释义 |
▪ I. lire, n.1 Obs. exc. Sc. and north. dial.|laɪə(r)| Forms: 1 líra, 4–7 lyre, 4–5 Sc. lyr, (4 lere), 3– lire. [OE. líra wk. masc., of obscure origin.] Flesh, muscle, brawn.
c1000Sax. Leechd. II. 216 Þa liran þara lendena sariað. Ibid. II. 264 Breost ablawen & sar þeoh & lira. c1000ælfric Gloss. in Wr.-Wülcker 159/8 Pulpa, uel uiscum, lira. a1225Juliana 58 As þat istelet irn to limede hire ant te leac lið ba ant lire. c1330Arth. & Merl. 8202 (Kölbing) For he carf man & stiel & ire, So flesche hewer doþ flesches lire. c1375Sc. Leg. Saints xxxviii. (Adrian) 504 Scho wald haf ronnyne in þe fire, til half brynt hir bane & lyr. c1386Chaucer Sir Thopas 146 He dide next his white leere Of clooth of lake fyn and cleere A breech and eek a sherte. c1390Form of Cury (1780) 12 Take the lire of Pork and grynd it smal. 1460Lybeaus Disc. 1899 Lybeauus..smot of hys theygh, Fell, and bone, and lyre. 1483Cath. Angl. 218 Lyre of flesche, pulpa. 1513Douglas æneis vi. iv. 35 The haill bowkis of beistis, bane and lyre. 1584Hudson Du Bartas' Judith vi. (1608) 95 Ther was no sinew, Arter, vaine, nor lyre, That was not mangled with their vulgar rage. 1610Healey St. Aug. Citie of God xxi. iv. (1620) 786 A boiled Peacock was serued in and I..tooke some of the Lyre of the breast. c1817Hogg Tales & Sk. VI. 133 He never observed..the hook, which indeed was buried in the lire. a1835J. R. Wilson Tales of Borders (1837) III. 304/2 He was nae feckless smaik that, either in bane, limb, or lire. 1876Whitby Gloss., Lire, the flesh of an animal, or rather the increasing substance as it grows bulky. ‘There's a fair deal o' lire about it.’ Hence ˈliry a. Obs. exc. dial. Fleshy.
1483Cath. Angl. 218/1 Lyrye, pulposus. 1876Whitby Gloss. s.v. Lire, ‘Quite liry’, well fleshed. ▪ II. lire, n.2 rare—1. [App. due to some mistake on Scott's part, perh. a confused recollection of litre.] A supposed old French measure. (The glossaries of recent edd. say ‘a pint’.)
1823Scott Quentin D. xxxiv, ‘If you want a confessor’, said Trois-Eschelles—‘Or a lire of wine’, said his facetious companion. ▪ III. † lire, lier, v. Obs. [f. *lire, *lier, lear2.] trans. To thicken with a ‘lear’ (see lear2 2).
15..Wyl Bucke his Test. (Copland) B ij b, Take blode of a good shepe..& drawe hit with the brede & lier vp thy pot therwith but not to thicke. Ibid. Lire him vp with crustes of brede, drawne with wine. ▪ IV. lire var. leer n.1 Obs.; obs. form of lyre. ▪ V. lire pl. and obs. sing. form of lira. |