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单词 nob
释义

nobn.1

Forms: Middle English nobbes (plural).
Origin: Perhaps (i) a borrowing from Dutch. Or perhaps (ii) a variant or alteration of another lexical item. Etymons: Dutch nop ; knob n.
Etymology: Perhaps < Middle Dutch nop, noppe wool fluff, flock (compare also Dutch regional (West Flanders) noppen (plural) knots on thread) or Middle Low German noppen (plural) in specific sense ‘knots on a thread’ (see nap n.2), or perhaps a variant of knob n. Compare nobbly adj.
Obsolete.
A knot (on thread).
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > thread or yarn > [noun] > defect or irregularity in
noba1398
twitter1639
twit1819
slub1825
snick1875
ballooning1904
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 249v Þerof is þreed y-sponne, þat is..vneuene and ful of nobbes.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2003; most recently modified version published online December 2020).

nobn.2

Brit. /nɒb/, U.S. /nɑb/
Forms:

α. Scottish pre-1700 1900s– nabb, 1700s–1800s knab, 1700s–1800s nab, 1700s– knabb; Irish English (northern) 1900s– knab, 1900s– nab.

β. 1800s knob, 1800s nobb, 1800s– nob.

Origin: Of uncertain origin. Perhaps a variant or alteration of another lexical item. Etymons: nab n.2, nob n.3
Etymology: Origin uncertain. Perhaps a specific use of nab n.2 or nob n.3 Compare earlier knap n.1 2 and later nabs n., nib n.3, nibs n.It has been suggested that this word is shortened < noble n.1 or nobleman n. (perhaps originally as a graphic abbreviation), although this would not explain the α. forms. In later use, perhaps influenced by association with nabob n.
slang. depreciative in later use.
A person of some wealth or social distinction.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > social class > nobility > aristocracy or upper class > gentry > [noun] > toff or swell
nob1676
swell1786
toff1851
silver-tail1898
α.
1676 Minute Bk. Inverness Tailors 10 Oct. The said John Baillie..resolved..that the most discreet and sound nabbs of the freemen should join with him in council.
1755 R. Forbes Shop-bill in tr. Ovid Ajax his Speech (new ed.) 37 Doughty geer That either knabbs or lairds may weer.
1796 J. Lauderdale Coll. Poems Sc. Dial. 75 A' the fat nabs through the countra.
1819 J. Thomson Poems Sc. Dial. (new ed.) 29 (E.D.D.) The nabs will say, that duddy soul Shall no sit near, nor taste our bowl.
1892 J. Lumsden Sheep-head 62 Upo' her back the wauchty creels, She thraws as eithly in a spell; As yon ‘half-nabs’ do their mantels.
1917 T. W. Paterson Wyse-sayin's xxi. 22 A wyse man speels ower the tap o' a toon-fu' o' knabbs, An' gies their upsettin silly consait an unco ding ower.
β. 1809 MS Lett. of W. Fowler My Drawings and Engravings..have recommended me to the notice of the first Nobbs of this Kingdom.1825 C. M. Westmacott Eng. Spy I. 224 Nob or big wig.1832 B. Hall Frag. Voy. & Trav. 2nd Ser. I. 117 They [sc. the passengers] fall under the description of what Jack calls ‘Knobs’.1836 B. Disraeli Henrietta Temple v. xviii The little waiter who began to think Ferdinand was not such a nob as he had imagined.1872 Punch 3 Feb. 47/1 Why don't your nobs and swells get up poor's schools of their own?1938 P. Kavanagh Green Fool ii. 24 The children of the nobs called their white bread ‘lunch’ and nibbled at it with aristocratic finger-tips.1962 J. B. Keane Hut 42 31 When a Paddy tries to come the nob, that's the limit, that is!1993 Times Lit. Suppl. 4 June 31/1 In the unending British civil war of Yobs vs Nobs, Ritchie is decidedly on the side of the Yobs.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2003; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

nobn.3

Brit. /nɒb/, U.S. /nɑb/
Forms:

α. 1600s– nob, 1700s nobb.

β. 1700s–1900s knob.

