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单词 mine
释义

minen.

Brit. /mʌɪn/, U.S. /maɪn/
Forms: Middle English–1600s myne, Middle English–1700s myn, Middle English– mine, 1500s miene, 1500s moine, 1500s moyne, 1500s myene; Scottish pre-1700 meayne, pre-1700 meinde, pre-1700 meynd, pre-1700 min, pre-1700 minde, pre-1700 minne, pre-1700 moynd, pre-1700 myn, pre-1700 mynne, pre-1700 1700s myne, pre-1700 1800s mind, pre-1700 1800s mynd, pre-1700 1800s mynde, pre-1700 1800s– mine.
Origin: A borrowing from French. Etymon: French mine.
Etymology: < Anglo-Norman and Middle French mine (c1220 in Old French in sense ‘underground cavity or excavation where metals and minerals are found’, 1300 in sense ‘mineral containing a metallic substance’, late 14th cent. in sense 3), probably < a continental Celtic word for ore, metal (compare Welsh mwyn mineral, mine (14th cent.), Early Irish méin ore, metal, Scottish Gaelic mèinn ore, mine); further etymology uncertain. Compare post-classical Latin mina (8th cent. (from 13th cent. in British sources) in sense 1, 9th cent. (from 12th cent. in British sources) in sense 2), Old Occitan mina (1382), Spanish mina (1400–21 in figurative use in sense 1c, 1490 in senses 1 and 2), Italian mina (1529 in sense 3), Portuguese mina (16th cent.). Compare also Middle Dutch mīne , minne (Dutch mijn ), Middle Low German mine , German Mine (c1600 in sense 3, second half of the 17th cent. in sense 1), Norwegian mine, Swedish mina (17th cent.), Danish mine, all ultimately from French (transmission into the Scandinavian languages is perhaps via German).A connection with post-classical Latin minare ‘to lead, drive’ is no longer generally maintained by etymologists of Romance languages.
1.
a. An excavation or system of excavations made underground for the extraction of metals or metallic ores, coal, salt, precious stones, (less commonly) building stone, clay, etc.; an open-air excavation for the extraction of such substances. Also: a place where such excavations are conducted.Frequently with preceding word indicating the substance being extracted, as coal, diamond, gold, salt mine, etc., or the type of excavation, as placer, strip mine: see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > workplace > places where raw materials are extracted > mine > [noun]
minea1393
work1474
mineral?a1500
minery1567
balc1600
groove1666
bargh1693
winning1708
working1708
wheal1830
show1898
a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) iv. 2455 Ferst forto gete it out of Myne, And after forto trie and fyne.
a1400 (c1303) R. Mannyng Handlyng Synne (Harl.) 10737 A grete party of þat yche myne Fyl dowun yn þe hole, and closed hym ynne.
c1450 (?c1408) J. Lydgate Reson & Sensuallyte (1901) 6080 Of awmber ryche and fyn, Pulshed ful clene out of the Myn.
1467–8 Rolls of Parl. V. 582/2 Mynes of Coles and Leede, and all other Possessions.
1535 Bible (Coverdale) 1 Macc. viii. 3 The Mynes of syluer and golde that are there.
1542 in T. Thomson Coll. Inventories Royal Wardrobe (1815) 63 Item, ane uthir peice of gold of the moynd unmoltin.
1551 R. Robinson tr. T. More Vtopia i. sig. Dv Them they condempned into ston quarris, and in to myenes to dygge mettalle.
1555 R. Eden tr. Peter Martyr of Angleria Decades of Newe Worlde i. iii. f. 11 By reason of a myne of stones which was nere vnto the same, seruynge well bothe to buylde with, and also to make lyme.
1638 W. Rawley tr. F. Bacon Hist. Nat. & Exper. Life & Death 17 Stones continue longer, if they be layd towards the same coast of Heaven, in the Building, that they lay in the Mine.
1652 W. Blith Eng. Improver Improved xxiii. 148 Bring in severall Loades of Sand either out of the streets or wayes, or from a sand-pit or mine, once or twice a weeke.
1672 R. Boyle Ess. Origine & Virtues Gems 31 In East-India,..they are wonderfully unskillful at digging Mines; as I have gathered from the Answers of some, who..went to visit the Diamond Mines, as they call them.
1696 E. Phillips New World of Words (new ed.) Mine is also that part of the Earth where Metals and Minerals are found, and out of which they are digg'd.
1708 in H. S. Sheldon Documentary Hist. Suffield (1879–88) 157 Every Mine, or Mines yt do..appear..within ye Township of Suffield: is..conserved for ye whole Town's use.
1772 J. Wedgwood Let. 6 June in Sel. Lett. (1965) 124 Many Gentlemen..had been in Derbyshire, seen the mine, and knew it to be free and open to all the world, on paying a certain known rent to the land owner.
1813 R. Bakewell Introd. Geol. ix. 215 The deepest mine that has been worked in Europe..is one at Truttenberg in Bohemia.
1869 R. F. Burton Explor. Highlands Brazil I. 251 The bar or tongue of killas slate which separated the two great mines.
1882 Rep. Precious Metals (U.S. Bureau of Mint) 96 The hydraulic and drift-mines during the last year have produced large sums.
1949 A. C. Walshaw Heat Engines (ed. 3) xv. 314 Turbo-blowers have a low compression ratio..and are suitable for such purposes as supplying air to furnaces, cupolas, mines, etc.
1981 B. Byars Cybil War 83 He and some friends were working the mine, digging out turquoise.
1992 RTZ Rev. June 4/1 An open-cast mine can be badly set back by mud-slides.
b. An underground cavity. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > land > landscape > low land > hole or pit > [noun] > cave
covec950
denOE
cavec1220
rochea1300
spelunk13..
cavernc1374
cabin1377
speke1377
antruma1398
minea1398
thurse-house?c1450
crypt?a1475
vault1535
chamber1575
antre1585
underground1594
Peak1600
lustre?1615
open?1644
cunicle1657
subterranean1714
subterrane1759
loch1767
purgatory1797
vug1818
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 171 It is harde & perilous to abyde in mynes of erþe, for þey ben colde and moyste.
c1450 J. Capgrave Solace of Pilgrims (Bodl. 423) (1911) 20 (MED) Þe cymyteries at rome be grete uoutes and mynes undir þe erde in whech seyntis dwellid sumtyme.
?c1475 Catholicon Anglicum (BL Add. 15562) f. 81 A Myne, cunus, via subterranea, cunulus, cuniculus.
?1611 G. Chapman tr. Homer Iliads xvii. 238 When a whirlewind..tosseth therewithall His fixt roote, from his hollow mines.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Othello (1622) iv. ii. 81 The bawdy wind, that kisses all it meetes, Is husht within the hallow mine of earth, And will not hear't. View more context for this quotation
c1639 in Sc. Antiquary (1889) 3 133 Signifiing..that ther is a myne of Brimstone vnder it, of a hote qualitie.
c. figurative. An abundant or constant source of supply; a store from which (something specified) may be obtained in plenty or whose supply is by no means exhausted. Frequently with of, esp. in mine of information.Sometimes with contextual indication that this is a figurative use of sense 1a.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > supply > [noun] > source of supply > abundant
mine?1541
storehouse1578
pantheon1596
cornucopia1611
goshen1890
?1541 R. Copland Guy de Chauliac's Questyonary Cyrurgyens ii. sig. Oij Specyally aboute the pryncipal membres that are the mynes of strength.
1561 T. Hoby tr. B. Castiglione Courtyer i. sig. B.iiv Some in rydinge, some in playnge at fence, euerye man accordinge to the moine of his mettall [It. (1547) 6 b, ciascuno secondo la minera del suo metallo].
1616 B. Jonson Epicœne iv. vi, in Wks. I. 584 I am glad of the fortune..to gaine the knowledge of so rich a mine of vertue, as sir Davphine. View more context for this quotation
1658 P. Cleveland Upon Mr. J. Cleveland (single sheet) Poize this Imparallel; and you will find A Mine of Treasures in a Matchless Mind.
1667 E. Waterhouse Short Narr. Fire London 112 A Mart of Trade and a Mine of Wealth, [of] which the inexhaustion of this last twenty-six years by Sums unsummable,..would be incredible.
a1764 R. Lloyd Dialogue in Poet. Wks. (1774) II. 4 You must have a fund, a mine, Prose, poems, letters.
1775 S. J. Pratt Liberal Opinions (1783) I. xliii. 256 There may be still an undug mine of knowledge.
1819 Ld. Byron Don Juan: Canto I xi. 8 Her memory was a mine: she knew by heart All Calderon and greater part of Lopé.
1830 Lady Morgan France 1829–30 I. 321 There was..Dumas, the author of ‘Henry the Third’, one of the most successful adventurers in the rich and new mine of romanticism.
1856 E. B. Kelly Autobiogr. ix. 72 Both proved to be Spanish Galleons..and when captured by another privateer..made for each sailor a share of more than eighteen hundred dollars. Thus the timidity of our captain lost us a mine of wealth.
1869 L. M. Alcott Little Women II. xxii. 322 He hadn't the heart to insult a rival who kept a mine of chocolate drops in his waistcoat pocket.
1905 Athenæum 30 Dec. 887/2 Her book is a mine of valuable information.
1930 Economist 31 May 1224/1 The ‘Bank and Finance’ volume..is a mine of information about the classes of activity covered.
1995 Irish Times (Nexis) 16 Dec. 4 Father Comyn describes the fisheries potential as a mine of wealth.
d. English regional. A ditch or drain. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > cultivation or tillage > preparation of land or soil > ditching or drainage > [noun] > ditch
dikec893
gripa1000
ditch1045
fosselOE
water-furrowlOE
sow1316
furrowc1330
rick1332
sewer1402
gripplec1440
soughc1440
grindle1463
sheugh1513
syre1513
rain?1523
trench1523
slough1532
drain1552
fowsie?1553
thorougha1555
rean1591
potting1592
trink1592
syver1606
graft1644
work1649
by-ditch1650
water fence1651
master drain1652
rode1662
pudge1671
gripe1673
sulcus1676
rhine1698
rilling1725
mine1743
foot trench1765
through1777
trench drain1779
trenchlet1782
sunk fence1786
float1790
foot drain1795
tail-drain1805
flow-dike1812
groopa1825
holla1825
thorough drain1824
yawner1832
acequia madre1835
drove1844
leader1844
furrow-drain1858
1743 W. Ellis Mod. Husbandman Oct. xvi. 92 The Middlesex Farmers, about Harrow..get a great deal of Sullidge out of the Bottom of Drains in Roads, Commons, and other Places, which they here call a Mine.
e. Entomology. A tunnel or network of tunnels made in plant tissue, esp. the interior of a leaf, by the larva of an insect.
ΚΠ
1830 J. Rennie Insect Archit. xii. 239 Most of the solitary leaf-miners either cannot or will not construct a new mine, if ejected by an experimenter from the old.
1875 Nature 13 79/2 Mr. W. C. Boyd exhibited mines of Heliozela sericiella in oak...The mines were situtated in the footstalks of the leaves.
1895 Canad. Entomologist 27 344 The larvae burst through the upper skin of the mine and fall to the ground, where they enter the earth.
1930 C. M. Weed Insect Ways v. 69 The mines made by leaf-miners vary greatly in size and form.
1985 R. I. Lorimer in R. J. Berry Nat. Hist. Orkney 267/1 Mines collected from Beech have been assigned to both species [sc. Phyllonorycter messaniella and P. maestingella].
2.
a. A mineral or metallic ore, esp. (in later use) iron ore. Also figurative.Now chiefly in mines and minerals n. Law all minerals or substances (including coal, metals, stone, clay, etc., but excluding oil and natural gas) that lie in, on, or under the ground and are obtainable for commercial profit by underground or surface working.Formerly frequently with preceding noun (as ball-, bog-, orange mine) or adverb (as all-, part-mine): see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > minerals > ore > [noun]
oreOE
metala1387
minea1425
mineralc1500
vein1601
spelter1661
ram1683
virgin ore1758
rock1830
manganomelane1934
the world > the earth > minerals > ore > [noun] > metal ore > iron ore
minea1425
iron ore1587
iron mine1616
iron man1683
a1425 (a1349) R. Rolle Meditations on Passion (Uppsala) (1917) 43 (MED) Sterris ben cause of mynys, metallis, and of precious stones.
a1475 Bk. Quinte Essence (1889) 3 Good gold naturel, & of þe myn of þe erþe, is clepid of philosophoris ‘sol’ in latyn.
1567–8 in R. W. Cochran-Patrick Early Rec. Mining Scotl. (1878) 13 The dekay of myndis and mynerallis of gold and silver within this realme.
1581 W. Lambarde Eirenarcha (1588) ii. vii. 305 Every occupier of any maner of Ironworks, which shall cary any coles, Mine, or Iron, to or from the same.
1608 G. Markham & L. Machin Dumbe Knight i. sig. B4v The mine Which doth attract my spirit to run this marshall course, Is the faire guard of a distressed Queene.
