单词 | pear |
释义 | pearn. I. The fruit, and related senses. 1. The fleshy edible fruit (a pome) of the tree Pyrus communis (see sense 2a), typically having a broad base and tapering or constricted towards the stalk. Also (usually with distinguishing word): the similar but round fruit of P. pyrifolia of eastern Asia (see nashi n.).Of the many varieties, the sweeter and juicier kinds are used as a dessert fruit or for cooking, while certain more astringent types are used to make perry (see perry n.3).Asian, Comice, Conference, Doyenne, Marie Louise, nashi, sand, warden pear, etc.: see the first element. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > fruit and vegetables > fruit or a fruit > pear > [noun] pearOE the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular types of fruit > [noun] > pear pearOE Madeira1664 OE Ælfric Gram. (St. John's Oxf.) 20 Hoc pirum seo peru. OE Antwerp Gloss. (1955) 145 Grustumie [read Crustumie], healfreade peran. c1300 St. Thomas Becket (Laud) 1191 in C. Horstmann Early S.-Eng. Legendary (1887) 140 (MED) His wijf..bi-gan to serui..deinteþes..Applene & peoren and notes also. 1316 Close Rolls Edward II 357 (MED) Pears of Permayns. c1395 G. Chaucer Merchant's Tale 2333 I moot dye so sore longeth me To eten of the smale perys [v.r. peeres] grene. a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 241v Þe wilde peres beþ more soure and erþy, more cold and druye þan þe tame, more vnsauory and hard in taste. ?c1425 tr. Guy de Chauliac Grande Chirurgie (Paris) (1971) 325 (MED) Vse þinges þat ben delitable and soure..for constipacioun..as ben peres, coyns, and soche oþre. a1475 Sidrak & Bokkus (Lansd.) (Ph.D. diss., Univ. of Washington) (1965) 10426 (MED) A seke man somtime wole dere Forto ete a litel pere. c1475 Advice to Lovers in J. O. Halliwell Select. Minor Poems J. Lydgate (1840) 43 (MED) Appeles and peres that semen very gode Ful ofte tyme are roten by the core. 1541 T. Elyot Castel of Helthe (new ed.) ii. vii. 22 Peares are muche of the nature of appulles, but they ar heuier. 1573 J. Partridge Treasurie Commodious Conceits xxix. sig. C.vj This wise you may make Marmylade of Wardens, Peares, apples, & Medlars, Seruits or Checkers, strawberys euery one by himselfe. 1634 Althorp MS in J. N. Simpkinson Washingtons (1860) App. p. xvi A jorney to Windsor for pares. 1699 in T. Heywood Norris Papers (1846) 17 James Bolton of Speake for getting Apples and Pares in the orchard of Wm. Gill of Speake. 1730 J. Thomson Autumn in Seasons 156 The juicy pear Lies, in a soft profusion, scatter'd round. 1785 T. Jefferson Let. 28 Oct. in Writings (1984) 842 Their plums I think are better; so also their gooseberries, and the pears infinitely beyond anything we possess. 1824 J. C. Loudon Encycl. Gardening (ed. 2) iii. i. 703 Dessert pears are characterised by a sugary aromatic juice, with the pulp soft and sub-liquid, or melting, as in the beurrés, or butter-pears. 1881 H. James Portrait of Lady I. vii. 75 The quality of this small ripe country seemed as sweet to her as the taste of an October pear. 1917 E. Wharton Summer ix. 133 Trestles with banked-up oranges and apples, spotted pears and dusty raspberries. 1993 Homemaker's Mag. (Toronto) Apr. 68/1 A perfect dessert would be ripe pears served with a selection of Italian cheeses. 2. a. The tree Pyrus communis (family Rosaceae), thought to be native to Europe and western Asia and widely cultivated for its fruit (see sense 1); = pear tree n. 1a. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular fruit-tree or -plant > [noun] > pear-tree perryOE pear tree1230 pearc1390 perer?a1425 warden-tree?1523 orchard pear tree1562 pyrus1567 willow-leaved pear1820 nashi1892 c1390 Pistel of Swete Susan (Vernon) 82 (MED) Þe popeiayes..On peren [v.r. piries] and pynappel þei ioyken in pees. a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 210 Some [trees]..bereþ more fruyt in eelde þan in ȝouþe..as it fareþ in almoundes, in pyries, and in peres. ?a1425 tr. Guy de Chauliac Grande Chirurgie (N.Y. Acad. Med.) f. 172 (MED) Leuez of wilde perez. Promptorium Parvulorum (Harl. 221) 394 Pere, tre, pirus. a1500 (?a1450) Treat. Gardening 19 in Archaeologia (1894) 54 161 (MED) Of pere y mynde ȝorne To graffe hym a-pon a haw-thorne. ?1523 J. Fitzherbert Bk. Husbandry f. xliiii And after saynt Valentynes day it is tyme to graffe both peeres and wardens. a1618 J. Sylvester tr. G. de S. Du Bartas Diuine Weekes & Wks. (1621) i. vi. 130 Heer the sweet Plum-tree, the sharp Mulbery there, Heer the lowe Vine, and there the lofty Pear. 1658 N. Billingsley Κοσμοβρεϕια: Infancy of World 74 The piramidal Pear The tow'ring Cedar and tall Pine did rear Their heads from me. 1681 T. Langford Plain Instr. Fruit-trees ii. 15 A Pear graffed on a Wicky-berry-tree grew very well. 1731 P. Miller Gardeners Dict. I. at Pyrus The Distance which the Branches of Pears should be train'd must be proportion'd to the Size of their Fruit. 1785 T. Martyn tr. J.-J. Rousseau Lett. Elements Bot. vii. 77 The pear and apple are..two..species of the same..genus. 1846 D. J. Browne Trees Amer. 287 The blossoms of the pear, which are scentless, and of a pure white, appear..in the southern counties of Ohio, by the middle of April. 1861 Amer. Agriculturist July 209/2 Deep cultivation, such as is required for the standard pear, will not do for the quince, because of the shallow depth at which the roots grow. 1927 S. Lewis Elmer Gantry xii. 181 She stopped, panting, by a walled garden with espalier pears. 1992 H. Mitchell One Man's Garden iv. 70 The flowers are often frozen, so fruit is not guaranteed, and pears often die of fire blight. b. With distinguishing word: any of several trees and shrubs related to the cultivated pear.willow-leaved pear: see willow n. Compounds 2. ΚΠ 1856 ‘E. S. Delamer’ Flower Garden 127 Pyrus Japonica—Japan Pear,—which bears scarlet blossoms early in spring, is really a Quince, and is now removed to the genus Cydonia. 1900 W. Robinson Eng. Flower Garden (ed. 8) 752/1 P[yrus] Salicifolia (the Willow-leaved Pear), which is well worthy of planting on account of its..beautiful foliage, has leaves of silvery whiteness. 