Origin: Probably a variant or alteration of another lexical item. Etymon: knob n.
Etymology: Probably originally a variant of knob n., now distinguished in form in senses below. Compare nab n.2With sense 2 compare noddy n.2 2. The senses ‘nose’ and ‘toe’ are also found regionally in Scotland and northern England: see Eng. Dial. Dict. s.vv. nob n.1 and v.1 5, 6 and Sc. National Dict. s.vv. nob n.1 Compare also Eng. Dial. Dict. s.vv. knob n. and v. 9, 10.
1.
a. Originally cant. The head. Also figurative. Cf. ginger nob n. at ginger n. and adj.1 Compounds 2. Now colloquial and somewhat archaic.bob a nob: see bob n.8 2.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > external parts of body > head > [noun]
nolleOE
headOE
topa1225
copc1264
scalpa1300
chiefc1330
crownc1330
jowla1400
poll?a1400
testea1400
ball in the hoodc1400
palleta1425
noddle?1507
costard?1515
nab?1536
neck1560
coxcomb1567
sconce1567
now1568
headpiece1579
mazer1581
mazardc1595
cockcomb1602
costrel1604
cranion1611
pasha1616
noddle pate1622
block1635
cranium1647
sallet1652
poundrel1664
nob1699
crany?1730
knowledge box1755
noodle1762
noggin1769
napper1785
garret1796
pimple1811
knowledge-casket1822
coco1828
cobbra1832
coconut1834
top-piece1838
nut1841
barnet1857
twopenny1859
chump1864
topknot1869
conk1870
masthead1884
filbert1886
bonce1889
crumpet1891
dome1891
roof1897
beanc1905
belfry1907
hat rack1907
melon1907
box1908
lemon1923
loaf1925
pound1933
sconec1945
nana1966
α.
1699 B. E. New Dict. Canting Crew Nob, a Head.
1733 K. O'Hara Tom Thumb i. iv 12 Do pop up your nob again, And egad I'll crack your crown.
1759 Compl. Let.-writer (ed. 6) 220 Miss Bennet had apparel'd her nob in a frightful Fanny Murry Cap.
?1782 G. Parker Humorous Sketches 155 Here no despotic power shews Oppression's haughty nob.
1819 Sporting Mag. 4 237 A tremendous lunging blow on his nob.
1833 T. Hood in Comic Ann. 167 A little dark spare man, With bald shining nob.
1894 G. Meredith Lord Ormont i Matey's sure aim..relieving J. Masner of a foremost assailant with a spanker on the nob.
1910 C. E. Montague Hind let Loose i. 12 Brumby got one for his nob... Bellona's other bridegroom took it on the boko [sc. nose].
1938 T. H. White Sword in Stone vii. 116 ‘Take that!’ cried Sir Grummore, giving the unfortunate monarch a two-handed swipe on the nob.
1997 T. Pynchon Mason & Dixon 494 Wearily Mason pulls on Oil-cloths, tugs his Service-Grade Beaver of his Nob, and emerges.
β. 1725 New Canting Dict. Knob, the Head or Skull.1868 College Rhymes No. 26. 165 Ozymandias rode to the meet On a fast-trotting cream-coloured cob, With very queer boots on his feet, And a very queer hat on his knob.1888 ‘M. Robertson’ Lombard St. Myst. xvi. 165 It were s'posed the guilty deed were one too much for 'is knob.1923 Fitchburg (Mass.) Sentinel 19 Mar. 9/1 But use your knob upon the job, or George will do it—and throw you out!
b. Boxing slang. A blow to the head. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > impact > striking > striking on specific part of the body > [noun] > on the head
nope1684
nobber1811
nob1812
nobbing1819
cob1828
nobbler1848
1812 Sporting Mag. 39 153 By flush-hits, and nobs and fibs Who crack'd the jaw and broke the ribs Of fearless Thomas Molineux.
2. Cribbage. A jack of the same suit as the card turned up by the dealer, scoring one to its holder; esp. in one for his (also rarely her) nob (or nobs). Cf. heel n.1 6.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > card game > cribbage > [noun] > jack
his heels1754
nob1821
society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > card game > card or cards > [noun] > picture-card > jack > in specific games
pur1592
Tom1647
maker1753
his heels1754
bragger1807
nob1821
right bower1839
1821 C. Lamb in London Mag. Feb. 163/2 There was nothing silly in it, like the nob in cribbage.
1834 C. Dickens Sketches by Boz (1836) 1st Ser. I. 208One for his nob!’ said Gobler.
1844 J. T. J. Hewlett Parsons & Widows III. liv. 278 Fifteen two, and a pair's four, and his nob's five.
?1870 F. Hardy & J. R. Ware Mod. Hoyle , Cribbage 18 If you hold in your hand or crib a knave of the same suit as the card turned up you peg one. In the familiar phrase, you take ‘one for his nob’.
1882 Society 11 Nov. 9/1 In cribbage parlance, it was one for her nob and two for her heels.
1969 R. C. Bell Board & Table Games (ed. 2) II. viii. 119 For the Knave of the exposed card, ‘his nobs’ 1 point.
1979 Official World Encycl. Sports & Games 113/3 If a player holds a jack of the same suit as the start, he scores ‘one for his nob’.
3. Australian and New Zealand. slang. A coin with two heads, used to cheat in gambling games, esp. two-up (see two-up n. 1). Cf. grey n. 10.Now in historical use, except with reference to games of two-up played as a tradition on Anzac Day.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > money > medium of exchange or currency > coins collective > [noun] > wrongly stamped coin
mule1801
nob1885
1885 Bulletin (Sydney) 1 Aug. 12/2 Someone has rung in the nob on the man who had the kip and let the mug collar the plunder.
1899 N. Queensland Reg. (Nexis) 20 Nov. 9/4 A bush spieler, whose pockets were full of ‘tats’ and ‘nobs’ and ‘greys’.
1932 Western Mail (Perth, Austral.) 22 Sept. 2/3 Our cobber would always have a dinkum grey or nob on him.
2007 Illawarra (Austral.) Mercury (Nexis) 25 Apr. 5 Calls of ‘come in, spinner’ are set to echo across the region, with nobs, kips and ringers making a comeback, if only for a day.