1639 G. Plattres (title) A discovery of subterraneall treasure: viz of all manner of mines and mineralls.
a1650 G. Boate Irelands Nat. Hist. (1652) xvi. 126 In Ireland,..in some places the Oar of the Iron is drawn out of Moores and Bogs, in others it is hewen out of Rockes, and in others it is digged out of Mountains: of which three sorts the first is called Bog-mine, the other, Rock-mine, and the third with severall names White-mine, Pin-mine, and Shel-mine.
1673 J. Ray Coll. Eng. Words 121 The water runs out, and carries away with it the Mine that is pounded small enough to pass the holes.
1794 Act 34 George III c. 93 §63 The Mines and Minerals lying and being within or under the said Lands.
1832 H. Martineau Hill & Valley iv. 57 Mr. Wallace explained how the ironstone, or mine as it is called, is calcined in the kilns.
1859 C. McAllister Rep. Circuit Court U.S. Districts Calif. 312 With intent to defraud the United States out of said mine and minerals, or some part thereof, under false, forged, and ante-dated Mexican titles.]
1884 W. H. Greenwood Steel & Iron iv. 56 Cinder-pig in contradistinction to all mine pig—i.e., pig smelted entirely from ore or mine—is obtained by [etc.].
1900 Daily News 24 Oct. 2/4 Pig iron sells slowly at..65s. for part-mine, 62s. 6d. to 70s. for all-mine.
1991 W. V. H. Rogers Tort 430 The following have in the past been regarded as a natural user of land;..the ordinary working of mines and minerals on land, erecting or pulling down houses or walls, trees whether planted or self-sown.
b. spec. = gold n.1 2a. (In quot. 1656: a mass of gold.) Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > money > medium of exchange or currency > other mediums of exchange > [noun] > uncoined metal as medium of exchange > gold
goldeOE
mine1610
yellow dirt1628
1610 G. Fletcher Christs Victorie 41 The owners..Tumbling themselues vpon their heaps of mine. Glutting their famish't soules with the deceitfull shine.
1627 P. Fletcher Locustæ ii. xxi Poore Soules, they dare not soile their hands with precious mine.
1656 A. Cowley Extasie in Pindaric Odes ix The Horses were of temper'd Lightning made,..The noblest, sprightful'st Breed, And flaming Mines their Necks array'd.
1807 W. H. Ireland Stultifera Navis lviii. 254 If dame fortune..Wafts to thee the precious mine; Awake, thou fear'st—while dreams suspicious, Ev'ry succeeding night are thine.
3.
a. Formerly: a subterranean passage dug under an enemy position, esp. the wall of a besieged fortress, in order to gain entrance or to bring about its collapse. In later use: such a passage in which an explosive is placed. Also: the explosive charge so placed. Now rare (historical in later use).
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > attack > action or state of siege or blockade > [noun] > mine(s)
minea1450
undermine1524
minework1583
minery1591
mining1598
berry1608
a1450 ( tr. Vegetius De Re Militari (Douce) f. 107v Sometyme þei þat þus myneþ entreth be nyght þorgh þe myne in to þe citee.
a1475 (?a1430) J. Lydgate tr. G. Deguileville Pilgrimage Life Man (Vitell.) 17599 (MED) Thys hand..maketh hoolys thorgh the wallys. Thys hand kan dygge and make mynys.
1523 Ld. Berners tr. J. Froissart Chron. (1812) I. cix. 132 Then he called to hym his myners, to thyntent that they shuld make a myne vnder all the walles.
1533 J. Bellenden tr. Livy Hist. Rome (1903) II. v. viii. (xix.) 173 Þai made ane mynde [MS. B. myn] vnder þe erde to mak ane gate be quhilk þai mycht cum to þe castell of Veos.
1548 Hall's Vnion: Henry VI f. cxiij So thei cast trenches, and made moynes.
1574 J. Whitgift Def. Aunswere to Admon. 141 To buyld vp the walles of Jerusalem, whiche you haue broken downe: and to fill vp the Mines that you haue digged.
1600 W. Shakespeare Henry V iii. iii. 3 To the Mines... Tell the Duke it is not so good To come to the mines.
1645 T. Fairfax Let. to W. Lenthall conc. Sherborn Castle 15 Aug. 4 The Myoners having fully wrought the Mine through the Castle wall.
1695 M. Prior Eng. Ballad 3 Cannons above, and Mines below Did Death and Tombs for Us contrive.
1706 Boston News-let. 5 Aug. 1/1 Having laid several Mines in the way to the principal places, thro' which the Enemy must pass (if they had Landed).
1739 D. Hume Treat. Human Nature II. iii. 311 The disposition and contrivance of the bastions, ramparts, mines, and other military works.
1781 E. Gibbon Decline & Fall II. xxiv. 436 A mine was carried under the foundations of the walls.
1846 H. H. Wilson Hist. Brit. India 1805–35 II. xi. 476 The fort was carried by storm after the destruction of part of its defences by the successful explosion of a mine.
1853 J. F. W. Herschel Pop. Lect. Sci. (1873) §24. 18 As if a succession of mines had been sprung.
1889 ‘M. Twain’ Connecticut Yankee xliii. 549 I sent an order..to stop operations and remove all life to a safe distance, as everything was going to be blown up by secret mines.
1918 E. S. Farrow Dict. Mil. Terms (at cited word) Some mines like the fougasse are charged with both explosives and projectiles.
b. figurative. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1639 S. Du Verger tr. J.-P. Camus Admirable Events 30 All the subtilties, which he invented to intrap her, were as so many vented mines, without any effect.]
1647 T. May Hist. Parl. iii. vi. 100 Many Mynes and Countermynes were every day working..on both sides.
1723 D. Defoe Hist. Col. Jack (ed. 2) 339 An unseen Mine blew up all this apparent Tranquility.
1863 R. Fortune Visits Japan & China xv. 244 We saw we had been sitting in fancied security on the top of a mine which was liable to an explosion at any moment.
1885 W. M. Taylor John Knox i. 7 He [sc. Cardinal Beaton] was himself standing above a mine which before long exploded for his own destruction.
4. A firework which throws numerous crackers or similar small explosions up into the air.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > light > firework > [noun] > cracker or squib
squib1534
crackera1592
breaker1630
serpent1634
fizgig1647
firecracker1650
petard1668
reporter1688
riprap1709
swarmer1740
mine1769
India cracker1780
throwdown1877
whizz-bang1881
flip-flap1885
snake1891
thunderflash1943
banger1959
1769 J. Woodforde Diary 22 Sept. (1924) I. 90 The fireworks were sent from London and were Sky-Rocketts, Mines, Trees,..and divers Indian Fireworks.
1834 F. Marryat Peter Simple I. ix. 117 Blue lights and Catherine-wheels, mines and bombs, Grecian-fires and Roman-candles.
1869 Routledge's Every Boy's Ann. 632 The mine..is a firework in which a number of crackers..are thrown up into the air.
1949 J. Brooke Mine of Serpents ii. iv. 29 What I wanted, more particularly, at the moment, was a Horizontal Wheel with Mine and Roman Candles.
1949 J. Brooke Mine of Serpents ii. iv. 30 It was the Mine of Serpents which gave the Guinea Box its peculiar..magic.
1999 Evening Post (Bristol) (Electronic ed.) 30 Oct. Cracker Jack Ground Mine at £4.67..: Not very long-lasting, but a great finale.
5. A type of bomb which detonates when activated by a person, vehicle, etc., passing over or near it; (spec. in early use) such a bomb placed underwater (in full submarine mine).Now frequently with modifying word specifying location (air, land, sea mine, etc.) or type (acoustic, contact, magnetic mine, etc.): see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > hostilities at sea > naval weapons and equipment > [noun] > mine
undermine1682
American turtle1775
torpedo1776
submarine1846
mine1862
pole torpedo1877
ground-torpedo1878
spar torpedo1878
countermine1880
acoustic mine1923
magnetic mine1939
limpet1942
pressure mine1943
oyster1945
1862 Sci. Amer. 24 May 329/2 Their ships..might be blown up by mines of powder under their keels.
1863 Harper's Mag. Dec. 15/2 A torpedo, or submarine mine, similar, in some respects, to one invented by Robert Fulton.
1878 Chambers's Encycl. IX. 488/2 To these fixed torpedoes it is now more usual to give the appropriate name of submarine mines.
1889 J. T. Bucknill Submarine Mines xx. 219 Just as the mines themselves form a grand obstruction to the passage of large vessels..so smaller obstructions can..impede..the passage of small craft whose aims may be to attack the mines.
1915 W. Owen Let. 8 Jan. (1967) 313 I am not exposed to chances of mine or torpedo.
1942 War Illustr. 16 Oct. 238/1 A man can walk over a mine easily enough, but a tank or lorry'll send them up in a proper earthquake.
1968 Visct. Montgomery Hist. Warfare xviii. 416 In 1855, in the Baltic, Russia made the first serious use of floating mines.
1980 B. Mason Solo 184 His jeep passed over a mine; wreckage was strewn over a wide area.

Compounds

C1.
a. General attributive.
mine accident n.
ΚΠ
1834 Mining Jrnl. 6 Jan. 2/2 (heading) Mine accidents.
1984 J. Phillips Machine Dreams 20 Her husband had died in a mine accident.
mine agent n.
ΚΠ
1839 J. Phillips Treat. Geol. II. xi. 295 The professional mine-agents of the North of England are now employed in extending its benefits.
1855 J. R. Leifchild Cornwall: Mines & Miners 262 What exactly suits the views of a mine-agent, may not exactly suit yours.
1986 Amer. Hist. Rev. 91 665/2 Zephenia Williams was a mine agent and innkeeper.
mine area n.
ΚΠ
1915 R. Kipling Fringes of Fleet in Daily Tel. 23 Nov. 9/2 The boundaries of the newly-discovered mine-area must be fixed.
1994 Northern Miner 3 Oct. 1/3 The rocks in the mine area consist of mafic lavas intruded by gabbroic sills and feldspar porphyry dykes.
mine-chamber n.
ΚΠ
1889 Official Gaz. (U.S. Patent Office) 11 Dec. 1214/1 A gas-testing apparatus, of two supply-pumps connected therewith and with a mine-chamber and standard gas supply, respectively.
1918 E. S. Farrow Dict. Mil. Terms (at cited word) Mine chamber, the cavity in a mine, usually of cubical form, which contains the charge.
1931 John o' London's Weekly 1 Aug. 594/1 Five mine-chambers set deep at intervals of a hundred yards, each well gorged with deadly food,..burst upwards as with one shock beneath the battered trench.
2010 R. J. Whitehead Other Side of Wire ix. 347 The Germans had almost completely filled the mine chamber with explosives when all sounds coming from the British mine ceased.
mine-crater n.
ΚΠ
1845 W. Howitt tr. F. Bremer Life in Dalecaria 61 Here they surveyed the strata of different metals and kinds of stones, which, in great layers,..projected from the sides of the mine crater.
1916 Cornhill Mag. Apr. 522 It was supposed, or at least suspected, that the mine-crater was being made the starting-point of a tunnel to run under the British trench.
2016 E. Skelding Somme 1916 52/1 There was a well-established concept of putting down a box barrage around something like a mine crater.
mine dust n.
ΚΠ
1843 Athenæum 16 Sept. 854/1 Mine dust mixed with the lime, he believed, made the most perfect concrete.
1981 N. Gordimer July's People 3 The window whose light was meshed by minute squares of the wire flyscreen, clogged with mine dust and dead gnats.
2008 W. R. Cullen Is Arsenic Aphrodisiac? vii. 315 In the late 1990s, eight to 10 tons of mine dust were recovered each day.
mine engineer n.
ΚΠ
1803 Jrnl. Nat. Philos. Jan. 74 (title) Account of some Ferruginous Rocks serving as Substitutes for Emery. By Mr. Blavier, Mine Engineer.
1864 Sci. Amer. July 165/1 Neither colliery proprietors nor mine engineers could see a way to the solution of this prodigious difficulty.
1975 D. Bagley Snow Tiger iii. 41 This is Harry Dobbs, the mine manager, and Joe Cameron, the mine engineer.
2012 A. Hart-Davis Engineers 128/2 The superintendent wasn't a mine engineer like Garrett. He was a geologist with a fancy degree from some school up north.
mine engineering n.
ΚΠ
1848 M. Dunn Treat. Winning & Working Collieries 104 The grand safeguard, and which is an invaluable addendum to mine engineering, is the regulation of the steam valve of the engine, by means of catrakes.
1859 Sci. Amer. 6 Aug. 87/2 The School of Mines, and the scientific and practical training it affords in mine-engineering.
1893 Manufacturer & Builder 25 131/3 Maps showing underground workings and illustrative of mine engineering.
1996 Engin. & Mining Jrnl. (Electronic ed.) 197 We support efforts to improve mining costs by safer and more productive equipment and by refined mine engineering.
mine fire n.
ΚΠ
1813 W. Scott Bridal of Triermain iii. xxxiii. 184 Foul vapours rise and mine-fires glare.
1970 Amer. Mineralogist 55 729 Ransomite..occurs only in the United Verde mine at Jerome, Arizona, where it formed as the result of a mine fire.
2007 V. Gunter & S. Kroll-Smith Volatile Places iv. 121 The Centralia mine fire has burned for over 30 years with no end in sight.
mine manager n.
