释义 |
▪ I. blooding, vbl. n.|ˈblʌdɪŋ| [f. blood v.] 1. The letting of blood, bleeding; wounding with loss of blood.
1597Lowe Chyrurg. (1634) 369 Blouding, which the Greekes call Phlebotomia. 1651Wittie tr. Primrose's Pop. Err. iv. 255 Bloodding is never good for a Flegmatick man. 1741Monro Anat. (ed. 3) 68 Surgeons..trust to the Blooding. 1852James Pequinillo I. 97 The young baronet..received, himself, a far more severe blooding. attrib.1685Lond. Gaz. No. 2079/4 A Chesnut Mare..with a swelling on her neck, about her blooding place. 2. The action of giving hounds a first taste of and appetite for blood (see blood v. 3).
1875‘Stonehenge’ Brit. Sports i. ii. iv. §5. 175 The necessity for blooding the hounds is the..most immediate object of cub-hunting. 1876G. J. Whyte-Melville Katerfelto xxv. 273 The honour of blooding a pack of hounds. ▪ II. † ˈblooding, n. Obs. [f. blood n., app. after pudding; cf. blacking, livering.] A black-pudding.
c1460Towneley Myst. 89 Oure mete now begyns..Two blodynges, I trow, a liveryng betwene. 1562Apol. Priv. Masse (1850) 10 Will ye inhibit the folks to eat bloodings, or pigeons, or capons, such as are killed by stifling? 1639Horn & Robotham Gate Lang. Unl. xxxvi, The pudding-maker..maketh puddings and sawsages..chitterlings, liverings, bluddings. 1783Ainsworth Lat. Dict. (Morell) 1, A blooding, or blood pudding, apexabo. |