释义 |
▪ I. weem|wiːm| [a. early Gael. uaim (now uaimh) cavern.] The name applied in Scotland to a cave or underground dwelling-place used by early inhabitants of the country.
1792Statist. Acc. Scot. IV. 101 An artificial cave or subterraneous passage, such as is sometimes called by the country people a weem. 1851D. Wilson Preh. Ann. I. iv. (1863) 107 The general name applied in Scotland to these subterranean habitations is Weems, from the Gaelic word uamha a cave. 1865C. W. Kett in Q. Jrnl. Sci. Apr. 247 We find in Scotland underground dwelling-places formed of large unhewn stones without cement of any kind; these are called weems. 1892D. MacRitchie Underground Life 47 It would be an easy matter for proprietors to fence in and otherwise protect existing ‘weems’. ▪ II. weem var. wame. |