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单词 pillar
释义

pillarn.

Brit. /ˈpɪlə/, U.S. /ˈpɪlər/
Forms:

α. early Middle English pilir, Middle English peeler, Middle English pelare, Middle English pelere, Middle English pelor, Middle English pelour, Middle English peloure, Middle English pelowr, Middle English pelyr, Middle English pilar, Middle English pileer, Middle English pileir, Middle English pilere, Middle English pilereres (plural, transmission error), Middle English polour (transmission error), Middle English pyleer, Middle English pylere, Middle English pylor, Middle English pylour, Middle English–1500s peler, Middle English–1500s piler, Middle English–1500s pilour, Middle English–1500s pylar, Middle English–1500s pyler, 1500s pylard; Scottish pre-1700 pelar, pre-1700 pilar, pre-1700 pleris (plural, transmission error), pre-1700 pyler.

β. Middle English pillere, Middle English pilloire, Middle English pilloure, Middle English pillyre, Middle English pller (transmission error), Middle English pyllare, Middle English–1500s peller, Middle English–1500s pillare, Middle English–1500s pyllar, Middle English–1500s pyller, Middle English–1600s piller, Middle English–1600s pillour, Middle English– pillar, 1500s–1600s pillor; Scottish pre-1700 peller, pre-1700 pillair, pre-1700 pillare, pre-1700 piller, pre-1700 pillere, pre-1700 pyllar, pre-1700 pyllare, pre-1700 1700s– pillar.

γ. 1500s pillower.

δ. 1600s pillow.

Origin: Of multiple origins. Partly a borrowing from French. Partly a borrowing from Latin. Etymons: French piler; Latin pilare.
Etymology: < Anglo-Norman piler, pilere, pilerre, peler, pelir, pieler (also pillier ) and Old French, Middle French piler, piller (Old French, Middle French, French pilier , with suffix substitution) pillar (11th cent.), support, defender (early 13th cent.), essential component of something ensuring stability (mid 13th cent.) and its etymon post-classical Latin pilare (late 11th cent. in a British source, from 12th cent. in continental sources; also pilarium , pilarius (from 12th cent. in British and continental sources)) < classical Latin pīla pillar (see pile n.6) + -āre -ar suffix1 (compare -ar suffix2). Compare Old Occitan pilar (c1150), Catalan pilar (14th cent.), Spanish pilar (c1200). Compare also Middle Dutch pilāre (Dutch pilaar), pīler, pīlere (Dutch pijler), Old Saxon pīliri (Middle Low German pīler, piiler, pyller, pīlār, pīlāre, pīlre), Old High German pfīlāri (Middle High German phīlære, phīler, German Pfeiler), also ( < Middle Low German) Old Icelandic pílarr, Old Swedish pilare (Swedish pelare).In sense 4a probably after Galatians 2:9. In sense 4b after 1 Timothy 3:15.
1.
a. A tall vertical structure of stone, brick, wood, metal, etc., usually narrow in proportion to its height, used either as a support for a structure, or as a monument or ornament. Also: a naturally occurring column (of rock, ice, etc.) resembling this.Pillar has wider application than column, which is usually applied to structures of a particular style, shape, or proportion; pillar is also applicable to larger supportive structures made up of multiple columns or shafts fixed together.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > architecture > pillar > [noun]
staplec950
pillarc1180
stoop1439
stape1512
the world > the earth > land > landscape > high land > rocky peak > [noun]
tor847
pinnaclec1330
rassec1400
spire1586
prick1604
needle1721
pillar1780
needle rock1784
aiguille1816
nunatak1877
hoodoo1880
c1180 Notes to Hexateuch (Claud. B.iv) in A. N. Doane & W. P. Stoneman Purloined Lett. (2011) 32 On twam columban, þæt bið twean pilires, in h[w]æder æl, in þan lande of Syria.
c1225 Worcester Glosses to Old Eng. Homilies in Anglia (1928) 52 24 Swerum : piler.
c1330 (?a1300) Richard Coer de Lyon (Auch.) 24 in Englische Studien (1885) 8 117 (MED) A wel gret cheyn þai had don drawe Ouer þe hauen of acres fers & was y fastned in to pilers.
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 171 Þe vndirpartie is vndirsette wiþ pilers and postys þat it may nouȝt falle.
c1450 (c1350) Alexander & Dindimus (Bodl.) (1929) 1140 Alixandre picht a pelyr of marbyl þere.
c1480 (a1400) St. John Baptist 779 in W. M. Metcalfe Legends Saints Sc. Dial. (1896) II. 245 In myddis wes a pillare, þat þe charge of þe kirk suld bere.
1535 Bible (Coverdale) Gen. xix. E His wife..was turned in to a pillar of salt.
1590 E. Spenser Faerie Queene ii. iii. sig. P2v Like two faire marble pillours..Which doe the temple of the Gods support.
1624 H. Wotton Elements Archit. 33 The Tuscan is a plain, massie, rural Pillar, resembling some sturdy well-limmed Labourer.
1685 J. Evelyn Diary (1955) IV. 449 Those words in the Inscription about the Pillar..[were] erased and cut out.
1780 tr. U. von Troil Lett. on Iceland 21 The most remarkable [islands] are Oransay and Columskill,..and Staffa, on account of its natural pillars.
1851 J. Ruskin Stones of Venice I. vii. 71 All good architecture adapted to vertical support is made up of pillars.
1896 Daily News 23 Oct. 2/2 Only fragmentary pillars and remnants of outlining walls..remain.
1939 Man No. 119. 178/2 On one of the stalactite pillars..was found a big round stone.
1995 V. Chandra Red Earth & Pouring Rain (1996) 585 A huge square black building with classical pillars and scrolled cornices.
b. spec. Usually with the. The post or column to which Jesus was thought to have been bound when he was whipped (one of the instruments of the Passion). Also pillar of flagellation.The flagellation of Jesus by Pilate is treated briefly in the Gospels (Matthew 27:26, Mark 15:15, John 19:1), but no mention is made of a pillar (which was a feature of this form of punishment in the Roman Empire, until abolished by Constantine); however, it became conventional in artistic representations of the episode.
ΚΠ
?c1225 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 142 Þencheð eauer inwardliche up on godes pinen..his swete bodi ibunden naked to þe harde piller. & ibeate.
a1250 Wohunge ure Lauerd in R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies (1868) 1st Ser. 281 Bute hwat tunge mai hit telle..Siðen bifore pilat hu þu was naket bunden faste to þe piler.
a1325 (?c1300) Northern Passion (Cambr. Gg.1.1) 1103 (MED) Of him þei diden is clothes..A bounden him to a piler [v.r. pelare].
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Trin. Cambr.) 16433 (MED) To a piler þei him bonde.
1451 in A. Clark Lincoln Diocese Documents (1914) 46 My lityll cros of gold..with..a peis of the peler that ouere lorde was Skowrged opon yerin.
a1513 W. Dunbar Ballat Passioun in Poems (1998) I. 35 Till ane pillar thai him band.
?1533 G. Du Wes Introductorie for to lerne Frenche sig. Eei His precious body was tyed to the pylar by Pylate.
a1639 J. Spottiswood Hist. Church Scotl. (1655) ii. 69 Part of the pillar to which our Saviour was tied when he was scourged.
c1660 J. Evelyn Diary anno 1644 (1955) II. 246 The Pillar, or stump, at which they relate, our B: Savior was Scourged.
a1701 H. Maundrell Journey Aleppo to Jerusalem (1703) 17 The first place they visited was that of the Pillar of Flagellation.