1976 O. Polunin & B. Everard Trees & Bushes of Europe 76 Almond-Leaved Pear. Pyrus amygdaliformis... A shrub or small tree..found in dry rocky places in the Mediterranean region. 1998 R. Mabey Flora Britannica 200/2 Wild pear, Pyrus pyraster. The status and distribution of the wild pear in Britain is uncertain. 3. Chiefly with distinguishing word: any of various fruits thought to resemble the pear (sense 1) in some way; any of the plants producing such a fruit. Earliest in prickle pear n.avocado, garlic, vegetable, wooden pear, etc.: see the first element. See also prickly pear n. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > fruit and vegetables > fruit or a fruit > pear > [noun] > other types of pear calewey1377 choke-pear1530 muscadel1555 lording1573 bon-chrétienc1575 Burgundian pear1578 king pear1585 amiot1600 bergamot1600 butter pear1600 dew-pear1600 greening1600 bottle pear1601 gourd-pear1601 critling1611 pearc1612 nutmeg1629 rosewater pear1629 amber pear1638 Christian1651 chesil1664 diego1664 frith-pear1664 primate1664 saffron pear1664 Windsor pear1664 nonsuch1674 muscat1675 burnt-cat1676 ambrette1686 sanguinole1693 satin1693 St. Germain pear1693 amadot1706 burree1719 Doyenne1731 beurré1736 colmar1736 chaumontel1755 Marie Louise1817 seckel1817 vergaloo1828 Passe Colmar1837 glou-morceau1859 London sugar1860 Kieffer pear1880 sand pear1880 sandy pear1884 nashi1892 c1612 W. Strachey Hist. Trav. Virginia (1953) i. x. 120 Here is a Cherry redd fruict both within and without..which we call the prickle-Peare... They beare a broad thick spungeous leafe full of karnells. 1696 L. Plukenet Opera Bot. II. 32 Anona Americana,..Anchovie Pear, & aliquando River Pear, Nostratibus nuncupatur. 1764 J. Grainger Sugar-cane i. 8 (note) The avocato, avocado, avigato, or, as the English corruptly call it, alligator-pear. 1804 Sydney Gaz. 7 Oct. 3 The timber consisted chiefly of cedar, pear and tea tree. 1845 Encycl. Metrop. XXV. 1362/2 Xylomelum... A genus so called by Smith..in allusion to the hard woody nature and form of the fruit, which is, on that account, also called wood-pear. 1880 Handbk. S. Afr. (S. W. Silver & Co.) (ed. 3) 127 In these kloofs grow..the Hard Pear..the White Pear. 1976 Hortus Third (L. H. Bailey Hortorium) 1055/2 Solanum muricatum Ait. Pepino, melon shrub,..melon pear. 4. a. U.S. regional and Australian. = prickly pear n. See also pear apple n. (b) at Compounds 2. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular fruit-tree or -plant > [noun] > tropical or exotic fruit-tree or -plant > prickly pear plants tuna1555 Opuntia1601 prickled pear1610 prickle pear1610 prickpear1622 Indian fig1631 prickly pear1696 pimploe1698 pear1805 1805 M. Lewis Jrnl. 13 Aug. in Jrnls. Lewis & Clark Exped. (1988) V. 78 The leaves grow from the margins of each other as in the broad leaf pear of the Missouri. 1905 Bull. Bureau Plant Industry, U.S. Dept. Agric. No. 74. 20 It is universally recognized throughout the pear region of southwestern Texas that the plant has a decided tendency to increase the flow of milk. 1908 Bulletin (Sydney) 9 July 15/3 Runs have been given up as hopeless for stock owing to the prickly anathema. Right down the line from Roma to Dalby pear is seen all the way. 1973 H. Lewis Crow on Barbed Wire Fence 29 You seen pear? It's cactus. Put a piece on that barbed wire fence and it'll grow. 1996 Time (Nexis) 10 June 44 Ranchers..have been hiring day laborers to ‘burn pear’, Texas lingo for applying a butane torch to the cactus and searing off the spines so that cattle can munch on what remains. b. Chiefly Caribbean and Hawaii. An avocado pear. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular types of fruit > [noun] > tropical exotic fruit pear1895 1672 W. Hughes Amer. Physitian 41 I never heard it [i.e. the avocado] called by any other name than the Spanish Pear, or by some the Shell-Pear.] 1895 Hawaiian Gaz. 19 July 7/2 A good market could be obtained in California for all the surplus pears for many years to come. 1907 W. Jekyll Jamaican Song & Story i. xlvii. 144 Dog don't like nothing as his pear an' bone. 1945 E. P. Clark W. Indian Cooking (1946) xxi. 103 Avocado Pear Soup... Just before serving stir in the pear, previously peeled, and either pounded or sieved. 1954 Evening News (Port of Spain, Trinidad) 22 Sept. 1 Mrs. Affou's garden, poultry and cultivated plants, including grafted oranges, mango julie, cocoa and pears were swept away. 1972 E. B. Carr Da Kine Talk ix. 143 The word pear can be heard in Hawaii denoting only the avocado. (To distinguish them, Mainland pears are frequently referred to as Bartlett pears.) 1979 Advocate News 17 June 16 To most Barbadians a Pear is an Avocado Pear. The true pear is Pyrus communis. 2002 Caribbean Today (Nexis) 30 Nov. 9 Abacate smoothie ingredients... Half medium pear (peeled and cubed). 5. = pearwood n. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > materials > raw material > wood > wood of specific trees > [noun] > wood of fruit trees > pear pear treec1350 pearwood1730 pear1831 1831 G. Greig S. Afr. Almanac 187 The other woods most in request, and found in Albany are..Red and White Pear, Saffran. 1879 Proc. Royal Geogr. Soc. 1 326 Unlike the useless scrub of the Tugela Valley, there is valuable timber of yellow-wood, stink-wood, red and white pear, boken-wood, and some others. 1888 Encycl. Brit. XXIV. 645/1 Some woods, such as pear, lime, and more especially box, are comparatively free from any distinct grain, and may be carved almost like marble. 1948 F. H. Titmuss Conc. Encycl. World Timbers 100 Pear is not a durable wood for use in unprotected positions, but is lasting for work under cover. 