单词 | mule |
释义 | mulen.1 I. Senses relating to the animal and general extended uses. 1. a. A hybrid animal that results from crossing a male ass with a mare or, more rarely, a female ass with a stallion.The mule combines the strength of a horse with the endurance and sure-footedness of an ass, and is used for certain tasks for which it is more suited than either, esp. load-bearing and pulling; it is generally sterile. With no good grounds, the mule is proverbially regarded as the epitome of obstinacy (see Phrases).The animal that results from crossing a female ass with a stallion (technically called a hinny) is traditionally considered less useful. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > mammals > group Ungulata (hoofed) > family Equidae (general equines) > [noun] > hybrid horse and ass > mule muleOE muletto1656 mute1838 hardtail1906 jarhead1906 skin1918 the world > animals > mammals > group Ungulata (hoofed) > family Equidae (general equines) > [noun] > hybrid horse and ass > hinny muleOE burdona1382 hinny1688 mute1838 OE tr. Medicina de Quadrupedibus (Vitell.) i. 236 Meng hys blod wyþ lytlum sealte horsum & mulum & ælcum fiþerfetum neate. OE King Ælfred tr. Psalms (Paris) (2001) xxxi. 10 Ne beo ge na swylce hors and mulas, on þam nis nan andgit. a1225 (c1200) Vices & Virtues (1888) 89 (MED) Ne bieð ȝelich ðe horse ne ðe mule, ðe ne habbeð non andȝet. c1325 (c1300) Chron. Robert of Gloucester (Calig.) 3913 Mid so gret charge..Of mules. a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) (1965) Psalms xxxi. 9 Wileþ not ben made as an hors & a mule, to whom is not vnderstonding. a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Gött.) 6001 Hors and ass, moul [v.r. mule] and camayle. c1400 (c1378) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Laud 581) (1869) B. xvii. 48 (MED) Þanne seye we a samaritan sittende on a mule. c1440 (?a1400) Morte Arthure 2287 Moyllez mylke-whitte. 1490 W. Caxton tr. Foure Sonnes of Aymon (1885) viii. 189 A knyghte mounted vpon a mewle all vnarmed. 1535 Bible (Coverdale) Job xxxix. 4 Who letteth the wilde asse go fre, or who lowseth the bondes of the Moole? 1568 A. Scott Poems (1896) xxxiv. 107 The mull frequentis þe anis, And hir awin kynd abusis. 1653 H. Cogan tr. F. M. Pinto Voy. & Adventures iii. 5 We went by Land mounted upon good Mules. 1679 J. Dryden Troilus & Cressida ii. ii. 17 I have been labouring in your business like any Moyle. 1704 Dict. Rusticum Mule or Moil, is of two sorts; the natural of their own kind, and the adulterate begotten between an Horse and an Ass. 1749 T. Smollett tr. A. R. Le Sage Gil Blas II. v. i. 139 A vast barn, in which the moyls [Fr. mulets] and the baggage were disposed. 1822 W. Scott Fortunes of Nigel I. iv. 110 Though he is not just so rich just now as some folks, yet I hope to see him ride upon his moyle. 1875 B. Jowett tr. Plato Dialogues (ed. 2) I. 360 You might as well affirm the existence of mules [Gk. ἡμιόνους], and deny that of horses and asses. 1913 Sat. Evening Post (Philadelphia) 22 Feb. 27/2 Fifty black mules there were, about ten abreast, each mule carrying a skinner. 1940 W. V. T. Clark Ox-bow Incident (1962) ii. 45 A mule is tough all right; a good mule can work two horses into the ground and not know it. 1992 D. Morgan Rising in West ii. v. 81 Cash-poor farmers bartered, taking a saddle for a mule here, a coat for a pair of boots there. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > mammals > group Ungulata (hoofed) > family Equidae (general equines) > [noun] > equus hemionus (Asiatic wild ass) onagera1398 mule1607 dziggetai1793 kulan1793 onagra1860 kiang1869 1607 E. Topsell Hist. Foure-footed Beastes 556 There is another kind of mules in Syria, diuers from those which are procreated by the copulation of a mare and an asse... These mules procreate in their owne kinde, and admit no mixture. 2. In extended use, of a person. a. gen. A person having a quality characteristic of or associated with mules, esp. a stupid, obstinate, or physically tough person. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > lack of understanding > stupid, foolish, or inadequate person > stupid person, dolt, blockhead > [noun] asseOE sotc1000 beastc1225 long-ear?a1300 stock1303 buzzard1377 mis-feelinga1382 dasarta1400 stonea1400 dasiberd14.. dottlec1400 doddypoll1401 dastardc1440 dotterel1440 dullardc1440 wantwit1449 jobardc1475 nollc1475 assheada1500 mulea1500 dull-pate15.. peak1509 dulbert?a1513 doddy-patec1525 noddypolla1529 hammer-head1532 dull-head?1534 capon1542 dolt1543 blockhead1549 cod's head1549 mome1550 grout-head1551 gander1553 skit-brains?1553 blocka1556 calfa1556 tomfool1565 dunce1567 druggard1569 cobble1570 dummel1570 Essex calf1573 jolthead1573 hardhead1576 beetle-head1577 dor-head1577 groutnoll1578 grosshead1580 thickskin1582 noddyship?1589 jobbernowl1592 beetle-brain1593 Dorbel1593 oatmeal-groat1594 loggerhead1595 block-pate1598 cittern-head1598 noddypoop1598 dorbellist1599 numps1599 dor1601 stump1602 ram-head1605 look-like-a-goose1606 ruff1606 clod1607 turf1607 asinego1609 clot-poll1609 doddiea1611 druggle1611 duncecomb1612 ox-head1613 clod-polla1616 dulman1615 jolterhead1620 bullhead1624 dunderwhelpa1625 dunderhead1630 macaroona1631 clod-patea1635 clota1637 dildo1638 clot-pate1640 stupid1640 clod-head1644 stub1644 simpletonian1652 bottle-head1654 Bœotiana1657 vappe1657 lackwit1668 cudden1673 plant-animal1673 dolt-head1679 cabbage head1682 put1688 a piece of wood1691 ouphe1694 dunderpate1697 numbskull1697 leather-head1699 nocky1699 Tom Cony1699 mopus1700 bluff-head1703 clod skull1707 dunny1709 dowf1722 stupe1722 gamphrel1729 gobbin?1746 duncehead1749 half-wit1755 thick-skull1755 jackass1756 woollen-head1756 numbhead1757 beef-head1775 granny1776 stupid-head1792 stunpolla1794 timber-head1794 wether heada1796 dummy1796 noghead1800 staumrel1802 muttonhead1803 num1807 dummkopf1809 tumphya1813 cod's head and shoulders1820 stoopid1823 thick-head1824 gype1825 stob1825 stookiea1828 woodenhead1831 ning-nong1832 log-head1834 fat-head1835 dunderheadism1836 turnip1837 mudhead1838 donkey1840 stupex1843 cabbage1844 morepork1845 lubber-head1847 slowpoke1847 stupiditarian1850 pudding-head1851 cod's head and shoulders1852 putty head1853 moke1855 mullet-head1855 pothead1855 mug1857 thick1857 boodle1862 meathead1863 missing link1863 half-baked1866 lunk1867 turnip-head1869 rummy1872 pumpkin-head1876 tattie1879 chump1883 dully1883 cretin1884 lunkhead1884 mopstick1886 dumbhead1887 peanut head1891 pie-face1891 doughbakea1895 butt-head1896 pinhead1896 cheesehead1900 nyamps1900 box head1902 bonehead1903 chickenhead1903 thickwit1904 cluck1906 boob1907 John1908 mooch1910 nitwit1910 dikkop1913 goop1914 goofus1916 rumdum1916 bone dome1917 moron1917 oik1917 jabroni1919 dumb-bell1920 knob1920 goon1921 dimwit1922 ivory dome1923 stone jug1923 dingleberry1924 gimp1924 bird brain1926 jughead1926 cloth-head1927 dumb1928 gazook1928 mouldwarp1928 ding-dong1929 stupido1929 mook1930 sparrow-brain1930 knobhead1931 dip1932 drip1932 epsilon1932 bohunkus1933 Nimrod1933 dumbass1934 zombie1936 pea-brain1938 knot-head1940 schlump1941 jarhead1942 Joe Soap1943 knuckle-head1944 nong1944 lame-brain1945 gobshite1946 rock-head1947 potato head1948 jerko1949 turkey1951 momo1953 poop-head1955 a right one1958 bam1959 nong-nong1959 dickhead1960 dumbo1960 Herbert1960 lamer1961 bampot1962 dipshit1963 bamstick1965 doofus1965 dick1966 pillock1967 zipperhead1967 dipstick1968 thickie1968 poephol1969 yo-yo1970 doof1971 cockhead1972 nully1973 thicko1976 wazzock1976 motorhead1979 mouth-breather1979 no-brainer1979 jerkwad1980 woodentop1981 dickwad1983 dough ball1983 dickweed1984 bawheid1985 numpty1985 jerkweed1988 dick-sucker1989 knob-end1989 Muppet1989 dingus1997 dicksack1999 eight ball- the mind > will > decision > obstinacy or stubbornness > [noun] > obstinate or stubborn person obstinate1435 mumpsimus1530 obstinant1581 ram-head1605 sitfast1606 stiff-stander1642 obduratea1665 ironface1697 sturdy1704 stiffrump1709 sturdy-boots1762 stickfast1827 impracticable1829 mule1846 bullet-head1848 hardshell1849 die-hard1857 hog on ice1857 last-ditcher1862 thick-and-thinnite1898 jusqu'auboutiste1916 stiff-neck1921 dead-ender1956 toughie1960 a1500 (a1471) G. Ashby Active Policy Prince 564 in Poems (1899) 30 (MED) Thaugh he were an asse hede or a dulle mule, He myght not lyve wildly at his pleasance. 