1754 C. Thompson Trav. Turkey in Asia II. 7 A little Cell..wherein is kept the Pillar of Flagellation.
1834 New Eng. Mag. Sept. 221 A phial of the Savior's blood..a fragment of the pillar at which he was scourged.
1860 Times 26 Dec. 5/5 Jesus..scourged at the pillar or racked on the cross.
1954 Amer. Lit. 26 367 To Twain, the sword is of more significance than the Pillar of Flagellation.
2004 BusinessWorld (Philippines) (Nexis) 12 May 4 Rumsfeld would explain away such techniques as scourging at the pillar, crowning with thorns, [etc.].
c. Chiefly Scottish. A whipping post; a raised structure (a platform, pedestal, etc.) on which a person undergoes public punishment or penance. Also pillar of repentance. Now historical.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > punishment > public or popular punishments > [noun] > platform
pillara1475
society > authority > punishment > corporal punishment > instrument or place of corporal punishment > [noun] > whipping-post or tripod
pillara1475
rogue stob1550
post1555
whipping-post1600
whipping-stock1615
fork1619
whipstock1619
flogging-stake1785
flogging-block1827
triangle1847
whipping-pole1862
a1475 J. Shirley Death James (BL Add. 5467) in Miscellanea Scotica (1818) II. 23 This same Erle of Athetelles was..lad to the polour yn the towne, and ther was he fast boundon.
a1525 Bk. Sevyne Sagis 1015, in W. A. Craigie Asloan MS (1925) II. 33 That þai suld..in presone..be done Syne..On a pillar' be done of braβ And þar' thole schame for þair trespaβ.
1530 J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 254/1 Pyller to do justyce, estache.
1556 in J. G. Nichols Chron. Grey Friars (1852) 95 The same man..was betten with whyppes at the peller in Chepe at the standert.
a1600 Meaning of Marriage (Sloane 1983B) in Jyl of Breyntford's Test. (1871) 40 Ye vold taiken it ill to me..and mad me sit on the pillar of repentance.
1646 in Z. Boyd Zion's Flowers (1855) App. p. xlii/1 That [i.e. Those] women who appear on the pillar with plaids..it shall not be esteemed a day of their appearance.
1691 in W. Macgill Old Ross-shire & Scotl. (1909) I. 237 Thrie treadsmen of the same town are ordered to be brought to the tron piller and to have thair eares nailed thairto.
1726 A. Ramsay Tea-Table Misc. II. 132 Now Tam maun face the minister, And she maun mount the pillar.
1787 R. Lewis Dublin Guide 106 They were places of penance, or purgatorial pillars, in which the penitent was elevated.
1869 H. C. Lea Stud. Church Hist. 475 In 1606 we see the kirk-session of Ayr inflict the..pillar of repentance on John M'Crie.
1885 A. Edgar Church Life 290 The church ‘pillar’ was the conspicuous object.
1975 Liturg. Rev. ii. 55 The pillar, the stool of repentance,..and so forth.
1993 P. Ackroyd House of Dr. Dee 68 ‘You have no disease’, I replied, ‘that could not be cured at the whipping pillar.’
d. Dressage. The centre of a manège ground, sometimes but not always marked with a post. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > transport > riding on horse (or other animal) > [noun] > riding school > track in > post in middle of
pillar1728
1728 E. Chambers Cycl. Pillar, in the Manage, signifies the Centre of the Volta, Ring, or Manage-Ground, round which a Horse turns; whether there be a wooden Pillar placed therein or not.
1759 W. Rider New Universal Dict. at Academy The place set apart for riding, called the Manege, has generally a pillar in the center.
1813 J. M. Good et al. Pantologia (at cited word) Most..riding-schools have pillars fixed in the middle of the manage ground.
e. = pillar box n.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > correspondence > postal services > equipment for sending or delivering mail > [noun] > post- or letter-box > pillar-box
postbox1786
pillar-post1840
pillar letter-box1854
pillar box1855
pillar1865
1865 J. W. Carlyle Lett. (1883) III. 255 Should it [sc. the letter] be put in the pillar to-night?
1884 ‘E. Lyall’ We Two III. vii. 214 Just drop that in the pillar on your way home.
1885 C. M. Yonge Nuttie's Father II. i. 2 The pillar at hand was cleared at seven, and the regular post-office could not be reached in time.
1947 T. Deevy Strange Birth in King of Spain's Daughter & Other One-Act Plays 20 Mark it not ‘not known’ and throw it in the pillar beyond.
1997 Advertiser (Adelaide) (Nexis) 14 Apr. He would calmly place the betting slip in the envelope and drop it in the letter pillar.
2.
a. An upright mass or column of air, water, sand, fire, etc.
ΚΠ
c1300 St. Edward Elder (Laud) 108 in C. Horstmann Early S.-Eng. Legendary (1887) 50 Þo iseiȝen huy gret light..a-boute one place, ase a piler stonde upriȝht.]
a1325 (c1250) Gen. & Exod. (1968) l. 3293 A fair piler son hem on o nigt And a skie [MS askie] euere on daiges ligt.
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) (1959) Exod. xiii. 21 Þe Lord forsoþ went beforn hem to be schewed þe way be day in þe pylere of a clowde & be niȝt in a pyler of fyre.
c1450 J. Lydgate Secrees (Sloane 2464) 705 (MED) Arystotiles was..Reysed in a pyleer wrought of ffyry levene So hih aloffte be Revelacyoun.
a1475 in Neuphilol. Mitteilungen (1957) 58 64 Þe comyn pepyll callithe þis fyre þe brennyng pyller.
c1595 Countess of Pembroke Psalme lxxviii. 47 in Coll. Wks. (1998) II. 107 A flaming piller glitt'ring in the skies.
1611 Bible (King James) Joel ii. 30 Blood, and fire, and pillars of smoke. View more context for this quotation
c1645 W. Atkins Relation of Journey (1994) 268 Guiding the 12 tribes of Israell out of the Egiptian slaverie with a cloude in the day and with a piller of fire in the night.
1702 T. Savery Miner's Friend 62 Such an immense Weight as a Pillar of Water a thousand foot high.
1754 E. Young Centaur Not Fabulous i. 44 Scripture, like the cloudy pillar which it records, is Light to the true Israelite, but Darkness to the Egyptians.
1815 J. Smith Panorama Sci. & Art II. 51 The water..rises in the vacuum..forming a pillar of water in the air.
1877 A. Forman tr. R. Wagner Nibelung's Ring: Rhinegold 45 (stage direct.) His figure disappears; in his place a pillar of cloud is seen.
1932 W. Faulkner Light in August ii. 48 He shows her the yellow pillar of smoke standing tall and windless above the trees.
1998 N.Y. Mag. 16 Mar. 26/1 The severing of a gas-line riser that sent forth a pillar of fire two stories high.
b. Metallurgy. Pressure of air. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > gas > air > [noun] > air-pressure
air pressure1837
pillar1843
1843 Budd's Patent Specif. No. 9495 A blast of atmospheric air..maintained at a pressure or pillar of upwards of 2½ lbs. on the square inch.
1857 S. B. Rogers Elem. Treat. Iron Metall. viii. 94 The high pillar of blast at present used with smelting-furnaces..appears to be necessary, in order to penetrate into the materials in the crucible and body of the furnace.
3. In mythological contexts and poetic: any of a number of props or supports upon which the earth, sky, heaven, etc., rests.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > support > [noun] > that which supports > imaginary support of earth or heaven
pillara1325
a1325 (c1280) Southern Passion (Pepys 2344) (1927) 447 (MED) Þe sulue pyleres of heuene..And þe aungeles..shulleþ quake ffor drede.
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) Job xxvi. 11 Þe pileeris of heuene togidere quaken & dreden at hes bek [?a1425 Wycliffite, L.V. (Gloss.) that is, aungels that mynystren ether rulen the styringis of heuene doen reuerence to God].
a1425 (a1400) Prick of Conscience (Galba & Harl.) (1863) 5388 (MED) If þe pylers of heven bright, Þat er haly men þat has liffed right, Sal dred Cristes commyng..What sal þe synful men þan do?
