释义 |
▪ I. spung, n. Sc.|spʌŋ| [? Alteration of the earlier pung n.1] A purse; a fob.
1728Ramsay Last Sp. Miser xiv, They bid us draw Our siller spungs, For this and that, to mak' them braw. 1728― General Mistake 167 [He] rarely has a shilling in his spung. 1836M. Mackintosh Cottager's Daughter 195, I to death hae some withstood To mak my spung and coffers guid. 1892J. Lumsden Sheephead & Trotters 14 [He] took an enormous gold watch from his ‘spung’ and handed it toward me. ▪ II. spung, v. Sc. [? f. prec.] trans. To rob.
1719Ramsay Ep. to Hamilton ii. xii, If that the gypsies dinna spung us. 1788R. Galloway Poems 94 If you be not very sly, They'll spung you of your watch. |