释义 |
sou'-ˈwester Also sou'wester, sou-wester. [Reduced form of south-wester n.] 1. = south-wester n. 1.
1838P. Hawker Diary (1893) II. 157 Frost ended in a set in of dirty sou'-wester, with a constant batch of wind and rain. 1894W. E. Norris St. Ann's I. 180 One of those steady, relentless sou'-westers, accompanied by sheets of rain. 2. = south-wester n. 2.
1837P. Hawker Diary (1893) II. 130, I shipped my sou-wester and went fishing. 1848Dickens Dombey xxxii, He also provided Rob with a species of hat,..which is usually termed a sou'wester. 1870Thornbury Tour rd. Eng. II. xxviii. 239 [The] men have their shiny-yellow sou'-westers pulled down over their brows. b. attrib., = south-wester n. 2 b.
1842Dickens Amer. Notes (1850) 13/1 When the captain comes down again, in a sou'-wester hat tied under his chin, and a pilot-coat. 1860C. A. Collins Eyewitness 120 It is a neighbourhood of canvas trousers and sou'-wester hats. 3. Naut. (See quot., and cf. nor'-wester 2.)
1848B. D. Walsh Aristoph. 40 note, Half-and-half was equivalent to what seamen call a sou'-wester, that is to say, half rum and the rest rum-and-water. Hence sou'-ˈwestered a., wearing a sou'-wester.
1891Harper's Mag. July 179/1 That unseasonably sou'-westered man at the wheel. |