| 单词 | hake | 
| 释义 | haken.1 1.   a.  Any of various cod-like gadoid fishes of the genus  Merluccius or (more widely) the family  Merlucciidae; esp. M. merluccius (more fully  European hake), which is found in the Eastern Atlantic from Iceland to North Africa, and in parts of the Mediterranean. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > fish > class Osteichthyes or Teleostomi > superorder Paracanthopterygii > order Gadiformes (cod) > 			[noun]		 > family Gadidae > merlucius or hake hake1225 luce of the sea1598 sea-pike1601 Jacka1625 whiting1735 beard1758 stockfish1823 sea-luce1880–4 1225–6    in  C. M. Woolgar Househ. Accts. Medieval Eng. 		(1992)	 I. 128  				Hake xviii d. Salmo xii d. Flundre et anguille iiii d. a1425						 (a1399)						    Forme of Cury 		(BL Add.)	 97 in  C. B. Hieatt  & S. Butler Curye on Inglysch 		(1985)	 119  				Gynggaudy. Take the poke and the lyuour of haddok, codlyng, and hake, and of ooþer fisshe. 1555    R. Eden tr.  Peter Martyr of Angleria Decades of Newe Worlde f. 273  				A fysshe..whiche wee caule haddockes or hakes. 1624    J. Smith Gen. Hist. Virginia  vi. 212  				Hake you may haue when the Cod failes in Summer. 1699    R. Sibbald Provision for Poor iii. 23  				The Sea Bream, the Sand Eel, the Hake,..the Heckleback, [etc.]. 1739    London & Country Jrnl. 15 May  				That Bank, and the Sea-Coast adjacent, abounding with great Store of Cod, Hake, Ling, Turbet, and other choice Fish. 1842    J. E. De_Kay Nat. Hist. N.Y. 282  				The European Hake is abundant on the west coast of Ireland. 1885    Standard Nat. Hist. III. 275  				The popular name current in England is hake, but in the United States the prefix ‘silver’ is generally added, to distinguish it from the species of Phycis... It is also frequently called whiting, New England whiting, or Old England hake. 1921    G. C. L. Howell Ocean Res. & Great Fisheries xx. 109  				Hake are ‘easily scared’; ‘very sensitive to heavy fishing’; ‘easily fished out’—and so forth. 1970    E. J. March Inshore Craft Great Brit. II. v. 195  				Until well after the mid-nineteenth century hake from its abundance was classed [in Cornwall] as 'rabble'. 2007    Tate Etc. Spring 105/2  				Later the bottom-living white fishes such as hake, redfish and cod showed unmistakable signs of reproductive failure.  b.  Any of several other gadoid fishes; esp.		 (a) any fishes of the genera  Phycis and  Urophycis (family  Phycidae), found on the coast of North America;		 (b) (chiefly Australian and New Zealand) the rock cod,  Lotella rhacina (family  Moridae). ΚΠ 1769    T. Pennant Brit. Zool. 		(new ed.)	 III.  iv. 159  				We therefore have given this species the name of the Lesser Hake. 1871    F. W. Hutton Fishes N.Z. 116  				No. 74 (Lotella rhacinus)..has been termed the Hake. 1883    Cassell's Nat. Hist. V. 274  				The greater Fork Beard or Forked Hake..a rare fish in British seas, but ranges round the European coasts and into the Mediterranean. 1885    Standard Nat. Hist. III. 273  				Three species are common along the eastern American coast, Phycis chuss, Phycis tenuis, and Phycis regius. The first two are of some economical importance..they are generally known as hakes. 1909    Science 25 June 985/1  				[He]..chanced to open a large hake (Urophycis tenuis) in the course of his search for parasitic worms. 1966    Encycl. N.Z. I. 373  				The Cloudy Bay cod (Lotella rhacinus), also known as rock cod and southern hake, is rather more brown and lacks the dark blotch by the pectoral fin [of the red cod]. 2013    Ecol. Applic. 23 383/1  				Some species at lower trophic levels, such as herring [or] red hake (Urophycis chuss)..had higher abundances than in the unfished state. ΚΠ 1574    J. Baret Aluearie H 1  				Haake fishe, Fagrus, vel Pagrus.  3.  English regional (Yorkshire). A greedy or covetous person. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the mind > will > wish or inclination > desire > inordinate or excessive desire > 			[noun]		 > inordinate desire of possessions > one who has yisserc1200 puttocka1500 Mammon1622 grasperc1628 snig1629 suck-egg1685 esurient1691 gripe-all1823 hake1855 1855    F. K. Robinson Gloss. Yorks. Words 78  				‘A greedy hake’, a grasping discontented person. 1876    C. C. Robinson Gloss. Words Dial. Mid-Yorks.  				