ΚΠ
1877 Minutes of Evid. 54/2 in Rep. Select Comm. Employers Liability in Parl. Papers (H.C. 285) X. 551 In your judgment, the owner of a colliery ought to be liable if negligence on the part of his mine manager is proved?
1929 Amer. Mercury Jan. 96/2 The visiting Yankee technicians, from shift-bosses to mine managers, developed kindly feelings for employés.
1996 A. Walker & P. Shipman Wisdom of Bones v. 73 The friend was the mine manager of the Northern Lime Company at Taung.
2007 P. J. Smit Managem. Princ. i. 16 When the mine manager of a platinum mine officiates at the opening of a new mine, he or she acts as a figurehead for the mine.
mine-mouth n. (frequently attributive)
ΚΠ
1863 S. Mowry Arizona & Sonora (ed. 2) 93 Contracts were made to deliver it [sc. the ore], dressed, in the mine mouth, at $1 per 300 lbs.
1942 Awards, Agreem., Orders, etc. Industr. Conciliation & Arbitration Act 41 ii. 1200 Provided the miners leave their working-faces at a time which will enable them to reach the mine-mouth at the recognized knock-off time based on the allowed walking speed of 2⅔ miles per hour.
1981 Energy Policy June 121 The plan..recognized the need for coal-fired mine-mouth plants.
2013 M. Kelley Coal in Campbell County vi. 63 The power plant near the mine was fed coal directly from the mine by a conveyor belt. This type of operation is called a ‘mine-mouth’ operation.
mine post n.
ΚΠ
a1450 ( tr. Vegetius De Re Militari (Douce) f. 107v When þei ben alredy to make assaut, þei sette here myne postes on fyre.
1886 E. V. d'Invilliers in Ann. Rep. Geol. Surv. Pennsylvania 1885 211 There is a parting and side track for making up the full train, the sheave wheel being placed upright between two mine posts.
1914 Colliery Engin. July 765/1 H. I. Smith, of the United States Bureau of Mines, read the concluding paper of the first day on ‘Possible Substitutes for Mine Posts’.
2006 G. F. Friel et al. in J. M. Mutmansky & R. V. Ramani Proc. 11th U.S./N. Amer. Mine Ventilation Symp. 484/1 12.5m upwind from the ionization detector was the first of two steel mine posts which supported a pair of path-averaging sensors.
mine pump n.
ΚΠ
1824 ‘R. Stuart’ Descr. Hist. Steam Engine 117 The mine-pump end of the lever-beam.
1901 Amer. Manuf. & Iron World 6 July 1104/1 Double-plunger mine pump,..with daily capacity of over 3,000,000 gallons.
1999 Sunday Gaz.-Mail (Charleston, W. Va.) (Nexis) 18 July 8 a Toney hurt his back lifting a mine pump on March 29.
2008 C. Wolkersdorfer Water Managem. Abandoned Flooded Underground Mines iv. 30 The water transports the ions in the direction of the lowest hydraulic pressure, usually towards the mine pumps or the open mine workings.
mine shaft n.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > workplace > places where raw materials are extracted > mine > [noun] > shaft
groovea1400
shaft1433
sink1557
mine pit1587
sinking1613
footway1778
shank1790
mine shaft1818
1818 Philos. Mag. 52 15 From these ponds the water is conducted by small canals, and falls through water-tight cast-iron pipes erected perpendicularly in the mine shaft.
1834 T. Carlyle Sartor Resartus i. iv. 10/1 On the whole, as in opening new mine-shafts is not unreasonable, there is much rubbish in his Book.
1971 Daily Tel. 22 Jan. (Colour Suppl.) 22/2 Aerial thermography has been used to locate old mineshafts, and coal seams burning underground.
2013 R. M. Haynes Ore Knob Mine Murders Introd. 5 He is forced at gunpoint to shove the blindfolded victim into a mine shaft in Ashe County, North Carolina.
mine-slime n.
ΚΠ
1914 Mining & Engin. World 27 June 1201/2 The fine values in the mud resulting from decomposed smaltite will not concentrate, and can be recovered only by separating and settling this original mine slime.
1921 Chambers's Jrnl. Apr. 262/1 A savage land of rocks and lakes and mine-slime and active and derelict mine-workings.
2004 Afr. Stud. Rev. Sept. 214 They shovel piles of dirt into heavy wooden troughs, shaking them to separate the diamonds from the silt, all the while standing in knee-deep watery mine slime.
mine-stamp n. (stamp n.3 9.)
ΚΠ
1926 J. Masefield Odtaa xiv. 233 It is a kind of a mine-stamp, or engine of some sort.
1953 D. Lessing Five iii. 128 The mine-stamps thudded day and night, coming loud or soft, according to the direction of the wind.
mine tailing n. chiefly in plural (tailing n.1 2b.)
ΚΠ
1860 Sci. Amer. 11 Feb. 98/1 Mr. Wykoff..obtained from gold mine tailings in Virginia from $15 to $300 per tun.]
1896 C. H. Shinn Story of Mine x. 87 Mexicans are accustomed to saving mine tailings, and if any Mexican was out of work he went down into Gold Canon and ‘concentrated tailings’ for a living.
1950 Jrnl. Polit. Econ. 58 231/2 Improved techniques..also permit substantial additional yields from formerly ‘exhausted’ workings and mine tailings.
1994 This Mag. (Toronto) Nov. 7/3 An environmental assessment..said the radioactive mine tailings would contaminate the surrounding land.
2008 C. J. Grandlic Plant Growth-promoting Bacteria Suitable for Phytostabilization Mine Tailings (D. Phil. thesis, Univ. of Arizona) ii. 61 Eolian dispersion of mine tailings in arid and semi-arid environments is an emerging global issue for which economical remediation alternatives are needed.
mine warfare n.
ΚΠ
1877 Text Bk. Fortification & Mil. Engin. I. iv. 133 He may be forced to.. incur the delays and uncertainties of mine warfare.
1882 Q. Rev. Oct. 401 Bélidor furnished besiegers with a new weapon in mine warfare.
1974 Saturday (Charleston, S. Carolina) 20 Apr. 3- a/2 Like wood, the fiberglass hull is non-magnetic and is considered good for mine warfare.
2006 N. Youngblood Devel. Mine Warfare Introd. p. xiii The loss of civilian life coupled with a disruption of commerce brought calls for the regulation of mine warfare during the 1907 Hague Convention.
mine-water n.
ΚΠ
1778 W. Pryce Mineralogia Cornubiensis 21 A very large proportion of our Mine Water is temporary; and..is denominated Top Water.
1882 Rep. Precious Metals (U.S. Bureau of Mint) 640 A very ingenious utilization of a portion of the mine-waters is made.
1998 Guardian 18 Sept. i. 26/8 Results from this pilot should show the most efficient ways of dealing with the treatment of polluted minewater.
mineworker n.
ΚΠ
1625 S. Purchas Pilgrimes III. v. iii. 996 The couetousnesse of the Myne-workers..caused them [sc. slaves] to poyson, kill, and hang themselues.
1864 Continental Monthly May 520 I think I know thee, old Mole! Earth delver, mound builder, mine worker!
1901 Edinb. Rev. Apr. 496 An agreement..that the mine-workers should receive an advance of 10 per cent. in their rates of wages.
1975 Times 18 Feb. 2/1 Mineworkers' leaders in the traditionally militant areas of Scotland and Yorkshire yesterday voted to back the £140m pay deal negotiated by their national union leaders with the National Coal Board last week.
b. Objective.
(a)
mine detection n.
ΚΠ
1967 Jane's Surface Skimmer Syst. 1967–8 67 (caption) The machine carries electronic mine detection equipment out in front of a jeep.
1998 Western Daily Press (Electronic ed.) 28 Dec. It can also look underneath vehicles—but its future probably lies in mine detection.
mine-digger n.
ΚΠ
1661 R. Boyle Sceptical Chymist iv. 208 A Mine-digger may meet, whilst he follows his work, with a Gemm or a Mineral which he knowes not what to make of.
1981 Forbes (Nexis) 7 Dec. 138 A quintessentially American clan of dam builders, mine-diggers and openers-up of the wilderness.
mine-digging n. Obsolete rare
ΚΠ
1648 J. Owen Disc. Toleration in Wks. (1851) VIII. 176 Which penalty..was inflicted unto banishment, imprisonment, mine-digging.
mine operator n.
ΚΠ
1886 Pennsylvania Rep. 112 571 The prosecution of mining operations..leaves the mine operator in the position of guarantor, both of [etc.].
1969 B. K. Cross & G. B. Williamson in A. Weiss Decade of Digital Comput. Mineral Industry 385 A modern analysis tool which allows the mine operator to evaluate the result of making a decision without actually changing the organization or buying the equipment.
mine-owner n.
ΚΠ
1784 Strother's Jrnl. 14 Sept. (1912) (modernized text) ii. 35 Lead..keeps lowering in price, owing to the mine owners endeavouring to undersell one another.
1855 Sci. Amer. 27 Oct. 53/4 Some of our American mines will yet be as deep as those in Europe. When this takes place, we hope our mine owners will not forget to adopt this humane invention.
1991 20th Cent. Brit. Hist. 2 198 Joseph Pease, head of an ‘empire’ comprising banking, coal, iron, railways, and wool, was one of the first mine-owners in north-east England to recognize the miners' union.
mine salter n. (see salt v.1 9).
ΚΠ
1929 Amer. Mercury Jan. 64/1 The logger, the silver-lead miner, the cowpuncher, the jerkline freighter or the bartender caught in the act of composing verses was regarded with something of the hostility accorded mine-salters and horse-lifters.
1987 New Yorker 4 May 48/2 Dynamite also found favor with mine salters.
(b)
mine-detecting adj.
ΚΠ
1948 H. S. Lloyd in B. Vesey-Fitzgerald Bk. Dog 188 Some months before ‘D’ day came a priority call for Mine-Detecting Dogs.
1999 Hull Daily Mail (Electronic ed.) 15 Jan. Six key NATO mine detecting vessels are also at the city's docks as part of a high-profile visit.
C2.
mine adventure n. now historical a speculation in the mining industry.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > financial dealings > types of money-dealing > [noun] > speculation > type of
mine adventure1698
land-jobbing1781
entrepreneurship1902
society > trade and finance > financial dealings > types of money-dealing > [noun] > speculation > a speculation > type of
mine adventure1698
embankment1813
1698 H. Mackworth (title) The Mine-Adventure; or, an expedient for composing all differences between the partners of the mines late of Sir Carbery Pryse:..for establishing a new method for the management thereof: [etc.].
1705 R. Steele Tender Husband ii. i. 26 I consider'd all the Stocks, Old and New Company, her own Complexion and Youth, Partners for Sword-Blades, Chamber of London, Banks for Charity, and Mine-Adventures, till she told me [etc.].
1945 William & Mary Q. 2 346 He was forced to part with what he had bought for his two children in the S. P. C. K. ‘mine adventure’, and also to sell some of his household goods.
mine-adventurer n. Obsolete a speculator in mines.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > financial dealings > types of money-dealing > [noun] > speculation > speculator > type of
co-adventurer1647
mine-adventurer1705
long1855
lamb1884
technopreneur1987
1700 (single sheet) (title) List of all the Adventurers in the Mine Adventure, May the First, 1700.]
1705 H. Mackworth (title) The case of Sir Humphry Mackworth, and of the Mine-Adventurers.
1751 S. Whatley England's Gazetteer at Pullox-Hill A gold mine was discovered here..by the society of royal mine-adventurers.
1893 Dict. National Biogr. XXXV. 188/2 A great number of pamphlets were published by Mackworth, Waller, Shiers, and others, with respect to the proceedings of the mine adventurers.
mine-boy n. South African (now offensive) a black African mineworker.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > worker > workers according to type of work > manual or industrial worker > miner > [noun] > native African
mine-boy1907
1907 J. P. Fitzpatrick Jock of Bushveld (1909) 215 Presently a long string of about fifty time-expired mine-boys came in sight.
1945 P. H. Abrahams Song of City 73 The tom-tom beat of the Maraba..danced away the seething bitterness that is attendant with repression... On the morrow the houseboy would be a good..houseboy!.. And the mine-boy.
1995 Guardian 13 Jan. i. 24/7 Joe Slovo..who, years before he returned in glory..had entertained my family with a spirited display of mineboy dancing in our house in Oxford.
mine canary n. [with allusion to the practice of keeping domestic canaries in coal mines to indicate the build-up of gases] figurative a person or thing acting as a danger signal; (sometimes) spec. an animal or plant whose population size, state of health, etc., is viewed as indicative of the state of the environment.
ΚΠ
1974 Ecology 55 465/2 The impending extinction of the Siberian Tiger may bear the same relation to us as does the death of the mine's canary to the miners.]
1985 Washington Post (Nexis) 3 Feb. (Bk. World) 4 Artists must be capable of a childlike access to primitive impulses and perceptions. That is essential to their roles as ‘mine canaries of civilization’.
1994 N.Y. Rev. Bks. 11 Aug. 41/2 Most bird species are declining, some rapidly. They are all mine canaries now.
1998 Canad. Geographic July 41/1 These parks are acting as the mine canaries for the rest of Canada's forests.
mine captain n. the overseer of a mine, or of its underground operations.
