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单词 woold
释义

wooldn.

/wuːld/
Forms: 1600s wolde, would, 1800s woold.
Etymology: Related to woold v.
Nautical.
= woolding n.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > equipment of vessel > ropes or chains other than rigging or cable > [noun] > binding cord or rope
woolder1548
woolding1589
woold cord1628
woold1688
1628 MS Accts. Toke Estate (Kent) For making 16 lbs of hempe into a wolde rope. 4/-.
1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory (1905) iii. xv. 43/1 The Would or wouldings of the mast or yard: is the ropes about them to keep on a fish.

Compounds

attributive in woold cord, woold rope (cf. West Flemish oelkorde): binding cord or rope.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > equipment of vessel > ropes or chains other than rigging or cable > [noun] > binding cord or rope
woolder1548
woolding1589
woold cord1628
woold1688
1628 MS Accts. Toke Estate (Kent) For making 16 lbs of hempe into a wolde rope. 4/-.
1639 MS Accts. Toke Estate (Kent) lf. 202 A payer of would ropps.
1805 R. W. Dickson Pract. Agric. II. 775 [Bundles of weld plants] are tied up by a string made for the purpose, and sold under the title of woold cord.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1928; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

wooldv.

/wuːld/
Forms: α. 1600s woll (past tense and past participle wolled, woolled), 1800s wool; β. 1600s– would, 1700s– woold (1800s wowld, wold).
Etymology: The late appearance of this word suggests that it is a back-formation < woolding n., but it was probably a late Middle English adoption of Middle Low German wolen, wölen (Low German wölen, past participle wöld), Middle Dutch woelen ‘premere..constringere, torquere’ (Kilian), Dutch woelen to woold (whence German wuhlen, wulen, Danish vule), also Dutch bewoelen (German bewuhlen), Flemish woeln, oelin to bind round with cord or rope, West Frisian woelje to wind. (Further relations are uncertain.) The infinitive forms would, woold appear to be due to the influence of the past tense and participle.
a. transitive (Nautical). To wind rope or chain round (a mast or the like) to strengthen it where it is broken or where (being made of two or more pieces) it is fished or scarfed. Also said of the rope.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > shipbuilding and repairing > build a ship [verb (transitive)] > fit out or equip > ropework operations
splice1524
woold1616
stovea1625
parcel1625
serve1627
point1644
thrum1711
long-splice1863
α.
1616 R. Cocks Diary (1883) I. 96 The master sent hym to tell me the mast was wolled.
1622 R. Hawkins Observ. Voiage South Sea xxxvi. 88 Wee woolled the two byghtes to the shanke.
1622 R. Hawkins Observ. Voiage South Sea lxi. 147 This time..we imployed..in fishing and wolling our mastes and yards.
1674 J. Josselyn Acct. Two Voy. 5 We found the head of our mainmast..shivered and the fore-top-mast crackt; So they wolled them both.
β. 1644 H. Mainwaring Sea-mans Dict. 116 To Would: or Woulding is to bind Roapes about any Mast, yard, or the like, to keepe on a fish, or somewhat to strengthen it.1691 T. Hale Acct. New Inventions 35 With her whole Body woulded about with Hawsers for preventing her very sides falling out.1730 W. Wriglesworth MS. Log-bk. of ‘Lyell’ 30 Oct. Yesterday in the afternoon stowed the Lazaretta, and this morning Woolded the Main Mast.1750 T. R. Blanckley Naval Expositor 110 Nails, Woolding, drove through the Ropes that Woold the Ship's Masts.1804 Ld. Nelson Let. 27 Aug. in Dispatches & Lett. (1846) VI. 172 You will use every dispatch in woolding and securing the foremast.1842 F. Marryat Percival Keene II. ii. 160 Our main-mast had received so many shot, that we were obliged to wold it for its support.
b. gen. To wrap or bind round.
ΘΠ
the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > covering > wrapping > wrap [verb (transitive)]
bewindOE
writheOE
windc1175
bewrap?c1225
lapa1300
umbelaya1300
umbeweave1338
wlappec1380
enwrapa1382
wrapa1382
inlap1382
envelop1386
forwrapc1386
hapc1390
umbeclapa1400
umbethonrea1400
umblaya1400
wapc1420
biwlappea1425
revolve?a1425
to roll up?a1425
roll?c1425
to roll ina1475
wimple1513
to wind up?1533
invest1548
circumvolve1607
awrap1609
weave1620
sheet1621
obvolve1623
embowdle1625
amict1657
wry1674
woold1775
overwrap1815
wrapper1885
wrapper1905
weve-
the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > fastening > binding or tying > bind or tie [verb (transitive)] > bind > bind round or about
uptrussc1340
betiea1556
circumlige1572
circumligate1599
obligatec1600
gird1602
woold1775
1775 B. Romans Conc. Nat. Hist. E. & W. Florida App. 65 Keeping your lead going, till you come on soundings so soft that the lead will bring none of the mud up, unless it be woolded with canvas.
1823 E. Moor Suffolk Words 497 Woulders, bandages. ‘Teent quite well, I'm forced to keep the woulders on.’ Wowld is also used as a verb.
1834 F. Marryat Peter Simple III. v. 67 A carronade, well woulded up.
1837 E. Howard Old Commodore xiv This love of a sail was woulded, with studied accuracy, by brilliant, black, and very narrow ribbon.
1847 J. O. Halliwell Dict. Archaic & Provinc. Words II Wool..(2) To twist a chain round a refractory horse to render him obedient. Kent.
1890 W. C. Russell Nelson 62 Her hull was kept together by cables, which frapped or woolded the fabric from stem to stern.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1928; most recently modified version published online December 2020).
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n.1628v.1616
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