Compounds

nob-thatch n. slang Obsolete hair.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > hair > hair of head > [noun]
lockeOE
faxc900
hairc1000
hairc1000
headOE
topc1275
toppingc1400
peruke1548
fleece1577
crine1581
head of hair1587
poll1603
a fell of haira1616
thatcha1634
maidenhair1648
chevelure1652
wool1697
toupet1834
nob-thatch1846
barnet1857
toss1946
1846 J. Sheppard Let. in Littell's Living Age 17 Oct. 139/1 Mr Chesterton's ‘nick’ is yet fearfully visible among my hair, whence a great paucity of nob-thatch.
1866 E. Yates Land at Last I. vii. 134 You've got a paucity of nob-thatch, and what 'air you 'ave is..gray.
nob thatcher n. slang Obsolete a wig-maker; a hatter.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > tailoring or making clothes > making headgear > [noun] > hat-making > one who
hatter1212
hatmaker1355
hurrer1403
haberdasher1566
chapeler1601
nob thatcher1793
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > tailoring or making clothes > making headgear > [noun] > wig-making > one who
periwig-maker1598
noddle-thatcher1716
tête-maker1789
nob thatcher1793
board-worker1927
1793 F. Grose Dict. Vulgar Tongue (ed. 3) Nob thatcher, a peruke maker.
1823 W. T. Moncrieff Tom & Jerry i. v Some of our dashing straw-chippers and nob-thatchers in Burlington Arcade.
1846 ‘Lord Chief Baron’ Swell's Night Guide (new ed.) 126/2 Nob thatcher, a hat maker.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2003; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

nobn.4

Origin: Of uncertain origin. Perhaps formed within English, by clipping or shortening. Etymon: knobstick n.
Etymology: Origin uncertain; perhaps shortened < knobstick n. (compare sense 2a s.v.).
Scottish. Obsolete.
= knobstick n. 2a.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > worker > worker according to manner of working > [noun] > striking > refusing to strike
dung1765
scab1777
knobstick1794
leg1815
rat1824
nob1825
black1826
blackneb1832
blacknob1838
knob1839
snob1839
blackleg1844
snob-stick1860
non-striker1868
ratter1890
strike-breaker1904
1825 Edinb. Mag. & Literary Misc. Oct. 495 There have of late been several cases of assault upon the workmen termed ‘nobs’ in Messrs. Dunlop's mill.
1870 J. K. Hunter Life Stud. Char. xix. 136 They ha'e a strong society,..and hate nobs such as me.
1886 D. Macleod Clyde District Dumbartonshire I. 22 The ‘nobs’ and their protectors proceeded to the works.
1895 J. Nicholson Kilwuddie (ed. 4) 174 Nae mercy for the nobs, the blackleg crew.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2003; most recently modified version published online September 2021).

