dick lxxviii. 382 No sign of either the sinker or the diver. 1913 H. B. Mart Golf Farms 59 When he came to this pond hole he tossed the boy a ball and said: ‘Boy, will you find out if this is a sinker?’ 1947 M. Renick Swimming Fever iii. 36 Bill's feet stayed on the bottom. ‘What's this?’ Mike exclaimed. ‘Who'd have thought it? Bill is a sinker.’ 1990 G. G. Liddy Monkey Handlers xiii. 222 The tall guy..kept teasing the other white guy that he was a sinker an' all and couldn't really swim. 2007 J. Richman & A. Sheth Bk. of Poo 30 It is impossible to predict whether a poo will be a Floater or a Sinker until it hits the water and settles in. b. In the logging industry: a log which will not float; a sunken or partly submerged log. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > materials > raw material > wood > wood in specific form > [noun] > undressed trunk or log > types of butt log1779 upper1877 stave bolt1878 sinker1884 teak log1889 peeler1935 1884 Redwood & Lumbering in Calif. Forests 95 The well matured heartwood of the base of these trees is so solid as to sink in water—hence designated as ‘sinkers’. 1915 P. B. Kyne Cappy Ricks 28 A sinker is a heavy, close-grained clear redwood butt-log, which, if cut in the spring,..is so heavy it will not float in the mill-pond. 1969 Marine Digest 4 Jan. 6/2 Ferry manager..blamed the accident on a sinker. 2005 J. Roberts Redux 34/1 Back when floating logs downriver was a cheap way to get them to sawmills, loggers didn't worry if a few so-called ‘deadheads’ or ‘sinkers’ sunk to the bottom. 10. Baseball. A ball which drops markedly after being pitched. Occasionally also: a batted ball which drops suddenly as it reaches the fielder (now rare). ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > baseball > [noun] > pitching > types of pitch change of pace1650 slow ball1838 passed ball1860 ball1863 rib roaster1864 called ball1865 low ball1866 wild pitch1867 curveball1875 short pitch1877 grass cutter1879 fastball1883 downshoot1886 lob ball1888 pitchout1903 bean ballc1905 spitball1905 screwball1908 spitter1908 sinker ball1910 fallaway1912 meatball1912 fireball1913 roundhouse1913 forkball1923 sinker1926 knuckle ball1927 knuckler1928 gofer1932 slider1936 sailer1937 junk1941 change up1942 eephus1943 junkball1944 split-finger(ed) fastball1980 change1982 1926 N.Y. Times 4 Oct. 26 Yankee youth was served a brand of pitching they couldn't solve. They saw elusive curves and tantalizing twisters, slow sinkers and some a little slower. 1932 Baseball Mag. Oct. 496/1 Outfield skill depends a lot on the player's quickness in detecting whether it's a ‘sailer’ or a ‘sinker’. 1967 Boston Traveler 1 June 31/3 I've developed a good sinker and my fastball and curve are moving. 2007 D. Ortiz & T. Massarotti Big Papi 177 One of his best pitches was a sinker or what some guys call a two-seam fastball that usually gets the batter to hit a ground ball. 11. Windsurfing. A board of insufficient buoyancy to support a surfer when not in motion through the water. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > water sports except racing > yachting and sailing > [noun] > sailboarding > sailboard > specific type funboard1965 sinker1984 1984 Observer 8 Apr. 35/9 (advt.) Windsurf in Lefkas with Lunarscape, the real windsurfers holiday. Unlimited free choice of the newest '84 best quality equipment, from flatboards to sinkers. 1989 C. Boden Successful Windsurfing 11 There is no point in buying a sinker unless you regularly sail in winds of force 5 and over. 2007 C. Ryan in G. Jennings Water-based Tourism, Sport, Leisure, & Recreation Experiences v. 100 Honscheid..appeared at the Weymouth Speed Trials to sail a ‘sinker’ to a world record of 24.75 knots. Compounds sinker ball n. Baseball a pitch which drops markedly as it nears the home plate; cf. sense 10. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > baseball > [noun] > pitching > types of pitch change of pace1650 slow ball1838 passed ball1860 ball1863 rib roaster1864 called ball1865 low ball1866 wild pitch1867 curveball1875 short pitch1877 grass cutter1879 fastball1883 downshoot1886 lob ball1888 pitchout1903 bean ballc1905 spitball1905 screwball1908 spitter1908 sinker ball1910 fallaway1912 meatball1912 fireball1913 roundhouse1913 forkball1923 sinker1926 knuckle ball1927 knuckler1928 gofer1932 slider1936 sailer1937 junk1941 change up1942 eephus1943 junkball1944 split-finger(ed) fastball1980 change1982 1910 Portsmouth (Ohio) Daily Times 10 Mar. 11/4 They have their sneeze balls, their whiff balls, their sinker balls, their stop balls and all that line of stuff. 