ΚΠ
1844 Littell's Living Age 21 Sept. 439/1 Mr. Henwood..thus describes a visit made by him and one of the mine captains, to a mine, in the same district with Botallack.
1899 J. H. Curle Gold Mines of World 7 The mine captain..is usually a most capable man.
1964 C. B. Crate Lang. Hardrock Mining (unpubl. MS) 3, in Dict. Canadianisms (at cited word) By tradition, an underground superintendent is known as a Mine Captain.
1989 Sunday Times (Johannesburg) 19 Nov. 9/5 Mine captain Harry Player took two overdrafts in his life.
mine car n. a wheeled container used in a mine for haulage or transport.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > rail travel > rolling stock > [noun] > railway wagon or carriage > for mineral haulage
mine car1854
1854 Sci. Amer. 15 Apr. 244/4 Mr. Patrick's improvement consists of a new arrangement of the fastening of the door of the mine car.
1923 Mine & Quarry July 1267/1 The scraping or slushing of ore into chutes or raises or into mine cars is only one of the many uses for the portable double drum hoists.
1956 F. S. Atkinson in D. L. Linton Sheffield 270 Diesel locomotives with large mine-cars are being used extensively underground, particularly in Yorkshire.
1967 Gloss. Mining Terms (B.S.I.) x. 11 Mine car, a large tub (usually spring mounted and over 60 ft..capacity) used primarily for mineral haulage underground.
mine clearance n. = mine-clearing n.
ΚΠ
1961 W. Granville & R. A. Kelly Inshore Heroes x. 108 Trawlers, drifters, armed yachts and other auxiliary craft employed on anti-submarine or mine-clearance work.
1998 Independent 20 Aug. ii. 8/1 The practical problem of mine clearance has become a moral crusade.
mine-clearing n. the operation of freeing an area from explosive mines.
ΚΠ
1905 Q. Rev. Jan. 204 Several smaller craft were destroyed in the operation of mine-clearing.
1988 Defence Update Nov. 51/1 Egypt opted for the PAP 104 after its active participation in the Red Sea multinational mineclearing operation, performing search, identification and destruction of 10 mines.
mine countermeasures n. defensive measures taken against explosive mines; frequently attributive.
ΚΠ
1964 Navy News Nov. 5/5 H.M.S. Investon commissioned on October 16 as a Coastal Minehunter. She will..be a powerful addition to the mine countermeasures fleet of the Royal Navy.
1986 Armed Forces Aug. 342/1 The Force normally comprises from five to ten mine countermeasures vessels.
1994 Forum Mag. (Markham, Ont.) June 16/1 All missions have day-night and visual-instrument flight rules requirements. These include:..mine countermeasures, naval gunfire spotting, combat search-and-rescue, medical evacuation and vertical replenishment.
mine dance n. South African an energetic dance performed by a troupe of mineworkers, usually incorporating elements of traditional African dance.
ΚΠ
1930 M. Mott-Smith Africa (1931) xvii. plate facing page 316 (caption) The marimba players at the Kleenfontia Mine Dance Festivals.]
1939 A. W. Wells S. Afr. 143 There are two things which no visitor to Johannesburg should leave Johannesburg without seeing and doing. He must see a mine-dance, and he must go down a gold mine.
1968 E. Cole & T. Flaherty House of Bondage 23 A number of men participate in programs of tribal dances—the so-called ‘mine dances’—which are a big tourist attraction for whites visiting Johannesburg.
1984 Frontline Feb. 40 Weinberg took refuge in the minedances... All the sweat, plenty of excitement among the participants.
mine detector n. an instrument for detecting the presence of explosive mines.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > discovery > instrument for detection > [noun] > electronic > used for specific purpose
gas detector1865
hydrostat1871
kinesiscope1893
leak detector1921
mine detector1943
sky screen1945
heat-seeker1956
1943 Hutchinson's Pictorial Hist. War 12 May–3 Aug. 125 (caption) The soldier in the foreground is sweeping the ground with a mine detector and wearing earphones as he listens intently for the buzz indicating the presence of a mine.
1945 Finito! Po Valley Campaign 41 The glass-topped Topf mines that fooled the mine-detectors.
1995 Fortean Times June 7/1 Soldiers with mine detectors searched for metal stakes buried more than 50 years ago by the Japanese army.
mine-dial n. Mining Obsolete = dial n.1 5b (see quot. 1701).
ΚΠ
1701 T. Tuttell Descr. Math. Instruments in J. Moxon Math. made Easie (ed. 3) 12 Mine-dial, a Box and Needle with a brass Ring, divided into 360 degrees, with several Dials Graduated thereon, generally thus made for the use of Miners.
mine-dragging n. the operation of dragging the sea to remove explosive mines.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > hostilities at sea > operations or manoeuvres > [noun] > mine-sweeping
minesweeping1904
mine-dragging1905
mine-hunting1964
1905 Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. Jan. 167/1 On May 12 mine-dragging operations in Talien Bay cost him a torpedo-boat.
mine dredger n. a ship equipped for mine-dragging.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > hostilities at sea > naval weapons and equipment > [noun] > mine-sweeping devices
sweep1775
mine dredger1904
paravane1916
otter1920
Oropesa float1939
1904 Daily Chron. 9 Aug. 5/1 Our ships, preceded by mine dredgers, steamed towards Lungantan.
mine-dump n. originally and chiefly South African a hill of solidified crushed quartz built up from the residue of gold-mining operations; (now also) such a hill composed of the overburden from other mining operations (cf. dump n.4 1a).
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > materials > raw material > mineral material > [noun] > mining refuse or rubbish
rough1677
old man1747
small1778
stent1778
vestry1784
gobbin1811
spoil1838
stowing1860
dump1865
muck1883
spoil-heap1883
mine-dump1909
1909 Westm. Gaz. 11 Feb. 3/3 Such statements as that..a mine dump can contain 40,000 tons, and that such a dump consists of 10 per cent. of pitchblende.
1927 Jrnl. Ecol. 15 47 The..flood-deposits..are remarkably copious and rough in character, owing to the presence of so many exposed mine-dumps near the streams in the hill-districts.
1990 N. Gordimer My Son's Story 37 A black landscape with only our mountains, the mine-dumps, yellow in the shadowless light.
mine earth n. Obsolete iron ore (cf. sense 2a).
ΚΠ
1880 C. H. Poole Attempt Gloss. Stafford 16/1 Mine earth, a white earth near the surface of the ground, indicative of iron ore.
1883 W. S. Gresley Gloss. Terms Coal Mining Mine Earth (N.S.). Synonymous with ironstone in beds: a term used as much as 200 years ago.
mine-free adj. free of explosive mines.
ΚΠ
1920 Polit. Sci. Q. 35 448 To make sure of a mine-free fairway, they retired to Horn Reef.
1999 Sunday Observer (Sri Lanka) (Electronic ed.) 4 July Releasing the areas certified as mine free to the civilians who are resettling in the region.
mine greys n. English regional Obsolete thin beds of limestone containing a high concentration of shells.
ΚΠ
1862 A. C. Ramsay et al. Descr. Catal. Rock Specim. (ed. 3) 149 In many of the localities in the Weald these limestones are known by the name of mine greys.
mine ground n. Obsolete rare rock containing strata of iron ore.
ΚΠ
1883 W. S. Gresley Gloss. Terms Coal Mining Mine Ground, strata containing ironstone in layers.
mine-head n. (a) (Military) an underground area in which explosives are placed to take the enemy by surprise; (b) (Mining) the entrance to a mine; a mine-shaft and headgear (headgear n. 4).
ΚΠ
1917 Summ. Recent Information regarding German Army & Methods 21 When the underground fighting becomes particularly vigorous,..the enemy will sometimes raid our mine heads with a view to destroying them or throwing back work.
1953 W. B. Mowery Sagas of Mounted Police 125 At Benders' joint, the price of a pint of pink-eye was a day's hard labor in a mine-head.
2003 H. S. Klein Conc. Hist. Bolivia ii. 38 No one miner owned anything greater than a few mine heads leading into one of the countless veins of silver.
mine-iron n. Obsolete rare = mine pig n.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > metal > iron > [noun] > type of iron > cast iron > cast iron in form of pigs > types of
mine-iron1838
grundy1840
silvery iron1861
mine pig1867
marked bar1888
marked iron1888
1838 Civil Engineer & Architect's Jrnl. 1 144/1 The iron is..to be made wholly of pure or mine-iron.
mine lamp n. a lamp used in a mine.
ΚΠ
1820 P. B. Shelley Sensitive Plant in Prometheus Unbound 160 As mine-lamps enkindle a hidden gem.
1863 Sci. Amer. 9 May 299/1 A new mine lamp, the primary object of the invention being the safe illumination of coal and iron-stone mines infested with explosive gases.
2000 Independent (Nexis) 30 Aug. 11 He collected mine lamps for use only when strictly necessary, and asked his colleagues to hold on to their picks and spades.
mine master n. (a) Military (now historical), a person who superintends the positioning and construction of mines; (b) the overseer of a mine.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > warrior > armed man > one who lays or operates mines or bombs > [noun]
mine master1598
petarder1611
petardier1632
miner1692
springer1860
explosionist1868
dynamitard1882
dynamitist1882
dynamiter1883
dynamiteur1883
bomb-thrower1891
bomber1915
car bomber1919
letter bomber1947
firebomber1957
plastiqueur1961
society > occupation and work > worker > workers according to type of work > manual or industrial worker > miner > [noun] > mine manager or overseer
mine master1598
captain1602
reeve1753
1584 Let. in G. G. Francis Smelting of Copper in Swansea District (1867) 12 Ulricke Frosse, M. Mr.]
1598 R. Barret Theorike & Pract. Mod. Warres v. 133 There must be, Mine-maisters, Smithes [etc.].
1665 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 1 112 The Requisits to a perfect knowledge of the Metallick Art, and of the qualities of the Mine-master.
1683 in R. W. Cochran-Patrick Rec. Coinage Scotl. (1876) II. 200 That he or his deput or the myn master be judges in all debaits about myns and levells.
1799 J. Black Let. 6 Nov. in E. Robinson & D. McKie Partners in Sci. (1970) 306 A very handsome Sum of arrears which were due to the Company—estimated by the mine-masters at about 40,000.
1955 Mil. Affairs 19 198/1 Other bands of pioneers, such as those under the command of the trench master, mine master, or fire..master.
mine pig n. Obsolete pig iron made from ore only, as distinguished from cinder-pig.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > metal > iron > [noun] > type of iron > cast iron > cast iron in form of pigs > types of
mine-iron1838
grundy1840
silvery iron1861
mine pig1867
marked bar1888
marked iron1888
1867 Bulletin (Amer. Iron & Steel Assoc.) 13 Nov. 1/1 Common iron is made from puddle bars from hot-blast mine pig.
1884 W. H. Greenwood Steel & Iron iv. 56 Cinder-pig in contradistinction to all mine pig—i.e., pig smelted entirely from ore or mine—is obtained by [etc.].
mine pit n. a shaft leading to an underground mine; (also) the excavated area of a surface or opencast mine.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > workplace > places where raw materials are extracted > mine > [noun] > shaft
groovea1400
shaft1433
sink1557
mine pit1587
sinking1613
footway1778
shank1790
mine shaft1818
society > occupation and work > workplace > places where raw materials are extracted > mine > [noun] > excavated area
mine working1826
mine pit1862
1587 Star Chamber Proc. in E. Straker Wealden Iron (1931) (modernized text) II. 439 He [sc. Richard Harding]..took a great stone and came to the minepit side.
1650 J. Trapp Clavis to Bible (Num. iv. 3) 5 A labouring even to lassitude; compared therefore to..digging in mine-pits.
1862 A. C. Ramsay et al. Descr. Catal. Rock Specim. (ed. 3) 148 These still go by the name of ‘mine-pits’, and must not be confounded with the ‘marl-pits’, or those other deeper openings.
1988 Canad. Geographic Feb. 39/1 ‘The Nuisance Grounds’ is Christie's name for the town dump. It could be the name for Bristol's mine pit, or any other landfill site.
mine-planter n. a small ship designed for laying underwater mines; (also) a person who lays mines.
ΚΠ
1918 L. E. Ruggles Navy Explained 97 Mine Planter, a small vessel constructed especially for planting mines in channels, harbors and rivers. The latest mine planters are equipped with rapid firing guns and torpedo tubes.
1950 Jane's Fighting Ships 457 The disposition of Randolph and other Army mineplanters not transferred to the Navy is not known.
1995 Chicago Sun-Times (Nexis) 31 Dec. 39 The snipers, mine-planters and other killers are on enforced holiday in Bosnia.
mine plough n. Military a device fitted to the front of a tank or other heavy vehicle which clears a path through a minefield by cutting into the ground and pushing the mines aside.
ΚΠ
1978 Jane's Combat Support Equipm. 1978–79 173 Tank-mounted mine-clearing plough.]
1985 Defense & Foreign Affairs (Nexis) Jan. 25 A variety of systems, icluding the RAM V-1 light armored vehicle, the Magov mine plow, [etc.].