1621 P. Hume Flytting betwixt Montgomerie & Polwart (Hart) sig. A3v Thy tyr'd comparisons a sklent, Are monstrous, like the Mule that made them. a1658 B. Rudyerd Prince d'amour (1660) 63 He shall be enquired of as a concealed Moyle or Ass in whom there is no understanding. 1816 J. Wolcot in Wks. I. vi. 47 Prithee accept th' advice I give..don't be a mule Take it. 1846 C. Dickens Dombey & Son (1848) vi. 51 ‘Now don't be a young mule,’ said Good Mrs. Brown. 1949 San Francisco Call-Bull. 19 Aug. 15/1 It goes without saying that [in American Football] no ball carrier is a success unless he has the mules up front to open the way for him. ΘΚΠ society > morality > moral evil > licentiousness > unchastity > [noun] > sexual indulgence > unchaste behaviour of woman > unchaste or loose woman queanOE whorec1175 malkinc1275 wenchelc1300 ribalda1350 strumpeta1350 wench1362 filtha1375 parnelc1390 sinner14.. callet1415 slut?c1425 tickle-tailc1430 harlot?a1475 mignote1489 kittock?a1500 mulea1513 trulla1516 trully?1515 danta1529 miswoman1528 stewed whore1532 Tib1533 unchaghe1534 flag1535 Katy1535 jillet1541 yaud1545 housewife1546 trinkletc1550 whippet1550 Canace1551 filthy1553 Jezebel1558 kittyc1560 loonc1560 laced mutton1563 nymph1563 limmer1566 tomboy1566 Marian1567 mort1567 cockatrice1568 franion1571 blowze1573 rannell1573 rig1575 Kita1577 poplet1577 light-skirts1578 pucelle1578 harlotry1584 light o' lovea1586 driggle-draggle1588 wagtail1592 tub-tail1595 flirt-gill1597 minx1598 hilding1599 short-heels1599 bona-roba1600 flirt1600 Hiren1600 light-heels1602 roba1602 baggage1603 cousin1604 fricatrice1607 rumbelow1611 amorosa1615 jaya1616 open-taila1618 succubus1622 snaphancea1625 flap1631 buttered bun1638 puffkin1639 vizard1652 fallen woman1659 tomrigg1662 cunt1663 quaedama1670 jilt1672 crack1677 grass-girl1691 sporting girl1694 sportswoman1705 mobbed hood1707 brim1736 trollop1742 trub1746 demi-rep1749 gillyflower1757 lady of easy virtue1766 mot1773 chicken1782 gammerstang1788 buer1807 scarlet woman1816 blowen1819 fie-fie1820 shickster?1834 streel1842 charver1846 trolly1854 bad girl1855 amateur1862 anonyma1862 demi-virgin1864 pickup1871 chippy1885 wish-wife1886 tart1887 tartleta1890 flossy1893 fly girl1893 demi-mondaine1894 floozy1899 slattern1899 scrub1900 demi-vierge1908 cake1909 coozie1912 muff1914 tarty1918 yes-girl1920 radge1923 bike1945 puta1948 messer1951 cooze1955 jamette1965 skeezer1986 slutbag1987 chickenhead1988 ho1988 a1513 R. Fabyan New Cronycles Eng. & Fraunce (1516) I. ccxxix. f. clv Ye Cardynall made sharpe processe agayn prestys yt noresshed Cristen Moyles, & rebuked them by open publysshement and otherwyse. 1638 J. Ford Fancies i. 8 Trudging betweene an old moyle, and a young Calfe, my nimble intelligencer. 1746 Exmoor Courtship 27 A zower-sop'd, yerring, chockling Trash, a buzzom-chuck'd haggaging Moyle, a gurt Fustilug. c. slang (originally and chiefly U.S.). A courier of contraband goods, esp. drugs. ΚΠ 1922 E. F. Murphy Black Candle 128 The ‘mules’ and ‘joy shots’ are among the most vicious elements in the [morphine] plague. 1951 Life 11 June 126/2 He becomes a ‘mule’ (delivery boy) for a peddler and earns his own heroin by introducing his friends to dope and making customers of them. 1977 Time 21 Feb. 24/1 The heroin is sent across the border to the U.S. by ‘mules’ or couriers. 1989 T. Clancy Clear & Present Danger xiv. 300 Met a new girl, but she was kidnapped and murdered by a local drug ring—seems she was a mule for them before they met. 2000 Sunday Mail (Brisbane) 23 July 69/2 She accepted £2500..to act as a ‘mule’ and smuggle a small amount of heroin on a Tokyo-bound plane. 3. In extended use, of a thing. a. U.S. Military slang. = mule meat n. at Compounds 2. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > animals for food > [noun] > meat > inferior meat sticking1764 mule meat1846 mystery1882 mule1887 1887 G. W. Peck How Private Geo. W. Peck put down Rebellion 58 There was no man that could boil corned mule so as to take the tast of the saltpetre out, as he could. 1919 Lit. Digest 1 June 78 You make no mention of corned beef, affectionately (???) called canned Bill, embalmed mule, etc. 1937 Our Army Jan. 20 Right after lunch, consisting of the lousiest G.I. mule ever foisted upon defenseless doggies, I'm picking the harness out of my teeth as I walk into the orderly room. b. A small tractor, locomotive, or other powered vehicle, used for towing, dragging, or moving a load (frequently another vehicle). ΘΚΠ society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > powered vehicle > [noun] > electrically-powered vehicle > specific milk float1864 mule1903 float1971 Segway2001 society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > other vehicles according to specific use > [noun] > for drawing a load > specific powered tractor1901 mule1903 1903 Electr. World & Engineer 14 Nov. 795 The ‘mule’ has two large hooks for the towropes. 1924 Chambers's Jrnl. Nov. 731/2 These wire ropes are stretched from the ship to motor-tractors running on rails the length of the docks. Electric ‘mules’ the tractors are called... These mules both guide and propel the ship. 1928 Amer. Speech 3 366 ‘Mules’ are the little gas and electric tractors used in the studios of Hollywood. 1947 Richmond (Va.) Times-Dispatch 1 Apr. 6/1 A loaded coal car is rolled by gravity onto the low level pier,..and then is pushed upward to the dumper by a mechanical ‘mule’. 1983 Internat. Railway Jrnl. 23 Sept. 48/2 Individual wagons are hauled by a remote-controlled mule, which runs on tracks inside the normal railway tracks, to the loading station. 1990 E. M. Helms Proud Bastards 179 A couple of balloon-tired ‘mules’ sporting 106mm recoilless rifles. c. U.S. slang. [Perhaps used with reference to the ‘kick’ of strong liquor.] Powerful liquor; esp. illicitly distilled whiskey. Cf. earlier white mule n. at white adj. and n. Compounds 1f; also Moscow mule n. at Moscow n. Compounds. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > drink > intoxicating liquor > [noun] drink1042 liquor1340 bousea1350 cidera1382 dwale1393 sicera1400 barrelc1400 strong drinkc1405 watera1475 swig1548 tipple1581 amber1598 tickle-brain1598 malt pie1599 swill1602 spicket1615 lap1618 John Barleycornc1625 pottle1632 upsy Englisha1640 upsy Friese1648 tipplage1653 heartsease1668 fuddle1680 rosin1691 tea1693 suck1699 guzzlea1704 alcohol1742 the right stuff1748 intoxicant1757 lush1790 tear-brain1796 demon1799 rum1799 poison1805 fogram1808 swizzle1813 gatter1818 wine(s) and spirit(s)1819 mother's milkc1821 skink1823 alcoholics1832 jough1834 alky1844 waipiro1845 medicine1847 stimulant1848 booze1859 tiddly1859 neck oil1860 lotion1864 shrab1867 nose paint1880 fixing1882 wet1894 rabbit1895 shicker1900 jollop1920 mule1920 giggle-water1929 rookus juice1929 River Ouse1931 juice1932 lunatic soup1933 wallop1933 skimish1936 sauce1940 turps1945 grog1946 joy juice1960 1906 C. M'Govern Sarjint Larry Gloss. Gray-mule, whiskey.] 1920 Chicago Tribune 7 Sept. 1 Along with the still were captured 400 gallons of ‘mule’ whisky and seven barrels of sour mash. 1922 Harper's Mag. Mar. 530/1 ‘They found some of the pill peddlers drinking mule and aqua.’.. ‘Aqua's water, of course... But what can mule be?’ ‘Alcohol.’ 1932 A. Hirschfeld Manhattan Oases 44 The choosey drinking habits of the whites are a bad influence on the sale of ‘mule’ to the dusky element. 1948 Sat. Evening Post (Philadelphia) 26 June 86 A drink compared to which Kentucky mule is soda pop. 1969 L. G. Sorden Lumberjack Lingo 79 Mule, alcohol or rotgut whisky. d. Nautical. A large triangular sail sometimes used on a ketch. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > equipment of vessel > masts, rigging, or sails > sail > [noun] > other triangular sails trinket1555 mule1932 1932 Yachting Sept. 46 ‘Tidal wave’, winner of the race, at the start, with the mule pulling aloft and motor pushing below. 