1535 Bible (Coverdale) Psalms lxxv. 3 The earth is weake & all that is therein, but I beare vp hir pilers.
1611 Bible (King James) Job xxvi. 11 The pillars of heauen tremble, and are astonished at his reproofe. View more context for this quotation
1707 I. Watts Hymns & Spiritual Songs ii. 134 Then should the Earths old Pillars shake [etc.].
1775 T. Sydney New & Compl. Hist. Eng. i. 3/2 His power supported the pillars of heaven.
1831 Times 5 Sept. 6/4 Justice must be done, even though it should shake the pillars of Heaven.
1887 W. Morris tr. Homer Odyssey I. i. 3 The long-wrought pillars that sunder the heavens from the earthly land.
1923 D. A. Mackenzie Myths China & Japan x. 147 The Egyptian sky-goddess..whose legs and arms, as she bends over the earth, represent the four pillars on which the sky was supposed to rest.
2003 Tulsa (Oklahoma) World (Nexis) 22 Aug. s12 Though they were praising the Almighty, their devilish hardcore rhythms shook the very pillars of heaven.
4. figurative.
a. A person seen as a source of support or stability; esp. one of the main supporters of some principle or institution, as pillar of the establishment, etc.; (more generally) a person who holds a position of public importance or respectability, as pillar of society, etc. Also: a person who possesses or displays some quality in an exemplary or steadfast way, as pillar of strength.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > esteem > reputation > good repute > reputability or honourableness > [noun] > respectability > person
pillarc1330
barona1400
Christian1693
respectable1770
respectability1837
square John1934
c1330 in T. Wright Polit. Songs Eng. (1839) 325 (MED) Seint Thomas..was a piler ariht to holden up holi churche.
c1384 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(2)) Gal. ii. 9 James and Cephas..the whiche weren seyn for to be pileris [L. columnæ], ȝauen to me..that riȝt hondis of fellowschip.
a1438 Bk. Margery Kempe (1940) i. 29 (MED) Þow wer a chosyn sowle..and a peler of Holy Cherch.
1485 W. Caxton tr. Thystorye & Lyf Charles the Grete sig. bv/2 The patryarke of Iherusalem..sente to hym [sc. Charles] the standart of the fayth as to the pyler of crystente.
1590 E. Spenser To Ld. Grey in Faerie Queene sig. Qq3 Most Noble Lord the pillor of my life.
1628 J. Earle Micro-cosmogr. iii. sig. B7v He is a maine pillar of our Church, though not yet Deane nor Canon.
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost ii. 302 With grave Aspect he rose, and in his rising seem'd A Pillar of State. View more context for this quotation
1704 Clarendon's Hist. Rebellion III. x. 48 The Earl of Manchester, and the Earl of Warwick, were the two Pillars of the Presbyterian Party.
1781 E. Gibbon Decline & Fall III. xxvii. 22 The scourge of Arianism, and the pillar of the orthodox faith.
1850 Ld. Tennyson In Memoriam lxii. 88 Some divinely gifted man..The pillar of a people's hope.
1888 tr. H. Ibsen (title) Pillars of society and other plays.
1891 G. B. Shaw Quintessence of Ibsenism 82 The hero [sc. Karsten Bernick]..is not accepted as a typical pillar of society.
1920 M. Beer Hist. Brit. Socialism II. iv. xvi. 315 Gladstone died, and with him one of the main pillars of Liberal Labourism disappeared.
1978 Morecambe Guardian 14 Mar. 19/1 Mr. Baxter has been a great fellow to work with and a pillar of strength.
2001 J. Wolcott Catsitters xxxiv. 217 Lloyd Fairwell—once a pillar of the community, now the town skunk.
b. A fact or principle which is a main support or basis of something.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > importance > [noun] > that which is important > most important > support
pillara1555
sinew1579
mainstay1604
axisa1625
backbone1849
a1555 J. Philpot tr. C. S. Curione Def. Authority Christ's Church in R. Eden Exam. & Writings J. Philpot (1842) (modernized text) 383 Paul calleth the church the firmament and pillar of truth.
1561 F. Coxe Short Treat. Wickednesse Magicall Sci. sig. Avij I knowe that what euer..they esteme, as principall rules and pillers of their knowledge to be nothing else but meare fables and toyes.
1578 T. Timme tr. J. Calvin Comm. Gen. 324 To the end the new promise may lean upon a better piller.
1654 Bp. J. Taylor Real Presence 67 The pillar and ground of Transubstantiation is supplanted.
a1691 G. Fox Jrnl. (1952) (modernized text) ii. 24 I told him the Church was the pillar and ground of Truth, made up of living stones.
1797 Monthly Rev. 22 556 The axiomatic pillars of a new code of the law of nations.
1833 A. Crichton Hist. Arabia I. vii. 334 Pillars of the Sonnee faith.
1920 F. S. Fitzgerald This Side of Paradise ii. ii. 227 There had been a time when his own Celtic traits were pillars of his personal philosophy.
1991 Canberra Times 31 Jan. 6/4 Launched in 1961 on the twin pillars of anti-colonialism and independence from superpower blocs, the movement is deeply divided about the war.
5.
a. Any vertical support, prop, or post, in a piece of furniture, machine, etc.In spec. senses: one of the four posts of a bedstead; one of the posts in a framed truss in a roof; a vertical post supporting a horizontal deck-beam in a ship; a central support or pedestal of a table (frequently used attributively, usually with claw, as pillar (and claw) table, etc.; cf. claw n. 5).
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > support > [noun] > that which supports > a vertical support, post, or stake
stakec893
studeOE
studdleeOE
stealc1000
stockc1000
postOE
stander1325
pillar1360
stilpc1380
bantelc1400
puncheon1423
stanchion1433
standard1439
side tree1451
stancher1488
stanchel1586
stipit1592
shore1601
trunch1622
arrectary1628
staddle1633
standing1800
mill-post1890
society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > parts of machines > other parts > [noun] > support
bearer1607
pedestal1665
stud1694
arbor1728
seat1805
pillar1833
housing1839
seating1844
bed-plate1850
bedding-plate1879
1360–1 in J. T. Fowler Extracts Acct. Rolls Abbey of Durham (1899) II. 384 (MED) In..uno lecto in le spendement, et Rogero Turnour pro pylers pro eisdem lectis [read pro eodem lecto] cum clavibus.
?a1425 (c1400) Mandeville's Trav. (Titus C.xvi) (1919) 183 (MED) And the tables whereon men eten, somme ben of emeraudes..And the pileres [Fr. pilers] þat beren vp the tables ben of the same precious stones.
a1470 T. Malory Morte Darthur (Winch. Coll.) 802 And the women kneled downe before an auter of sylver wyth four pyloures.
1595 P. Henslowe Diary (1961) 9 Itm turnde pellers in the parler iij yrdes at xvjd yrd.
1607 in W. H. Hale Precedents in Causes of Office against Churchwardens (1841) 7 To provide a new comunion table with turned pillers before Easter.
1657 A. Wood Life & Times (1891) I. 225 All curiously cut in stone in the pillars of the window.
c1720 N. Dubois & G. Leoni tr. A. Palladio Architecture III. viii. 18 Making every brace bear up its pillar, and every pillar the cross beam.
1757 Philos. Trans. 1756 (Royal Soc.) 49 487 A middle sized pillar and claw tea-table.
1774 M. Mackenzie Treat. Maritim Surv. 42 How to adjust Bird's twelve-inch Quadrant... The Pillar is to be set perpendicular to the Horizon.
1833 J. Holland Treat. Manuf. Metal II. 302 The lever..is ten feet long, nine feet from the smaller end to the axis of suspension in the pillar M, and one foot from the latter point to the eye of the descending rod.
1850 J. Greenwood Sailor's Sea-bk. 137 Pillars, the square or turned pieces of timber erected perpendicularly under the middle of the beams for the support of the decks.