1992 H. N. Schwarzkopf It doesn't take Hero xx. 384 Armored excavators, mine plows, and other breaching equipment.
mine ship n. Nautical Obsolete = fireship n. 1.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > war vessel > [noun] > fireship
fire vessela1382
palander1524
fire boata1615
fireship1626
mine shipc1643
machine-vessel1694
fire raft1759
catamaran1804
fire-coffer1804
fire-junk1822
volcano-ship1860
c1643 N. Boteler Dialogues (1929) (modernized text) 268 All treacherous designs,..either with some fire-ship, mine-ship, or the like, may seasonably be discovered and avoided.
1706 Phillips's New World of Words (new ed.) Mine Ships or Powder-Ships, Ships fill'd with Gun-powder, enclos'd in strong Vaults of Brick or Stone; to be brought up, and fired in the midst of the Enemies Fleet.
mine sinker n. (a) = sinker n.1 2; (b) a device for making underwater mines sink to the bottom.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > hostilities at sea > naval weapons and equipment > [noun] > mine > parts of
mine sinker?1881
antenna1918
?1881 Census Eng. & Wales: Instr. Clerks classifying Occupations & Ages (?1885) 86 Well Sinker, Borer. Pit Sinker. Mine Sinker.
1889 C. Sleeman Torpedoes (ed. 2) vi. 119 The only practicable method of testing the efficiency of mine anchors or sinkers is to moor a buoyant mine to an anchor.
1926 Spectator 21 Aug. 271/1 He..produced 50,000 minesinkers at a very low cost.
mine-sowing n. = minelaying n.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > military equipment > operation and use of weapons > use of mines and explosives > [noun] > laying of mines
minelaying1900
mine-sowing1940
1940 V. Bartlett & W. G. Williams War of 1939 II. iii. 104 The Germans..had turned to indiscriminate mine-sowing.
1985 Sydney Morning Herald 27 July 25/6 Extensive mine sowing by air or sea is relatively easy. Counter-mining is expensive and difficult.
mine spirit n. Obsolete a spirit supposed to inhabit a mine (cf. fairy of the mine n. at fairy n. and adj. Phrases 1).
ΚΠ
1757 tr. J. G. Keyssler Trav. III. 377 It is said that the miners of Idra have formerly been so superstitious as to set some provisions for the mine-spirit every day.
1866 Galaxy 1 May 29 There are five species of Cornish fairies—the Small people..the Knockers, or mine spirits; [etc.].
mine-stone n. Obsolete ore, esp. iron ore.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > minerals > ore > [noun] > metal ore > iron ore > hard
ironstone1522
mine-stone1612
dogger1670
gubbin1712
iron clay1750
small balls1793
penny-stone1803
mine-stuff1839
silver thread1855
1612 S. Sturtevant Metallica ii. 35 Prepared or roasted oares, Mine-stones, or Mettle-stones beeing the fitt matter of Metallique liquours.
1703 R. Neve City & Countrey Purchaser 185 'Tis the first Iron that runs from the Mine-stone when 'tis melting.
1862 A. C. Ramsay et al. Descr. Catal. Rock Specim. (ed. 3) 148 The sites..where the ‘iron-mine’ or ‘mine-stone’ was extracted.
mine-stuff n. Obsolete rare = mine-stone n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > minerals > ore > [noun] > metal ore > iron ore > hard
ironstone1522
mine-stone1612
dogger1670
gubbin1712
iron clay1750
small balls1793
penny-stone1803
mine-stuff1839
silver thread1855
1839 A. Ure Dict. Arts 969 During this operation, all the water and mine-stuff are drawn off by the pit.
mine surveying n. the use of the techniques and practices of surveying in the construction and working of mines.
ΚΠ
1828 G. C. Lewis tr. A. Boeckh Public Econ. Athens II. iii. 456 For this purpose some knowledge of mine-surveying was requisite.
1904 Iowa Engineer 4 19 Mine surveying is generally defined as the art of making such measurements as may be necessary (a) to determine the location and extent of bodies of coal, ore, etc., (b) to determine the relative positions of points in the mine.
1981 Mining Jrnl. (Nexis) 12 June 465 During the symposium there will be an exhibition on mine surveying instruments.
2009 J. A. Botin Sustainable Managem. Mining Operations ix. 264 Mine surveying (mine, stockpiles, dam, etc.): This is the daily staking of ore–waste boundaries and blastholes, ongoing toe-crest surveying, and so forth.
mine surveyor n. an official responsible for inspecting mineworkings to assess safety, yield, etc.
ΚΠ
1860 Eng. & Foreign Mining Gloss. (new ed.) (S. Staffs.) Mine Surveyor, a person who dials the working of a colliery as often as requisite, and makes plans of the mines got and ungot.
1909 Trans. Amer. Inst. Mining Engineers 1908 39 899 Our mine-surveyors recognize, but do not employ, the old usage of ‘dip’ and ‘pitch’ interchangeably.
1949 Dict. National Biogr. 1931–40 at Hocking, Silas Kitto He intended to be a mine surveyor, but in 1869 was accepted as a candidate for the ministry of the United Methodist Free Church.
2010 Sowetan (S. Afr.) (Nexis) 12 Oct. A mine surveyor is usually responsible for carrying out feasibility studies to assess the financial viability of the project as well as its environmental impact.
mine tin n. Obsolete tin worked out of the lode; cf. moor-tin n. at moor n.1 Compounds 2a, stream-tin n. at stream n. Compounds 3.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > metal > base metal > [noun] > tin > types of
white tin1562
mine tin1602
grain tin1668
phosphor tin1668
pillion1778
grey tin1804
prillion1821
1602 R. Carew Surv. Cornwall i. f. 15v A foote of..the Myne Tynne..[will weigh] fiftie two pound.
1839 A. Ure Dict. Arts 1244 Mine tin requires peculiar care in its mechanical preparation or dressing.
1856 Sci. Amer. 19 Jan. 149/3 The tin-stone of Cornwall is found in veins associated with copper ore..hence it is called ‘mine tin.’
mine tipple n. [ < mine n. + tipple n.3] North American the area where the product of the mine is loaded into a ship, truck, etc., for transport (cf. tip n.5 3).
ΚΠ
1930 J. Dos Passos 42nd Parallel i. 111 In the middle of squirrels and minetipples.
1974 Beautiful Brit. Columbia Spring 27/2 Coal is still mined there in large quantities. The highway passes underneath a portion of the mine tipple.
mine town n. a town populated chiefly by local miners (cf. mining town n. at mining n. Compounds 1).
ΚΠ
1661 R. Boyle Sceptical Chymist vi. 361 At a Mine-Town (if I may so English the German Bergstat)..a Workman came to the Overseer, and desired employment.
1755 A. Berthelson tr. E. Pontoppidan Nat. Hist. Norway i. 183 The new built mine-town of Kongsberg.
1802 Brookes' Gazetteer (ed. 12) Platen, a mine-town of Bohemia.
1966 R. Webster Pract. Gemmol. (ed. 4) xviii. 180 At the mine town of Palmnicken this pit amber..is washed in revolving cylinders with sand and water.
mine-viewer n. Obsolete rare = mine surveyor n.
ΚΠ
1839 A. Ure Dict. Arts 1271 At the pleasure of the skilful mine-viewer.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2002; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

mineadj.pron.

Brit. /mʌɪn/, U.S. /maɪn/
Forms: Old English minn, Old English–1500s min, Old English–1500s myn, Middle English mein, Middle English miin, Middle English minne, Middle English myin, Middle English myine, Middle English mynn, Middle English–1600s myen, Middle English–1600s myne, Middle English– mine, 1500s mijn; Scottish pre-1700 mayn, pre-1700 mayne, pre-1700 mien, pre-1700 miyn, pre-1700 myn, pre-1700 mynn, pre-1700 mynne, pre-1700 1800s– mine, pre-1700 1900s– myne, 1900s– min, 1900s– min'.
Origin: A word inherited from Germanic.
Etymology: Cognate with Old Frisian mīn (Frisian myn ), Middle Dutch mīn , mijn (Dutch mijn ), Old Saxon mīn , Old High German mīn (Middle High German mīn , German mein ), Old Icelandic minn , mínn , Norn (Shetland) min , Norwegian min , Old Swedish mín (Swedish min ), Old Danish min (Danish min ), Gothic meins < a suffixed form of the Germanic base of me pron.1 Compare mines pron.A case-form (whether ablative, locative, or instrumental is uncertain) of this possessive adjective serves in all early Germanic languages as the genitive of the pronoun of the 1st person singular; compare Old English mīn , Old Frisian mīn , Old Saxon mīn , Old High German mīn , Old Icelandic mín , Gothic meina . The Old English mīn as genitive did not survive into Middle English (uses like malgre min being not survivals, but imitations of French). Compare:OE Cynewulf Elene 347 He on gesyhðe wæs, mægena wealdend, min on þa swiðran.OE St. Mary of Egypt (Julius) (2002) 104 Geanbida min on þa healfe Iordanen þe to worulde belimpeð.OE King Ælfred tr. Psalms (Paris) (2001) xxiv. 6 Beo þu min gemyndig, Drihten. In Old English and early Middle English inflected as a strong adjective (e.g. Old English mīnre and its reflex early Middle English mire (dative singular feminine)); the alternation of min (singular) and mine (plural) is still common in Middle English of the 14th cent. For the history of use of my and mine as possessive adjective see note s.v. my adj., int., and pron.
The possessive †adjective and pronoun of the first person singular.
A. adj. (determiner).
1.
a. Modifying a following noun: = my adj. 1a. Now only before a vowel or h, and archaic or poetic (except in mine host: see host n.2 2a); otherwise superseded by my adj. (see for the various uses).min dieu [representing French mon Dieu!] : ‘my God!’ (obsolete). See also mein Gott int. Occasionally also found in representations of nonstandard speech.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > owning > [adjective] > own > mine, my, or our
mineeOE
oureOE
ourOE
myc1175
oursa1400
eOE King Ælfred tr. Gregory Pastoral Care (Tiber.) (Junius transcript) (1871) i. 28 Hi hæfdon mine æ, & hi me ne gecnewon.
OE Ælfric Catholic Homilies: 1st Ser. (Royal) (1997) i. 185 Þonne beo ic gemyndig mines weddes.
OE West Saxon Gospels: Luke (Corpus Cambr.) xv. 24 Forþam þes min sunu wæs dead & he geedcucude, he forwearð & he is gemet.
c1175 Ormulum (Burchfield transcript) l. 2957 Drihhtin me ȝifeþ witt. & mihht. To forþenn wel min wille.
c1230 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Corpus Cambr.) (1962) 207 Min & mines feaderes luue ne mei naut cumen to ow.
c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1978) 8407 Þe oðer wes mire suster sune.
c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1978) l. 14085 Þat ich habbe minne æm [c1300 Otho min eam] awræke.
c1330 (?a1300) Arthour & Merlin (Auch.) (1973) 961 (MED) A, min dieu..Þine tales ben gode.
1400 in Ancestor (1904) July 14 I bequeth to Hawys myn wyff all myn necessaries that arn in myn place.
c1450 (c1385) G. Chaucer Complaint of Mars 57 Then seyde he thus: ‘Myn hertes lady swete’[etc.].
1469 in S. Tymms Wills & Inventories Bury St. Edmunds (1850) 46 (MED) I wyll that John..haue myn seid place callyd Upwode Halle.
c1480 (a1400) Prol. 169 in W. M. Metcalfe Legends Saints Sc. Dial. (1896) I. 6 At Petir firste I wald begyne, and sa furtht to myn purposs win.
1484 W. Caxton tr. Subtyl Historyes & Fables Esope i. vi He shall be myn mortal enemy.
1526 Bible (Tyndale) John xvi. f. cxlvv At that daye shall ye axe in myne name.
1558 in J. Strype Ann. Reformation (1824) I. ii. 72 I do send you at this present mine faithful Chaplain.
1598 W. Shakespeare Henry IV, Pt. 1 iii. iii. 80 Shall I not take mine ease in mine Inne. View more context for this quotation
1628 G. Hakewill Let. 16 July in R. Parr Life J. Usher (1686) Coll. cxxxi. 399 During mine abode in the University.
1726 J. Swift Gulliver I. ii. vii. 131 Till I had gotten a little below the level of mine Eyes.
1756 C. Lucas Ess. Waters i. Ded. [It] would be very far from desireable, in mine estimation.
1816 W. Scott Antiquary II. ii. 48 Dat is my little secret, mine goot sir.
1842 Ld. Tennyson Morte d'Arthur in Poems (new ed.) II. 11 Sir King, I closed mine eyelids, lest the gems Should blind my purpose.
1871 R. Ellis tr. Catullus Poems lxiv. 223 Rather, first in cries mine heart shall lighten her anguish.
1914 E. P. Stewart Lett. Woman Homesteader xvi. 159 You shall come to mine house and when away you come it shall be wiser as when you left.
1929 C. Day Lewis Transitional Poem ii. 34 When bullying April bruised mine eyes With sleet-bound appetites and crude Experiments of green.
1987 Washington Post (Nexis) 22 May e4 But I still got a big boff out of the bumper sticker mine eyes saw the glory of on River Road.
b. As the first of two or more possessives modifying a following noun (without intention of archaism).