1954 Yachting Apr. 61 The swell rolls the wind out of her spinnaker, but the ‘mule’ aloft between her masts is pulling like its long-eared namesake. 1964 M. Weeks Compl. Boating Encycl. 366/2 Mule, a large triangular staysail sometimes used on a ketch. It sets on the main backstay and is sheeted to the mizzenmasthead. II. Extended uses specifically relating to the hybrid nature or the sterility of the animal. 4. A hybrid. a. A person who or thing which is a hybrid in some way. Frequently attributive. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > condition or state of being mixed or blended > [noun] > a mixture > of incongruous elements participle?a1475 mongrel1582 centaur1606 mule1631 crossc1796 half-and-halfc1814 chimera1832 half-breed1846 hybrid1850 piebald1897 the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > condition or state of being mixed or blended > [adjective] > of mixed composition or character linsey-woolsey1565 mongrela1586 piebald1590 sundry1593 party per pale1607 mi-parti1610 hybridan1623 participle1694 ambigenal hyperbola1710 hybrida1716 mulish1729 hybridal1801 mulea1833 mixtiform1837 mongrelized1857 1631 B. Jonson Staple of Newes ii. iv. 56 in Wks. II Alm. I wonder what religion hee's of! Fit. No certaine species sure, A kinde of mule! That's halfe an Ethnicke, halfe a Christian! a1833 J. T. Smith Bk. for Rainy Day (1845) 161 (note) Which, by reason of Mr. Bentley's fancy mouldings, interfering so often with parts which are really chaste, must be considered a mule building. 1877 J. Miller Baroness of N.Y. ii. ix. 141 I hate and abhor your middle-class. Your mule, that's neither a horse nor ass. 1891 W. J. Linton Catoninetales 72 ‘Only a maid can in this mirror see, One made of mixèd blood. Mule Hattie! you are She.’ 1980 Radio Times 20 Sept. 25/2 Cars called ‘mules’ are another way the manufacturers can test new models on public roads without detection... They're familiar bodies carrying new mechanicals. 1990 B. Neal Biscuits, Spoonbread, & Sweet Potato Pie ii. 48 Angel biscuits are a sort of mule bread, a curious hybrid crossed from baking powder and yeast. 1993 Weekend Austral. 18–9 Sept. (Review Suppl.) 6/2 When you have the spectacle of an editor of a gay anthology keeping gay writers out and straight writers in, you'll have an idea of what's wrong with this mule of a book. b. An (esp. interspecific) hybrid plant. Frequently attributive. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > variety or species > [noun] > cross or hybrid mule1728 bigener1817 graft-hybrid1868 nothomorph1939 polycross1946 metis1974 the world > life > biology > biological processes > genetic activity > heredity or hereditary descent > [adjective] > cross-breeding or hybridization bigenerous1610 hybridan1623 mongrel1633 hybridous1691 mule1728 hybrid1775 cross-bred1856 hybridizablea1864 paragenesic1864 hybridized1872 cross1886 monohybrid1903 outbred1903 intergeneric1921 polyhybrid1922 reticulate1938 trihybrid1941 inter-strain1950 1728 E. Chambers Cycl. (at cited word) Mules, among Gardeners, a sort of vegetable Monsters produced by putting the Farina fæcundans of one Species of Plant into the Pistil or Utricle of another. 1731 P. Miller Gardeners Dict. I. at Caryophyllus The Double Rose-colour'd Sweet-John, or Fairchild's Mule. 1755 Gentleman's Mag. Sept. 408/1 Other bastard or mule plants. 1800 E. Darwin Phytologia vii. ii. 115 A mule cabbage is described..which is said to fatten a beast six weeks sooner than turneps. 1826 Gardener's Mag. 1 31 The mule plants are in general more hardy, and flower more readily than the original species. 1857 A. Henfrey Elem. Course Bot. §948 Gærtner states that in hybrids of Digitalis the mules most resembled the female parent, while in Nicotiana the reverse appeared. 1902 W. Bateson Mendel's Princ. Heredity 23 This Aa is the hybrid or ‘mule’ form, or as I have elsewhere called it, the heterozygote. 1946 A. Nelson Princ. Agric. Bot. xxvi. 520 The hybrid fails to form viable gametes. Such hybrids or ‘mules’ are sterile. 1998 S. Orlean Orchid Thief 75 In 1856 the first artificial hybrid—a plant made by intentionally cross-fertilizing different species—bloomed. These early orchid ‘mules’ were a botanical shock. c. An (esp. interspecific) hybrid animal. Now chiefly: a hybrid cage bird; cf. mule bird n. at Compounds 2. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > domestic animal > [noun] > livestock > stock or breed > cross-breed mule1772 cross-breed1844 half-bred1848 metis1852 mixed breed1864 1772 Philos. Trans. 1771 (Royal Soc.) 61 319 The mules between carp and tench, partake of the nature of both fish. 1818 Sporting Mag. 2 67 As to mules from the fox and dog, they are equally fruitful. 1868 F. Smith Canary xiii. 92 The linnet and the goldfinch..from both of which [with the canary] mules are..obtained. 1884 Proc. Zool. Soc. 401 The belief, so general, that all hybrids or mules are barren and useless for breeding-purposes is simply a stupid and ignorant prejudice. 1976 Cumberland News 3 Dec. 16/5 The bird also took the awards for best champion and best mule or hybrid. d. British. Agriculture. A cross-bred sheep, esp. (more fully North Country mule) one derived from a Bluefaced or Border Leicester ram and a Scottish Blackface or Swaledale ewe. Frequently attributive. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > mammals > group Ungulata (hoofed) > group Ruminantia (sheep, goats, cows, etc.) > genus Ovus > [noun] > Ovus Aries (domestic sheep) > half-bred half-bred1848 mule1892 1892 Berwick Advertiser 16 Sept. 2/1 Cheviot and mule lambs. 1951 I. L. Mason World Dict. Breeds Livestock 139 Greyface (Scotland-England): Border Leicester X Scottish Blackface, 1st cross; syn. Mule, cross. 1985 D. B. Dalal-Clayton Black's Agric. Dict. (ed. 2) 252 The original mule sheep, dating back to 1863, was derived from a Bluefaced Leicester ram mated with a Swaledale or Scottish Blackface ewe, and is now known as the North Country Mule. 1995 Farmers Weekly 21 July 100 (advt.) Flock dispersal..Comprising 700 mainly north country mules, 250 bleu du maine and texel × mule ewes. 5. In technical applications: something which combines aspects of two different sources. a. A kind of spinning machine invented in 1779 by Samuel Crompton (1753–1827), capable of spinning various strengths and thicknesses of yarn. Now historical. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > textile manufacture > manufacture of thread or yarn > [noun] > spinning > machine > types of water frame1777 spinning-jenny1783 mule1791 mule jenny1792 throstle1792 jenny1796 muslin wheel1830 hand mule1831 self-shifter1834 ring frame1850 cap-frame1884 trap-twister1884 trap-winder1884 1791 T. Digges Let. 28 Apr. in T. Jefferson Papers (1982) XX. 314 Two ingenious workmen..can make most kinds of machinery such as spining Jennys, Billys, mules, Carding machines &c. 1797 Encycl. Brit. V. 488/2 It is called a mule, being a kind of mixture of machinery between the warp-machine of Mr. Arkwright and the woof-machine or hand-jenny of Mr. Hargrave. 1812 Parl. Deb. 1st Ser. 21 1173 To remedy this defect, the Petitioner [sc. S. Crompton] in the year 1779, completed the discovery of a Machine, now called a Mule, but which, for several years, bore the name of the Hall of the Wood Wheel. 1831 G. Henson Civil Hist. Framework-knitters (1970) v. 275 To Mr. Crompton, of Manchester, £5,000, for the invention of the mule, used in cotton spinning. 1884 W. S. B. McLaren Spinning Woollen & Worsted (ed. 2) 229 Tatham's woollen mules—which are very different from cotton mules. 1910 Encycl. Brit. VII. 277/1 [article Cotton] 40s mule, water twists and twofolds. 1990 Stamp Monthly Mar. 5/1 Wool yarn manufactured on a woolen spinning ‘mule’ is in the background. b. Numismatics. A coin with obverse and reverse produced by dies not originally intended for use on the same coin. Also (occasionally): a token or medal with similarly mismatched front and back. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > money > medium of exchange or currency > coins collective > [noun] > wrongly stamped coin mule1801 nob1885 1801 C. Pye Provincial Coins 3 The endless varieties (not unaptly termed mules) produced by a combination of dies not originally intended for the same coin. 1884 R. S. Poole in Encycl. Brit. XVII. 630/2 A coin which presents two obverse types, or two reverse types, or of which the types of the obverse and reverse do not correspond, is called a mule; it is the result of a mistake or caprice. 