释义 |
swain \ˈswān\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English swain, swayne, swein boy, servant, from Old Norse sveinn; akin to Old English swān herdsman, peasant, swain, Old High German swein herdsman, swain, giswīo brother-in-law, Lithuanian svaine sister-in-law, Latin suus one's own — more at suicide 1. obsolete : boy, man 2. : one who lives and works in the country : rustic, peasant < the sluggish clod, which the rude swain turns with his share — W.C.Bryant > specifically : shepherd 3. : a male admirer or suitor < the many swains … besieging her from every noon to every midnight — Upton Sinclair > 4. : one having a freehold within a forest |