ΚΠ
1506 in J. Bain & C. Rogers Glasgow Protocol Reg. (1875) 163 All and sindri myn and theris gudis.
1558 J. Hales in J. Foxe Actes & Monuments (1576) II. 2006/1 I haue..discouered myne, yours, & my lande of Englands enemies.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Tempest (1623) iii. iii. 93 His, and mine lou'd darling. View more context for this quotation
a1616 W. Shakespeare Cymbeline (1623) v. vi. 230 Oh Gentlemen, helpe, Mine and your Mistris.
1761 F. Sheridan Mem. Miss Sidney Bidulph II. 275 As mine and my child's future welfare must be [etc.].
a1845 S. Smith Elem. Sketches Moral Philos. (1850) xv. 209 I bought them both the same day, mine and your ticket.
1930 W. Faulkner As I lay Dying 169 Let not the tale of mine and her transgression come from her lips instead of mine.
1989 G. Keillor We are still Married (1990) 58 The mess, the endless clutter and noise and confusion and hostility..makes for a stifling atmosphere for mine and Rob's relationship.
2. As postmodifier. Now only archaic in vocative expressions.
ΚΠ
eOE King Ælfred tr. Gregory Pastoral Care (Hatton) (1871) xxxviii. 273 Sunu min, ongiet minne wisdom & minne wærscipe.
OE Guthlac B 1235 Huru, ic nolde sylf þurh gielpcwide gæstes mines frofre gelettan, ne fæder mines æfre geæfnan.
c1175 Ormulum (Burchfield transcript) Ded. l. 1 Nu broþerr wallterr. broþerr min.
c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1978) 12064 Appolin, þat is deore lauerd min.
c1275 (?c1250) Owl & Nightingale (Calig.) (1935) 712 (MED) Wi axestu of craftes mine?
c1330 (?a1300) Arthour & Merlin (Auch.) (1973) 1442 Tel me now, sone mine, Whi [etc.].
c1330 (?a1300) Arthour & Merlin (Auch.) (1973) 4977 Y dar legge heued min Þat [etc.].
c1395 G. Chaucer Clerk's Tale 365 This is ynogh Grisilde myn quod he.
a1400 Psalter (Vesp.) vii. 5 in C. Horstmann Yorkshire Writers (1896) II. 137 (MED) Fylegh, saule mine, þe faa.
c1450 (?a1405) J. Lydgate Complaint Black Knight (Fairf.) 639 in Minor Poems (1934) ii. 408 O glad[e] sterre! O lady Venus myn!
a1557 J. Cheke tr. Gospel St. Matthew (1843) xxvi. 25 Js it J Mr mijn, quoth he.
1567 Compend. Bk. Godly Songs (1897) 38 O Father myne, how lang haif I Thy trew and faithfull seruand bene.
1597 W. Shakespeare Romeo & Juliet ii. ii. 82 Rom: Thou chidst me oft for louing Rosaline. Fr: For doating, not for louing, pupill mine . View more context for this quotation
1611 J. Florio Queen Anna's New World of Words at Mamma Also Mam, Mother-mine, or Mammie, as children first call their Mothers.
1682 A. Behn False Count i. ii. 7 Bal. Let her remain awhile amongst us. Fran. The Devil a bit shee shall, good Father mine, no, no.
1771 T. Smollett Humphry Clinker I. 108 Hoity toity, brother mine, (she replied) no offence, I hope.
1803 H. K. White Lullaby in Clifton Grove 110 Sleep Baby mine enkerchieft on my bosom.
1845 ‘Bon Gaultier’ Bk. Ballads 35 Fill me once more the foaming pewter up! Another board of oysters, ladye mine!
1852 C. A. Bristed Five Years Eng. University (ed. 2) 67 There, reader mine! Is that last page grave and solid enough for you?
1870 G. Massey Tale of Eternity 295 I do not blame you, Darling mine; You could not know the love that lurkt To make my life so intertwine With yours.
1916 F. R. Livesay in J. W. Garvin Canad. Poets 373 The sun will make it [sc. my hair] dry, Wind-parted it will lie—So, mother mine, good-bye!
1993 E. Richmond Love of my Heart (BNC) Hello, brother mine, what perfect timing you do have.
3. In phrases: mine alone, mine one, mine unwitting, maugre mine (see alone adj. 1a(c), one adj. 5c, unwitting adj. 3, maugre prep. 1b). Obsolete.
B. pron. [These were originally the predicative and absolute uses of the possessive adjective. Following the generalization of my as the invariable form of the 1st person possessive adjective, mine has taken on a pronominal function parallel to that of ours, yours, hers, etc.]
1. Predicatively: that which belongs to me.
ΚΠ
OE Old Eng. Martyrol. (Julius) 14 May 104 Ic geseo twegen beagas cuman of heofonum, se mara is þin ond se læssa is min.
OE Old Eng. Hexateuch: Exod. (Claud.) xix. 5 Eal eorðe is min.
c1175 Ormulum (Burchfield transcript) l. 17964 Þiss blisse iss min lafuliwiss.
a1225 (?OE) MS Lamb. in R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies (1868) 1st Ser. 35 Me were leofere þenne al world, þah hit were min.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Gött.) 970 (MED) Of all kines fruit hald þu þe neien, For i wil þe tend þan be mein.
c1400 (a1376) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Trin. Cambr. R.3.14) (1960) A. v. 92 (MED) I wysshe it were myn.
c1450 (c1386) G. Chaucer Legend Good Women Prol. 146 I chees yow to be myn.
1484 W. Caxton tr. Subtyl Historyes & Fables Esope i. vi The fyrst part is myn by cause I am your lord.
1535 Bible (Coverdale) John vii. 16 My doctryne is not myne, but his that hath sent me.
a1592 R. Greene Alcida (1617) sig. G4v Lucidor shall be mine, hee shall haue my heart, and I his.
1602 B. Jonson Poetaster v. iii. sig. L Though 'twere your great Graund-fathers, the Law ha's made it mine now, Sir.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Measure for Measure (1623) v. i. 491 Giue me your hand, and say you will be mine . View more context for this quotation
1697 J. Dryden tr. Virgil Pastorals x, in tr. Virgil Wks. 46 Ah! that your Birth and Bus'ness had been mine.
1734 M. Barber Poems 64 These boasted Gifts are thine, I own; But know, Content is mine alone.
1766 O. Goldsmith Vicar of Wakefield I. xv. 152 That pocket-book is mine, and I am glad you have found it.
1793 S. Rowson Inquisitor (new ed.) I. 30 I shall not be entirely devoid of fear till I can call you mine.
1842 Ld. Tennyson May Queen (new ed.) Concl. x, in Poems (new ed.) I. 172 It's not for them: it's mine.
1864–8 R. Browning James Lee's Wife iv. v Such as you were, I took you for mine.
1910 E. M. Forster Howards End v. 39 It's an appalling umbrella. It must be mine.
1968 J. D. Carr Papa Là-bas ii. ix. 111 It was stuck in the pigeonhole that's mine on the rack outside the office.
1993 A. Wells Viking Magic xi. 150 One look and I was arrogant enough to decide I was going to make her mine.
2. Equivalent to my with a noun supplied from the context. Frequently paired or contrasted with another possessive.
ΚΠ
OE Paris Psalter (1932) liv. 12 Wyt..on godes huse gangan swylce mid geþeahtunge þine and mine.
lOE Anglo-Saxon Chron. (Laud) (Peterborough interpolation) anno 963 Ealle þa þing þe þin forgengles & min geatton, þa wille ic þæt hit stande, & swahwaswa hit tobrecoð, þa gife ic him Godes curs &..min.
a1225 ( Ælfric's Homily De Initio Creaturae (Vesp. A.xxii) in R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies (1868) 1st Ser. 223 For þan þe were hihersam þines [wifes] wordum mor ðan mine.
c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1963) 676 He deð him selua freoma þa helpeð his freondene Swa ich wlle mine.
1395 in F. J. Furnivall Fifty Earliest Eng. Wills (1882) 7 (MED) To preye for my lordes soule Sir Thomas West and for myn.
c1405 (c1390) G. Chaucer Reeve's Tale (Hengwrt) (2003) l. 165 Lay doun thy swerd and I wol myn alswa.
c1450 (?a1400) Wars Alexander (Ashm.) 668 (MED) Oft storbis me..Þat þi personale proporcion sa party is to myne.
c1500 Melusine (1895) 157 Your wylle & myne be one.
1597 W. Shakespeare Romeo & Juliet ii. ii. 59 My harts deare loue is set On the faire daughter of rich Capulet: As mine on hers, so hers likewise on mine. View more context for this quotation
1625 K. Long tr. J. Barclay Argenis iii. xix. 211 If more holily and religiously wee esteeme of my Fathers preseruer and mine.
1684 J. Stewart in B. Cusack Everyday Eng. (1998) 220 [Scotl.] May lowf to yow and Robert Goodien..also all owr lowff to margret forest and espesly mien.
1786 G. Horne Duty contending Faith 8 (note) When a man deceives me once, says the Italian proverb, it is his fault; when twice, it is mine.
1839 C. Dickens Nicholas Nickleby iiiMine was no common loss!’ said Mrs Nickleby.
1843 G. Borrow Bible in Spain II. xiv. 311 I am pleased with your company, as I make no doubt you are with mine.
1866 J. C. Maxwell in Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 156 268 In M. Meyer's experiments the time of vibration is shorter than in most of mine.
1907 E. von Arnim Fräulein Schmidt xlii. 167 Her hair, waved more beautifully than mine will ever be, was piled up in..masses.
1973 P. Dickinson Green Gene ii. 28 She's got a really yuck family, even worse than mine.
1991 New Musical Express (BNC) 16 Mar. 20 He looks like someone's Dad. Not mine, thank God.
3.
a. Those who are mine; (chiefly) my family, my kindred. Frequently in me and mine.
ΚΠ
OE Descent into Hell 75 Þu me gecyddest [read gecyðdest], cyneþrymma wyn, þæt þu mundbora minum wære.
OE Genesis A (1931) 2178 Ne þearf ic yrfestol eaforan bytlian ænigum minra.
a1350 (a1250) Harrowing of Hell (Harl.) (1907) 62 (MED) Y shal þe bringe of helle pyne ant wyþ þe alle myne.
c1390 G. Chaucer Melibeus 3071 I..foryeue yow outrely alle the offenses, iniuries, and wronges þat ye haue doon agayn me and myne.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) 5371 (MED) He has saued me and mine Fra mikel nede.
c1425 (c1400) Laud Troy-bk. 16851 Ȝit I hope that I & myne Schal venge his dethe on the & thine.
c1485 ( G. Hay Bk. Law of Armys (2005) 154 Vnharmyt of me or ony of myn.
1522 E. Betts Let. in B. Cusack Everyday Eng. 1500–1700 (1998) 228 I Recommande me vnto you in myn herty wyse and soo thanke you for yor gret kyndnesse shewn vnto me and myn.
1597 W. Shakespeare Richard III ii. i. 24 I will neuer more remember Our former hatred so thriue I and mine . View more context for this quotation
1683 Robin Consc. 15 Both I and mine alas would starve.
1749 H. Fielding Tom Jones VI. xvii. ii. 93 He hath been the Preserver of me and mine . View more context for this quotation
1829 W. Wordsworth Mem. II. 209 I and mine will be happy to see you and yours here or anywhere.
1884 A. Phelps Let. 14 Dec. in E. S. Phelps Mem. (1891) 275 God is so unspeakably good to me and mine.
1891 Sir J. Paget in Mem. & Lett. (1901) 387 The unhappiness of being here alone is greater than the happiness of seeing things which, if any of ‘mine’ had been with me, I should [etc.].
1972 Star (Johannesburg) 26 Oct. 27 Guarding me and mine from the infidels waiting to destroy my ‘kultuur’.
1994 Critical Intelligence Sept. 3/3 Outside is negativity, can't-doism, and any criticism of me and mine.
b. That which is mine; my property; (also) my affair, my business. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > possessions > [noun] > that which is one's own > that which is mine, ours, his, hers, or yours
oureOE
hisOE
mineOE
thineOE
hernc1230
hersa1250
ourna1382
yourna1382
oursa1400
his'nc1425
yours1526
OE Beowulf 2737 Ic on earde bad mælgesceafta, heold min tela.
lOE Laws: Hit Becwæð (Corpus Cambr.) iii. §2. 400 Ne gyrne ic ðines, ne læðes ne landes, ne sace ne socne; ne ðu mines ne ðearft.
?a1300 (a1250) Harrowing of Hell (Digby) (1907) 87 (MED) Seþþen þou boundest him wiþ min, Wiþ reisoun wil ich hauen him.
c1384 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(2)) John xvi. 14 Of myne he schal take.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) 2429 O þine wil i not haue a dele, Bot leuer es me o myne þou haue.
a1500 tr. Thomas à Kempis De Imitatione Christi (Trin. Dublin) (1893) 132 (MED) To þe I committe me & all myne to correcte.
1555 R. Eden tr. Peter Martyr of Angleria Decades of Newe Worlde i. iii. f. 17v Myne and Thyne (the seedes of all myscheefe) haue no place with them.
