单词 | cuff |
释义 | cuffn.1ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > clothing for hands > [noun] > glove glovea1000 cuff1362 famble-cheat1567 fambler1610 turtle-dove1857 turtle1893 the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > clothing for hands > [noun] > mitten mitten1287 cuff1362 muffle1575 mitt1812 muffler1824 1362 W. Langland Piers Plowman A. vii. 56 He caste on his cloþes, i-clouted and i-hole, His cokeres and his coffus, for colde of his nayles. c1440 Promptorium Parvulorum 106 Cuffe, glove, or meteyne, mitta (J. ciroteca). 1467 in W. H. Stevenson Rec. Borough Nottingham (1883) II. 262 Unum par chirotecarum vocatarum cuffes de velwet. 2. a. An ornamental part at the bottom of a sleeve, consisting of a fold of the sleeve itself turned back, a band of linen, lace, etc. sewed on, or the like; also, the corresponding part of a shirt-sleeve, or a separate band of linen or other material worn round the wrist so as to appear under the sleeve. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > clothing for arms > [noun] > covering for wrist > cuff cuff1522 hand wrist1707 the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > parts of clothing > [noun] > covering spec parts of body > arm > parts of > cuff cuff1522 sleeve-hand?c1547 wristband1571 handcuff1591 hand wrist1707 1522 in J. Raine Testamenta Eboracensia (1884) V. 154 My velvett jacket, to make his childer patlettes and cuyffes. 1594 T. Nashe Vnfortunate Traveller sig. C4 Cleane shirts and cuffes. 1615 T. Overbury et al. New & Choise Characters with Wife (6th impr.) sig. Kv He neuer weares Cuffes. 1684 J. Wilding in C. R. L. Fletcher Collectanea (1885) I. 259 For a pair of Kuffs. 1768 L. Sterne Sentimental Journey I. 52 She laid her hand upon the cuff of my coat. 1838 C. Dickens Oliver Twist I. ii. 20 Oliver, firmly grasping his [sc. Mr. Bumble's] gold-laced cuff. 1861 A. Wynter Our Social Bees 153 He turned up his cuffs like an expert chemical lecturer. b. That part of a long glove or gauntlet which covers the wrist or part of the arm. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > clothing for hands > [noun] > glove > types of > gauntlet > part of cuff1860 1860 J. Hewitt Anc. Armour p. vii The sollerets and the cuffs of the gauntlets. c. Colloquial phrases: off the cuff (as if from notes made on the shirt-cuff) originally U.S., extempore, on the spur of the moment, unrehearsed; also attributive (with hyphens); on the cuff, (a) originally U.S. on credit; (b) New Zealand beyond what is appropriate or conventional; excessive ( a bit on the cuff perhaps influenced by rhyming collocation a bit rough); to shoot one's cuffs: see shoot v. ΘΚΠ the mind > will > intention > unintentional or unplanned character > [adverb] > in unplanned manner suddenly1340 of unwarninga1400 on, upon, rarely of, in (a) suddenty1469 casuallya1549 extemporea1556 of (upon) this sudden1572 extemporally1577 at (the or a) volley1578 on (or o') the volley1578 extrumpery1582 unpremeditately1607 extemporary1610 extempory1623 extemporarily1667 impromptu1669 ad aperturam libri1679 unpremeditatedly1694 impulsively1768 extemporaneously1791 promiscuously1791 spontaneously1799 on (also upon) the spur of the moment (or occasion, etc.)1801 spontaneous1810 promiscuous1826 improvisedly1851 off-handedly1876 at the first jet1878 off the cuff1927 off the top of one's head1939 off the wall1966 society > trade and finance > management of money > solvency > [adverb] > on credit to fristc1440 on (also upon, of) trust1509 on (also