释义 |
rush-bush Also 5 reschebusk, 6 resche-bush, 8–9 dial. rex-bush; Sc. 6 rysche-, rasch(e)-bus(s), 8–9 rash-buss, -bush. [f. rush n.1 Cf. G. ruschbusch.] A tuft of rushes. In early Scottish use common in a proverbial expression denoting the strict suppression of cattle-lifting.
c1425in Wr.-Wülcker 645 Hec papirio, reschebusk. 1529Lyndesay Compl. 408, Ihone Upeland bene full blyith, I trow, Because the rysche bus kepis his kow. 1596Dalrymple tr. Leslie's Hist. Scot. II. 77 This prouerb of him [James II] in the cuntrie was commoun: He garis the rasche bus keip the kow. a1649Drummond of Hawthornden Hist. Jas. V, Wks. (1711) 114 The Poor Man loved him, the Great feared him: He made the Rush-Bushes keep the Herds of Cattel. 1746Exmoor Scolding (E.D.S.) 38 Rex-bush!—Fath! tell me o' tha Rexbush. 1785Burns Address to Deil vii, Ye, like a rash-buss, stood in sight. 1833Carlyle in Froude (1882) II. 387 Remember always what you said of the rush-bush here at Puttock on the wayside. 1898J. MacManus Bend of Road 149 All who are..on the Ocean with no rush-bush to hould by when the storms come up. |