1961 G. van der Meer in R. H. M. Dolley & D. M. Metcalf Anglo-Saxon Coins ix. 184 The type is a mule of the ‘Arm-and-Sceptre’ type of ‘Cnut’ (= Harthacnut) and the ‘Pacx’ type of Edward the Confessor. 1992 Coin Monthly Feb. 53/2 I have just found in my change a pound coin dated 1990. It seems to be a mule of the 1989 coin, because the lettering on the edge reads Decus Lacessit Tutamen with the ‘men’ of ‘Tutamen’ poorly struck. The 1990 reverse should be the Welsh Leek design, but mine is the Scottish design of the previous year. c. English regional (northern). A boat combining the characteristics of a coble and a fishing boat. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > fishing vessel > [noun] > other types of fishing vessel spindlers-boat1243 manfare1326 stall boat1328 dogger1338 hackboat1344 coble1493 peter-boat1540 monger1558 trimboat1558 shotter1580 crab-skuit1614 fly-boat1614 cantera1642 dogger-boat1646 cag1666 yawl1670 barca-longa1681 hogboat1784 fishing-smack1785 hooker1801 hatch-boat1828 pinkie1840 fishing-bark1841 pookhaun1851 garookuh1855 jigger1860 fisher-bark1862 fisher-keel1870 Norwegian1872 scaf1877 mule coble1883 mule1884 Zulu1884 novy1885 tosher1885 skipjack1887 fleeter1888 fishing-float1893 rodney1895 mutton-ham boat1899 nobby1899 sinagot1927 sport fisherman1937 sport fisher1940 ski-boat1964 belly boat1976 society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > vessels propelled by oars or poles > [noun] > vessels propelled by oars and sails > coble coble1493 mule coble1883 mule1884 1884 Whitby Gaz. 28 June 4/4 Several of the Whitby mules have landed good catches of herrings. 1897 B. Stoker Dracula vii. 78 More than one captain made up his mind then and there that his ‘cobble’ or his ‘mule’, as they term the different classes of boats, would remain in the harbour. 1962 W. Granville Dict. Sailors' Slang 79/1 The mule is in use on the Yorkshire coast in the Whitby and Scarborough area. 1973 W. Elmer Terminol. Fishing i. 38 Nowhere in Yorkshire are the double-ended boats called mules any longer,..a name still common for them in Northumberland. 2002 P. Frank Yorks. Fisherfolk iv. 74 The mule..was a hybrid. It had the deep forefoot and bow of the coble; but, instead of a square stern, it had the pointed stern of the yawl. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > [noun] > member of > defined as social insect or association of > worker labourer1609 worker1744 mule1797 nurse1818 acolyte1874 1797 Encycl. Brit. XVIII. 646/1 The common labouring wasps, called mules, which, according to Reaumur, are neither males nor females, and consequently barren. 1857 R. G. Mayne Expos. Lexicon Med. Sci. (1860) Mule, applied to insects of which the organs are not properly developed and which are really of neither sex. Phrases In proverbs and proverbial phrases. †to shoe (this, one's, etc.) mule: to provide or take advantage of monetary resources (obsolete). †one mule doth scrub another: one fool flatters another (obsolete). as stubborn (also obstinate) as a mule: very stubborn. ΘΚΠ the mind > will > decision > obstinacy or stubbornness > [noun] > obstinate or stubborn person > proverbially mule1564 1564–78 W. Bullein Dial. against Fever Pestilence (1888) 86 The Mule carieth a Maister that will dooe nothyng but for golde, and the fooles of the worlde that loue debate and strief must shooe this Mule. a1635 T. Randolph Muses Looking-glasse iii. iv. 59 in Poems (1638) I need not flatter these, they'le doe't themselves, And crosse the Proverb that was wont to say One Mule doth scrub another. 1655 tr. C. Sorel Comical Hist. Francion iii. 75 He had the keeping..of the Moneyes, and yet shod not his Mule at all. 1751 Mem. Lady of Quality in T. Smollett Peregrine Pickle III. lxxxviii. 158 Some people..have actually believed him a good-natured easy creature..; but, upon further acquaintance, they have always found him obstinate as a mule, and capricious as a monkey. 1771 T. Smollett Humphry Clinker III. 152 The captain..becomes stubborn as a mule, and unmanageable as an elephant unbroke. 1812 M. Edgeworth Absentee xiii, in Tales Fashionable Life VI. 260 She was as obstinate as a mule on that point. 1853 J. Y. Akerman Wiltshire Tales 138 As cam and as obstinate as a mule. 1922 J. Joyce Ulysses ii. xv. [Circe] 411 The likes of her! Stag that one is. Stubborn as a mule! 1987 S. Beauman Destiny 268 Jean-Paul can be as stubborn as a mule, and you knew perfectly well that..he would have dug in his heels and insisted. Compounds C1. General attributive. a. (In sense 1a.) mule bell n. ΚΠ 1814 W. Sotheby Confession v. ii, in Tragedies 285 The mule-bell must not tinkle while it passes. 1992 N. Samaras Hands of Saddlemaker 27 Rising up the olive slope, the sound Of mule bells tonguing. mule boy n. ΚΠ 1859 G. W. Thornbury in Househ. Words 8 Jan. 132/2 From the pathway runs a mule-boy, and steals a hasty farthing's-worth of..drink. 1958 J. Carew Black Midas i. 11 I had started work as a mule boy..trotting beside a mounted overseer. 1994 Washington Post (Nexis) 26 Jan. a1 Casey's father, a mule boy in a coal mine at age 10, was orphaned at age 15. mule-bray n. ΚΠ 1960 S. Plath Colossus 20 Mule-bray, pig-grunt. mule-cart n. ΚΠ 1790 T. Jefferson Memorandum c7 Nov. in Papers (1971) XVIII. 29 Fire-wood to be..brought in by the mule-cart. 1808 H. C. Backhouse Jrnl. in Jrnl. & Lett. (1858) ii. 30 A drive with Jane in the mule cart. 1847 Knickerbocker 30 228 Our little mule-cart was but ill-fitted for the passage of so swift a stream. 1929 J. Buchan Courts of Morning i. 37 Country mule-carts struggled towards the market-place. 1981 Dict. National Biogr. 1961–70 at Sheepshanks, Sir Thomas Herbert His father..had crossed China, Mongolia, and Siberia in a little mule-cart. mule-driver n. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > farming > animal husbandry > keeping or management of horses > [noun] > keeping or driving mules > keeper of mules or asses ass-herda1425 assmanc1470 muliona1500 mule-drivera1653 asswoman1728 peon1826 mule-whacker1873 a1653 J. Taylor Wks. not in Folio Vol. of 1630 (1870) 12 Maximinus [was the offspring] of a Mule-driver. 1857 P. St. G. Cooke Scenes & Adventures 90 A charge..would have proved disastrous to the mule-drivers. 1998 M. Booth Industry of Souls iv. 83 The mule-driver jumped down from the cart. mule-hoof n. ΚΠ 1859 G. W. Thornbury in Househ. Words 12 Mar. 351/1 Road padded to dust..by scuffling mule-hoofs. 1880 ‘M. Twain’ Tramp Abroad xlii. 486 We found the masonry slightly crumbled, and marked by mule-hoofs. 1911 Pop. Mech. Oct. 472 The left hind hoof is an imperfect mule hoof. The mule is two years old. 2000 L. Green in C. West ‘How-to’ Horseshoeing Bk. 82/1 The texture of the mule hoof differs from that of the horse. It is thicker, tougher and more resilient. mule kick n. ΚΠ 1930 E. Blunden De Bello Germanico 5 That sudden backward mule-kick which gives troop-trains one of their unique charms. 1997 J. Lasdun Woman Police Officer in Elevator 77 A sudden pang of hunger like a mule kick Stabbed his belly. mule-load n. ΚΠ 1810 Z. M. Pike Acct. Exped. Sources Mississippi App. iii. 4 There are taken, to be coined, 100 mule-loads of bullion in silver and gold monthly. 1880 ‘M. Twain’ Tramp Abroad xlii. 491 We had plenty of company, in the way of wagon-loads and mule-loads of tourists. 1907 Catholic Encycl. I. 289/2 Infessura's tale of mule-loads of silver has long since been discredited. 2018 J. Gyllenbok Encycl. Hist. Metrol., Weights, & Meas. xxxi. 1065/1 In Harari-speaking areas [of Ethiopia]: tan = a mule load. mule man n. ΚΠ 1315 Patent Roll, 9 Edward II 30 Aug. (P.R.O.: C 66/144) m. 24v Adam Muleman.] 1686 W. Hedges Diary 30 May (1887) I. 225 Our Mulemen, knowing ye straightness and difficulty of ye Passage, by reason of ye scraggedness of ye Rocks, thought good to pass all difficulties this day. 1867 in E. Custer Tenting on Plains (1887) 537 Teams of luggage, dogs, horsemen, mulemen, cross and recross at will. 1970 R. Lowell Notebk. 