upon) credit1560 in, upon, on (the) score1568 on time1628 on or upon (the) tick1642 upon the tally1807 on the nod1882 on the slate1909 on the cuff1927 on the knocker1934 the mind > will > intention > unintentional or unplanned character > [adjective] > unplanned suddena1300 unpremeditate1551 extemporal1570 unpurposed1570 unmeditated1576 extemporate1590 unpremeditated1597 unplotted1598 extemporary1610 extemporanean1621 extempory1623 impremeditate1647 unthought1648 unresolved1649 extemporate1651 incogitate1652 unprojected1653 indeliberate1655 extemporaneous1656 indeliberated1656 autoschediastical1662 casual1667 offhanda1668 undiscourseda1670 extemporany1673 unplanned1775 impromptu1789 on (also upon) the spur of the moment (or occasion, etc.)1801 autoschediastic1809 impromptuary1827 improvised1833 extemporized1856 spontaneous1856 unconsidered1876 undevised1894 lashed-up1920 ad-libbed1933 willy-nilly1933 off the cuff1948 1938 N.Y. Panorama (Federal Writers' Project, N.Y.) vi. 157 Double talk is created by mixing plausible-sounding gibberish into ordinary conversation, the speaker keeping a straight face or dead pan and enumerating casually or off the cuff. 1941 Time (Air Express ed.) 4 Aug. 1/1 Talking off the cuff to a group of civilian-defense volunteers he made them a little homily. 1944 Penguin New Writing 20 130 In that scene, shot off the cuff in a shockingly bad light, there leapt out of the screen..something of the real human guts and dignity. 1948 Economist 3 July 17/2 Mr. Truman's off-the-cuff comment. 1960 News Chron. 6 July 7/7 He was infuriated by Mr. Macmillan's refusal to give off-the-cuff answers. d. The turn-up on a trouser leg. Chiefly U.S. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > clothing for legs > clothing for legs and lower body > [noun] > trousers > parts of > leg > turn-up trouser cuff1896 cuff1911 turn-up1925 1911 T. Eaton & Co. Catal. Spring–Summer 117 Trousers have belt loops, cuff bottoms and full width. 1917 T. Eaton & Co. Catal. Fall–Winter 369 Trousers have five pockets, belt loops and finished with cuff. 1931 W. Faulkner Sanctuary vi. 52 Scraping at his trouser-cuffs. 1947 Book Nine (Caxton Press, N.Z.) 23 He tapped [the cigarette] ash into his trouser cuff. 1968 Observer 10 Mar. 25/5 A technique which guarantees there won't be glass fragments (identifiable by spectrography) in the cuffs of the thief's trousers. 1969 Catal. J.C. Penney Fall & Winter 561 Slacks... Rugged corduroy fabric. Belt loops and cuffs. 3. A fetter for the wrist, a handcuff n. ΘΚΠ society > authority > subjection > restraint or restraining > restraint depriving of liberty > binding or fettering > [noun] > bond(s) or fetter(s) or shackle(s) > for the hands or arms copsa700 manaclec1350 handlock1532 hand-bolt1563 handcuff1649 cuff1663 Darbies1673 glim-fenders1699 government securities1707 pinion1736 ruffles1776 bracelet1817 nippers1821 handicuff1825 shangy1839 snitchers1864 come-along1874 shackle-irons1876 mitten1880 wristlet1881 snaps1891 snips1891 stringers1893 twister1910 1663 S. Butler Hudibras: First Pt. i. ii. 154 Promises that yoke The Conquerour, are quickly broke, Like Sampson's Cuffs. 