单词 | hazzled |
释义 | > as lemmasˈhazzled ˈhazzled adj. English regional (chiefly midlands) (a) (of the skin) chapped; (b) (partially) dried, esp. by the sun. ΚΠ 1848 A. B. Evans Leicestershire Words 42 Hazzled, chapped. 1854 A. E. Baker Gloss. Northants. Words I. 316 When the skin is rough or dry, inclining to chap from exposure to a cold harsh wind, it is said to be hazzled. a1895 E. Smith MS Coll. Warwicks. Words in Eng. Dial. Dict. (1902) III. 103/1 Now your hands are hazled. The child's skin is quite hazled. 1901 M. Combs in Eng. Dial. Dict. (1902) III. 103/1 [Essex] ‘Have you all your linen dry?' 'No, but it is hazelled.’ 1967 S. Marshall Fenland Chron. (1980) ix. 244 We never felt as if our washing were clean if it hadn't been hung outside to get hazelled, and to this day I can't get used to things dried inside. 1970 H. Orton & M. V. Barry Surv. Eng. Dial. II. ii. 636 In frosty weather, your hands sometimes get all dry, red and sore, and you say your hands are . . .[Warwickshire] Hazled. 1979 N. Rogers Wessex Dial. 80/2 Hazzled, chapped. < as lemmas |
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