1875 E. H. Knight Amer. Mech. Dict. III. 1703/2 Pillar..[inter alia] The nipple of a fire-arm. A frame on which the tobacco-pipes rest in a kiln.
1902 W. W. Beaumont in A. C. Harmsworth et al. Motors & Motor-driving (Badminton Libr. of Sports & Pastimes) 218 Looseness between steering wheel and end of steering pillar can be found at any time.
1955 R. Fastnedge Eng. Furnit. Styles x. 232 These ‘pillar and claw’ supports were used for cheval fire screens, for pole screens,..and other tables.
1990 Bicycle Aug. 56/1 A micro-adjustable SR alloy seat pillar was fitted.
b. The upright post in the frame of a harp.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > stringed instruments > harp or lyre > [noun] > parts of > wood
pillar1794
1794 E. Jones Mus. Relicks Welsh Bards (rev. ed.) 114 (note) Perhaps the only possible way it [sc. a Welsh harp] could have been formed to sustain the great tension of the strings without a pillar.
1838 Penny Cycl. XII. 52/2 Its [sc. an Irish harp's] form is not unlike that of the modern instrument, but the pillar is curved outwards.
1880 A. J. Hipkins in G. Grove Dict. Music I. 685/1 The pillar is hollow to include the rods working the mechanism.
1947 Man 47 25/1 Unlike the Irish harps, and that mentioned by Iolo Goch, the pillar—in post-mediæval times—was invariably straight.
2000 Boston Globe (Nexis) 17 Sept. (North Weekly section) 13 One of his distinctive decorations, according to Vickers, was his depiction of saints around the top of the harp's pillar.
c. In a motor vehicle: each of the metal posts on either side of the windscreen and of the rear window, and between the front and rear doors, which connect the roof to the rest of the bodywork. Also: a thin metal strip dividing a windscreen into two halves.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > powered vehicle > parts and equipment of motor vehicles > [noun] > frame or chassis > vertical frame members
pillar1907
rear pillar1922
1907 Car 25 Sept. 261/1 The hind pillars were painted white from top to bottom.
1926 Motor 26 Oct. 637/1 The roof..slides back as far as the pillars in front of the rear doors.
1937 Motor 9 Mar. 219/3 A point..noticeable when sitting in the car is the wide range of vision made possible by extremely narrow pillars.
1964 Which? Car Suppl. Apr. 47/2 The VW Devonette had its windscreen divided by a pillar which did not help forward vision.
1977 Custom Car Nov. 19/2 The new Granada shape is clean and very smart, though it has lost the rather pleasant kink by the rear pillar.
1992 I. Banks Crow Road ii. 34 The car skidded briefly... He clutched at the grab handle on the door pillar.
6. Any of various supporting structures of the body likened to a pillar.
a. As a figurative use of sense 1.
ΚΠ
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 61v Þe legges bene mene bytwene þe feet an þe þyȝes..They..beþ, as it were, pileres of þe body, abel to bere þe weiȝte of þe body.
c1450 in Archiv f. das Studium der Neueren Sprachen (1913) 131 62 (MED) Blissede be þi nekke, pilere streghte and euen, Vprighte berynge þi hede and thi vesage.
1621 M. Wroth Countesse of Mountgomeries Urania i. 64 Her neck the curiousest pillar of white Marble, breast of Snow.
1812 R. Wilson Diary 13 Oct. (1861) I. 194 My leg is still a little pillar, with three wounds in it; but..I go about in droska.
1835 W. Wordsworth Yarrow Revisited 301 White as her marble neck Is, and the pillar of the throat would be.
1951 A. Ridler Coll. Poems (1991) 110 Her neck is a doric pillar Her brow is the arch's keystone.
1978 C. Heath Lady on Burning Deck 98 Her pillars of legs doubtless worry her doctor; they descend, ankleless, into sloppy slippers.
b. As a technical term in Anatomy.
ΚΠ
1693 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 17 713 Note also, that the Laminulæ and bony Pillars are every where to be observ'd where there is a passage.
1726 A. Monro Anat. Humane Bones 86 In some Sculls, besides the large osseus Septum, there are found in each Sinus several bony Pillars.
1826 Lancet 23 Sept. 812/2 It resembles very much the human velum..; in the ape, the pillars are separated below farther from each other.
1876 Trans. Clin. Soc. 9 81 The pillars of the fauces were immovable.
1899 T. C. Allbutt et al. Syst. Med. VI. 74 The posterior mediastinum between the pillars of the diaphragm.
1949 H. Bailey Demonstr. Physical Signs Clin. Surg. (ed. 11) vi. 57 (caption) By pressure against the interior pillar of the fauces an apparently small buried tonsil may be everted from its bed.
1995 Ann. Rev. Anthropol. 24 241 The pillar of bone between the eye sockets (interorbital septum) is narrow.
7. An ornamental column used as a symbol of dignity or office. Now historical.Two of these, of silver gilt, were borne by pillar-bearers before Cardinal Wolsey (c1475–1530) and Cardinal Pole (1500–58), but they are not recorded elsewhere (later use refers exclusively to Wolsey). Representations of Wolsey's pillars appear in the decorations of Christ Church, Oxford. Those of Pole are represented in the illumination on the first page of his Register of Wills at Somerset House; they appear as Corinthian columns with capital and base, about the size of Roman fasces, 3½ to 4 feet long.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > office > symbol of office or authority > [noun] > specific
keyOE
sword?c1475
the seals?a1500
pillara1529
post1598
umbrella1653
akakia1731
a1529 J. Skelton Speke Parrot in Poet. Wks. (1843) II. 25 Suche pollaxis and pyllers, suche mvlys trapte with gold.
1548 Hall's Vnion: Henry VIII f. lviiv He [sc. Wolsey] receaued the habite, hat and piller, and other vaynglorious tryfles, apperteygnyng to the ordre of a Cardinall.
1599 F. Thynne Animaduersions (1875) 63 Euery cardinall had, for parte of his honorable ensignes borne before hym, certeine siluer pillers; as had cardinall Wolsey..and Cardinall Poole, in my memory.
1623 W. Shakespeare & J. Fletcher Henry VIII ii. iv. (stage direct.) Then two Gentlemen bearing two great Siluer Pillers . View more context for this quotation
1780 J. Towers Brit. Biogr. II. 17 Two gentlemen carried before him also two pillars of silver.
1875 Harper's Mag. Oct. 717/2 With his seven silver pillars, his maces, his poleaxes, his crosses, his hat, and his great seal.
1942 G. M. Trevelyan Eng. Social Hist. iv. 94 He..marched in state with silver pillars and pole-axes borne before him.
1997 S. Anglo Spectacle, Pageantry & Early Tudor Policy (rev. ed.) vii. 242 The hated symbols of his authority—his crosses, pillars, and pole-axes.
8. from pillar to post (originally from post to pillar: see post n.1 Phrases 1): from one person or place of appeal or resource to another; hither and thither; to and fro. Usually implying rejection or harassment. Also attributive in pillar-to-post: that goes from one extreme to another; erratic, haphazard, roundabout. [Apparently originally alluding to the rapid movement of a ball around the court in real tennis. Rhyming constructions with tost or tossed often indicate the presence of this allusion, and appear to have motivated the change in the order of the elements of the phrase.]
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > [phrase] > hither and thither
hither and thitherc725
here and there1297
from place to placea1398
hitherward and thitherwarda1398
from post to pillarc1500
from pillar to posta1550
from wig to wall1602
hither and yon1787
hither and yond1831
the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > [adjective] > moving hither and thither
fugitive1481
discursive1626
volatile1654
various1725
pillar-to-post1886
a1550 Vox Populi 185 in W. C. Hazlitt Remains Early Pop. Poetry Eng. (1866) III. 274 From piller vnto post The powr man he was tost.