1968 J. Arnold Shell Bk. Country Crafts xiv. 192 Grinling Gibbons worked in several woods, lime, box and pear. 1990 Woodworker July 691/1 He will use fruitwoods, such as apple, plum and, particularly, pear with its tight knit quality. II. Extended uses. 6. ΘΚΠ the world > space > extension in space > measurable spatial extent > smallness > [noun] > that which is small > a small thing > typical examples of little fingerc1300 pear1340 hair1377 flea1388 a pin's head (also point)c1450 fitch1550 mouse1584 minnow1596 the pestle of a lark1598 nutshella1616 pinhead1662 pinpoint1670 rope yarn1751 bee's knee1797 peanut1864 postage stamp1881 1340 Ayenbite (1866) 208 (MED) God..nele þe yeue pere ne eppel ase me deþ ane childe, ac greate þinges he wile þet þou him acsi. c1380 Sir Ferumbras (1879) 5722 (MED) Of þyne ne schalt þow lese noȝt þe worthy of a pere. a1425 (c1333–52) L. Minot Poems (1914) 1 (MED) Þai turned ogayn with sides sare, And al þaire pomp noght worth a pere. c1475 (c1399) Mum & Sothsegger (Cambr. Ll.4.14) (1936) Prol. 73 (MED) It shulde not apeire hem a peere, a prynce þouȝ he were. c1500 (?a1475) Assembly of Gods (1896) 597 (MED) All the baytys that ye for hym haue leyde, Without myn helpe, be nat worth a peere. ?1504 S. Hawes Example of Vertu sig. dd.ivv Nor fortune without me auayleth not hym a pere. 1631 W. Lisle Faire Æthiopian iii. 48 When he came forth, what ere Was seene before, is thought not worth a peare. b. In various similative and proverbial uses. ΚΠ a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add. 27944) (1975) II. xvii. cxxiv. 1021 For as oon seith, ‘wiþoute wyn peres beþ venyme’. a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) 37 (MED) O gode pertre coms god peres [a1400 Gött. peris; a1400 Trin. Cambr. perus], Wers tre, vers fruit it beres. c1540 (?a1400) Gest Historiale Destr. Troy 3080 The brede of hir brest..Was pleasaund..With two propur pappes, as a peire rounde, ffetis and faire, of fauour full swete. a1616 W. Shakespeare Merry Wives of Windsor (1623) iv. v. 94 As crest-falne as a dride-peare. View more context for this quotation 1666 G. Torriano Proverbial Phrases 201/2 in Piazza Universale A pear must have wine after it, and a fig water. 1700 T. Brown Amusem. Serious & Comical ix. 93 His Body was as Rotten as a Pear. 1751 M. Mendez Shepherds Lottery i. v. 9 I like young Doris in her russet Gown, Ripe as the Pear, and as the Berry brown. 1762 J. Hall-Stevenson Crazy Tales 13 Others presum'd she was perfum'd, From being rotten as a pear. 1807 Port Folio 4 207 To use the homely proverb of Sancho, ‘looking for pears from an elm’. 1845 B. Disraeli Sybil II. iv. xi. 271 ‘But is the pear ripe?’ said the diplomatist. ‘The pear is ripe if we have courage to pluck it,’ said Lord Marney. a1859 W. Watt Poems & Songs (1860) 253 Then, o' her mouth, as sweet's a pear, He tak's a luscious smack. 1951 Times 30 May 2/4 She [sc. a yacht] is likely to have passed the point where reconstruction would be possible, being reported to be ‘ripe as a pear’. 1999 Atlanta Jrnl. & Constit. (Nexis) 21 Dec. 2 e It's proverbial that pears don't grow on elms. 7. a. Something shaped like a pear; esp. a pear-shaped pearl or gem (cf. pear pearl n. at Compounds 2). ΘΚΠ the world > plants > particular plants > trees and shrubs > thorn-tree or -bush > brier or wild rose-bush > [noun] > part of > hip hipeOE shoop1483 pear1576 hedge-peak1630 choop1820 rose berry1822 rose hip1833 hedge-speak1847 society > occupation and work > materials > raw material > gem or precious stone > pearl > [noun] > varieties of unioOE pearl of orientc1400 seed pearl1551 powdering pearls1606 pear pearl1647 Welsh pearl1681 peara1685 union1694 akoya1727 river pearl1776 orient1833 bouton pearl1851 blister pearl1885 Bombay pearl1885 teardrop pearl1904 cultured pearl1911 culture pearl1921 1576 G. Baker tr. C. Gesner Newe Jewell of Health i. f. 4 The seedes within the peares of the Rose, are..astringent. a1685 M. Evelyn Mundus Muliebris (1690) 4 Diamond Pendants for the Ears,..or two Pearl Pears. 1727 A. Hamilton New Acct. E. Indies II. xlv. 150 Some beautiful Pearls..among them a Pair of Pears worth 50L. Sterl. 1857 P. H. Gosse Creation 223 From the side of this ‘pear’ [sc. the tunicate Botryllus] another was developed by gemmation. 1901 J. K. Mumford Oriental Rugs (new ed.) vi. 68 The ‘pear’ [sc. a motif] seems to have..original association with Persia. 1992 Rock & Gem Feb. 3/3 (advt.) Shapes available—mostly ovals, emerald cuts and pears. b. An instrument of torture made of curved metal panels, roughly pear-shaped when closed but capable of being opened up gradually. Sometimes more fully pear of confession. Cf. choke-pear n. 2. Now historical. ΘΚΠ society > authority > punishment > torture > instrument or place of torture > [noun] > pear-shaped pear of confession1630 1630 Pathomachia iii. iv. 29 Vnlesse thou confesse,..the Scottish Bootes, the Dutch Wheele, the Spanish Strappado, Linnen Ball, and Peare of Confession shall torment thee. 1990 J. A. Amato Victims & Values i. 9 This diverse array of instruments..were used by secular and religious authorities as well. They included a vaginal pear (an opening device), a chastity belt, [etc.]. 1990 J. Ayto Glutton's Glossary 213 Medieval torturers devised a particularly gruesome tool known in English as the pear of confession. 1997 Richmond (Va.) Times Dispatch (Nexis) 16 Feb. f4 One guesses that some readers may learn more than they want to about the strappado, the ‘pear’, and the Judas chair. Compounds C1. a. General attributive. pear bin n. ΚΠ 1824 M. R. Mitford Our Village I. 235 The apple-room, the pear-bin, the cheese-loft, the minced-meat closet were household words. 1993 Washington Times (Nexis) 8 Dec. e1 Supermarket pear bins are full of Bosc, Anjou and the Bartletts, red or yellow. pear bud n. ΚΠ 1838 M. Howitt Birds & Flowers 135 Did you say that the Titmouse was stealing, That he ate your pear-buds..And nipped off the apricot-bloom in his fun? 1997 New Scientist (Nexis) 30 Aug. 8181 The bottlers..place empty bottles over the pear buds. As they mature, they grow in the bottle. pear eater n. ΚΠ 1658 J. Rowland tr. T. Moffett Theater of Insects in Topsell's Hist. Four-footed Beasts (rev. ed.) 1034 Such [caterpillars] as have sayl-yards, such as are called Neustriæ, Pear-eaters. 