209 The mule-man lost his footing in the clouds. 2000 Washington Times (Nexis) 30 May c3 This mule man spent a recent afternoon teaching..how to harness and work a mule. mule path n. ΚΠ 1826 T. Flint Francis Berrian II. iv. 208 In this way we advanced constantly,..following for the most part mule-paths among the mountains. 1892 S. Baring-Gould In Roar of Sea I. xiv. 186 They'll come up the mule-path. 1981 N.Y. Times (Nexis) 3 May Each escorted group of 20 participants will ride along mule paths from one mountain valley to another. mule power n. ΚΠ 1848 W. Youatt Horse 430 The wonder is that the conviction of it is not carried out in the agricultural economy of the country, to the almost universal adoption of mule power. 1983 Jrnl. Econ. Hist. 43 4 The switch from horse and mule power to tractors. 2007 G. B. Ellenburg Mule South to Tractor South vi. 148 Comparisons of rental arrangements showed that renters using all mule power farmed under the same basic arrangements whether they worked on farms with or without tractors. mule race n. ΚΠ 1861 Southern Literary Messenger 32 ii. 131 Simonides, when offered a small price for an ode in honor of a victory in a mule race, contemptuously calls the successful animals half-asses. 1916 W. S. Churchill Let. 17 Jan. in W. S. Churchill & C. S. Churchill Speaking for Themselves (1999) vii. 155 They were most amusing sports—mule races, pillow fights, obstacle races etc. 2000 San Francisco Chron. (Nexis) 3 Aug. e1 Now, mule races attract the same purses and betting handles as quarter horses, Appaloosas and Arabians. mule raising n. ΚΠ 1868 14th Ann. Rep. Iowa State Agric. Soc. 1867 133 Robert Grant..mentions the names of several persons who give especial attention to mule-raising. 1923 National Geographic Mag. Apr. 441/1 Horse and mule raising is falling off since the advent of the cheap ‘iron mule’. 1995 Arkansas Democrat–Gaz. (Nexis) 13 June 4 e The Fishbein smokers are demanding a formal retraction and less talk about mule raising. mule road n. ΚΠ 1777 P. Thicknesse Year's Journey France & Spain I. xxiv. 210 The foot-road..is only one thousand three hundred paces;..the mule-road is above four times as far. 1970 C. Kopas Bella Coola iii. 55 Applied for a contract to build a mule road from Bella Coola to the mouth of the Quesnel. mule route n. ΚΠ 1849 C. Lanman Lett. Alleghany Mountains viii. 58 The distance from Hubbard's Cabin..in a direct line, is eight miles, but by the ordinary mule-route it is thirteen. 1898 Harper's Mag. Apr. 691/1 From Seville to Granada one may follow..the old horse and mule route by Alcaha de Guadaira. 1954 L. R. Hafen & A. W. Hafen Old Spanish Trail i. 19 The Old Spanish Trail was the longest, crookedest, most arduous pack mule route in the history of America. mule skin n. ΚΠ 1868 Putnam's Mag. Dec. 681/2 They [sc. gloves] hung back, and could not have been more obstinate if they had been made up of mule-skin. 1926 Daily Colonist (Victoria, Brit. Columbia) 7 Jan. 11/1 Brown Muleskin Gauntlets, warmly lined, cuff has fringe and red star. 1971 Proc. National Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 68 544/2 The relative amounts of horse and donkey enzymes activities in lysates of mule skin fibroblasts. 1998 SF Weekly (Nexis) 21 Oct. (Calendar section) He was grizzled like sun-dried mule skin. mule steak n. ΚΠ 1854 J. R. Bartlett Personal Narr. Explor. & Incidents I. v. 113 We might reach El Paso by..taking an occasional mule steak. 1979 United States 1980–1 (Penguin Travel Guides) 153 Gone are the days when eating out in Denver meant broiling mule steak over an open fire. 1990 Financial Times (Nexis) 7 July 16 The hero..eats mule steaks. mule team n. ΚΠ 1846 S. S. Magoffin Diary in Down Santa Fé Trail (1926) 25 His mule team (some eighteen or twenty) were..passing the little wet creek. 1988 Mid-Atlantic Country Mar. 33/1 [A towpath] worn smooth by countless mule teams making the 184-mile journey to Cumberland. mule track n. ΚΠ 1834 A. Pike Prose Sketches & Poems 29 When I got into the narrow cañon, beyond the Black Lake, I saw a mule-track or two again, and again thought I might get some place. 1908 A. Bennett Old Wives' Tale i. i. 2 The ineffaceable mule-tracks that had served centuries before..Watling Street. 1991 T. Pakenham Scramble for Afr. xxix. 527 The mule tracks turn to mountain streams lubricated with yellow mud, making travel almost impossible. mule trail n. ΚΠ 1859 Brit. Colonist (Victoria, Brit. Columbia) 29 Jan. 1/4 A good wagon road to Fort Yale, and a mule trail thence equal to the best in California. 1932 World Today Feb. 217/2 Twenty miles of muletrail were built. 1994 Jrnl. Biogeogr. 21 426/1 The mule trail linking the village of Los Nevados with Mérida. mule train n. ΚΠ 1849 H. Page Let. 8 May in E. Page Wagons West (1930) 116 The Indians..will not trouble us, so much as they will the mule trains. 1996 Condé Nast Traveler June 140/2 The drug lords plied their trade and dispatched the goods by mule train down into Thailand. mule-trot n. ΚΠ 1824 E. Hibbet Narr. Journey Santiago de Chile to Buenos Ayres 97 Under the heat of the sun, and the fatigue of the mule trot, we had consumed our scanty supply of water. 1871 C. Kingsley At Last x A truck, with chairs on it, as usual here, carried us off at a good mule-trot. 1914 A. Wilkinson Plantation Stories Old Louisiana vii. 86 I's moughty tired o' dat joltin' mule-trot, let alone try in' to f oller dem fool oxens. 1973 ‘W. Henry’ Bear Paw Horses xx. 103 Without hesitation or guidance from Crowfoot, he set out on a jarring mule trot, straight across the lush grasses of High Meadow. mule wagon n. ΚΠ 1846 P. St. G. Cooke Jrnl. 19 Oct. in P. St. G. Cooke et al. Exploring Southwestern Trails (1938) 69 There are three mule wagons to each company. 1998 Review (Rio Tinto plc) June 7/3 Exhibits relating to mining, processing and uses of borax minerals—..including mining equipment and mule wagons. mule-way n. ΚΠ 1850 J. L. Tyson Diary of Physician in Calif. 24 [Down] the only pass..was a narrow mule-way. 1930 T. S. Eliot tr. ‘St.-J. Perse’ Anabasis 65 The parties for upkeep of muleways. 1998 Financial Times (Nexis) 22 Aug. 14 The crates were shipped to South America and then moved by rail and mule way up into the Andes. b. (In sense 4c.) mule breeding n. ΚΠ 1882 Bazaar, Exchange & Mart 15 Feb. 175 ‘Sib breed’..is a word used in the North for the particular kind of canary employed for mule breeding, and really means that the birds have been bred in-and-in for a number of years. 1987 E. W. Burr Compan. Bird Med. vi. 33/1 Mule breeding, the production of sterile hybrids involving the canary and various finches, is very popular in Europe. c. (In sense 5a.) ΚΠ 1835 A. Ure Philos. Manuf. 301 The mule-carriage began to recede from the fixed roller beam. 1905 Engin. 21 July 74/2 We find that in an average mule of 1300 spindles,..the average weight of a mule-carriage will approximate to 4 tons. 1913 Bull. U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics No. 128. 125 The spinner must know the distance the mule carriage draws away from the frame of the mule and other measurements necessary to the unit. 1919 N.E.D. at Stretch sb. The length of spun yarn which is wound on the spindles at each journey of the mule-carriage towards the roller-beam. mule room n. ΚΠ 1900 Public Docs. Mass. for 1899 11 14 In February, fire damaged mule and card room; in March, mule room again damaged by fire. 1909 Englishwoman Apr. 266 The card-room contains the mechanical processes in cotton manufacture, preparatory to the spinning of yarn in the ‘mule’ room. 2007 J. Greenlees Female Labour Power iv. 93 The numbers of women in the mule room declined during the 1850s. mule spinner n. ΚΠ 1814 Niles' Reg. 6 199/2 The mule spinners alone will do more work extra in the time saved from snuffing candles, than will pay the whole expense of light for the factory. 1835 A. Ure Philos. Manuf. 423 The mule-spinners..always prefer children who have been educated at an infant school. 