1598 R. Tofte Alba ii. sig. E3v And though from piller tost he be to poste.
1602 Contention Liberalitie & Prodigalitie ii. iv. sig. C3 Euery minute tost, Like to a tennis ball, from piller to post.
a1626 N. Breton Char. Queen Elizabeth in Wks. (1966) II. 5/1 How was shee handled? tost from piller to post, imprisoned, sought to be put to death.
1664 C. Cotton Scarronides 1 Packt, and wrackt, and lost, and tost, And bounc'd from Pillar unto Post.
1705 P. A. Motteux Amorous Miser ii. i. 20 An Aversion to starving and being drub'd from Pillar to Post by a handly of foul ugly Rogues.
1753 R. North Disc. Poor 35 Then are they sent back, and tost from Pillar to Post in Carts.
1807 T. Jefferson Writings (1830) IV. 91 If the several courts could bandy him from pillar to post.
1832 H. Martineau Homes Abroad v. 63 We could not have borne to be..driven from pillar to post.
1886 G. Saintsbury in Macmillan's Mag. Apr. 416/2 The inveterate habit of pillar-to-post joking.
1891 T. Hardy Tess of the D'Urbervilles I. i. 6 Here have I been knocking about..from pillar to post.
1919 Outing Mar. 340/2 It was the old story of a life of hard knocks, of being shoved from pillar to post.
1997 Sun 30 Jan. 41/1 Deane was shoved from pillar to post by previous boss Howard Wilkinson.
9. Typography. A narrow block of print arranged in a vertical column; = column n. 4. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > printing > printed matter > arrangement or appearance of printed matter > [noun] > column
columnc1440
pillar1557
columela1661
col1903
the world > relative properties > number > mathematical notation or symbol > [noun] > figure > groupings of figures > column of figures
pillar1557
line of numbers1656
1557 R. Record Whetstone of Witte sig. Ki A table..where in the firste columpne you se the rootes set, and in the seconde piller, right against eche roote, there is set his square.
1577 M. Hanmer tr. Bp. Eusebius in Aunc. Eccl. Hist. vi. xvi. 105 The pages deuided into pillers or columnes.
1603 A. Top Oliue Leafe sig. C4v As for the seuerall names of the Letters of euery Abce, let each Countrey tearme the whole Pillar, as she calles her owne.
1628 Field's Of Church (ed. 2) xxvi. 388 Diuiding euery page into sixe columnes, or pillars.
10. Mining (chiefly Coal Mining). A solid mass of coal or other mineral, of rectangular cross-section, left in place to support the roof of a mine; = rib n.1 13c.board and pillar: see board n. 16. rib and pillar: a modification of the pillar and stall system (see pillar and stall n. at Compounds 2).
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > workplace > places where raw materials are extracted > mine > [noun] > pillar or area of unworked material
forbar?15..
pillar1591
whole1728
stalch1747
post1793
stenting1812
rib1818
stook1826
man-of-war1835
spurn1837
staple1839
barrier1849
shaft pillar1855
barrier-pillar1881
stoop1881
stump1881
1591 Duchy of Lancaster Pleadings (P.R.O.: DL 1/153 F3) John Drake, John Roebucke and others haue nowe..seuerall times..felled and cutt downe all the heads, pillers, and other workes..made within the groundes of your oratours said myne at your oratours great charges for bearing up of the groundes there.
1659 Lease (W. Yorks. Arch. Service, Bradford: MM/A/250) in G. Redmond Vocab. Coal Mining Yorks. (2016) 51 He will at all tymes..keep and maintaine in all such pitt or pittes..good and sufficient pillers for the upholding and supporting of the groundfeild.
1708 J. C. Compl. Collier 17 in T. Nourse Mistery of Husbandry Discover'd (ed. 3) The Remainder of four Yards is left for a Pillar to support the Roof and Weight of the Earth above.
1797 J. Curr Coal Viewer 30 The two rope barrels..are fixed in two inclining board gates.., which are divided by a pillar of solid coal 4 yards thick.
1839 A. Ure Dict. Arts 975 Working coal~mines..with pillars and rooms, styled post and stall.
1854 North of Eng. Inst. Mining Engineers II. 252 It is the practice here..to arrange board and pillar workings so that the goaf may lay on the dip of the face of the work.
1883 W. S. Gresley Gloss. Terms Coal Mining 203 Rib and pillar, a system upon which the Thick coal seam was formerly extensively mined, being a kind of pillar and stall plan.
1920 A. H. Fay Gloss. Mining & Mineral Industry 510/2 Pillar-and-breast... Also called Pillar-and-stall, Post-and-stall, Bord-and-pillar.
1935 H. Heslop Last Cage Down i. iii. 32 Let us begin with the Yard Seam... You may be aware that always the board and pillar system has been wrought in that seam.
1950 People (Austral.) 12 Apr. 4/1 The first work on the roof or pillar..would bring the whole thing down on top of you.
1960 Times Rev. Industry Oct. 34/3 Bord-and-pillar working.
2000 High Country News 31 July 10/3 Traditional coal mines use the room-and-pillar technique.
11. Watchmaking and Clockmaking. Each of several rods which keep the two plates of a movement at the correct distance from each other.
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > instruments for measuring time > watch > [noun] > parts of
barrel1591
motion1605
bezel1616
fusee1622
string1638
crown wheel1646
out-case1651
watch-box1656
nuck1664
watchwork1667
balance-wheel1669
box1675
dial wheel1675
counter-potence1678
pendulum-balance1680
watch-case1681
pillar1684
contrate teeth1696
pinion of report1696
watch-hook1698
bob-balance1701
half-cock1701
potence1704
verge1704
pad1705
movable1709
jewel1711
pendant1721
crystal1722
watch-key1723
pendulum spring1728
lock spring1741
watch-glass1742
watch-spring1761
all-or-nothing piece1764
watch hand1764
cylinder1765
cannon?1780
cannon1802
stackfreed1819
pillar plate1821
little hand1829
hair-spring1830
lunette1832
all-or-nothing1843
locking1851
slag1857
staff1860
case spring1866
stem1866
balance-cock1874
watch-dial1875
balance-spring1881
balance-staff1881
Breguet spring1881
overcoil1881
surprise-piece1881
brass edge1884
button turn1884
fourth wheel1884
fusee-sink1884
pair-case1884
silver bar1884
silver piece1884
slang1884
top plate1884
karrusel1893
watch-face1893
watch bracelet1896
bar-movement1903
jewel pivot1907
jewel bearing1954
1684 London Gaz. No. 1991/4 Another Watch a Spelter Box and Case all in one..with a round Pillar going 18 hours.
1704 J. Harris Lexicon Technicum I Frame is the Out-work of a Clock or Watch, consisting of the Plates and Pillars.
1884 F. J. Britten Watch & Clockmakers' Handbk. (new ed.) 193 The pillars of a watch are the three or four short pieces of brass which serve to keep the two plates of the movement in their proper relative positions.
1990 Antique Dealer & Collectors' Guide Nov. (advt.) The movement with five pillars is made to a good standard.
12. Conchology. = columella n. 2. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > invertebrates > subkingdom Metazoa > grade Triploblastica or Coelomata > phylum Mollusca > [noun] > Testacea (shelled molluscs) > shelled mollusc > shell > part of
auricle1665
heel1673
lip1681
mouth1681
whirl1681
rib1711
antihelix1721
canal1734
columella1755
vesture1755
body whirl1776
fent1776
pillar1776
pillar-lip1776
septum1786
aperture1794
body whorl1807
costa1812
seam1816
spine1822
umbo1822
varix1822
peristome1828
summit1828
nucleus1833
concameration1835
lunula1835
nympha1836
nymph1839
lunule1842
peritreme1848
body chamber1851
axis1866
umbone1867
liration1904
1776 E. M. da Costa Elements Conchol. 115 The Pillar (Columella) is the middle part, or axis, which runs through the Shell its length.