1569 R. Grafton Chron. II. 86 Your grace hath hetherto cherished mee but for mine, but now I will go to him that is more redier to geue then to take.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Taming of Shrew (1623) ii. i. 379 She shall haue me and mine . View more context for this quotation
a1616 W. Shakespeare Measure for Measure (1623) ii. ii. 12 Goe to; let that be mine . View more context for this quotation
a1628 J. Carmichaell Coll. Prov. in Scots (1957) No. 720 He that can not gyde his awin weil wil never gide myne weill.
c. of mine: that is (or are) mine; belonging to me (see of prep. 32).
ΚΠ
c1390 G. Chaucer Monk's Tale 3092 If that any neighebore of myne Wol nat in chirche to my wyf enclyne.
1463 in S. Tymms Wills & Inventories Bury St. Edmunds (1850) 23 (MED) I yeve here the..clothes of myn that longe to ye bedde that she hath loyen in.
1502 Townley in T. Stapleton Plumpton Corr. (1839) 164 There was a servant of yours, and a kynsman of myne, was myschevously made away with.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Henry V (1623) iii. iii. 58 By the Mes, ere theise eyes of mine take themselues to slomber, ayle de gud seruice. View more context for this quotation
1749 H. Fielding Tom Jones II. vi. x. 292 He shan't ever have a Morsel of Meat of mine . View more context for this quotation
1877 H. James American v. 86 Mr. Babcock's moral malaise..lay deeper than where any definition of mine can reach it.
1991 L. Faderman Odd Girls & Twilight Lovers i. 21 A masculine colleague of mine looked around the office in a rather critical state of mind.
d. colloquial and British regional (originally East Anglian). My home, my house, ‘my place’.
ΚΠ
a1825 R. Forby Vocab. E. Anglia (1830) II. 214 Mine,..used with the ellipsis of house. Ex. ‘I wish you would come to mine’.
1893 in H. T. Cozens-Hardy Broad Norfolk (Eastern Daily Press) 63 I happened with him at mine.
1997 J. Mullin in Guardian 14 June (Weekend Suppl.) 8/3 He stayed at mine when he was working as a security guard in London.
1999 J. Lloyd & E. Rees Come Together iii. 68 What else could I have done but invited her back to mine?
e. colloquial. My choice, esp. my drink (i.e. ‘what I would like to drink’) (typically in response to an offer to buy drinks). Cf. yours pron. 3f.
ΚΠ
1937 E. Partridge Dict. Slang 522/2 Mine's a gin.
1962 S. Gore Down Golden Mile vi. 120 Make mine a glass this time, seein' I have to go on the scoot with you booze artists to-night.
1998 Evening Standard (Electronic ed.) 5 Oct. It's enough to shake you to the roots. Meanwhile, mine's a large spinach on the rocks, Squeezemaster.
4. mine-take-it: a children's claiming call (cf. finders keepers at finder n. Phrases). Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1694 S. Johnson Notes Pastoral Let. 28 The ridiculous Ownership we have, is the ridiculous English word, Mine-take-it; which all the Children in England Know, is equivalent to Your's-take-it.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2002; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

minev.

Brit. /mʌɪn/, U.S. /maɪn/
Forms: Middle English mini, Middle English myny, Middle English–1500s myne, Middle English– mine, 1600s moine; Scottish pre-1700 myn, pre-1700 mynd, pre-1700 mynde, pre-1700 myne, pre-1700 1700s– mine.
Origin: A borrowing from French. Etymon: French miner.
Etymology: < Anglo-Norman and Middle French miner, myner, French miner (c1200 in Old French in sense ‘to dig under land, a rock, a wall, etc., so as to make it collapse’, c1340 in figurative sense of ‘to destroy, wear down’, 15th cent. in sense ‘to hollow out by erosion’, c1550 in sense ‘to extract from a mine’, 1680 in sense 6), probably < mine mine n. Compare Old Occitan minar (14th–15th cent.), Italian minare (a1348), Spanish minar (1495), Portuguese minar (16th cent.), post-classical Latin minare (13th cent.), mineare (13th cent. in British sources); also Dutch mijnen , German minieren (early 16th cent.), Norwegian mine to blast, blow up, Swedish mina (second half of the 17th cent.), Danish mine . Compare undermine v.
I. To dig a passage, and related senses.
1.
a. intransitive. To dig or tunnel under the foundations of a wall, fort, etc., so as to cause its collapse or to gain an entrance; (more generally) to dig in the earth, esp. for treasure. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > attack > action or state of siege or blockade > lay siege [verb (intransitive)] > undermine
minec1330
undermine1382
society > occupation and work > industry > earth-moving, etc. > [verb (intransitive)] > dig or excavate
gravea1000
delvec1000
wrootc1325
minec1330
gruba1350
sinkc1358
undermine1382
diga1387
spit1393
to pick upc1400
holk1513
graff1532
pion1643
excavate1843
throw1843
crow1853
spade1869
c1330 (?a1300) Richard Coer de Lyon (Auch.) 143 in Englische Studien (1885) 8 117 (MED) Þai hadde so mined vnder þe walle Þat mani a griffoun gan doun falle.
c1330 Seven Sages (Auch.) (1933) 99 (MED) Þai..sette postes al about, And bigan to mini vnder.
a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) v. 2121 (MED) On of hem seith that he mette Wher he a goldhord scholde fette..this Emperour..bad His Mynours forto go and myne.
?a1400 (a1338) R. Mannyng Chron. (Petyt) ii. 179 Richard had minoures þat myned vndere þe walle.
c1400 (?a1300) Kyng Alisaunder (Laud) (1952) 1216 Alisaundre quyk hete his hynen Vnder her walles forto mynen.
c1400 Brut (Rawl. B. 171) 58 (MED) Doþ myne depe til ȝour men come to the ponde.
a1425 (?a1350) Seven Sages (Galba) (1907) 2283 (MED) Vnder þe stane..Es ful mekil seluir and golde..If þat we myght þarvnder mine, We sold find gold.
?c1475 Catholicon Anglicum (BL Add. 15562) f. 81 To Myne, arapagare, cunire.
1487 (a1380) J. Barbour Bruce (St. John's Cambr.) xvii. 600 With armyt men enew tharin, And instrumentis als for to myne.
a1500 (?a1450) Gesta Romanorum (Harl. 7333) (1879) 110 He saw..an hidowse pitte, and an orible dragon þere in, myning at the tree.
a1530 (c1425) Andrew of Wyntoun Oryg. Cron. Scotl. (Royal) viii. xxxvii. 5538 Wndyre the erde he gert thaim myne.
1569 R. Grafton Chron. II. 327 They beganne to mine vnder the Castell.
1614 W. Raleigh Hist. World i. v. iii. §9. 465 The Enemie mined; and they countermined.
1692 Smith's Sea-mans Gram. (new ed.) ii. ii. 91 He may be able..to Mine or Counter-mine under the same.
b. intransitive. In extended use. Frequently with in, into. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1340 Ayenbite (1866) 108 (MED) Þanne nymþ he his pic and his spade and beginþ to delue and to myny and geþ in-to his herte.
a1425 (c1385) G. Chaucer Troilus & Criseyde (1987) ii. 677 His manhod and his pyne Made love with-inne hire herte for to myne.
c1450 (?c1408) J. Lydgate Reson & Sensuallyte (1901) 6918 (MED) Water that droppeth euer in oon Myneth ful depe in-to A stoon.
a1475 (?a1430) J. Lydgate tr. G. Deguileville Pilgrimage Life Man (Vitell.) 4282 Thys mortal werm wyl neuere fyne Vp-on hys mayster for to myne.
a1475 (?a1430) J. Lydgate tr. G. Deguileville Pilgrimage Life Man (Vitell.) 11872 And many kankres wych on hem myne.
c1475 (a1449) J. Lydgate Testament (Harl. 218) 34 in Minor Poems (1911) i. 331 (MED) In Amorous hertes brennyng of kyndenesse This name Iesu most profoundely doth myne.
1532 (c1385) Usk's Test. Loue in Wks. G. Chaucer Prol. f. cccxxv Dul wytte and a thoughtful soule, so sore haue myned and graffed in my spyrites.
1605 F. Bacon Of Aduancem. Learning ii. sig. Fff2 To search and mine into that which is not reuealed. View more context for this quotation
1816 M. Holford Margaret of Anjou ii. 28 Many a surface fair and shining Conceals a wasted core, where thou [sc. Sorrow] art slowly mining!
1888 Harper's Mag. Sept. 508/1 One [caribou] will..go gravely over to where another has mined down to a piece of ice of extra flavor.
2.
a. transitive. To tunnel or excavate beneath the foundations of (a wall, fort, etc.) so as to cause its collapse or to gain an entrance. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > industry > earth-moving, etc. > [verb (transitive)] > dig (hole, etc.) > dig under
underdelvec1000
underwroota1272
undermyec1330
minec1380
underminea1382
underdig1382
c1380 Sir Ferumbras (1879) 4993 Þay seȝe sa[r]zyns myne þe wal Wyþ pykoys & howes gret & smal.
c1400 Brut (Rawl. B. 171) 136 (MED) William Bastard..hade taken al þe lande aboute Hastynge & hade also mynede þe castell.
a1425 J. Wyclif Sel. Eng. Wks. (1871) II. 408 (MED) If þe hosebonde man wiste what hour þe þeef were to come, certis he wolde wake, and suffre him not to myne his hous.
a1425 (c1395) Bible (Wycliffite, L.V.) (Royal) (1850) Job xxiv. 16 Thei [sc. adulterers] mynen housis in derknesses.
c1440 (?a1400) Morte Arthure 351 Merke vnto Meloyne, and myne doun þe wallez.
c1450 tr. G. Deguileville Pilgrimage Lyfe Manhode (Cambr.) (1869) 139 (MED) The kyng first bifore wente and mynede the foundement.
a1522 G. Douglas tr. Virgil Æneid (1957) v. viii. 42 To mynd the castell on the rochis hie, Lurkand in harnes wachis round about.
1570 P. Levens Manipulus Vocabulorum sig. Livv/2 To Mine, suffodere.
1911 T. E. Lawrence Let. 8 June (1938) 110 No one knows how the outwork at Gaillard was breached: I fancy..that the angle tower was mined over the filled up moat.
b. transitive. figurative. To attack, overcome, ruin, or destroy by slow or secret methods; to undermine. Occasionally with away, down. Now rare.In quot. 1749 used intransitively with object implied.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > harm or detriment > cause or effect (harm) [verb (transitive)] > do harm or injury to > gradually or secretly
undergoc1000
minec1422
undercreepa1440
cankera1450
undermine1565
cankerfret1585
sap1711
honeycomb1821
white-ant1905
submarine1917
sabotage1918
undercut1955
monkeywrench1986
the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > breaking or cracking > break [verb (transitive)] > break down, demolish, or ruin > undermine or cause collapse
minec1422
sap1652
c1422 T. Hoccleve Tale of Jerelaus (Durh.) l. 476 in Minor Poems (1970) i. 157 Shee wolde for no thyng bowe & enclyne; Hire hertes Castel kowde they nat myne.
a1450 (c1412) T. Hoccleve De Regimine Principum (Harl. 4866) (1897) 3133 They at þe fulle kunne his herte myne.
a1475 (?a1430) J. Lydgate tr. G. Deguileville Pilgrimage Life Man (Vitell.) 15650 Whan Ire doth myn herte myne.
1607 B. Jonson Volpone iii. ii. sig. F4 I haue done Base offices, in..Whispering false lies, or mining men with prayses. View more context for this quotation
a1616 W. Shakespeare As you like It (1623) i. i. 19 Hee..mines my gentility with my education. View more context for this quotation
1685 J. Dryden Threnodia Augustalis v. 9 Like a fortress on a Rock, Th' impregnable Disease their vain attempts did mock; They min'd it near, they batter'd from a far With all the Cannon of the Med'cinal War.
1749 S. Johnson Vanity Human Wishes 26 The Rival batters, and the Lover mines.
1751 J. Brown Ess. Characteristics 239 'Till..irreligion and licentiousness appear; mine the foundations of the fabric, and sink it in the general abyss of ignorance and oppression.
1814 J. Galt tr. C. Goldoni Love, Honor, & Interest i. i, in New Brit. Theatre III. 260 While love is mining down The strength and virtue of my own esteem.
1846 E. Bulwer-Lytton Lucretia I. i. i. 44 The wreck of man..fretted and mined away by small pleasures and poor excitements.
1998 M. Tea Passionate Mistakes & Intricate Corruption (2007) 68 Oh, I'm straight he said. I wanted to kill him. I was pretending to be a lesbian and he mined it.
c. transitive. poetic. Of a river: to force its way beneath. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1807 J. Barlow Columbiad i. 39 Pastaza mines proud Pambamarca's base.
a1809 A. Seward in Poet. Wks. (1810) III. 348 Now Nor waters mine the root, nor tear the branch.
1824 W. C. Bryant Green River ii The plane-tree's speckled arms o'ershoot The swifter current that mines its root.
3.
a. transitive. To make (a hole, a passage, one's way) underground by digging. Also in extended use. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > industry > earth-moving, etc. > [verb (transitive)] > make tunnel
mine1555
ferret1582
hole1708
tunnel1865
?a1425 (c1400) Mandeville's Trav. (Titus C.xvi) (1919) 178 A fox schall..mynen an hole.
c1425 J. Lydgate Troyyes Bk. (Augustus A.iv) iii. 2232 He made his werkmen a toumbe for to myne.