1988 Daily Tel. 15 Nov. 4/6 Skilled mulespinners were dubbed ‘barefoot aristocrats’ because they went without shoes when the floor became slippery with grease from the machines. mule spinning n. ΚΠ 1797 in J. Tann Sel. Papers Boulton & Watt (1982) 237 There is a difference of abt 1 to 10 between Water & Mule Spinning. 1988 Short Gloss. Terms Craft Clothworking (Clothworkers' Company) s.v. Mule Spinning, an intermittent method of producing yarn in which a fixed length of yarn is first stretched, then twisted, and finally wound on to a package. C2. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > mammals > order Edentata > [noun] > family Dasypodidae (armadillo) > member of genus Dasypus hog in armour1729 tatouete1753 mule armadillo1827 pichi1827 peba1834 poyou1834 tatouay1834 tatouhou1834 tatou-peba1834 tatou-poyou1834 1827 E. Griffith et al. Cuvier's Animal Kingdom III. 294 The Mule Armadillo..is said not to dig burrows. mule-beater n. a stick used for beating mules. ΚΠ 1909 E. Banks Myst. Frances Farrington 123 Pedro took up one of the disused mule-beaters, and laid it on him thick and fast. mule bird n. now rare = mule canary n. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > birds > order Passeriformes (singing) > arboreal families > family Fringillidae (finch) > [noun] > subfamily Carduelinae > genus Serinus > serinus canaria (canary) > cross between canary and another finch mule bird1768 mule canary1853 1768 T. Pennant Brit. Zool. (new ed.) II. ii. 317 These birds will produce with the goldfinch and linnet, and the offspring is called a mule-bird, because, like that animal, it proves barren. a1832 Encycl. Metrop. (1845) XIX. 344/1 This readiness to pair with other species, seems almost peculiar to the female... The young ones are called Mule Birds. 1888 F. T. Elworthy W. Somerset Word-bk. (at cited word) The commonest mule bird is the cross between a canary and goldfinch. mule canary n. now rare a hybrid between a canary and another finch, esp. a goldfinch. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > birds > order Passeriformes (singing) > arboreal families > family Fringillidae (finch) > [noun] > subfamily Carduelinae > genus Serinus > serinus canaria (canary) > cross between canary and another finch mule bird1768 mule canary1853 1853 Househ. Words 14 May 248/2 [Men] are ashamed themselves to indulge in ‘lop-ears’, ‘mule-canaries’, and other domestic juvenile pets. 1908 N.E.D. at Muling The breeding of mule canaries. mule chest n. a hybrid form of chest, intermediate between a simple chest and a chest of drawers (see quot. 1911). ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > a building > furniture and fittings > chest of drawers > [noun] > other types of foot-gang1530 lobby chest1803 wagon box1810 wagon chest1827 bahut1840 Wellington chest1880 tansu1885 mule chest1911 Wellington1936 1911 J. P. Blake & A. E. Reveirs-Hopkins Tudor to Stuart (Little Bks. Old Furnit.) vi. 96 In some cases during the transition from the simple chest to the chest of drawers, we find a chest with drawer or drawers below and false drawer fronts to match on the upper portion. The old chest lid is still retained. This type, being a hybrid, is known amongst collectors as the ‘Mule Chest’. 1923 J. C. Rogers Eng. Furnit. ii. 15 The ‘mule chest’, or dower chest, with its proverbial bottom drawer. 1990 Ideal Home Apr. 178/2 (advt.) Full range of traditionally styled pine bookcases, toyboxes, mule chests, monks benches. mule coble n. = sense 5c. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > fishing vessel > [noun] > other types of fishing vessel spindlers-boat1243 manfare1326 stall boat1328 dogger1338 hackboat1344 coble1493 peter-boat1540 monger1558 trimboat1558 shotter1580 crab-skuit1614 fly-boat1614 cantera1642 dogger-boat1646 cag1666 yawl1670 barca-longa1681 hogboat1784 fishing-smack1785 hooker1801 hatch-boat1828 pinkie1840 fishing-bark1841 pookhaun1851 garookuh1855 jigger1860 fisher-bark1862 fisher-keel1870 Norwegian1872 scaf1877 mule coble1883 mule1884 Zulu1884 novy1885 tosher1885 skipjack1887 fleeter1888 fishing-float1893 rodney1895 mutton-ham boat1899 nobby1899 sinagot1927 sport fisherman1937 sport fisher1940 ski-boat1964 belly boat1976 society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > vessels propelled by oars or poles > [noun] > vessels propelled by oars and sails > coble coble1493 mule coble1883 mule1884 1883 Great Internat. Fisheries Exhib. Catal. 16 Model of Improved Mule Coble for Herring Fishery. mule colt n. U.S. a young mule. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > mammals > group Ungulata (hoofed) > family Equidae (general equines) > [noun] > hybrid horse and ass > mule > young mule colt1740 1740 T. Cooke tr. Hesiod Wks. & Days iii, in tr. Hesiod Wks. 86 Geld in the eighth [day] the goat, and lowing steer; Nor in the twelfth to geld the mule-colt fear. 1788 G. Washington Diary (1925) III. 400 Turned..the two yearling Mule Colts..into the Clover Paddock. 1885 Rep. Indian Affairs (U.S.) 11 The increase has been 8 horse and mule colts, 50 calves, and 150 pigs. 1999 Knoxville (Tennessee) News–Sentinel (Nexis) 25 Aug. s10 She refused to sell that mule..but bought another mule colt to train and sell. mule deer n. a deer of western North America, Odocoileus hemionus, with long ears and black markings on the tail; also called black-tailed deer. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > mammals > group Ungulata (hoofed) > group Ruminantia (sheep, goats, cows, etc.) > types of deer > [noun] > genus Odocoileus > Odocoileus hemionus (mule deer) fallow deer1584 mule deer1805 jumping deer1806 muley1959 1805 M. Lewis Jrnl. 10 May in Jrnls. Lewis & Clark Exped. (1987) IV. 138 The year and the tail of this anamal when compared with those of the common deer, so well comported with those of the mule when compared with the horse, that we have by way of distinction adapted the appellation of the mule deer which I think much more appropriate. 1880 Scribner's Monthly May 129/1 For meat we have bacon and generally steaks or roasted ribs of elk, mule-deer or mountain sheep. 1936 D. McCowan Animals Canad. Rockies xxxi. 265 A full grown Mule deer measures about sixty five inches from nose to tail. 1997 B. Morrow Giovanni's Gift i. 44 Farther up was superior hunting: elk, bear, and mule deer. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > veterinary medicine and surgery > [noun] > veterinarian > farrier marshalc1387 horse-leech1493 horse marshal1508 farrier1562 horse-doctor1672 mule-doctor1678 hippiatrica1690 1678 E. Phillips New World of Words (new ed.) at Mulomedick A Mulomedick, is no other then a Farrier, if a Mule-doctor may be so called. 1706 Phillips's New World of Words (new ed.) at Mulo-medicina Medicine for Cattel, the Art and Mystery of a Mule-Doctor, or Farrier. mule doubler n. now rare (in cotton manufacturing) a machine resembling a mule (see sense 5a) in its ability to spin two yarns simultaneously. ΚΠ 1858 P. L. Simmonds Dict. Trade Products 394/1 Twine-reeler, a mule-doubler; a string-twister. 1877 I. Watts in Encycl. Brit. VI. 491/1 [article Cotton] Machines used in cotton-spinning..mule doublers or twiners. mule-ear rabbit n. U.S. regional (rare) = jackrabbit n. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > mammals > group Unguiculata or clawed mammal > order Lagomorpha (rabbits and hares) > [noun] > family Leporidae > genus Lepus (hares) > lepus townsendii (jack-rabbit) prairie hare1840 jackass rabbit1847 mule-eared rabbit1855 mule rabbit1857 Texan hare1859 jackrabbit1863 Jack1864 mule-ear rabbit1889 mountain hare1923 1889 H. H. McConnell Five Years Cavalryman 56 The English hare..is not nearly so large as our jack or ‘mule-ear’ rabbit. mule-eared rabbit n. (also mule-yeared rabbit) U.S. regional = jackrabbit n. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > mammals > group Unguiculata or clawed mammal > order Lagomorpha (rabbits and hares) > [noun] > family Leporidae > genus Lepus (hares) > lepus townsendii (jack-rabbit) prairie hare1840 jackass rabbit1847 mule-eared rabbit1855 mule rabbit1857 Texan hare1859 jackrabbit1863 Jack1864 mule-ear rabbit1889 mountain hare1923 1855 Life Illustr. 10 Nov. 16/3 She will follow the mountain or ‘mule-eared’ rabbits. 