?1841 Hist. Berwickshire Naturalists' Club 1 No. 9. 269 Throat of the aperture brown, the pillar pale.
1894 Amer. Naturalist 28 911 Liræ, as these elevated lines are called when on the outer lip; or plaits, when situated on the pillar.
1988 Veliger 30 295 Species are defined using parameters of protoconch type, spire height, aperture width, pillar lirae count, and shell length.

Compounds

C1. General attributive and similative.
pillar cap n.
ΚΠ
1871 Times 11 Mar. 12/2 On Sunday night a number of pillar caps were broken off from the pillars of their gates.
2001 What's New in Building (Nexis) 16 Oct. 24 Various sizes of coping stones and pillar caps.
pillar pin n. Obsolete
ΚΠ
1783 Lett. & Papers Agric. (Bath & West of Eng. Soc.) II. 358 The holes in the pillar S, are for the pillar-pins VV, to alter the direction of the beam of the plough.
1885 C. G. W. Lock Workshop Receipts 4th Ser. 327/1 Push out the pillar pins, and remove the top plate.
pillar-row n. Obsolete
ΚΠ
1678 S. Butler Hudibras: Third Pt. iii. iii. 238 Or wait for Customers, between The Piller-Rows in Lincolns-Inn.
pillar-shaped adj.
ΚΠ
1776 J. Lee Introd. Bot. (ed. 3) Explan. Terms 392 Cylindrica, pillar-shaped.
1886 Times 27 July 8/1 A pillar-shaped light was observed..to proceed from the summit of Mount Tarawera.
1992 M. Schaffer-Fehre tr. S. Schaal & W. Ziegler Messel vi. 76 The formation of pillar-shaped ‘styliforus’ teeth.
pillar-strong adj. Obsolete
ΚΠ
1657 R. Carpenter Astrol. Proved Harmless 1 The Reason is Pillar-strong.
C2.
pillar and breast n. = pillar and stall n.
ΚΠ
1920 A. H. Fay Gloss. Mining & Mineral Industry 510/2 Pillar-and-breast... Also called Pillar-and-stall, Post-and-stall, Bord-and-pillar.
pillar and room n. = pillar and stall n.
ΚΠ
1906 N.E.D. at Pillar sb. Pillar and stall, also pillar and room.
pillar and scroll top clock n. (also pillar and scroll clock) a clock for a shelf or mantelpiece, with pillars at the side and a scrolled arch top.
ΚΠ
1912 N. H. Moore Old Clock Bk. facing p. 113 (caption) Pillar and scroll top clock.
2000 Orlando (Florida) Sentinel (Nexis) 29 Apr. g5 I have a nice pillar-and-scroll clock that was made about 1840.
pillar and stall n. Mining a method of mining in which the working is advanced in a series of stalls (stall n.1 11); frequently attributive; cf room and pillar n. at room n.1 and int. Phrases 8.
ΚΠ
1868 W. H. Pearce Pop. Treat. Coal Mining iv. 36 The pillar and stall system is carried out in the working away of a certain portion of the coal as a first measure and the leaving of the remainder in pillars..for the support of the roof.
1994 Independent on Sunday 21 Aug. (Review Suppl.) 44/3 The difference between pillar-and-stall and longwall methods of coal-getting.
pillar apostle n. a chief apostle (applied to Peter, James, and John, in allusion to Galatians 2:9).
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > aspects of faith > Bible, Scripture > Biblical personages > apostle > [noun] > chief
arch-apostle1726
pillar apostle1875
1875 M. Arnold God & Bible Pref. p. ix The alleged bitter hatred of St. Peter and the other pillar-apostles against St. Paul.
1999 Church Times 24 Sept. 16/2 The momentous consequence of the conversion and mission of Paul was to win the consent of the pillar apostles at Jerusalem.
pillar-bearer n. now historical a servant who carries a Cardinal's pillar (cf. sense 7).
ΚΠ
?a1562 G. Cavendish Life Wolsey (1959) 20 He had ij Crosberers & ij Pillers berers.
1706 N. Crouch Unfortunate Court-Favourites (ed. 2) 98 He had likewise 2 Cross-bearers and 2 Pillar-bearers in the Great Chamber.
1906 N.E.D. at Pillar Two of these, of silver gilt, were borne by pillar-bearers before Cardinal Wolsey and Cardinal Pole.
pillar bracket n. Mechanics (a) a bracket with a support in the form of a short upright column or pillar; (more widely) a free-standing upright mechanical support; (b) a bracket attached to one of the pillars of a motor vehicle.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > support > [noun] > that which supports > projecting bracket > on a pole or pillar
saddle bracket1844
pillar bracket1854
saddle1867
pole-bracket1876
1854 W. Johnson Armengaud's Pract. Draughtsman's Bk. Industr. Design 177/1 A pillar bracket to support one end of the main crank disc shaft.
1887 D. A. Low Introd. Machine Drawing 34 End elevation of a pillar bracket for carrying a pillow block.
1976 U.S. Patent 3,935,674 2 Hinge pillar brackets 26 and 28 are attached to and extend from the rearward pillar 16 of the vehicle body.
1993 N.Y. Times (Nexis) 9 Apr. c26/1 A breathtaking pillar bracket in the shape of a seminude woman who stretches one arm back over her head.
2002 U.S. Patent 6,575,521 1/2 B pillar brackets are preferably assembled to reinforcement plates and fastener retention plates.
pillar-brick n. rare a brick placed on end, used in building a clamp.
ΚΠ
1906 N.E.D. at Pillar sb. Pillar-brick.
pillar buoy n. a buoy with a vertical post used as a marker.
ΚΠ
1858 Mercantile Marine Mag. 5 285 A Black Pillar Buoy bearing a bell, with perch and ball.
2003 Pittsburgh Post-Gaz. 12 Oct. b2 The Army Corps of Engineers Pittsburgh District will begin removing small boat warning signs and pillar buoys.
pillar clock n. (a) a public clock mounted on top of a pillar; (b) a domestic clock with the movement and dial supported on four short vertical pillars; (c) a clock in which the time is shown by a pointer moving along a pillar or other linear scale.
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > instruments for measuring time > clock > [noun] > other types of clock
watch-clock1592
German clock1598
quarter clocka1631
wheel-clock1671
table clocka1684
month clock1712
astronomical clock1719
musical clock1721
repeater1725
Tompion1727
pulling clock1733
regulator1735
eight-day clock1741
regulator clock1750
French clock1757
repetition clock1765
day clock1766
striker1778
chiming clock1789
cuckoo-clock1789
night clock1823
telltale1827
carriage clock1828
fly-clock1830
steeple clock1830
telltale clock1832
skeleton clock1842
telegraph clock1842
star clock1850
weight-clock1850
prison clock1853
crystal clock1854
pillar scroll top clock1860
sheep's-head clock1872
presentation clock1875
pillar clock1880
stop-clock1881
Waterbury1882
calendar-clock1884
ting-tang clock1884
birdcage clock1886
sheep's head1887
perpetual calendar1892
bracket clock1894
Act of Parliament clock1899
cartel clock1899
banjo-clock1903
master clock1904
lantern clock1913
time clock1919
evolutionary clock1922
lancet clock1922
atomic clock1927
quartz clock1934
clock radio1946
real-time clock1953
organ clock1956
molecular clock1974
travelling clock2014
1880 Manufacturer & Builder Oct. 217/3 A number of these pillar clocks, of very ornamental appearance and, illuminated at night, are said to have been erected in that city.
1933 Burlington Mag. Aug. p. xvi/1 Mr. Mody..retains the useful terms ‘Lantern, Bracket, and Pillar Clocks’ to describe the main types.