1861 W. M. Thackeray On being found Out in Roundabout Papers (1876) 132 Mr. Bardolph..puts out his hands to the little steel cuffs, and walks away quite meekly. Compounds General attributive. cuff box n. ΚΠ 1883 A. Dobson Old World Idylls 17 The shoulder-knot that slept within her cuff-box. cuff button n. ΚΠ 1684 London Gaz. No. 1981/4 A Cuff Button with a Diamond of about ten grains. cuff-edge n. ΚΠ 1922 J. Joyce Ulysses i. i. [Telemachus] 6 Across the threadbare cuffedge he saw the sea hailed as a great sweet mother. cuff-link n. (also cuff-links) ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > beautification > types of ornamentation > jewellery > cuff- or sleeve-link > [noun] link1807 link-stud1881 sleeve-link1886 cuff-link1897 1897 Sears, Roebuck Catal. No. 104. 425 Solid gold Cuff Links, plain polished and raised ornamentation. 1915 ‘Bartimeus’ Tall Ship iv. 75 This liberal display of fine linen and flashing cuff-links. 1970 A. Cameron et al. Computers & Old Eng. Concordances 39 We had slugs made for print chains and finally made cuff links out of the slugs. 1971 N.Y. Times 21 Feb. 40 (advt.) Boutique cufflink collection in swivel lucite top cases. cuff string n. ΚΠ 1677 A. Wood Life & Times (1892) II. 389 For cuff strings, 8d. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1893; most recently modified version published online March 2022). cuffn.2 1. a. A blow with the fist, or with the open hand; a buffet. Cf. fisticuff n. ΘΠ the world > movement > impact > striking > striking with specific thing > [noun] > with the hand handstroke1488 hand blow?1569 cuff1570 handy blow1572 kerry-merry-buff1598 cuffing1610 handicuff1611 hander1829 society > authority > punishment > corporal punishment > [noun] > beating > a blow rapc1330 cuff1570 lamback1592 scourge1741 tinglera1804 swish1860 whomp1970 1570 P. Levens Manipulus Vocabulorum sig. Piiv/1 A Cuffe, colaphus. a1616 W. Shakespeare Taming of Shrew (1623) iii. iii. 36 This mad-brain'd bridegroome tooke him such a cuffe, That downe fell Priest and booke. View more context for this quotation 1630 R. Norton tr. W. Camden Hist. Princesse Elizabeth iv. 127 She..gaue him a cuffe on the eare. 1712 J. Addison Spectator No. 433. ¶6 Their publick Debates were generally managed with Kicks and Cuffs. 1879 Cassell's Techn. Educator (new ed.) IV. 62/1 Many a cuff did the foreman..give him for absenting himself. b. at cuffs: at blows, fighting; to go or fall to cuffs. ΘΠ society > society and the community > dissent > fighting > [phrase] at it1609 at cuffsa1616 society > society and the community > dissent > fighting > fight [verb (intransitive)] > come to blows to come to strokes1297 to fall in hand (also hands)1448 to fall to1577 come (or go), fall, get to blows1594 to go or fall to cuffsa1616 to fall, get, go to loggerheads1671 a1616 W. Shakespeare Hamlet (1623) ii. ii. 356 Vnlesse the Poet and the Player went to Cuffes in the Question. 1669 London Gaz. No. 386/4 The Contest grew so high, that they began to deside the dispute at Cuffs. 1683 Autobiog. Sir J. Bramston 140 Macedo..fell to cuffs with a Frenchman. 1711 J. Swift Lett. (1767) III. 175 He was at cuffs with a brother footman. 1720 Humourist 54 Mutatius is generally at Cuffs with himself. a1839 W. M. Praed Poems (1864) II. 225 And there were kings who never went To cuffs for half-a-crown. 2. transferred. A blow or stroke of any kind. ΘΠ the world > movement > impact > striking > [noun] > a stroke or blow dintc897 swengOE shutec1000 kill?c1225 swipc1275 stroke1297 dentc1325 touchc1325 knock1377 knalc1380 swapc1384 woundc1384 smitinga1398 lush?a1400 sowa1400 swaipa1400 wapc1400 smita1425 popc1425 rumbelowc1425 hitc1450 clope1481 rimmel1487 blow1488 dinga1500 quartera1500 ruska1500 tucka1500 recounterc1515 palta1522 nolpc1540 swoop1544 push1561 smot1566 veny1578 remnant1580 venue1591 cuff1610 poltc1610 dust1611 tank1686 devel1787 dunching1789 flack1823 swinge1823 looder1825 thrash1840 dolk1861 thresh1863 mace-blow1879 pulsation1891 nosebleeder1921 slosh1936 smackeroo1942 dab- 1610 R. Niccols Winter Nights Vision in Mirour for Magistrates (new ed.) 619 (T.) The billows rude..Cuff after cuff, the earth's green banks did batter. 