单词 | long-nose |
释义 | long-nosen.adj. A. n. 1. A person with a long nose. Frequently (and in earliest use) figurative: (a name for) a person who pries or is objectionably inquisitive. In later use in Asian contexts designating a Caucasian person. ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > external parts of body > head > face > nose > [noun] > types of nose > person having camois1485 swine snout1592 flat-nose16.. muzzle chops1611 firedrake1623 sneap-nosea1644 long-nose1691 knobnose1839 1691 T. D'Urfey Love for Money ii. ii. 22 What's that to you long Nose, oh law oh law. 1694 T. D'Urfey Comical Hist. Don Quixote: Pt. 1 iii. i. 22 The hour's a coming Chuffy Chaps—'tis a coming Long Nose ah—Pinckaninny, are your Twincklers twinckling ifaith. 1847 Amer. Rev. Feb. 197/1 A curious disease, incident to the race of long noses: symptom, an itching in the tip of the nose—which leads them to thrust it into every crack and cranny. 1935 J. T. Farrell Judgment Day vi. 157 Was I ready to stand up and give three cheers when that long-nose ended his spiel? 1994 P. Baker Blood Posse ix. 107 ‘Hey! Long nose, you a spy or what?’ Jerome barked at the white youth who kept a safe distance. 2001 Gazette (Montreal) (Nexis) 10 Nov. b7 Foreign longnoses were so few that one of us going for a walk was about as inconspicuous as a pink elephant. We, with our three boys, were something of a sensation. (In China, we still are). 2. Any of several fishes with long snouts; esp. the garfish, Belone belone, of the north-east Atlantic. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > fish > superorder Acanthopterygii (spiny fins) > order Perciformes (perches) > order Atheriniformes > [noun] > member of family Belonidae (gar-fish) horn-fishOE hornkeckc1425 garfishc1440 horn-stocka1485 green-bone1525 hornbeak1565 thorn-beak1570 horn-back1598 needlefish1601 spit-fish1601 sea-needle1603 ganefish1611 snacot-fish1611 greenbacka1682 bill-fisha1757 gar1767 sea-pike1769 saury1771 gar-pike1776 sea-snipea1832 mackerel guide1835 long-nose1836 gore-fish1839 gorebill1862 mackerel-scout1880 Long Tom1881 snipe-eel1882 1836 W. Yarrell Hist. Brit. Fishes I. 391 The Garfish…Long-Nose. 1868 Tinsley's Mag. 2 206 There was first the longnose, or snipe-fish, like a long thin mackerel-coloured ribbon. 1910 Brit. Sea Anglers' Soc. Q. Dec. 111 It [sc. the gar-fish] passes under a variety of names, such as long-nose, snipe-eel, sea-needle and mackerel-guard. 1965 J. P. Tupper in A. Wrangles Newnes Compl. Guide Sea Angling 125/2 The garfish has various local names, such as Long Nose, Green Bone, Mackerel Guide, Gorbill, Sea Needle, Snipe Eel and Swordfish. B. adj. 1. Designating something with a long nose or snout; = long-nosed adj. Frequently in the names of fishes and other animals. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > animal body > general parts > head and neck > [adjective] > having a snout > having a long nose long-nosed1552 long-nebbed1732 long-nose1781 snipy1825 1781 T. Pennant Hist. Quadrupeds II. 364 Long-nose [Cavy]. 1830 E. T. Bennett Gardens & Menagerie Zool. Soc. I. 294 The Long-nose Cavy of Pennant and Agouti of Buffon is about the size of the common rabbit. 1942 Copeia No. 2. 101 Almost nothing has been recorded concerning the natural history of the eastern longnose shiner, Notropis longirostris. 1975 J. McPhee Survival of Bark Canoe (1990) i. 20 The Ojibway Long-Nose Canoe, for example, had in its bow (and stern) an outreaching curve of considerable tumblehome. 1995 Traveller Summer 13/1 It is possible Fraser mistook some of the lake's squawfish and longnose suckers for the more desirable carp. 2009 Daily Tel. 21 Sept. 15/3 (caption) A long-nose vine snake in South East Asia. 2. Designating a person with a long nose; (of a face) characterized by having a long nose.In later use in Asian contexts designating a Caucasian person. ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > external parts of body > head > face > nose > [adjective] > types of nose > having cammed?c1350 camoised1393 nosed?1440 hook-nosed1519 snat-nosed1519 flat-nosed1530 bottle-nosed1566 chamoy-nosed1598 saddle-nosed1598 swine-snouted1600 camois-nosed1601 round-nosed1611 nosy1620 flat-nose1636 simous1656 sharp-nosed1675 tutty-nosed1681 Roman-nosed1688 snut-nosed1706 snub-nosed1725 camois1745 blunt-nosed1772 pug-nosed1788 snipy1825 button-nosed1830 nip-nosed1831 leptorrhinian1878 leptorrhine1880 snub1883 knob-nosed1886 long-nose1896 Tartar-nosed1897 Ally Sloper1901 beaky-nosed1923 1896 H. T. Noel Byrosonia xxi. 301 Zeke knocked at the door, one day, and told the assembled family that a ‘bony, old, long-nose man, dat looked mi'ty nigh like a han't, was sittin' down in de cabin’. 1938 Esquire Jan. 35/3 The streetcars are the same, the longnose sallow Madrileño faces are the same, with the same mixture of brown bullet-headed countrymen. 1979 Washington Post (Nexis) 10 June f1 There is no greater store attraction, however, than a ‘long nose’ foreigner trying on a Mao jacket. 1988 J. Hawkins Sky Strike ix. 65 To win the war without killing every last long-nose bastard in Southeast Asia was unthinkable. 2011 S. Francis Hello, Goodbye Again xxv. 111 The long nose woman slipped past me and entered looking around. Compounds long-nose pliers n. pliers having long, pointed jaws, used in tight spaces and for manipulating small objects, esp. for bending and cutting electrical wires; needlenose pliers. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > pliers and nippers > [noun] > types of bender1496 wire pliers1675 wire-cutter1794 side nippers1846 long-nose pliers1872 hawkbill1875 flat pliers1881 parrotbill1971 burr-nipper- 1872 Eng. Mechanic & World of Sci. 18 Oct. 115 Hold top pallet with strong tweezers, bottom with long nose pliers. 1923 Daily Independent (Murphysboro, Illinois) 14 Sept. 7/5 Lost—Leather pocket containing one large and one small screw driver and one pair of long nose pliers. 1977 Kitchens & Bathrooms (Time Life Bks.) (1989) iv. 123/3 (caption) On some disposals, you may have to punch in a knockout plug at the top, then retrieve the plug with a pair of long-nose pliers. 2002 Jrnl. Crustacean Biol. 22 559/1 Galls were collected by using long-nose pliers to break off the branches with galls at their ends, without otherwise damaging the colonies. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2016; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.adj.1691 |
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