释义 |
▪ I. cobbled, ppl. a.1|ˈkɒbld| [f. cobble v.1 + -ed1.] Mended or put together clumsily (esp. of shoes), patched, botched; see the vb.
1575Gascoigne Wks. (1587) 301 Learne to clout thine old cast cobled shoes. 1590Spenser F.Q. i. iv. 28. 1622 Malynes Anc. Law-Merch. 229 Old shoes, but not cobled. 1798W. Hutton Autobiog. 19 As I could not afford to pay for binding, I fastened them together in a most cobbled style. 1864Knight Passages Work. Life I. i. 120 With patched breeches and cobbled boots. ▪ II. cobbled, ppl. a.2|ˈkɒb(ə)ld| Also 5 cobled. [f. cobble n.1 or v.2 + -ed.] †1. cobbled stone = cobble-stone. Obs.
c1435Torr. P. 1298 Sir Torrent gaderid cobled stonys. 2. Paved with cobbles.
1853G. P. Morris Poems (1860) 88 The omnibuses rumble Along their cobbled way. |