1997 Mail Tribune (Medford, Oregon) (Electronic ed.) 9 Aug. They're at their best cored and peeled, two messy, time-consuming chores that can leave a less-than-dedicated pear eater reaching for the nearest apple. ΚΠ c1450 in T. Wright & R. P. Wülcker Anglo-Saxon & Old Eng. Vocab. (1884) I. 603/10 Piracium, a Perehorde. ΚΠ 1681 T. Langford Plain Instr. Fruit-trees i. 9 Crab-kernels and Pear-kernels. a1706 J. Evelyn Direct. for Gardiner (1932) 54 Sow another Bed of peare kirnells. a1706 J. Evelyn Direct. for Gardiner (1932) 63 Graffe on the peare-kirnell stock. pear orchard n. ΚΠ 1828 Edinb. Advertiser 17 Oct. 670/2 A prominent defect is the want of variety in the soil; nearly the whole, with the exception of the pear orchard, consisting of [etc.]. 1927 V. R. Gardner et al. Orcharding xi. 133 A large portion of the pear orchards in the Rogue River Valley, in Oregon, grow on a very heavy adobe soil. 2002 Daily Tel. 21 Oct. 9/1 Almost two thirds of apple orchards and more than half of pear orchards have disappeared in the last 30 years. pear shape n. ΚΠ 1757 Philos. Trans. 1756 (Royal Soc.) 49 450 Every one of those stars is composed of many thin hollow radii, of a pear-shape form, from five to twelve or more in number, all united intimately at their smaller end. 1833 C. Lyell Princ. Geol. III. Gloss. 83 Detached masses of melted lava, which, as they fall, assume rounded forms (like bomb-shells), and are often elongated into a pear shape. 1993 Clothes Show Feb. 72/1 (caption) High-waisted or empire-line dresses are very flattering for pear shapes. pear stock n. ΚΠ ?1523 J. Fitzherbert Bk. Husbandry f. xlv A peer or a warden wolde be graffed in a pyrre stocke. 1671 J. Sharp Midwives Bk. ii. vi. 124 Graft an Apricock on a Pear stock you shall have Apricocks. 1707 J. Mortimer Whole Art Husbandry (1721) II. 251 Pear-stocks may also be raised of Suckers,..but those that are raised of Seeds or Stones are esteemed much better. 1887 G. Nicholson Illustr. Dict. Gardening III. 47/1 Pyramid training is largely practised with Pear-trees... Pyramids may be procured worked either on the Pear stock or on the Quince. 1951 Dict. Gardening (Royal Hort. Soc.) III. 1506/2 Pears are propagated by grafting or budding, seed being used only for the raising of Pear stocks and for the production of new varieties. 1999 A. Davidson Oxf. Compan. Food 494/2 The medlar can be grafted onto quince or pear stock, but does best on hawthorn stock. b. pear-growing n. and adj. ΚΠ 1856 Putnam's Monthly Mag. Apr. 392/1 No pursuit is perfectly safe from misfortunes, and pear-growing is not quite secure. 1902 Science 1 Aug. 193/1 It [sc. pear blight] has spread to a large percentage of the leading pear-growing districts of southern California. 1958 Times 17 Oct. 16/4 Fire blight..has been largely responsible for the decline in pear growing in the eastern United States. 2003 Better Homes & Gardens Sept. 34 Heather's family settled in Oregon's scenic Hood River Valley, one of the largest pear-growing regions in the world. C2. pear apple n. (a) a fruit having features of both an apple and a pear; esp. a rough-skinned variety of apple (now historical); (b) the fruit of a prickly pear (a cactus of the genus Opuntia); (c) = nashi n. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > fruit and vegetables > fruit or a fruit > apple > [noun] > eating-apple > types of costardc1390 bitter-sweet1393 Queening?1435 richardine?1435 blaundrellc1440 pear apple1440 tuberc1440 quarrendenc1450 birtle1483 deusan1570 apple-john1572 Richard1572 lording1573 greening1577 queen apple1579 peeler1580 darling1584 doucin1584 golding1589 puffin1589 lady's longing1591 bitter-sweeting1597 pearmain1597 paradise apple1598 garden globe1600 gastlet1600 leather-coat1600 maligar1600 pome-paradise1601 French pippin1629 gillyflower1629 king apple1635 lady apple1651 golden pippin1654 goldling1655 puff1655 cardinal1658 green fillet1662 chestnut1664 cinnamon apple1664 fenouil1664 go-no-further1664 Westbury apple1664 seek-no-farther1670 nonsuch1676 calville1691 passe-pomme1691 fennel apple1699 queen1699 genet1706 fig-apple1707 oaken pin1707 nonpareil1726 costing1731 monstrous reinette1731 Newtown pippin1760 Ribston1782 Rhode Island greening1795 oslin1801 fall pippin1803 monstrous pippin1817 Newtown Spitzenburg1817 Gravenstein1821 Red Astrachan1822 Tolman sweet1822 grange apple1823 orange pippin1823 Baldwin1826 Sturmer Pippin1831 Newtowner1846 Northern Spy1847 Blenheim Orange1860 Cox1860 McIntosh Red1876 Worcester1877 raspberry apple1894 delicious1898 Laxton's Superb1920 Macoun1924 the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular types of fruit > [noun] > apple > eating-apple > types of costardc1390 bitter-sweet1393 pippin?1435 pomewater?1435 Queening?1435 richardine?1435 blaundrellc1440 pear apple1440 tuberc1440 quarrendenc1450 birtle1483 sweeting1530 pomeroyal1534 renneta1568 deusan1570 apple-john1572 Richard1572 lording1573 russeting1573 greening1577 queen apple1579 peeler1580 reinette1582 darling1584 doucin1584 golding1589 puffin1589 lady's longing1591 bitter-sweeting1597 pearmain1597 paradise apple1598 garden globe1600 gastlet1600 leather-coat1600 maligar1600 pomeroy1600 short-start1600 jenneting1601 pome-paradise1601 russet coat1602 John apple1604 honey apple1611 honeymeal1611 musk apple1611 short-shank1611 spice apple1611 French pippin1629 king apple1635 lady apple1651 golden pippin1654 goldling1655 puff1655 cardinal1658 renneting1658 green fillet1662 chestnut1664 cinnamon apple1664 fenouil1664 go-no-further1664 reinetting1664 Westbury apple1664 seek-no-farther1670 nonsuch1676 white-wining1676 russet1686 calville1691 fennel apple1699 queen1699 genet1706 fig-apple1707 oaken pin1707 musk1708 nonpareil1726 costing1731 monstrous reinette1731 Newtown pippin1760 Ribston1782 Rhode Island greening1795 oslin1801 wine apple1802 fall pippin1803 monstrous pippin1817 Newtown Spitzenburg1817 Gravenstein1821 Red Astrachan1822 Tolman sweet1822 grange apple1823 orange pippin1823 Baldwin1826 wine-sap1826 Jonathan1831 Sturmer Pippin1831 rusty-coat1843 Newtowner1846 Northern Spy1847 Cornish gilliflowerc1850 Blenheim Orange1860 Cox1860 nutmeg pippin1860 McIntosh Red1876 Worcester1877 raspberry apple1894 delicious1898 Laxton's Superb1920 Melba apple1928 Melba1933 Mutsu1951 Newtown1953 discovery1964 the world > food and drink > food > fruit and vegetables > fruit or a fruit > other fruits > [noun] tamarind1539 zizypha1546 guava1555 tuna1555 turpentine1562 mango1582 mammee1587 durian1588 lychee1588 sapota1589 fritter1591 mangosteen1598 custard apple1648 longan1655 mammee sapota1657 mammee apple1683 breadfruit1697 coco-plum1699 rambutan1707 pawpaw1709 locust bean1731 sapodilla1750 cherimoya1758 wild lime1767 Otaheite apple1777 narra1779 langsat1783 rose apple1790 cinnamon apple1796 sapota plum1797 bhindi1809 salak1820 gingerbread plum1824 geebung1827 loquat1829 sapodilla plum1830 sage-apple1832 kangaroo-apple1834 karaka-fruit1834 quandong1836 mombin1837 terap1839 zapote1842 tamarind plum1846 prairie pea1848 Barbados-cherry1858 kei-apple1859 Natal plum1859 bullock's heart1866 guava-apple1866 Sierra Leone peach1866 Turkey fig1866 marula1877 scarlet banana1885 Suriname cherry1895 feijoa1898 pear apple1898 ume1918 pepino1922 Chinese gooseberry1925 num-num1926 acerola1954 the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular types of fruit > [noun] > tropical exotic fruit > prickly pear tuna1555 Opuntia1601 prickled pear1610 prickle pear1610 prickpear1622 prickly pear1696 pear apple1898 Promptorium Parvulorum (Harl. 221) 394 Peere apple, pirumpomum. 1664 J. Evelyn Kalendarium Hortense 76 in Sylva Apples..Pearmain, Pear-apple, Hony-meal. 1707 J. Mortimer Whole Art Husbandry (1721) II. 293 The Pear Apple is a curious pleasant Apple of a rough Coat. 1898 H. S. Canfield Maid of Frontier 205 He knew..which of the ‘pear apples’ were good to eat. 1993 Albuquerque (New Mexico) Jrnl. 10 Nov. b8/1 It's an Asian pear, aka nashi, apple pear, sand pear, salad pear, Chinese pear, Oriental pear or even pear apple. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > farming > animal husbandry > keeping or management of horses > horse-gear > [noun] > bit kevela1300 barnaclea1382 bitc1385 molanc1400 bridle bit1438 snafflea1533 titup1537 bastonet?1561 cannon?1561 scatch1565 cannon bit1574 snaffle-bit1576 port mouth1589 watering snaffle1593 bell-bit1607 campanel1607 olive1607 pear-bit1607 olive-bit1611 port bit1662 neck-snaffle1686 curb-bit1688 masticador1717 Pelham1742 bridoon1744 slabbering-bit1753 hard and sharp1787 Weymouth1792 bridoon-bit1795 mameluke bit1826 Chiffney-bit1834 training bit1840 ring snaffle1850 gag-snaffle1856 segundo1860 half-moon bit1875 stiff-bit1875 twisted mouth1875 thorn-bit1886 Scamperdale1934 bit-mouth- 1607 G. Markham Cavelarice ii. 57 That bytt which is called the peare bytt. 1706 Phillips's New World of Words (new ed.) Pear-bit, a kind of Bit for Horses.] pear blight n. (a) either of two destructive diseases of pear trees, one caused by a bacterium, Erwinia amylovora, which turns the leaves rapidly brown (also called fire-blight), and the other caused by any of several beetles which bore into the bark; (b) a beetle which causes the latter (see pear blight beetle n.). ΘΚΠ the world > plants > disease or injury > [noun] > type of disease > bacterial diseases > associated with food or crop plants fire blight1742 apple blight1835 pear blight1854 leaf scald1870 ring rot1875 angular leaf spot1896 blackarm1902 Moko1913 halo blight1920 1854 E. Emmons Agric. N.Y. V. 165 Atmospheric Blight..proves itself to be independent of the cause that sometimes produces the pear blight. 1881 E. A. Ormerod Man. Injurious Insects (1890) 330 In America this species of beetle,..known..under the name of Xyleborus pyri, popularly as the ‘Pear Blight’ is..injurious both to Pear and Apple. 1961 A. Schoenfeld tr. C. Stapp Bacterial Plant Pathogens ii. 134 This disease, variously called ‘fire blight’, ‘blossom blight’, ‘fruit blight’, ‘twig blight’, ‘apple blight’, or ‘pear blight’, according to the place affected, is one of the most dangerous and dreaded tree diseases of North America. 2003 Sacramento Bee (Nexis) 6 June g1 They lost half their pear crop when pear blight swept across the county in the early 1960s. pear blight beetle n. any of several beetles causing pear blight, esp. the bark beetles Xyleborus dispar (also called shot-hole borer) and X. pyri (family Scolytidae). ΚΠ 1854 E. Emmons Agric. N.Y. V. 113 Scolytus (Tomicus) pyri... Pear-blight Beetle... This insect has been highly injurious to the pear tree in New-England. 1885 Amer. Naturalist 19 1178 The limb..may be punctured and killed by the pear-blight beetle (Xyleborus pyri), a very small insect which often escapes detection. 1936 R. W. Doane et al. Forest Insects v. 132 The pear blight beetle, Anisandrus pyri (Peck), is the American representative of the European shot-hole borer, A. dispar (Fabr.). 2003 Newsday (Nexis) 13 Apr. n2 The culprits are two species of bark or ambrosia beetles—Xyleborus dispar or pear blight beetle, and Xylesandrus germanus or black-stem borer. pear encrinite n. (also pear encrinus) Palaeontology (now rare). a pear-shaped fossil crinoid of the genus Apiocrinus. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > invertebrates > subkingdom Metazoa > grade Triploblastica or Coelomata > phylum Echinodermata > [noun] > division Pelmatozoa > class Crinoidea > fossil or encrinite > member of genus Apiocrinus pear encrinite1816 apiocrinite1851 1816 W. Smith Strata Identified 30 That extraordinary fossil zoophite the pear encrinus. 1843 W. Humble Dict. Geol. (at cited word) The pear encrinite is confined to the middle oolite. 1911 Encycl. Brit. XXVIII. 698/1 Above the freestones near Bradford comes the Bradford clay, with the well-known fossil Apiocrinus or pear-encrinite. pear-gauge n. now historical and rare a gauge incorporating a pear-shaped glass vessel and a tube with one end dipped into a container of mercury, which measures the air pressure in a vessel from which air has been pumped out. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > pump > [noun] > other parts of pumps pump box1422 pump-staff1422 pump-tree1617 branch1659 pump rod1731 pear-gauge1753 barometer-gauge1783 bucket-door1797 head1824 balance-bob1838 suction primer1875 cup-leather1889 airline1893 1753 J. Smeaton in Philos. Trans. 