nobv.1

Forms: 1800s knob, 1800s nob; Scottish pre-1700 nob.
Origin: Partly of uncertain origin. Partly formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: nob n.3
Etymology: In sense 2 < nob n.3 The origin of sense 1 is uncertain, as is the reading of quot. a1586 at sense 1, which may rather show a transmission error for now v.1
Obsolete.
1. transitive. Scottish. Probably: to beat, strike. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > impact > striking > strike [verb (transitive)]
swingc725
slayc825
knockc1000
platOE
swengea1225
swipa1225
kill?c1225
girdc1275
hitc1275
befta1300
anhitc1300
frapa1330
lushc1330
reddec1330
takec1330
popc1390
swapa1400
jod?14..
quella1425
suffetc1440
smith1451
nolpc1540
bedunch1567
percuss1575
noba1586
affrap1590
cuff?1611
doda1661
buffa1796
pug1802
nob1811
scud1814
bunt1825
belt1838
duntle1850
punt1886
plunk1888
potch1892
to stick one on1910
clunk1943
zonk1950
a1586 Christis Kirk on Grene in W. A. Craigie Maitland Folio MS (1919) I. 154 Thair durst na ten cum him to tak So nobbit [1568 Bannatyne nowit] he þair nowis.
2. Boxing slang.
a. transitive. To strike (a person), esp. on the head.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > impact > striking > strike [verb (transitive)]
swingc725
slayc825
knockc1000
platOE
swengea1225
swipa1225
kill?c1225
girdc1275
hitc1275
befta1300
anhitc1300
frapa1330
lushc1330
reddec1330
takec1330
popc1390
swapa1400
jod?14..
quella1425
suffetc1440
smith1451
nolpc1540
bedunch1567
percuss1575
noba1586
affrap1590
cuff?1611
doda1661
buffa1796
pug1802
nob1811
scud1814
bunt1825
belt1838
duntle1850
punt1886
plunk1888
potch1892
to stick one on1910
clunk1943
zonk1950
the world > movement > impact > striking > striking on specific part of the body > strike on specific part of body [verb (transitive)] > on the head
mazer1596
mazard1616
nope1684
snabble1725
crown1746
jow1802
nob1811
bean1910
skull1945
1811 Sporting Mag. Oct. 18/2 After Crib had again nobbed him.
1818 Sporting Mag. Aug. 211/2 He knobbed his adversary well.
1823 W. T. Moncrieff Tom & Jerry ii. iv I've nobb'd him on the canister.
1842 Whip (N.Y.) 9 July 2 McCoy nobbed his opponent, and he went down bleeding.
b. intransitive. To deliver a blow to the head.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > impact > striking > striking on specific part of the body > strike on specific part of the body [verb (intransitive)] > on the head
nob1812
to scuttle (a person's) nob1834
1812 Sporting Mag. Jan. 153/2 Tom, who cou'd both fib and nob.
1813 Sporting Mag. Nov. 55/2 Alexander kept nobbing with his left hand at the other.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2003; most recently modified version published online December 2020).

nobv.2

Brit. /nɒb/, U.S. /nɑb/
Origin: Of uncertain origin.
Etymology: Origin uncertain. Compare slightly earlier nobbins n.It has been suggested that this word is derived < nob n.3, with allusion to the collection of an amount of money per head, although connections with nab v.2 and nobble v. are also possible.
British slang.
1. intransitive. To seek contributions of money, esp. after a performance. Obsolete. rare.
ΚΠ
1861 H. Mayhew London Labour (new ed.) III. 135/2 We also ‘nob’, or gather the money.
2. transitive. To seek contributions of money from (persons); to seek contributions of (money), esp. after a performance. Now rare.
ΚΠ
1861 H. Mayhew London Labour (new ed.) III. 206/2 I saw some men coming out of a chemical works, and we went to ‘nob’ them (that's get some halfpence out of them).
1893 P. H. Emerson Signor Lippo vi I nobbed half a sovereign from a young visitor, besides a lot of small money.
1908 G. Sanger Seventy Years Showman xxxii. 96 Not a soul among the spectators..escaped being nobbed.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2003; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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