1962 E. Bruton Dict. Clocks & Watches 131 Pillar clock, French drum clock with round movement and dial on four vertical pillars standing on a round base... Also a special form of Japanese clock showing time by a pointer moving along a linear scale, or any clock on a pillar.
1977 C. Jagger Clocks & Watches 219 Finally, there is the weight-driven ‘pillar clock’, to which no European clock even approximates, so called because it was long, narrow, very lightly constructed and could be attached to the main upright of a building in a wholly unobtrusive way which the Japanese..would not find offensive.
2003 Derby Evening Tel. (Nexis) 29 Mar. 11 The pillar clock, which was made by Smith's of Derby in 1958, stopped ticking in November 2001.
pillar-compass n. Obsolete rare a pair of dividers with an attachment for a pen or pencil.
ΚΠ
1875 E. H. Knight Amer. Mech. Dict. III. 1703/2 Pillar-compass, a pair of dividers, the legs of which are so arranged that the lower part may be taken out, forming, respectively, a bow-pen and bow-pencil.
pillar cross n. Archaeology a cross with a round shaft shaped like a pillar.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > record > memorial or monument > [noun] > structure or erection > cross
crossc1420
pillar cross1849
1849 Ecclesiologist 9 89 The Scotch pillar-crosses we must assign to Danish times.
2000 Sunday Times (Nexis) 28 May (Features section) Llanmadog's church has..a Celtic pillar cross.
pillar-deity n. Cultural Anthropology now rare a god represented symbolically as a pillar.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > deity > [noun] > idol > phallus > deity worshipped through
pillar-deity1874
1874 H. M. Westropp & C. S. Wake Anc. Symbol Worship 61 The peculiar titles given to these pillar-deities..led to their original phallic character being somewhat overlooked.
1937 Amer. Jrnl. Archaeol. 41 430 For griffins guarding a pillar-deity, see a Mycenaean gem.
pillar dollar n. now historical a silver coin bearing a picture of the pillars of Hercules, current chiefly in Spanish territories in America from the 17th to the 19th cent.
ΚΠ
1695 W. Lowndes Rep. Amendm. Silver Coins 87 Foreign Moneys now Currant amongst us; Namely, the Pillar Dollars, which go at Seven Shillings and a Peny per Ounce.
1823 G. Crabb Universal Technol. Dict. at Dollar The former [sc. Spanish dollars] are called pillar dollars, because they bear on the reverse the arms of Spain between two pillars.
1997 J. Weatherford Hist. Money vii. 118 Some people say that the modern dollar sign is derived from this pillar dollar.
pillar drill n. Engineering a drilling machine incorporating a work table supported on a column attached to the base of the machine.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > equipment > machine tool > other specific machine tools > [noun] > pillar drilling machine
pillar drilling machine1870
pillar drill1881
1881 E. Matheson Aid Bk. Engin. Enterprise Abroad II. xxiii. 313 The self-contained Pillar drill is useful, as there is more room around the machine within which to move the article.
1990 Pract. Woodworking Mar. 44/1 Matters are made rather easier if a pillar-drill is available.
pillar drilling machine n. Engineering = pillar drill n.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > equipment > machine tool > other specific machine tools > [noun] > pillar drilling machine
pillar drilling machine1870
pillar drill1881
1870 Times 5 Mar. 15/3 (advt.) A powerful double geared pillar drilling machine.
1975 G. Bram & C. Downs Manuf. Technol. vii. 198 The pillar drilling-machine..is similar in general design to the sensitive drill.
pillar file n. a small file used for delicate or detailed work.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > equipment > shaping tools or equipment > file > [noun] > other files
jack file1678
knife-file1683
pillar file1683
using-file1683
carlet1688
grail1688
screw-rasp1688
riffler1797
quannet1809
safe edge1815
cross-cut1831
saw-file1846
shouldering file1846
warding file1846
found1874
side file1874
cant-filea1877
pin bone1936
1683 J. Moxon Mech. Exercises II. 110 A small Flat-File, called a Pillar-File.
1884 F. J. Britten Watch & Clockmakers' Handbk. (new ed.) 193 A pillar file is generally understood to mean one three inches and a half long, measured from the point to the end of the cut.
1990 Shooting Industry (Nexis) June 12 File off its rivet-face with a medium sized safe-faced pillar file.
pillar head n. Architecture the upper part of a column, spec. an abacus, capital, or architrave; a cross-beam between two columns.
ΚΠ
?c1475 Catholicon Anglicum (BL Add. 15562) f. 95v A pllerhede [read pillerhede; 1483 BL Add. 89074 Pillare hede], abacus, epistilium.
1910 R. Kipling Rewards & Fairies 82 I'd hear it where I hung chipping round a pillarhead.
1972 E. Pound Cantos xx. 95 Crystal columns, acanthus, sirens in the pillar heads.
pillar hermit n. an ascetic who lives on the top of a pillar; a stylite.
ΚΠ
1806 E. King Munimenta Antiqua IV. 265 Other Stylites, or Pillar Hermits, mortified themselves by continual standing.
1990 Los Angeles Times (Nexis) 21 Oct. 6/1 St. Simeon Stylites, the world's first pillar hermit, died in AD 459.
pillar letter-box n. = pillar box n.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > correspondence > postal services > equipment for sending or delivering mail > [noun] > post- or letter-box > pillar-box
postbox1786
pillar-post1840
pillar letter-box1854
pillar box1855
pillar1865
1854 Sci. Amer. 25 Nov. 88/3 It consists of placing pillar letter boxes along the leading thoroughfares, at intervals of half a mile or thereabouts.
1977 Times 26 July 16/7 A Victorian oak pillar letter-box, probably made for John Fitzgibbon, third Earl of Clare, went for £340.
pillar-lip n. Conchology Obsolete the inner or parietal lip of a gastropod mollusc shell.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > invertebrates > subkingdom Metazoa > grade Triploblastica or Coelomata > phylum Mollusca > [noun] > Testacea (shelled molluscs) > shelled mollusc > shell > part of
auricle1665
heel1673
lip1681
mouth1681
whirl1681
rib1711
antihelix1721
canal1734
columella1755
vesture1755
body whirl1776
fent1776
pillar1776
pillar-lip1776
septum1786
aperture1794
body whorl1807
costa1812
seam1816
spine1822
umbo1822
varix1822
peristome1828
summit1828
nucleus1833
concameration1835
lunula1835
nympha1836
nymph1839
lunule1842
peritreme1848
body chamber1851
axis1866
umbone1867
liration1904
1776 E. M. da Costa Elements Conchol. x. 218 Umbilicated Whelks, or those that have a perpendicular hollow or navel aside the columella or pillar-lip.
1878 Johnson's New Universal Cycl. (new ed.) III. 948/2 The shell is sub-cylindrical, smooth, and polished.., with the pillar-lip obliquely plaited in front.
pillar-monk n. Obsolete rare = pillar hermit n.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > church government > monasticism > anchorite > [noun] > stylite
pillarista1638
pillar-monka1638
stylitea1638
pillar-percher1791
aerialist1846
a1638 J. Mede Apostasy Latter Times in Wks. (1672) 150 Peter à Metra, a famous Stylite, or Pillar-Monk.
pillar orphrey n. a vertical band of embroidered ornamentation on an ecclesiastical vestment.
ΚΠ
1888 Archaeologia 51 362 An inscription runs down the pillar-orphrey of the chasuble.
1999 Church Times 6 Aug. 24/5 As I worked on the green vestment, a leaf shape emerged for the pillar orphrey.
pillar-percher n. Obsolete rare (humorous) = pillar hermit n.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > church government > monasticism > anchorite > [noun] > stylite
pillarista1638
pillar-monka1638
stylitea1638
pillar-percher1791
aerialist1846
1791 G. Wakefield Enq. Publ. Worship 15 The perseverance of Simeon the pillar-percher.
pillar-plait n. Conchology Obsolete a fold on the inner or parietal lip of a gastropod mollusc shell.