1778 F. Burney Let. 21 Aug. in Early Jrnls. & Lett. (1994) III. 88 In getting out of the Coach, she had given her Cap some unlucky Cuff. 1872 J. S. Blackie Lays of Highlands 34 Granite battlements that..stiffly bear the cuffs and buffet of the strong-armed blast. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1893; most recently modified version published online March 2022). cuffn.3 slang. A contemptuous term for an old man; esp. a miserly old fellow. ΘΚΠ the world > people > person > old person > old man > [noun] old maneOE bevara1275 beauperec1300 vieillard1475 Nestor?c1510 old gentleman1526 haga1529 velyarda1529 old fellow?1555 old sire1557 granfer1564 vecchioc1570 ageman1571 grave-porer1582 grandsire1595 huddle-duddle1599 elder1600 pantaloon1602 cuffc1616 crone1630 old boya1637 codger?1738 dry-beard1749 eld1796 patriarch1819 oubaas1824 old chap1840 pap1844 pop1844 tad1877 old baas1882 senex1898 finger1904 AK1911 alte kacker1911 poppa stoppa1944 madala1960 Ntate1975 the mind > possession > retaining > niggardliness or meanness > [noun] > niggard or mean person > old or churlish chuffc1440 huddle1578 nabal1586 curmudgeon1587 cormullion1596 hunks1602 nabalite1612 cuffc1616 chuff-cat1653 codger1778 hunkster1842 sore-head1848 c1616 R. C. Times' Whistle (1871) iv. 1255 Some rich cuffe. 1699 B. E. New Dict. Canting Crew A pleasant Old Cuff, a frolicksom old Fellow. 1725 N. Bailey tr. Erasmus All Familiar Colloquies 526 Gil...I boarded with Antronius. Ja. What, with that rich old Cuff? 1760 G. Colman Polly Honeycombe i. iii. 23 Ten to one the old cuff may not stay with her. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1893; most recently modified version published online September 2019). cuffn.4 Originally Scottish. In cuff of the neck: ‘the fleshy part of the neck behind’ (Jamieson); (also) the coat collar. ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > external parts of body > neck > [noun] > back of neck napea1325 hattrelc1330 nolla1382 skull1382 polla1398 nape of the neck (also head)1440 noddle1547 niddick1558 nuke1562 nuque1578 nub1673 nod1695 cuff of the neck1740 nucha1768 scuff1787 scruff1790 scroop1850 kitchen1964 the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > clothing for body or trunk (and limbs) > [noun] > coat > parts of > collar cuff of the neck1740 storm collar1898 bolster collar1923 1740 in Inverness Cour. 29 Dec. 1883. 3/1 Mr. M.'s wife was drawn backwards by the cuff of the neck. 1823 J. Galt Ringan Gilhaize I. vii. 81 Her husband..seizing his Grace by the cuff of the neck, swung him away from her with..vehemence. 1873 E. Bulwer-Lytton Kenelm Chillingly II. iv. x. 309 I took him..by the cuff of the neck. 1876 S. Smiles Life Sc. Naturalist ii. 29 She took hold of her son by the cuff of the neck. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1893; most recently modified version published online December 2019). Cuffn.5 U.S. = Cuffee n. (in both senses). ΘΚΠ the world > people > ethnicities > division of mankind by physical characteristics > black person > [noun] AfriceOE MoorOE EthiopOE blomana1225 Ethiopiana1325 blue mana1387 Moriana1387 black mana1398 blackamoor1525 black Morian1526 black boy1530 molen1538 Nigro1548 Nigrite1554 Negro1555 neger1568 nigger1577 blackfellow1598 Kaffir1607 black1614 thick-lipsa1616 Hubsheea1627 black African1633 blackface1704 sambo1704 Cuffee1713 Nigritian1738 fellow1753 Cuff1755 blacky1759 mungo1768 Quashie1774 darkie?1775 snowball1785 blue skin1788 Moriscan1794 sooterkin1821 nigc1832 tar-brush1835–40 Jim Crow1838 sooty1838 mokec1847 dinge1848 monkey1849 Siddi1849 dark1853 nigre1853 Negroid1860 kink1865 Sam1867 Rastus1882 schvartze1886 race man1896 possum1900 shine1908 jigaboo1909 smoke1913 golliwog1916 jazzbo1918 boogie1923 jig1924 melanoderm1924 spade1928 jit1931 Zulu1931 eight ball1932 Afro1942 nigra1944 spook1945 munt1948 Tom1956 boot1957 soul brother1957 nig-nog1959 member1962 pork chop1963 splib1964 blood1965 non-voter1966 moolinyan1967 Oreo1968 boogaloo1972 pongo1972 moolie1988 the world > animals > mammals > group Unguiculata or clawed mammal > family Ursidae (bear) > [noun] > genus Ursus > ursus arctos > black bear Cuff1811 cinnamon bear1823 Cuffee1824 cinnamon1855 muskwa1861 1755 J. Hempstead Diary 26 Sept. (1998) 639 An Indian freewoman wife to Mr Tilleys Negro Cuff Died. 1811 H. M. Brackenridge Jrnl. 15 Apr. in Views Louisiana (1814) 211 They chased a she bear into a hollow tree... The chopping was renewed; madam Cuff again appeared, and was saluted as before. 1855 W. Whitman Leaves of Grass 16 Growing among black folks as among white, Kanuck, Tuckahoe, Congressman, Cuff. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1972; most recently modified version published online June 2018). cuffv.1 1. a. transitive. To strike with the fist, or with the open hand; to buffet. ΘΚΠ society > authority > punishment > corporal punishment > administer corporal punishment [verb (transitive)] > beat threshOE beatc1000 to lay on?c1225 chastise1362 rapa1400 dressc1405 lack?c1475 paya1500 currya1529 coil1530 cuff1530 baste1533 thwack1533 lick1535 firka1566 trounce1568 fight1570 course1585 bumfeage1589 feague1589 lamback1589 lambskin1589 tickle1592 thrash1593 lam1595 bumfeagle1598 comb1600 fer1600 linge1600 taw1600 tew1600 thrum1604 feeze1612 verberate1614 fly-flap1620 tabor1624 lambaste1637 feak1652 flog1676 to tan (a person's) hide1679 slipper1682 liquora1689 curry-comb1708 whack1721 rump1735 screenge1787 whale1790 lather1797 tat1819 tease1819 larrup1823 warm1824 haze1825 to put (a person) through a course of sprouts1839 flake1841 swish1856 hide1875 triangle1879 to give (a person or thing) gyp1887 soak1892 to loosen (a person's) hide1902 the world > movement > impact > striking > striking with specific thing > strike with specific thing [verb (transitive)] > with the hand colaphizec1450 cuff1530 1530 J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 502/2 I cuffe one, I pomell hym about the heed, Je torche. 1570 P. Levens Manipulus Vocabulorum sig. Piiv/1 To Cuffe, colaphizare. a1616 W. Shakespeare Henry VI, Pt. 1 (1623) i. iv. 47 Priest, beware your Beard, I meane to tugge it, and to cuffe you soundly. View more context for this quotation 1677 T. D'Urfey Madam Fickle v. 54 Sirra, you shall be hufft and cufft, and flip'd and kick'd. 1781 F. Burney Early Jrnls. & Lett. (2003) IV. 453 I think a man deserves to be Cuffed for saying any lady will marry him. 1872 W. Black Strange Adventures Phaeton iv. 42 She ran out..and cuffed the boys' ears. b. transferred. To beat, strike, buffet. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > impact > striking > strike [verb (transitive)] swingc725 slayc825 knockc1000 platOE swengea1225 swipa1225 kill?c1225 girdc1275 hitc1275 befta1300 anhitc1300 frapa1330 lushc1330 reddec1330 takec1330 popc1390 swapa1400 jod?14.. quella1425 suffetc1440 smith1451 nolpc1540 bedunch1567 percuss1575 noba1586 affrap1590 cuff?1611 doda1661 buffa1796 pug1802 nob1811 scud1814 bunt1825 belt1838 duntle1850 punt1886 plunk1888 potch1892 to stick one on1910 clunk1943 zonk1950 society > society and the community > dissent > fighting > fight [verb (intransitive)] > fight with fists fist?a1300 cuff?1611 fistify1860 to go the knuckle1944 ?1611 G. Chapman tr. Homer Iliads xv. 575 Like a wave..that..down doth come And cuff a ship. a1649 W. Drummond Poems (1656) 188 The angry Winds not aye Do cuff the roaring Deep. 1855 Ld. Tennyson Maud vi. i, in Maud & Other Poems 24 The budded peaks of the wood..Caught and cuff'd by the gale. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > prosperity > success > mastery or superiority > have or gain mastery or superiority over [verb (transitive)] > overcome or defeat shendc893 overwinOE overheaveOE mate?c1225 to say checkmatea1346 vanquishc1366 stightlea1375 outrayc1390 to put undera1393 forbeat1393 to shave (a person's) beardc1412 to put to (also at, unto) the (also one's) worsec1425 adawc1440 supprisec1440 to knock downc1450 to put to the worsta1475 waurc1475 convanquish1483 to put out1485 trima1529 convince1548 foil1548 whip1571 evict1596 superate1598 reduce1605 convict1607 defail1608 cast1610 banga1616 evince1620 worst1646 conquer1655 cuffa1657 trounce1657 to ride down1670 outdo1677 routa1704 lurcha1716 fling1790 bowl1793 lick1800 beat1801 mill1810 to row (someone) up Salt River1828 defeat1830 sack1830 skunk1832 whop1836 pip1838 throw1850 to clean out1858 take1864 wallop1865 to sock it to1877 whack1877 to clean up1888 to beat out1893 to see off1919 to lower the boom on1920 tonk1926 clobber1944 ace1950 to run into the ground1955 a1657 G. Daniel Idyllia in Poems (1878) IV. i. 32 The fabled Monsters, wch Sr Bevis oft Vanquisht in fight, and our St George has Cufft. 1791 J. Boswell Life Johnson anno 1769 I. 325 Johnson: I'll take you five children from London, who shall cuff five Highland children. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > birds > actions or bird defined by > [verb (intransitive)] > strike or buffet with wings cuff1626 the world > animals > birds > actions or bird defined by > [verb (transitive)] > strike or buffet with wings cuff1626 1626 G. Sandys tr. Ovid Metamorphosis xiii. 270 [They] Their opposites with beake and tallons rend; Cuffe with their wings. 1647 N. Bacon Hist. Disc. Govt. 171 He hauked at all manner of game..till at length being well cuft and plumed, he was faine to yoke his lawlesse will under the grand charter. 1682 T. Otway Venice Preserv'd ii. 17 Those Lazy-Owls..Sit only watchful..To cuff down new fledg'd Virtues. 1687 J. Dryden Hind & Panther iii. 141 The Pigeons..with their Quills..cuff'd the tender Chickens from their food. 1725 W. Broome in A. Pope et al. tr. Homer Odyssey I. ii. 179 They [two eagles] cuff, they tear, their cheeks and necks they rend. 3. absol. or intransitive. To deal or exchange blows; to fight, scuffle. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > impact > striking > strike or deliver blows [verb (intransitive)] slay971 smitelOE flatc1330 flap1362 acoupc1380 frapa1400 girda1400 hit?a1400 knocka1400 swap?a1400 wapa1400 castc1400 strike1509 befta1522 to throw about one1590 cuff1596 to let down1640 dunch1805 yark1818 bunt1867 1596 [implied in: E. Spenser Second Pt. Faerie Queene iv. iv. 29 Most cuffling [1611 cuffing] close, now chacing to and fro. (at cuffle v.)]