释义 |
▪ I. cauld, n. Sc.|kɔːld| Also caul. A weir on a river to divert the water into a mill-lead.
1805Scott Last Minstr. ii. xiii. note, He commanded him to build a cauld or dam-head across the Tweed at Kelso. 1818Law-case (Jam.), Right to fish from the head of the Black Pool, down to the caul or dam-dyke of Milnbie. 1839Proc. Berw. Nat. Club I. 104 The whole of the water was..diverted into the mill-lead by means of a cauld or weir. ▪ II. cauld, v. Sc. [f. prec.] trans. To provide with a cauld; to dam.
1886J. Russell Remin. Yarrow ix. 294 The stones were handy for caulding the river. ▪ III. cauld Sc. form of cold, a. and n. |