Hake..also, a grasping, covetous person. 1928    A. E. Pease Dict. Dial. N. Riding Yorks. 56/2  				Hake/Heeak, an importunate person, a beggar, a grasping person. ‘A greedy hake.’ Compounds C1.   General attributive, as  hake fishing,  hake industry,  hake net, etc. ΚΠ a1450    in  T. Austin Two 15th-cent. Cookery-bks. 		(1888)	 16 (MED)  				Gyngaudre. Take þe Lyuerys of Codlyngys, Haddok, Elys, or þe Hake hed, or Freysshe Mylwell hedys. 1809    W. Nicholson Brit. Encycl. III. at Gadus  				On the coasts of Brittany an extensive hake fishery is carried on. 1892    A. M. Clerke Familiar Stud. Homer vii. 184  				The admixture of perch with tunny and hake-bones in the prehistoric waste-heaps at Hissarlik. 1895    ‘J. Bickerdyke’ in  ‘J. Bickerdyke’ et al.  Sea Fishing (Badminton Libr. of Sports & Pastimes) 152  				A large hake hook. 1904    36th Ann. Rep. Dept. Marine & Fisheries 		(Canada)	 1903 (Sessional Paper No. 22) App.  i. 102  				The hake fishing amounts to quite an industry in his district during the summer months. 1977    A. R. Mitchell in  E. E. Rich  & C. H. Wilson Cambr. Econ. Hist. Europe V. iii. 140  				Herring nets needed smaller meshes than mackerel nets, hake nets were different yet again. 2015    Africa News 		(Nexis)	 5 June  				The hake industry today has the capacity to catch and process 300,000 tonnes of fish per year.  C2.     hake's dame  n. English regional(Cornwall; now rare) a gadoid fish, the greater forkbeard,  Phycis blennioides. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > fish > class Osteichthyes or Teleostomi > superorder Paracanthopterygii > order Gadiformes (cod) > 			[noun]		 > family Gadidae > member of genus Phycis (fork-beard) goatfish1613 forked-bearda1705 hake's dame1823 fork-beard1864 1823    Trans. Linn. Soc. 14 75  				Greater forked Beard. B[lennius] Phycis... The Cornish fishermen call it the Hake's Dame. 1883    Sc. Naturalist Oct. 55  				According to Jewyns and Yarrell, this species was first described as British by the late Mr. Iago, on the Cornish coast, where it is not common, and it is there called the Hake's Dame. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2019; most recently modified version published online March 2022). haken.2 1.  Originally Scottish. A hook; spec. one used to suspend a pot or kettle over a fire. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > food manufacture and preparation > equipment for food preparation > cooking vessel or pot > 			[noun]		 > bar or chain for hanging rack1391 reckon1400 hake1402 kilp1425 pot-clip1459 pothangles1468 reckon-crook1469 kettle-hook1485 rax1519 pot hangings1521 pot hangerc1525 pot-crookc1530 pot-hook1530 trammel1537 pot-kilp1542 gallow-balk1583 hale1589 hanger1599 pot-keep1611 pot rack1619 reckon hook1645 ratten crook1665 winter1668 rantle1671 cotterel1674 rantle-tree1685 rannel-balk1781 sway1825 rannel-perch1855 1402    in  J. Stuart  & G. Burnett Exchequer Rolls Scotl. 		(1880)	 III. 544  				Costagiis factis super tronam... Item, for hakis and rapis, xij d. 1488    in  T. Dickson Accts. Treasurer Scotl. 		(1877)	 I. 100  				For cordis and hakkis and ryngis to hyng vp the claythis. 1546    in  J. B. Paul Accts. Treasurer Scotl. 		(1908)	 VIII. 439  				For haikkis and nalis to hing the said tapiȝare. 1592    in  D. Yaxley Researcher's Gloss. Hist. Documents E. Anglia 		(2003)	 2  				The angers in the chemny with the haks. 1658    W. Style Narrationes Modernæ 95  				He declares for taking away tria suspendia, Anglice, Pot-hooks, or Hakes. 1706    Phillips's New World of Words 		(new ed.)	  				Hake, a Pot-hook. 1795    European Mag. & London Rev. Sept. 212/1  				The tea-kettle, and the hake on which it was suspended. 1806    R. Bloomfield Wild Flowers 35  				On went the boilers till the hake Had much ado to bear 'em. a1825    R. Forby Vocab. E. Anglia 		(1830)	  				Hake, a pothook. 1920    D. C. Beard Amer. Boys Handybk. Camp-lore & Woodcraft iv. 61  				The hake..is a forked stick like the pot-claw, but in place of the notch near the lower end a nail is driven diagonally into the stick and the kettle hung on the nail. 1985    O. Sharkey Old Days, Old Ways 		(1987)	 ii. 30  				The pole spanned the width of the chimney.., and carried all the major fire-irons, such as pot hangers and hakes.  