1751–2 (Royal Soc.) 47 428 Fig. V. Represents the new gage; which I call the pear-gage. 1822 T. Webster Imison's Elem. Sci. & Art (new ed.) I. 155 The pear-gage..shows the true quantity of atmospheric air left in the receiver. 1871 Zell's Pop. Encycl. 577/1 Pear-gage, an instrument for measuring the exhaustion of a receiver. pear haw n. U.S. regional = pear thorn n. ΚΠ 1884 C. S. Sargent Rep. Forests N. Amer. 79 Black Thorn Pear Haw. 1908 N. L. Britton & J. A. Shafer N. Amer. Trees 480 Pear Thorn—Cratægus Chapmani (Beadle) Ashe... This species occurs from central New York..to northern Georgia and westward..to Missouri. It is also called Pear haw. 2000 Deseret News (Salt Lake City) (Nexis) 12 Mar. c8 The blackthorn is a tree or shrub of the rose family... Some call it the pear haw. pear leaf n. the leaf of a pear tree; also attributive, designating other plants with leaves resembling these. ΚΠ 1822 A. Eaton Man. Bot. (ed. 3) 254 [Crataegus] pyrifolia..pear-leaf thorn. 1845–50 A. H. Lincoln Familiar Lect. Bot. (new ed.) App. 151 Pyrola..rotundifolia (shin-leaf, pear-leaf wintergreen). 1860 R. W. Emerson Fate in Conduct of Life (London ed.) 36 The slug sweats out its slimy house on the pear-leaf. 1915 V. L. Kellogg & R. W. Doane Elem. Textbk. Econ. Zool. & Entomol. 434 The Pear-leaf Blister-mite (Eriophyes pyri)..causes red blister-like blotches on the leaves of the pears and sometimes of the apples. 1993 New Phytologist 124 427/1 Norris & Bukovac (1968)..found no physical alteration of pear leaf cuticles during enzymatic isolation. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > subclass Pterygota > [noun] > division Exopterygota or Hemimetabola > order Hemiptera > suborder Homoptera > family Psyllidae > member of genus Psylla psylla1852 pear sucker1881 pear-louse1890 pear psylla1892 1890 Cent. Dict. Pear-louse. pear midge n. a small gall midge, Contarinia pyrivora, whose larvae damage the fruit of pear trees. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > order Diptera or flies > [noun] > suborder Nematocera > family Cecidomyiidae > contarinia pyrivora (pear midge) pear midge1854 1854 Amer. Farmer's New & Universal Handbk. 542 The small pear midge lays her eggs in the blossoms when they are still closed. 1956 R. H. Davidson & L. M. Peairs Insect Pests (ed. 5) xvii. 442 The pear midge is an introduced insect, present in the northeastern states for over 50 years. 1996 Pract. Gardening June 91/1 Pear midge..can be discouraged by..burning fallen fruitlets during the summer, and regularly hoeing the soil in winter to expose the overwintering cocoons. pear oyster-scale n. = oyster shell scale n. at oyster shell n. Compounds. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > subclass Pterygota > [noun] > division Exopterygota or Hemimetabola > order Hemiptera > suborder Homoptera > family Coccidae or genus Coccus > aspidiotus ostreaeformis (pear oyster scale) pear oyster-scale1881 1881 E. A. Ormerod Man. Injurious Insects iii. 288 Pear Oyster Scale..of the same nature as the Mussel Scale of the Apple. 1903 E. Bartrum Bk. Pears & Plums 37 The pear oyster scale is very injurious, especially on walls, if not checked at an early stage. pear pearl n. a pear-shaped pearl. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > materials > raw material > gem or precious stone > pearl > [noun] > varieties of unioOE pearl of orientc1400 seed pearl1551 powdering pearls1606 pear pearl1647 Welsh pearl1681 peara1685 union1694 akoya1727 river pearl1776 orient1833 bouton pearl1851 blister pearl1885 Bombay pearl1885 teardrop pearl1904 cultured pearl1911 culture pearl1921 1647 R. Stapleton tr. Juvenal Sixteen Satyrs vi. 96 Those mighty peare-pearles that waigh-down her eares. 1843 F. E. I. Calderón de la Barca Life in Mexico 129 A necklace of pear pearls, valued at twenty thousand dollars. 2000 Hartford (Connecticut) Courant (Nexis) 16 Mar. 10 (caption) Festoon tiara. Circa 1830; gold, silver, button and pear pearls, diamonds. pear plum n. now rare any of several varieties of plum tree bearing pear-shaped or oblong fruit, used chiefly as rootstock (more fully pear plum-tree); the fruit of any of these trees. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > fruit and vegetables > fruit or a fruit > stone fruit > [noun] > plum > other types of plum bullacea1375 myxe?1440 prunelloa1450 bullace-fruit1530 wheat-plum1538 wheaten plum1542 pear plum1573 finger plum1577 perdrigon1582 damson plum1584 apple-plum1601 bullace-plum1608 amber plum1629 Christian1629 queen mother1629 cinnamon-plum1664 date1664 Orleans1674 Chickasaw plum1760 blue gage1764 golden drop1772 beach-plum1785 quetsch1839 egg-plum1859 hog plum1863 bladder-plum1869 prune1872 Carlsbad plum1885 apricot plum1893 the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular types of fruit > [noun] > stone fruit > plum > other types of white plumc1330 bullacea1375 myxe?1440 prunelloa1450 bullace-fruit1530 horse plum1530 plum1530 wheat-plum1538 wheaten plum1542 choke-plum1556 pear plum1573 finger plum1577 scad1577 skeg1601 merchant1602 bullace-plum1608 malacadonian1608 prune plum1613 date plum1626 mussel plum1626 amber plum1629 black plum1629 primordian1629 queen mother1629 winter crack1629 myrobalan1630 Christian1651 Monsieur's plum1658 cinnamon-plum1664 date1664 primordial1664 Orleans1674 mirabelle1706 myrobalan plum1708 Mogul1718 mussel1718 Chickasaw plum1760 blue gage1764 magnum bonum1764 golden drop1772 beach-plum1785 sweet plum1796 winesour1836 wild plum1838 quetsch1839 egg-plum1859 Victoria1860 cherry plum1866 bladder-plum1869 prune1872 sour plum1874 Carlsbad plum1885 horse-jug1886 French plum1939 1573 T. Tusser Fiue Hundreth Points Good Husbandry f. 32/2 Peareploms, black & yelow. 1600 R. Surflet tr. C. Estienne & J. Liébault Maison Rustique iii. iii. 427 The stone of the peare-plum-tree must be set in a cold place. 1625 M. Pring in S. Purchas Pilgrimes IV. viii. xii. 1656 As for Trees the Country yeeldeth Sassafras..and a kinde of tree bearing a fruit like a small red Peare-plum. 1707 J. Mortimer Whole Art Husbandry (1721) II. 265 Plumbs are..commonly cleft-grafted..one of the best sorts to graft them on is the Pear-Plumb. 