1555 W. Waterman tr. J. Boemus Fardle of Facions i. vi. 93 The Troglodites myne them selues caues in the grounde, wherin to dwell.
a1802 E. Darwin Temple of Nature (1803) iv. 132 The cruel larva mines its silky course.
1813 W. Scott Rokeby ii. 57 Condemned to mine a channelled way, O'er solid sheets of marble grey.
1820 W. Hazlitt Lect. Dramatic Lit. 165 He may be said to mine his way into a subject, like a mole.
1900 Daily News 20 Nov. 3/2 The Funk Holes which the besieged residents had mined in the river bank.
b. transitive. To dig or burrow in (the earth); to make a hollow, groove, or tunnel in; to fill with cavities or tunnels (frequently in passive). Also in extended use.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > shape > unevenness > condition or fact of receding > hollowness > make hollow [verb (transitive)]
holec1000
mine?a1425
hollowc1450
cave?1541
raven1560
excave1578
excavate1599
exconcavate1599
society > travel > means of travel > route or way > other means of passage or access > [verb (transitive)] > supply with underground passages
minea1822
subway1866
?a1425 (c1400) Mandeville's Trav. (Titus C.xvi) (1919) 178 So longe he schall mynen & percen the erthe til þat he schall passe þorgh.
1477 W. Caxton tr. R. Le Fèvre Hist. Jason (1913) 26 How well the stone is myned and holowed by contynuell droppyng of water.
1779 R. Jephson Law of Lombardy iv. i. 43 Like a deep stream it rolls its noiseless way, Mining the banks in silence.
1811 J. Pinkerton Petralogy II. 551 This stump and the trunk, hollowed and mined by the subterranean heat.
1816 W. Kirby & W. Spence Introd. Entomol. (1818) II. xxii. 279 A subcutaneous larva..that mines the leaves of the rose.
a1822 P. B. Shelley Witch of Atlas lx, in Posthumous Poems (1824) 49 Through fane and palace-court and labyrinth mined With many a dark and subterranean street.
1858 C. Merivale Hist. Romans under Empire VI. lix. 596 The site of Jerusalem itself is mined with vaults and galleries.
1921 Brit. Mus. Return 138 Phytomyza albiceps, mining and ruining the leaves of Cinerarias.
1972 T. Keneally Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith v. 34 The earth beneath had been tortuously mined by pestilential rabbits.
1980 M. Robinson Housekeeping i. 7 These hills..were made of some brittle stone which had been mined by the water and fallen sheerly away.
c. intransitive. Entomology. Of an insect or its larvae: to burrow or tunnel through plant tissue, esp. through the interior of a leaf. Cf. miner n.1 4b.
ΚΠ
1906 N.E.D. at Oak Oak-pruner, a longicorn beetle..the larva of which mines down the centre of hardwood twigs.
1950 Ecol. Monogr. 20 89/2 When leaves in which they are mining become brown and waterlogged, second instar larvae..start new mines in neighbouring leaves.
1968 F. G. Browne Pests & Dis. Forest Plantation Trees i. 161 It [sc. the Jack Pine budworm larva] feeds mainly on the developing buds.., and also mines in young staminate cone clusters.
4. transitive. To bury in the soil. Also: to store up. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > covering > cover [verb (transitive)] > cover over or up > under the ground or bury
delvec1175
indelve1382
mine?1440
dig1530
bury1535
inter1601
inhume1626
turf1628
earthen1708
inearth1801
tr. Palladius De re Rustica (Duke Humfrey) (1896) iii. 334 (MED) Is not to helpe..To delue hit [sc. a vine] vnder al, but to reclyne Hit lyke a bowe and vnder lond hit myne.
1606 J. Day Ile of Guls sig. A3v Tis not strange to you, that the choisest treasure Nature indow'd vs with, is mynde vp in the vaines of my two daughters.
5. transitive. To extract (soil, etc.) in the course of digging. rare.
ΚΠ
1609 C. Butler Feminine Monarchie iv. sig. D6v Then making more roome beneath by moining & carrying out the earth, they [sc. wasps] hang an other combe vnder the first, by little pins.
1818 E. Elliott Night iv. vii. 140 The mole mines not the soil In heaps like these.
1906 tr. Littré in N.E.D. at Mole sb.2 A sort of tumour formed under the integuments of the head, which are raised like the earth mined [Fr. fouillée] by a mole.
6. transitive. To lay explosive mines beneath or around (a wall, fort, etc.), or in or about (an area of sea or land). Also: to dig tunnels or passages for mines beneath (a fort, etc.) (now rare).In some early quots. perhaps properly sense 2a.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > military equipment > operation and use of weapons > use of mines and explosives > use mines and explosives [verb (transitive)] > mine
minea1627
a1627 J. Hayward Life & Raigne Edward Sixt (1630) 60 They mined the walls, laid the powder and rammed the mouth.
1686 London Gaz. No. 2158/1 A Deserter..had informed the Imperial Generals that the said Towers were Mined.
1775 S. Johnson Journey W. Islands 310 The castle..is built upon a rock..that it might not be mined.
1820 C. C. F. Greville Mem. 10 Dec. (1874) 41 The Prussians arrived, mined the arches, and attempted to blow up the bridge.
1851 W. E. Gladstone Let. 26 Jan. in J. Morley Life Gladstone (1903) I. iii. vi. 403 The ground is mined—the train is laid.
1885 N. Amer. Rev. Sept. 274 Although the waters may be reported as mined in all directions, a bold test would show them to be clear of such dangers.
1917 J. Masefield Old Front Line iii. 38 It was all mined, countermined, and re-mined.
a1944 K. Douglas Alamein to Zem Zem (1946) xiv. 82 The verges of gaps in the road were mined with anti-personnel and vehicle mines.
1960 O. Manning Great Fortune iv. 248 Once we started mining Norwegian waters, Germany had no choice but to invade.
II. To extract ore, and related senses.
7.
a. transitive. To extract (metal, ore, coal, etc.) by mining. Also with out.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > industry > mining > mine [verb (transitive)]
minea1398
win1447
to work out1545
broach1582
labour1897
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 206 In capadocia is ȝolow salt y-digged and y-myned.
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 163 Noble metall ys y-myned owte of veynes of mountayns.
1429 in Norfolk Archaeol. (1904) 15 147 (MED) ij lod of sond paying j d. yat it was mynyd to ye same place.
1855 J. R. Leifchild Cornwall: Mines & Miners 129 The perplexity of the minerals to be mined.
1866 J. E. T. Rogers Hist. Agric. & Prices I. xxiii. 599 The Eastern produce [of tin] not being yet introduced into Europe, if indeed it were mined at that time.
1915 Northwestern Reporter 152 1022/1 In mining out the copper rock from this stope by the miners, it was passed or thrown downward along the foot wall to the level.
1963 A. Moorehead Cooper's Creek i. 5 Nearly all the surface alluvial was exhausted and now gold had to be mined by machinery and in deep shafts.
1980 Sci. Amer. Oct. 156/1 Much of the oil left in the ground after pumping can be mined.
b. transitive. figurative.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > taking > stealing or theft > thief > [verb (transitive)] > to extract item of value
mine1844
1844 J. C. Neal Peter Ploddy 83 Available knowledge..is a precious ore, to be..mined out by personal effort.
1961 Webster's 3rd New Internat. Dict. Eng. Lang. (at cited word) So far mined only a fraction of the cultural treasures of those times.
1988 Creative Rev. Jan. 15/2 The Americans have achieved the ultimate life-style approach, mining images that touch your senses and make you feel successful.
8. intransitive. To dig for the purpose of obtaining metals, ore, coal, etc.; to dig a mine; to work in a mine. Usually with in (the earth, etc.) or for (minerals, etc.). Also figurative.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > industry > mining > mine [verb (intransitive)]
mine1438
1438 in H. Nicolas Proc. & Ordinances Privy Council (1835) V. 87 (MED) The King to ordeine newe men to goo to þabbotes myne of Bukfast for to myne þere.
c1500 (a1449) J. Lydgate Isopes Fabules (Trin. Cambr.) 25 in Minor Poems (1934) ii. 567 Who, that myneth lowe in the grounde, Of gold and siluer fyndith the myneral.
?1568 in J. Pettus Fodinæ Regales (1670) 60 She grants unto them to search, dig, and mine for the Callamine stone in all places of England.
1677 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 12 912 The Earth they Mine in, is very red.
1748 B. Robins & R. Walter Voy. round World by Anson i. v. 50 The workmen break off the rocks, and do not properly mine into them.
1819 Ld. Byron Don Juan: Canto I cxxxii. 69 Coals Are safely mined for.
1862 H. Brown Victoria, as I found It 151 All those without a miner's right have no permission to mine on Crown Land.
1896 Daily News 9 Sept. 7 Those who mined for what London housekeepers know as ‘hearthstone’.
1934 Punch 7 Mar. 280/2 He lumbered, mined and starved in Canada; he became an itinerant ‘small-time’ wrestler and pugilist all over the United States.
1944 N. Nicholson Five Rivers 11 From one shaft at Cleator Moor They mined for coal and iron ore.
1976 Billings (Montana) Gaz. 17 June 6- a/6 In 1924, he moved to Musselshell, mining in the Star Mine and Carpenter Creek Mine.
1996 M. Urban UK Eyes Alpha (1997) ii. 16 Gordon Barrass..spent weeks..mining away in the dimmest recesses of the KGB man's extraordinary memory.
9. transitive. To dig in (the earth, etc.) so as to find and extract ore, metals, coal, etc. With out: to extract all the ore, etc., from (usually in passive).
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > industry > mining > mine [verb (transitive)] > obtain (metals, minerals, etc.) by mining
win1447
mine1781
exploit1868
1781 W. J. Mickle Almada Hill 8 Soon, by fearless lust of gold impell'd, They mined the mountain, and explored the field.
1839 A. Ure Dict. Arts 748 Lead veins have been traced even further down,..but they have not been mined.
1867 W. W. Smyth Treat. Coal & Coal-mining 78 The..rich coalfield..of Westphalia: which, although mined..as early as 1302, has only within the last quarter of a century risen to a high degree of importance.
1911 Science 2 June 850/2 Many of the richest placers have been mined out.
1948 Econ. Geol. 43 334 Tin is still mined from the oxidized zone, but the bonanza silver ores were mined out many years ago.
1991 Garden (Royal Hort. Soc.) Apr. 213/2 The PPA [= the Peat Producers' Association] mined and completely devastated 900 hectares..of peat bogs that are officially designated Sites of Special Scientific Interest.
1998 M. Booth Industry of Souls ii. 23 Gallery B was mined out and was now used..as a storage area.
10. figurative.
a. transitive. To extract the benefit of, to exploit. Also with out: to exhaust the potential of.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > taking > stealing or theft > thief > [verb (transitive)] > to exploit an abundant source
mine1820
1820 Ld. Byron Let. 8 May (1977) VII. 98 I begin to think I have mined my talent out.
1899 Westm. Gaz. 2 Aug. 3/1 We must leave the reader to mine this rich quarry for himself.
1939 Jrnl. Negro Educ. 8 635/1 A thousand pens have..scribbled at least a million lines, in praise..of the Negro spiritual. They have mined out its religion, its psychology, its philosophy.
2012 Church Times 17 Aug. 18/4 Of the two works, Gjerde's is the more dense, mining a rich vein of little known material from a period of major conflict between nativists and the then largely immigrant Roman Church.
b. transitive. To analyse and extract information from (a large collection of data, or a database), now typically using specialized computer software. Cf. data mining n.
ΚΠ
1957 Jrnl. Higher Educ. 28 289/1 Most of the relationships are as one might expect, but the careful reader will find a number of surprises. One hopes that the author will mine the data further.
1995 GQ Jan. 74/2 The collective medical data of all hospitals will be mined for statistics to monitor the efficiency of drugs and treatments.
2002 P. Kotler et al. Marketing Moves vi. 106 The company has the skills to build and mine their databases.
2014 Daily Tel. 9 Jan. 29/1 Mobile phones can now instantly mine data libraries that it would once have taken a football stadium of slide-rule geeks to analyse.
11. transitive. North American. To exhaust (soil, land) by excessive cultivation.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > structure of the earth > constituent materials > earth or soil > soil qualities > [verb (transitive)] > render infertile
barren1581
pill1594
disfertile1606
peel1610
embarren1628
unfructify1628
barrenize1652
mine1937
1937 Amer. Speech 12 105 They mine the soil; that is, they use up fertility without restoring it.
1955 Christmas Tree Farming (Victoria, Brit. Columbia, Dept. Forestry) The Christmas tree lands were ‘mined’ rather than ‘farmed’ with little or no thought or care to future crops or a permanent production basis.
1972 New Yorker 25 Nov. 42/3 When they moved here, the land had been farmed out—‘mined’, the local phrase was—and the one undiscouraged crop was the wild strawberries.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2002; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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n.a1393adj.pron.eOEv.c1330
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