2.  Originally English regional (East Anglian). A device by means of which a horse, tractor, etc., is hitched to a plough; = cops n. 3. Also: a device on a foot plough which allows the depth of ploughing to be regulated. Now rare (chiefly historical). ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > farming > tools and implements > ploughing equipment > 			[noun]		 > plough > part to which draught attached plough shackle?c1475 plough-ear1510 cock?1523 ear?1523 muzzle1534 cutwith1565 tractory1607 plough-cock1652 plough-head1733 hake1787 bridle1790 drail1811 gallows1840 plough clevis1846 1787    W. Marshall Provincialisms in  Rural Econ. Norfolk II. 381  				Hakes, the copse or draught-irons of a plow. 1823    E. Moor Suffolk Words 161  				Hake, the dentated iron head of a foot-plough, serving to adjust the depth to which the land is to be stirred. 1846    Jrnl. Royal Agric. Soc. 7  i. 34  				One end [of the chain] being fastened to the ‘hake’ of the plough, and the other to the top of the coulter. 1905    Mackay 		(Queensland)	 Mercury 17 Jan.  				The ploughman is..compelled to shift the draught-pin in the bridle or hake of the plough, until the draught-chains come into line between the shoulder-hooks and centre of resistance of the plough. 1940    Huon & Derwent 		(Austral.)	 Times 5 Dec. 1/4  				If the hitch at the hake is too low, the front of the plough will ride high. 1990    Times 20 Oct. 19/7  				I am trying hard to remember all the names of the parts of the plough so that if I am asked, ‘How far yer hake's snotched over?’.., I shall be able to hold my own. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2019; most recently modified version published online March 2022). haken.3ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > textile manufacture > manufacture of thread or yarn > 			[noun]		 > spinning > spinning wheel > other parts hake1502 temper-pin1788 heck1824 chase1902 1502    in  E. Beveridge Burgh Rec. Dunfermline 		(1917)	 123  				The vrangvis withthaldin of..ane haik, ane quheill and j par of kardis, j par of kamys,..ane schotill [etc.]. 1624    in  M. Wood Extracts Rec. Burgh Edinb. 		(1931)	 VI. 259  				Nyne small quheilles with the spynnelles and haiks thairof. 1893    C. Millar in  D. H. Edwards Mod. Sc. Poets 15th Ser. 401  				As weel from weaver bodies take Twa best knags out o' ilka haik.  2.  Scottish. A rack to hold fodder for cattle or other animals. Also in  †to live at hake and manger: to live in plenty, to live the good life (obsolete). Cf. hack n.4 1,  heck n.1 3. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > providing or receiving food > feeding animals > 			[noun]		 > fodder rack cribOE hatchlOE cratch?c1225 rack1343 mangerc1350 heckc1420 hake1551 stand heck1570 hack1612 meat rack1744 hay-rack1825 1551    in  J. D. Marwick Extracts Rec. Burgh Edinb. 		(1871)	 II. 158  				That all maner of stabillaris..haue thair stabillis weill and sufficientlie furnist with haik and maynger. 1636    in  W. Stevenson Presbyterie Bk. Kirkcaldie 		(1900)	 102  				Item for two dealls to be ane maunger, 18 sh. Item for ane trie to be ane haik, 15 sh. 1710    A. Grant Let. 17 June in  W. Fraser Chiefs of Grant 		(1883)	 II. 93  				Lett there be boards betwixt the haick and the manger, that the dust may..not fall in the manger. 1768    A. Ross Fortunate Shepherdess  iii. 109  				At hake an' manger Jean an ye sall live. 1855    J. C. Morton Cycl. Agric. II. (Gloss.) 723/2  				Hecks or Hakes (Lothians), sparred boxes for holding fodder for sheep. 1872    W. Philip It'll a' come Richt ii. 24  				Like some men's wives that I see, that live at hake and manger an' flichter aboot ilka day like butterflees in silks and falderals. 1891    J. MacDonald Stephens's Bk. of Farm 		(ed. 4)	 III. 387/2  				Haiks to be fitted over troughs in byres and in cattle-courts. 1908    Trans. Highland & Agric. Soc. Scotl. 20 166  				He has always fresh hay in an iron-covered haik. 1955    Bulletin 		(Glasgow)	 11 Jan.  				The farm worker clumping about in hob-nailed boots filling troughs with neeps and haiks with straw. 2015    J. Yeadon Telling Tales iv. 17  				She [sc. a cow] tugs out straw from the wooden haiks.  3.  Scottish.  a.  