1890 Harper's Mag. July 231/2 A thin-faced Italian has a wagon laden with game... Mule-eared rabbits, [etc.]. 1933 Amer. Speech 8 31 He don't know no more than a mule-yeared rabbit about brandin'. 1967 in Dict. Amer. Regional Eng. (1996) III. 725/2 Mule-eared rabbit—same as jackrabbit. mule-gate n. rare (in cotton manufacturing) the space traversed by the carriage of a mule (see sense 5a) when the machine is in motion. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > textile manufacture > manufacture of thread or yarn > [noun] > spinning > place for > area in mule-sweep1869 mule-gate1892 1892 J. Nasmith Students' Cotton Spinning 409 The pillars..are so pitched that they fall into the alleys between the mules and not into the mule-gate. mule-headed adj. stubborn. ΘΚΠ the mind > will > decision > obstinacy or stubbornness > [adjective] starkOE moodyOE stithc1000 stidyc1175 stallc1275 harda1382 stubbornc1386 obstinate?1387 throa1400 hard nolleda1425 obstinant?a1425 pertinacec1425 stablec1440 dour1488 unresigned1497 difficultc1503 hard-necked1530 pertinatec1534 obstacle1535 stout-stomached1549 hard-faced1567 stunt1581 hard-headed1583 pertinacious1583 stuntly1583 peremptory1589 stomachous1590 mulish1600 stomachful1600 obstined1606 restive1633 obstinacious1649 opinionated1649 tenacious1656 iron-sided1659 sturdy1664 cat-witted1672 obstinated1672 unyielding1677 ruggish1688 bullet-headed1699 tough1780 pelsy1785 stupid1788 hard-set1818 thick and thin1822 stuntya1825 rigwiddie1826 indomitable1830 recalcitrant1830 set1848 mule-headed1870 muley1871 capitose1881 hard-nosed1917 tight1928 1870 Punchinello 15 Oct. 40/2 Your organ of firmness is not confined to any one spot, but is spread over the entire skull. This phenomenon is due to your being what we [sc. phrenologists] technically call ‘mule-headed’. 1884 ‘M. Twain’ Adventures Huckleberry Finn xxix. 255 That muleheaded old fool wouldn't give in then! 1992 N.Y. Times Mag. 6 Sept. 44/3 The large planters..had to share political power with the mule-headed hill people who always seemed to go their own way. ΚΠ OE Glosses to Bella Parisiacae Urbis of Abbo of St. Germain (Harl. 3271) in W. H. Stevenson Early Scholastic Colloquies 108 Neque sit tuus mulio strabo : ne ne sy þin mulhyrde scyleage. ?c1475 Catholicon Anglicum (BL Add. 15562) f. 83v A mulehyrde, mulio. a1500 in T. Wright & R. P. Wülcker Anglo-Saxon & Old Eng. Vocab. (1884) I. 687 Mulundinarius, a mulharde. mule jenny n. now historical a spinning machine; = sense 5a. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > textile manufacture > manufacture of thread or yarn > [noun] > spinning > machine > types of water frame1777 spinning-jenny1783 mule1791 mule jenny1792 throstle1792 jenny1796 muslin wheel1830 hand mule1831 self-shifter1834 ring frame1850 cap-frame1884 trap-twister1884 trap-winder1884 1792 W. Kelly Brit. Patent 1879 (1856) 2 Those machines, commonly known by the names of roving billies and slobbing and common and mule jennies. 1835 A. Ure Philos. Manuf. 171 A soft thread to be..spun, on the mule-jenny, into yarn fit for the loom. 1972 Sci. Amer. Dec. 51/2 The intermittent, two-phase process of hand spinning was carried over to Samuel Crompton's mule jenny of 1779. 1999 St. Louis (Missouri) Post-Dispatch (Nexis) 14 Nov. t9 When Britain desperately wanted to hold on to the trademark secrets of the spinning ‘mule jenny’..Bauwens stole it by having the machine dismantled in Britain and smuggled out among a cargo of coffee. mule litter n. a litter carried by mules. ΘΚΠ society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > conveyance carried by person or animal > [noun] > litter > carried on horses or mules horse-bierc900 horse-litter1388 lettiga1805 mule litter1855 1855 Times 26 Sept. 7/5 Then the ambulances and the cacolets (or mule litters) came in sight. 1910 Encycl. Brit. I. 803/2 In the Russo-Japanese War an ingenious form of mule litter..was made by fixing the ends of two long springy poles..to each side of the pack saddles of two mules. mule meat n. U.S. (chiefly Military slang) low-quality corned beef; tough or gristly beef. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > animals for food > [noun] > meat > inferior meat sticking1764 mule meat1846 mystery1882 mule1887 1846 R. B. Sage Scenes Rocky Mts. xxix. 251 We ended our fast..with a feast of mule meat. 1899 J. D. Elderkin Sketches 168 Our rations were pretty good except the corn beef; it was very bad..and the boys called it ‘Salt horse, or mule meat’. 1999 South Bend (Indiana) Tribune (Nexis) 21 Dec. a11 A lot of people dismiss Peggy as a piece of fluff... But I've always found her tough as mule meat myself. ΚΠ 1716 M. Davies Diss. Physick 44 in Athenæ Britannicæ III Those Mulemedicinal Authors, therein contain'd are Absyrtus, Prusuensis, Æmilius Hispanus [etc.]. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > veterinary medicine and surgery > [noun] > farriery marshalcyc1450 ferruriea1616 hippiatrics1646 hippiatry1653 farrying1678 horse-leechery1688 mule-medicine1716 farriery1737 horse-doctoring1807 1716 M. Davies Diss. Physick 46 in Athenæ Britannicæ III The old Writers of the Rustick or Country-Physicks are generally the same that writ of Mule-Medicines. mule-picket n. rare a peg for tethering a mule. ΚΠ 1846 E. Bryant Jrnl. 5 July in What I saw in Calif. (1848) viii. 122 The ground is so hard that it is with difficulty that we can force our mule-pickets into it. mule rabbit n. U.S. regional (now historical) = jackrabbit n. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > mammals > group Unguiculata or clawed mammal > order Lagomorpha (rabbits and hares) > [noun] > family Leporidae > genus Lepus (hares) > lepus townsendii (jack-rabbit) prairie hare1840 jackass rabbit1847 mule-eared rabbit1855 mule rabbit1857 Texan hare1859 jackrabbit1863 Jack1864 mule-ear rabbit1889 mountain hare1923 1857 Porter's Spirit of Times 28 Feb. 414/3 Some of our expedition..went farther out, for the purpose of fetching in some of the deer, bar, and mule rabbits aforesaid. 1877 S. W. Cozzens Crossing Quicksands 80 More commonly known as the ‘mule’ rabbit, so called on account of its enormous ears. 1994 R. Hendrickson Happy Trails 136 They were also called mule rabbits. mule-rigged adj. (of a ketch) having a mule for a sail (see sense 3d). ΚΠ 1950 Yachting Monthly July 31/2 Mr. C. G. Burge's mule rigged Thoma II raced in the bowsprit class. 1954 Motor Boating Dec. 29/1 The mule-rigged yawl Flame at the start in Newport. mule's fern n. (also mule fern) now rare. any of several ferns related to hart's tongue, Asplenium scolopendrium; esp. the Mediterranean fern A. sagittata, with sagittate fronds. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > particular plants > ferns > [noun] > spleenworts maidenhairc1300 finger fern1548 scale-fern1548 stone-rue1548 wall rue1548 tentwort?1550 ceterach1551 stone-fern1552 English maidenhair1562 male fern1562 miltwaste1578 spleenwort1578 stonewort1585 white maidenhair1597 milt-wort1611 mule's fern1633 rusty-back1776 maidenhair spleenwort1837 sea-spleenwort1850 sea-fern1855 scaly spleenwort1859 black adiantum1866 1633 T. Johnson Gerard's Herball (new ed.) 1137 There is another kinde of Hart-tongue called Hemionitis,..that is, Mulus, a Mule, because Mules do delight to feed thereon.] 1633 T. Johnson Gerard's Herball (new ed.) 1138 (caption) Hemionitis maior. Mules Ferne, or Moone-Ferne. 1640 J. Parkinson Theatrum Botanicum x. x. 1047 Hemionitis. Mules Ferne. 1. Hemionitis major. The Greater Mules Ferne. 2. Hemionitis altera seu minor. The Lesser Mules Ferne. 1728 R. Bradley Dict. Botanicum Hemionitis,..in English, Mules Fern, is somewhat like the Horse-tongue. 1824 J. C. Loudon Encycl. Gardening (ed. 2) Index 1207/2 Mule's fern, Asplenium hemionitis. 1994 M. Griffiths Index Garden Plants 109/1 A. sagittatum (DC.) Bange. Mule's fern. mule skinner n. North American (a) a prairie mule-driver; (b) a whip used in driving mules. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > farming > farmer > [noun] > farm worker > driver of a team of draught animals goadman1606 goad-groom1614 teamer1696 teamster1758 team man1763 goadsman1788 teamsman1792 voorloper1837 mule skinner1870 swamper1870 tracer1899 skinner1910 society > travel > transport > transport or conveyance by carrying > [noun] > conveyance by pack-animals > one who > muleteer muleteer1538 muletc1575 arriero1763 mule skinner1870 skinner1870 drabi1900 1870 J. H. Beadle Life in Utah 224 I took to the plains..in the capacity of a ‘mule-skinner’. 1912 R. A. Wason Friar Tuck vii. 71 He would stand up an' yell, crack his mule-skinner, and send the ponies along on a dead run. 1945 B. A. Botkin Lay my Burden Down 169 The massa took down his long mule skinner. 1994 Senior World Newsmag. (San Bernadino, Calif.) Apr. 18/5 Coming face to face with these odd creatures scared the wits out of the more commonly used mules... The muleskinners understandably objected. mule skinning n. the driving of mules. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > farming > animal husbandry > keeping or management of horses > [noun] > keeping or driving mules peonage1844 mule skinning1881 1881 E. W. Nye Bill Nye & Boomerang 34 A practical knowledge of..mule skinning, vocal music, horsemanship. 1971 J. H. Gray Red Lights on Prairies vii. 158 Nicholas Sheran gave up mule-skinning for coal mining. 1998 Commercial Appeal (Memphis, Tennessee) (Nexis) 28 May cc2 Another nonfictional character is Zack Bragg, a colorful Mississippian whose career included mule skinning, ox driving, logging, saw mining and cattle farming. mule-stair n. a mountain ascent negotiable by mules.Apparently an isolated use. ΚΠ 1864 M. J. Higgins Ess. (1875) 179 The steep and stony mule-stair between Monaco and Turbia. mule-sweep n. rare = mule-gate n. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > textile manufacture > manufacture of thread or yarn > [noun] > spinning > place for > area in mule-sweep1869 mule-gate1892 1869 Overland Monthly July 9/2 Here..is a cotton-gin..and ponderous wooden wheels, and the mule-sweep underneath. mule twist n. = mule yarn n. ΚΠ 1823 R. Guest Compend. Hist. Cotton-manuf. 34 The folly of our Government, in permitting mule twist to be exported duty free. 1882 S. F. A. Caulfeild & B. C. Saward Dict. Needlework 463 Stocking Yarn..is Cotton thread, and is spun softer and looser than either Mule or Water Twist. 1981 Q. Jrnl. Econ. 96 95 Drawing on British data on cotton staple requirements as a function of counts for mule twist, mule weft, and ring twist, [etc.]. mule-whacker n. U.S. a mule-driver. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > farming > animal husbandry > keeping or management of horses > [noun] > keeping or driving mules > keeper of mules or asses ass-herda1425 assmanc1470 muliona1500 mule-drivera1653 asswoman1728 peon1826 mule-whacker1873 1873 J. H. Beadle Undeveloped West iv. 88 The streets were thronged with motley crowds of railroad men and mule-whackers. 1889 H. O'Reilly & J. Y. Nelson Fifty Years on Trail 357 The town was full of cow-punchers, mule-whackers, [etc.]. 1994 R. Hendrickson Happy Trails 164 Mule skinner, a mule driver. Also called a mule whacker.] mule yarn n. (in cotton manufacturing) yarn spun on a mule (see sense 5a). ΚΠ 1823 R. Guest Compend. Hist. Cotton-manuf. 32 By exporting mule yarn, the English have nourished..a foreign cotton manufacture. 1876 I. Watts Cotton in Brit. Manuf. Industries V. 138 Throstle yarn is stronger and more even than mule yarn, and better adapted for warps. 1981 Q. Jrnl. Econ. 96 93 The labor, capital, power and shipping cost differentials per pound between ring yarn and mule yarn. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2003; most recently modified version published online June 2022). mulen.2 1. A chilblain, esp. on the heel. Later also (in plural): †sores on the lower legs of a horse (obsolete). Cf. muley adj.1 Now regional (Scottish and Irish English). ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > suppuration > [noun] > a suppuration > blain or chilblain blainc1000 kibe1387 mulea1400 hekec1450 chilblain1547 bloody fall1601 night blain1601 night-foe1601 pernio1676 perniosis1896 a1400 J. Mirfield Sinonoma Bartholomei (1882) 3 (MED) De apostemate et cissuris in calcaneo quæ vulgaliter dicuntur mule. Promptorium Parvulorum (Harl. 221) 346 (MED) Mowle, sore: pustula. a1500 in T. Wright & R. P. Wülcker Anglo-Saxon & Old Eng. Vocab. (1884) I. 707/34 Podegra, perneo, a mowlle. 1568 J. Rowll Cursing l. 65 in W. T. Ritchie Bannatyne MS (1928) II. 279 The mowlis and þair sleip the mair..Mott fall vpoun þair kankart cors. 1579 S. Novimola Despauterii Grammaticæ Institutionis Lib. VII (new ed.) ii. 40 Pernio, the Mowllis. 1607 E. Topsell Hist. Foure-footed Beastes 409 (heading) Of Mules or kibed heeles. c1720 W. Gibson Farriers New Guide ii. lxxxiii. 286 Mules or kib'd Heels..are Chinks and Sores on the inside of the hind Pasterns, and in the Heels. 1790 A. Shirrefs Poems 284 Without a thought of host or moul. 1866 T. Edmondston Etymol. Gloss. Shetland & Orkney Dial. 73 Mools, a disease in the heels. 1880 W. H. Patterson Gloss. Words Antrim & Down 69 Mools, broken chilblains. 1923 G. Watson Roxburghshire Word-bk. 213 Mool, a broken chilblain. Usually plural. 1953 M. Traynor Eng. Dial. Donegal 188/1 There's mools on my feet I can hardly thole. 2. A kind of slipper or shoe. Now only: a kind of slipper or light shoe with an open back (frequently also with an open toe), worn esp. by women. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > footwear > shoe or boot > shoe > [noun] > types of > light shoe or slipper > other pantofle1494 mule1562 pantap1570 scarpinea1586 sock1597 sandal1794 powdering slipper1800 carpet slipper1851 Romeo slipper1889 Romeo1892 slipperslapper1922 Grecian slipper1926 Slipperette1931 ballerina1947 1562 J. Heywood Sixt Hundred Epigrammes in Wks. sig. Ddiijv Thou wearst..Moyles of veluet to saue thy shooes of lether. 1585 J. Higgins tr. Junius Nomenclator Mulleus, a shooe with a high sole,..a moyle. 1603 Philotus xix. sig. B Lo Maistres heir ȝour Muillis [v.r. mooles]. c1650 J. Spalding Memorialls Trubles Scotl. & Eng. (1851) II. 388 He had..ane pair of mules on his feit. 1824 W. Scott Redgauntlet I. xi. 238 He seldom wore shoon, unless it were muils when he had the gout. 1894 E. Sullivan Woman 52 She [sc. Mlle de Caynon] threw them her velvet mules that the executioner had left her. 1922 S. Lewis Babbitt xx. 254 She wore..torn stockings thrust into streaky pink satin mules. 1976 New Yorker 12 Jan. 22/3 He was wearing tapered gray trousers, a mottled black-and-white sweater, and brown mules. 1993 B. Kingsolver Pigs in Heaven ii. xvii. 166 Barbie..takes off her mules, leaving them crouched like Pekingese littermates on the carpet. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2003; most recently modified version published online March 2022). † mulen.3 Obsolete. rare. The base of a stag's antlers. ΚΠ a1425 Edward, Duke of York Master of Game (Digby) xxiv Þe aunteleres, þe whiche beth þe first tyndes, beth gret and longe and nere þe mules and wele apperynge. c1425 Edward, Duke of York Master of Game (Vesp. B.xii) (1904) 80 A grete hert..haþ grete beemys al about as ȝif þei were sette like as it were wiþ smale stoonys, and þe mules nye þe hede. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2003; most recently modified version published online March 2019). mulev. U.S. slang. transitive. To act as a courier of (contraband, esp. drugs); to smuggle or carry illegally. Also intransitive. ΚΠ 1978 in J. E. Lighter Hist. Dict. Amer. Slang (1997) II. 617/1 I'm gonna be Dr. D's mule?.. I'm gonna mule in his smack? 1981 N.Y. Times 31 May br13/1 Sonny, when arrested, was carrying two pounds of cocaine. The Los Angeles dealers for whom he was ‘muling’ the drugs say they paid Sonny for four. 1990 S. King Stand (new ed.) xlviii. 598 All dope was nasty..stuff... After you muled a few loads of that shit, you could wipe your ass with gold toilet-paper. 1995 Chicago Sun-Times (Nexis) 3 Sept. 14 I had seen those boys ‘muling’ (delivering drugs) and all of them wore smirks on their faces. This is a new entry (OED Third Edition, March 2003; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.1OEn.2a1400n.3a1425v.1978 |
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