. 1675 C. Cotton Poet. Wks. (1765) 223 I'll cuff with thee for twenty Pound. 1675 C. Cotton Poet. Wks. (1765) 224 To prate, And cuff it out at Billingsgate. 1693 G. Stepney tr. Juvenal in J. Dryden et al. tr. Juvenal Satires viii. 160 While the Peers Cuff, to make the Rabble sport. 1812 Sporting Mag. 39 153 All those who choose..in a ring with him to cuff. 1886 J. K. Jerome Idle Thoughts (ed. 58) 128 Shrill-voiced women cuff, and curse, and nag. 4. transitive. To discuss, talk over (a tale, matter); also, to tell (a tale). dialect. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > speech > speak, say, or utter [verb (transitive)] > discuss (a topic) talka1387 rolla1413 descant?1532 to speak to ——1610 to speak unto ——1639 to go into ——1697 cuff1746 to speak on ——1819 tongue1841 1746 Exmoor Scolding (ed. 3) ii. 15 Oll vor..cuffing a Tale. 1854 A. E. Baker Gloss. Northants. Words I. 165 The personal appearance and behaviour of Miss H —— was cuffed over at the ball. 1867 W. F. Rock Jim an' Nell cx. 31 Let's cuff another tale. 1891 R. P. Chope Dial. Hartland, Devonshire 39 Cuff over, to talk over, discuss. ‘Let's ha' a pipe an' cuff it auver.’ Derivatives ˈcuffing n. and adj. (In quot. 1610 figurative = contending, opposing.) ΘΚΠ the world > movement > impact > striking > beating or repeated striking > [noun] > specific object a person threshingOE sousingc1580 rib-roast1595 basting1599 swingeing1603 cuffing1610 lamming1611 rib-roasting1613 mauling1621 pinking1637 drubbing1650 diverberation1651 verberation1661 trimming1675 rib1699 thrashing1720 dousing1721 fagging1746 bumping1751 dusting1799 clapperclawing1806 milling1806 hiding1809 punishment1811 doing1814 bethumping1831 mugging1846 jacketing1850 frailing1851 pasting1851 towelling1851 tanning1863 fum-fum1885 ribbing1894 paddywhack1898 tanking1905 beating-up1915 shellacking1931 sloshing1931 clobbering1948 twatting1963 duffing-up1967 the world > movement > impact > striking > striking with specific thing > [noun] > with the hand handstroke1488 hand blow?1569 cuff1570 handy blow1572 kerry-merry-buff1598 cuffing1610 handicuff1611 hander1829 1610 King James VI & I Speach Whitehall xxj. March 1609 sig. C4 There are diuers crosse and cuffing Statutes, and some so penned, as they may be taken in diuers, yea contrary sences. a1680 S. Butler Genuine Remains (1759) II. 32 In Cuffing, all Blows are aimed at the Face. 1740 S. Richardson Pamela II. 257 I have but just escaped a good Cuffing. 1885 R. F. Burton tr. Arabian Nights' Entertainm. II. xxxv. 16 Give her a sound cuffing. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1893; most recently modified version published online March 2022). cuffv.2 rare. transitive. To put cuffs on; to handcuff; see cuff n.1 3. ΘΚΠ society > authority > subjection > restraint or restraining > restraint depriving of liberty > binding or fettering > bind, fetter, or shackle [verb (transitive)] > by the hands or arms manaclea1350 pinion1556 handfast1587 handlock1587 pinno1596 immanacle1637 handcuff1649 cuff1693 hand-bolt1702 1693 N. Luttrell Diary in Brief Hist. Relation State Affairs (1857) III. 1 He was cuff'd and shackled with irons, and committed to Newgate. 1851 F. Palgrave Hist. Normandy & Eng. I. 555 Taken prisoner, cuffed and stripped. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1893; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.11362n.21570n.3c1616n.41740n.51755v.11530v.21693 |
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