A triangular frame set with wooden or metal spikes, on which fish are hung for drying. Cf. hack n.4 3. Now somewhat rare. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > food manufacture and preparation > preparation for table or cooking > preparation of seafood > 			[noun]		 > drying frame or stick stage1535 hake1609 flake1623 fish-flake1767 fishing-flake1861 fish stick1875 1609    in  J. D. Marwick Rec. Convent. Royal Burghs Scotl. 		(1870)	 II. 282  				Restraynning..of vnfremen, packeris of hering and fische in the haikis and Randersoun heawin. 1835    H. Miller Scenes & Legends N. Scotl. 279  				Here's a gay fresh codling on Nannie's hake. 1890    A. T. Matthews in  D. H. Edwards Mod. Sc. Poets 13 Ser. 276  				Hung like haddocks on a hake. 1930    Scotsman 10 Mar. 7  				The wooden frame is called, in Angus, Aberdeen and Kincardine, a hake. It is a triangular frame studded with wooden spikes on which the fish are impaled through the eye. I do not think it is known in the South of Scotland. 1992    D. Toulmin Coll. Short Stories 28  				Leaving a fish to dry on the hake by the kitchen door.  b.  A wooden rack suspended from a roof, used for drying cheeses (cf. hack n.4 3,  heck n.1 4). Also more generally: a rack used for storing plates, pans, etc., or for drying clothes. Now rare.Recorded earliest in cheese haik (cf. cheeseheck n. at cheese n.1 Compounds 2). ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > food manufacture and preparation > preparation of dairy produce > 			[noun]		 > formation of cheese > drying frame cheeseheck1345 heck1403 cheese rack1456 cheese cratch1586 hake1689 cheese crate1846 the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > cleaning > washing > washing clothes and textile articles > 			[noun]		 > frame for hanging washing on to dry hake1689 horse1706 winter dyke1748 maid1795 clothes-horse1807 winter hedge1812 airer1817 clothes-screen1832 linen-horse1845 maiden1856 maiden maker?1881 1689    Brechin Test. VII. f. 211v, in  Dict. Older Sc. Tongue at Haik  				Item a cheese haik xj s. 1768    A. Ross Fortunate Shepherdess  ii. 71  				A hake was frae the rigging hinging fu' Of quarter kebbocks tightly made an' new. 1880    J. Skelton Crookit Meg xiii. 145  				The long array of shining pots and pans and willow-pattern plates suspended in a haik above the dresser. 1931    J. Lorimer Red Sergeant iii.  				The auld wives of the High Street put a new haik at their windows for the drying of clothes.  4.  A frame on which bricks, tiles, etc., are stacked to dry before being fired; (also) the stack of bricks, etc., itself. Cf. hack n.4 2. Now historical and rare. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > brick-making equipment > 			[noun]		 > drying frame hack1703 hake1840 1840    Jrnl. Royal Agric. Soc. 1  iii. 352  				They [sc. the tiles] are placed one upon another on the hakes or piles in the sheds till placed in the kiln. 1843    Jrnl. Royal Agric. Soc. 4  ii. 371  				Set them to dry on frames (provincially termed hakes), covered with cloth, supported on iron standards. 1888    Official Rep. Third Ann. Convent. National Brick Manufacturers' Assoc. 46  				After the bricks are made, they are solid and firm enough to be piled directly onto the hake or dried on pallets. 1903    Brick Oct. 131/1  				Total cost of bricks in hake..$35.75 Or per thousand in hakes..[$]1.43. 1956    Racine 		(Wisconsin)	 Jrnl.-Times Sunday Bull. 28 Oct.  				Their job was to load two filled forms on a two wheel cart and run..with it to a ‘hake’, or pile of drying bricks.  5.  A framework or grating placed in a stream, mill-race, or other watercourse, designed to prevent the passage of fish or debris without stopping the flow of the water. Cf. heck n.1 2. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > water > lake > pool > 			[noun]		 > artificially confined water > contrivance for impounding water > framework to allow only water through hake1855 1855    J. Leslie  & J. Shaw 2nd Section Rep. River Doon in  Rep. Select Comm. Salmon Fishings 		(1860)	 App. B. 403 in  Parl. Papers (H.L. 135) XXVI. 1  				There is no intake sluice and no hake. 1891    Pall Mall Gaz. 26 Sept. 2/2  				At the ‘backwater hakes’ adjoining these mills the workmen sometimes break a bar or two, and the salmon coming from the sea get into the dam and are secured in very large numbers. 