1960 J. Brosnan Long Season 77 It helps to have a good sinker ball, or some other special pitch that is consistently hit into the ground. 1997 Courier-Jrnl. (Louisville, Kentucky) 22 May f2/5 Relying heavily on his sinkerball, Erickson got 18 outs on groundballs, including four double plays. sinkerballer n. Baseball a pitcher who specializes in throwing sinker balls. ΚΠ 1953 San Antonio (Texas) Express 22 Apr. (Final Street ed.) 10/2 Stingy relief pitching by sinkerballer Fred Martin gave Houston a 7 to 3 victory. 1992 N. George Buppies, B-Boys, Baps & Bohos (1994) v. 305 My hero was the Yankees's underappreciated sinkerballer Mel Stottlemyre. 2005 N.Y. Times (National ed.) 25 Sept. viii. 11/4 Shortstops who play behind fly-ball pitchers will not seem as impressive as those who share a locker room with sinkerballers. sinker-bar n. (a) (in a stocking frame or knitting machine) a bar upon which the sinkers (sense 4b) are mounted; (b) Mining a heavy bar of metal attached to the upper part of a boring rod, so as to provide it with additional weight. ΚΠ a1749 G. C. Deering Nottinghamia (1751) App. 366 The sinker Bar..is about two feet three inches long, screwed to the hanging joints. 1883 Cent. Mag. July 330/1 The drilling tools consist of the ‘bit’,..the sinker-bar resembling the auger stem, and the rope-socket. 1952 D. F. Paling Warp Knitting Technol. i. 6 A forward movement of the sinker bar combined with a further downward movement of the needle bar ensures a gradual knock-over. 2015 J. P. DeGeare Guide Oilwell Fishing Operations (ed. 2) xiii. 103 The tools consist of a cable clamp with a T-bar, rope sockets for each end of the line, one or more sinker bars, [etc.]. sinker-rod n. now rare and historical a boring rod used to begin excavation of a well. ΚΠ 1875 E. H. Knight Amer. Mech. Dict. III. 2441/2 Substitute,..a short section of sinker-rod having flanges to ream the hole and keep it straight. 1947 R. P. Conkling & M. B. Conkling Butterfield Overland Mail 384 To the upper end of the sinker rod was attached a pair of iron shoes, or guides, having a play or stroke of sixteen inches. sinker-wheel n. now rare and historical (in a circular knitting machine) a wheel upon which the sinkers (sense 4b) are mounted. ΚΠ 1846 Mechanics' Mag. 17 Jan. 34/1 The sinker-wheel..serves to press down such loops as may not have been freed from the needles. 2001 D. J. Spencer Knitting Technol. (ed. 3) iii. 21 The ease of flexing and deflection of the bearded needle made the sinker wheel and straight bar frames useful for loop transfer effects. Derivatives ˈsinkerless adj. (of a fishing line) having no sinker attached. ΚΠ 1890 W. O. Stoddard Crowded out o' Crofield ii. 26 Under that bank the sinkerless line carried..its little green prisoner. 1905 Westm. Gaz. 25 Mar. 2/1 I had but to bait my line and cast it, sinkerless, into the water. 1993 News Herald (Panama City, Florida) 15 July (Sports section) 5 c/4 Have another sinkerless rig ready for one [sc. a cobia] that shows up behind the boat, or for one that follows up a hooked fish. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2019; most recently modified version published online June 2022). sinkern.2 Botany. Any of the processes of the root system of a mistletoe (or, occasionally, other parasitic plant) that grow into the tissues of the host plant; a haustorium. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular cultivated or ornamental plants > cultivated or ornamental trees and shrubs > [noun] > mistletoe > part of sinker1894 1894 W. Somerville & H. M. Ward tr. R. Hartig Text-bk. Dis. Trees i. 27 Once a year, very seldom twice, often only each alternate year, a ‘sinker’ [Ger. Senker] originates on the inner side of the cortex-root near the apex. 1938 J. S. Boyce Forest Pathol. xv. 347 From the cortical haustoria are developed the sinkers which grow radially through the inner bark to the cambium, later becoming embedded in the wood by the formation of new annual rings. 1970 W. H. Smith Tree Pathol. xxi. 220 Generally, sinkers are located within the rays of host xylem tissue, where they appear to grow coincidentally with the host. 2007 Sunday Tel. (Nexis) 9 Dec. (House & Home section) 7 A ‘sinker’, a modified root, pushes its way through a layer of bark and penetrates the ducts that run up and down the tree carrying the sugars, foods and other goodies. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2019; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.11526n.21894 |
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