1731 P. Miller Gardeners Dict. I. at Prunus Prunus fructu albo, oblongiusculo, acido. Journ. The white Pear Plum. This is a good Fruit for Preserving, but is very unpleasant if eaten raw: it is very late ripe, and seldom planted in Gardens. 1911 Encycl. Brit. XXI. 854/2 Plums are propagated chiefly by budding on stocks of the Mussel, Brussels, St Julien and Pear plums. pear psylla n. chiefly North American = pear sucker n. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > subclass Pterygota > [noun] > division Exopterygota or Hemimetabola > order Hemiptera > suborder Homoptera > family Psyllidae > member of genus Psylla psylla1852 pear sucker1881 pear-louse1890 pear psylla1892 1892 Garden & Forest 5 285 The Pear psylla, which did so much damage during the past summer, is probably a new species. 1972 L. A. Swan & C. S. Papp Common Insects N. Amer. xiii. 141 Pear Psylla... A major pest of pears, first introduced into the East in 1832. 1994 Org. Gardening Feb. 20/2 The pear psylla can also transmit an organism that causes ‘pear decline’, or premature death of trees. pear-quince n. a pear-shaped variety of quince. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular fruit-tree or -plant > [noun] > pear-tree > quince-tree quince treea1325 quince?1435 pear-quince1601 Portugal quince1653 1601 P. Holland tr. Pliny Hist. World I. 436 A smaller sort..called Struthea (i. Peare-quince) and these do cast a more odoriferous smell. 1665 J. Rea Flora iii. iii. 213 Cydonia... The Portugal Pear-Quince is fair, large, Pear fashioned, and yellow, excellent either to bake or preserve. 1766 Compl. Farmer at Quince-tree Several kinds, as the pear-quince, the apple-quince, and the Portugal quince. 2003 V. R. Phillips tr. C. Ferber Mes Tartes 175 Quince Tart with Slivered Citrus Zest... 11 oz...rich flaky pastry..4 attractive apple-quinces or pear-quinces. pear shell n. now rare the pear-shaped shell of a tropical marine gastropod mollusc of the genus Ficus or family Ficidae; the mollusc itself; also called fig shell. ΚΠ 1885 J. S. Kingsley Standard Nat. Hist. (1888) I. 352 The species of Ficula are known from their shape as fig or pear shells. 1936 L. Binyon et al. Romance Chinese Art 168 For this purpose various shells were used, mother-of-pearl for larger work and that of nautilus, pear-shell, sea-ear (Haliotis, Jap. Awabi) and Turbo Cornutus (Jap. Sazaye). 2002 Weekend Austral. (Nexis) 4 May 38 There are barks, pear shells, pottery and paintings galore. pear slug n. the slug-like larva of a sawfly, Caliroa cerasi, which infests the leaves of the pear and other fruit trees. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > order Hymenoptera > [noun] > suborder Symphta or Phytophaga Sessiliventres > family Tenthredinidae > caliroa cerasi larva or pear-slug pear slug1867 1867 J. A. Warder Amer. Pomology Index 741/2 Pear slug. 1872 Illustr. Ann. Reg. Rural Affairs 285 The currant worm is moist and tender and soft, like the snail and pear slug, and the remedy for the latter..is lime well scattered over the trees. 1930 Times 18 June 11/2 A miniature wasp which eats the pear slug has gone to New Zealand. 1993 Fort Collins (Colorado) Triangle Rev. 12 Aug. 12/2 Pear slugs eat the upper leaf surface, ‘skeletonizing’ the leaf. pear sucker n. a psyllid bug of European origin, Cacopsylla (or Psylla) pyricola, a major pest of pear trees which it damages in several ways, esp. by feeding on sap and producing excessive honeydew which encourages the growth of certain moulds. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > subclass Pterygota > [noun] > division Exopterygota or Hemimetabola > order Hemiptera > suborder Homoptera > family Psyllidae > member of genus Psylla psylla1852 pear sucker1881 pear-louse1890 pear psylla1892 1881 E. A. Ormerod Man. Injurious Insects iii. 286 Jumping Plant-louse. Pear-sucker. 1882 Garden 28 Jan. 61/2 As soon as the buds begin to burst in the spring, the Pear suckers leave their winter quarters. 1903 E. Bartrum Bk. Pear & Plum 38 The Pear Sucker is a jumping plant-louse which early in the season sucks the juices of the tree about the axils of the leaves. 2000 Herald (Glasgow) (Nexis) 30 Sept. 36 The pear sucker (Psylla pyricola), which can seriously reduce the yield of this fruiting tree, is a small blackish-green sap-feeding insect just 1/16″ (2mm) long. pear thorn n. any of several North American kinds of hawthorn with somewhat pear-shaped fruits, esp. Crataegus calpodendron. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > particular plants > trees and shrubs > thorny berry-bush > [noun] > hawthorn and allies hawthorna700 hawthorn-treec1290 whitethorna1300 haw-treec1325 albespyne?a1425 thorn-tree1483 mespilus1548 may-branch1560 quickthorn1571 hedge-bush1576 busket1579 May-bush1579 Neapolitan medlar1597 azarole1658 pyracanth1664 white bush1676 Glastonbury thorna1697 quick1727 evergreen thorn1731 blackthorn1737 whitethorn1788 oriental medlar1797 haw1821 May-haw1840 Maythorn1844 May1848 pear thorn1848 pink thorn1852 aronia thorn1882 scarlet thorn1882 black haw1897 1822 A. Eaton Man. Bot. (ed. 3) 254 [Crataegus] pyrifolia..pear-leaf thorn.] 1848 A. Gray Man. Bot. Northern U.S. 128 C[rataegus] tomentosa, L. (Black or Pear Thorn.)..fruit orange-color, or yellow marked with red, pear-shaped. 1907 R. B. Hough Handbk. Trees Northern States & Canada 257 The Pear Thorn is a very distinct species, but not of large stature. 1976 Hortus Third (L. H. Bailey Hortorium) 330/1 Crataegus..Calpodendron (J. F. Ehrh.) Medic. (C. tomentosa of auth., not L.). Blackthorn, pear t[horn]. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > fruit and vegetables > fruit or a fruit > pear > [noun] > warden warden-pear138. wardena1400 pearmaina1425 pear wardena1450 palm-pear1655 French warden1664 the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular types of fruit > [noun] > pear > warden warden-pear138. wardena1400 pearmaina1425 pear wardena1450 palm-pear1655 French warden1664 a1450 in T. Austin Two 15th-cent. Cookery-bks. (1888) 88 (MED) Peris in compost..take pere Wardones, and pare hem, And seth hem. 1620 T. Venner Via Recta vii. 111 Peare-Wardons..are of all sorts of Peares the best and wholsomest. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > particular plants > trees and shrubs > shrubs > climbing, trailing, or creeping shrubs > [noun] > non-British Paullinia1753 Pothos1754 corchorus1759 water vine1774 cobaea1805 bush-rope1814 combretum1819 kerria1823 pishamin1826 guarana1838 stephanotis1843 lapageria1849 pear-withe1864 waw-waw1864 Bougainvillaea1866 pyxie1882 pine-barren beauty1883 Madagascar jasmine1884 streptosolen1938 1864 A. H. R. Grisebach Flora Brit. W. Indian Islands 786 Pear-withe: Tanæcium Jaroba. 1866 J. Lindley & T. Moore Treasury Bot. II. 855/1 Pear-withe, a West Indian name for Tanæcium Jaroba. Derivatives ˈpear-like adj. ΚΠ 1668 Bp. J. Wilkins Ess. Real Char. ii. iv. 113 A weak tree..whose fruit is of an oblong Pear-like figure. 1676 J. Cooke Mellificium Chirurg. (ed. 3) 394 The Gall-Bladder is Pear-like. 1786 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 76 291 In the middle of a glass body, of a pear-like form, about 8 inches long, and 2½ inches in its greatest diameter, I suspended a small mercurial thermometer. a1822 P. B. Shelley Prose Wks. (1888) I. 408 Her pointed and pear-like person. 1998 N. Lawson How to Eat (1999) 245 4–6 firm pears, Williams or dessert variety which looks suitably pear-like. ΚΠ 1725 R. Bradley Chomel's Dictionaire Œconomique at Spring Fasten at the Top a very strong Loop, of about an hundred Horse-Hairs..and this Loop shall be of the just Quantity of the Hoop, made Pear-wise, as already mentioned. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2005; most recently modified version published online June 2022). 'pearv. Now regional (chiefly U.S.). ΘΚΠ society > law > administration of justice > court proceedings or procedure > [verb (intransitive)] > appear before court appear1330 'peara1382 to go up1673 a1382 Prefatory Epist. St. Jerome in Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) (1959) i. 21 He..to a full crewel tyraunt peerid [a1425 Corpus Oxf. pered; a1425 L.V. apperyde; L. paruit]. ?a1475 Ludus Coventriae (1922) 123 Loke ȝe fayl for no dowte at the court to pere. 1661 in H. Paton Rothesay Parish Rec. (1931) 52 John Cernegem Elespet NcKaw both in thes peres for the first tym. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > sight and vision > visibility > be visible [verb (intransitive)] > appear or become visible ariseOE to come in (also to, on, etc.) placec1225 'peara1382 appear1382 kithea1400 to show out?a1425 muster?1435 to come forthc1449 to look outa1470 apparish1483 to show forth1487 come1531 to come out?1548 peer1568 to look through1573 glimpse1596 loom1605 rise1615 emicate1657 emike1657 present1664 opena1691 emerge1700 dawn1744 to come down the pike1812 to open out1813 to crop out1849 unmask1858 to come through1868 to show up1879 to come (etc.) out of thin air1932 surface1961 a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) (1963) 1 Kings ix. 2 Fro þe schuldyr & abouyn he perede [a1425 Corpus Oxf. peeryde; a1425 L.V. apperide; L. eminebat] abouyn al þe puple. 1488 (c1478) Hary Actis & Deidis Schir William Wallace (Adv.) (1968–9) xii. l. 438 And Sternys wp peyr began in-to thair sycht. c1515 Ld. Berners tr. Bk. Duke Huon of Burdeux (1882–7) lix. 204 There was not so hardy a paynym that durst pere before the castell. 1568 T. Howell Newe Sonets (1879) 153 When Primrose gan to peare, on Medows bancke so green. 1594 H. Plat Jewell House 91 One inch of the neck [of the viol] only to peer aboue ye ashes. a1616 W. Shakespeare Henry V (1623) iv. vii. 83 For yet a many of your horsemen peere, And gallop ore the field. View more context for this quotation 1642 H. More Ψυχωδια Platonica sig. B7 They 'pear and then are hid. 1756 J. Home Douglas (1757) ii. 28 Darkly a project peers upon my mind. 1850 J. S. Blackie tr. Æschylus Lyrical Dramas II. 124 I spy the ship; too gallantly it peers To cheat mine eye. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > sight and vision > visibility > be visible [verb (intransitive)] > appear or become visible > of spirits or angels appearc1250 'pearc1400 manifest1858 c1400 ( Canticum Creatione l. 866 in C. Horstmann Sammlung Altengl. Legenden (1878) 135 (MED) An angel perede to hem anon. c1480 (a1400) St. Theodora 440 in W. M. Metcalfe Legends Saints Sc. Dial. (1896) II. 111 Þane god..gert til hyme ane angele pere. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > belief > uncertainty, doubt, hesitation > absence of doubt, confidence > assured fact, certainty > evident certainty > be self-evident [verb (intransitive)] 'pear1463 to answer for itself1570 speak1689 to speak for itself1779 show1901 1463 in Manners & Househ. Expenses Eng. (1841) 151 (MED) He owyth my mastyr ffor vij horssis mete..as itt peryth be Thomas Howys bokys tresorere. 1623 Althorp MS in J. N. Simpkinson Washingtons (1860) App. p. xlviii To the shepard at Elkington for moying, making, and ining all the hay..as peares by his bill 17 03 08. 5. intransitive. = appear v. 10a, 10b.Esp. in representations of African-American speech. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > sight and vision > thing seen > appearance or aspect > have (specific) appearance [verb (intransitive)] > seem thinkeOE beseem?c1225 semblec1325 show1340 supposea1393 appeara1425 resemble?a1425 think1425 seem1570 'pear1851 1851 E. Bennett Rosalie Du Pont xix. 88 It 'pears to me, now I think on't, I could eat a cat's hide, with all the hair on. 1852 H. B. Stowe Uncle Tom's Cabin II. xxvi. 105 Lor, it's so hard to be good! 'Pears like I an't used to it, no ways! 1872 ‘M. Twain’ Roughing It lxi. 439 He never ketched a rat in his life—'peared to be above it. 1900 Pall Mall Mag. Apr. 439 An' you 'peared so onrestful an' wisht that I was gwaine to wake 'e. 1955 Z. Grey Black Mesa i. 11 Wal, boss, you don't 'pear powerful curious. 1997 M. Maron Up Jumps Devil (Electronic text) x. 100 'Pears to me you don't like her much, do you, honey? This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2005; most recently modified version published online June 2022). < n.OEv.a1382 |
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