1951    Aberdeen Press & Jrnl. 4 Dec. 6  				The immediate cause of the flooding..was the blocking of the hakes on the Newlands Burn and the West Burn..by twigs and leaves. CompoundsΚΠ 1886    W. A. Harris Techn. Dict. Fire Insurance  				Hake-houses, air-drying sheds, for bricks. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2019; most recently modified version published online March 2022). † haken.4α. 1500s hacke, 1500s hakk- (inflected form), 1500s–1600s hake, 1600s haque. β. 1600s hague; Scottish pre-1700 hag, pre-1700 hage, pre-1700 hagg- (inflected form), pre-1700 haige.  Obsolete.   A type of relatively short-barrelled handgun, used chiefly in the 16th cent. Attested earliest in half-hake n.   and demi-hake n. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > device for discharging missiles > firearm > small-arm > 			[noun]		 > hake hakec1538 half-hakec1538 demi-hake1541 c1538    R. Cowley in  H. Ellis Orig. Lett. Eng. Hist. 		(1827)	 2nd Ser. II. 100  				Who had vj half hakes, a redd pese, a passvolant, ij hackbusshes, and a shipp pese. 1541–2    Act 33 Henry VIII c. 6 Preamble in  Statutes of Realm 		(1963)	 III. 8326  				Noe person..shall shote in any Crosbowe handgun hagbutt or demy hake. 1548    Act 2 & 3 Edward VI c. 14 in  Statutes of Realm 		(1963)	 IV. 58  				An Acte was made in the [33rd] yere of the late Kinge..for some libertye to shoote in Handegonnes hakes and hacquebuytes. 1607    J. Cowell Interpreter sig. Ll3v/1  				Haque, is a handgunne of about three quarters of a yard long. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2019; most recently modified version published online December 2020). haken.5  A wide, flat, soft paintbrush originating in Japan, typically having bristles of goat hair and used esp. in watercolour painting. Also more fully  hake brush. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > painting and drawing > equipment for painting or drawing > 			[noun]		 > brush > types of pencila1350 calaber pencil1583 washing-brush1585 softener1756 hair-pencil1763 camel('s) hair pencil1771 pound brush1780 dabberc1790 varnishing brush1825 writer1825 red sable1859 sweetener1859 varnish brush1859 fitch1873 sable-brush1873 wash-brush1873 Poona brush1875 hake1882 rigger1883 airbrush1884 liner1886 sable1891 stippler1891 aerograph1898 mop brush1904 filbert brush1950 1882    G. A. Audsley Ornamental Arts Japan I.  iv. 15  				A coating of nakanuri-urushi is now laid on with a haké. 1906    M. M. Fenollosa Dragon Painter v. 123  				He..caught up suddenly the thick hakè brush, and hurled it across the room toward the upright frame of silk. 1974    J. Hillier Uninhibited Brush xii. 251  				Employing the hake, the flat-topped brush that allowed such subtle gradations of tone and alternations from wetness to dryness. 1977    R. Fournier Illustr. Dict. Pract. Pottery 		(rev. ed.)	 4  				A variety of brushes including..a goathair mop, and a hake brush. 2011    W. T. Cooper Capturing Essence 14  				With a broad hake or similar soft brush (or a sponge), coat the back of the paper with water. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2019; most recently modified version published online March 2022). hakev. Now rare.   intransitive. To fish for hake. Chiefly in the progressive. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > fishing > fishing for type of fish > fish for type of fish			[verb (intransitive)]		 > for others sharking1860 shad1863 sprat1863 hake1868 drum-fish1879 cod1881 snoek1913 1868    J. C. Wilcocks Sea-fisherman 		(ed. 2)	 169  				Very large Pollack are caught whilst Haking. 1903    35th Ann. Rep. Dept. Marine & Fisheries 		(Canada)	 1905 346  				Vessels operating off the light caught as high as twenty-five quintals per day with the small boats doing well hakeing in the North channel. 1972    Maine Sunday Telegram 14 May 3 d/3  				If they got a big catch they'd load her in the stern also. I've seen them come home no more than a foot out of the water, especially when they were haking. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2019; most recently modified version published online March 2022). <  | 
	
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