ΚΠ
1861 P. P. Carpenter in Rep. Smithsonian Inst. 1860 181 The Boat-shells and Melons are large and thin, with very expanded mouth, and a few sharply-cut pillar-plaits.
pillar plate n. Watchmaking and Clockmaking the plate of a movement immediately behind the dial, to which the pillars are fixed.
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > instruments for measuring time > watch > [noun] > parts of
barrel1591
motion1605
bezel1616
fusee1622
string1638
crown wheel1646
out-case1651
watch-box1656
nuck1664
watchwork1667
balance-wheel1669
box1675
dial wheel1675
counter-potence1678
pendulum-balance1680
watch-case1681
pillar1684
contrate teeth1696
pinion of report1696
watch-hook1698
bob-balance1701
half-cock1701
potence1704
verge1704
pad1705
movable1709
jewel1711
pendant1721
crystal1722
watch-key1723
pendulum spring1728
lock spring1741
watch-glass1742
watch-spring1761
all-or-nothing piece1764
watch hand1764
cylinder1765
cannon?1780
cannon1802
stackfreed1819
pillar plate1821
little hand1829
hair-spring1830
lunette1832
all-or-nothing1843
locking1851
slag1857
staff1860
case spring1866
stem1866
balance-cock1874
watch-dial1875
balance-spring1881
balance-staff1881
Breguet spring1881
overcoil1881
surprise-piece1881
brass edge1884
button turn1884
fourth wheel1884
fusee-sink1884
pair-case1884
silver bar1884
silver piece1884
slang1884
top plate1884
karrusel1893
watch-face1893
watch bracelet1896
bar-movement1903
jewel pivot1907
jewel bearing1954
1821 London Jrnl. Arts & Sci. 2 173 A small-toothed wheel lying upon the pillar-plate.
1884 F. J. Britten Watch & Clockmakers' Handbk. (new ed.) 199 The chief plate called the pillar plate lies underneath the dial.
1987 Jrnl. Econ. Hist. 47 321 Screws were used to secure the top plate to the pillar plate.
pillar-post n. now rare (a) an upright structure on to which public notices are posted; (b) = pillar box n.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > correspondence > postal services > equipment for sending or delivering mail > [noun] > post- or letter-box > pillar-box
postbox1786
pillar-post1840
pillar letter-box1854
pillar box1855
pillar1865
1840 E. S. Wortley Eva v. i. 106 That great gigantic thing [sc. Cleopatra], whose needle looks For all the world, like some huge pillar-post!
1860 R. S. Surtees Plain or Ringlets? xlix. 177 He chucked the letter..into the pillar post at the Derby Station.
1881 H. James Portrait of Lady I. xv. 185 The big red pillar-post on the south-east corner.
1910 Encycl. Brit. I. 240/1 Public advertisements in public streets may be posted only on the appliances, such as pillar posts, &c., provided for the purpose.
pillar-punishment n. Obsolete a punishment consisting of being forced to live on top of a pillar.
ΚΠ
1842 Ld. Tennyson St. Simeon Stylites in Poems (new ed.) II. 56 Not alone this pillar-punishment.
1884 Cent. Mag. Dec. 172/2 The ‘pillar-punishment’ of St. Simeon Stylites.
pillar road n. Mining rare a road between pillars (sense 10).
ΚΠ
1883 W. S. Gresley Gloss. Terms Coal Mining 187 Pillar roads, working-roads or inclines in pillars having a range of long-wall faces on either side.
1964 A. Nelson Dict. Mining 330 Pillar roads, roadways formed in coal pillars.
pillar rose n. a climbing rose suitable for training on a pillar.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular cultivated or ornamental plants > particular flower or plant esteemed for flower > [noun] > rose and allied flowers > rose > types of rose flower or bush
summer rosea1456
French rose1538
damask rose?a1547
musk rose1559
province1562
winter rose1577
Austrian brier1590
rose of Provence1597
velvet rose1597
damasine-rose1607
Provence rose1614
blush-rose1629
maiden's blush1648
monthly rose tree1664
Provinsa1678
York and Lancaster rose1688
cinnamon rose1699
muscat rose1707
cabbage rose1727
China-rose1731
old-fashioned rose1773
moss rose1777
swamp rose1785
alba1797
Cherokee rose1804
Macartney rose1811
shepherd's rose1818
multiflora1820
prairie rose1822
Boursault1826
Banksian rose1827
maiden rose1827
moss1829
Noisette1829
seven sisters rose1830
Dundee rambler1834
Banksia rose1835
Chickasaw rose1835
Bourbon1836
climbing rose1836
green rose1837
hybrid China1837
Jaune Desprez1837
Lamarque1837
perpetual1837
pillar rose1837
rambler1837
wax rose1837
rugosa1840
China1844
Manetti1846
Banksian1847
remontant1847
gallica1848
hybrid perpetual1848
Persian Yellow1848
pole rose1848
monthly1849
tea rose1850
quarter sessions rose1851
Gloire de Dijon1854
Jacqueminot1857
Maréchal Niel1864
primrose1864
jack1867
La France1868
tea1869
Ramanas rose1876
Japanese rose1883
polyantha1883
old rose1885
American Beauty1887
hybrid tea1890
Japan rose1895
roselet1896
floribunda1898
Zéphirine Drouhin1901
Penzance briar1902
Dorothy Perkins1903
sweetheart1905
wichuraiana1907
mermaid1918
species rose1930
sweetheart rose1936
peace1944
shrub rose1948
1837 T. Rivers Rose Amateur's Guide 81 Clarissa Harlowe is a pillar-rose, of first-rate excellence.
1916 H. G. Wells Mr. Britling sees it Through iii. 78 Isn't that a beautiful pillar rose? Edith put it in only last year.
1992 Garden Answers Jan. 18/3 Check roses for wind rock especially newly planted bush roses together with climbing and pillar roses.
pillar-saint n. = pillar hermit n. (also figurative).
ΚΠ
1765 A. Maclaine tr. J. L. von Mosheim Eccl. Hist. I. 254 A certain order of men, who were called Stilites by the Greeks, and Sancti Columnares, or Pillar-Saints, by the Latins.
1829 N. Amer. Rev. Jan. 17 He has contributed to the decline of his art, and done as little as a pillar-saint for the welfare of man.
2001 Financial Times (Nexis) 24 Nov. (Property & Gardening section) 19 The battery-powered lift refused to come down and..I had an unwelcome taste of life as a pillar-saint.
pillar scroll top clock n. = pillar and scroll top clock n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > instruments for measuring time > clock > [noun] > other types of clock
watch-clock1592
German clock1598
quarter clocka1631
wheel-clock1671
table clocka1684
month clock1712
astronomical clock1719
musical clock1721
repeater1725
Tompion1727
pulling clock1733
regulator1735
eight-day clock1741
regulator clock1750
French clock1757
repetition clock1765
day clock1766
striker1778
chiming clock1789
cuckoo-clock1789
night clock1823
telltale1827
carriage clock1828
fly-clock1830
steeple clock1830
telltale clock1832
skeleton clock1842
telegraph clock1842
star clock1850
weight-clock1850
prison clock1853
crystal clock1854
pillar scroll top clock1860
sheep's-head clock1872
presentation clock1875
pillar clock1880
stop-clock1881
Waterbury1882
calendar-clock1884
ting-tang clock1884
birdcage clock1886
sheep's head1887
perpetual calendar1892
bracket clock1894
Act of Parliament clock1899
cartel clock1899
banjo-clock1903
master clock1904
lantern clock1913
time clock1919
evolutionary clock1922
lancet clock1922
atomic clock1927
quartz clock1934
clock radio1946
real-time clock1953
organ clock1956
molecular clock1974
travelling clock2014
1860 C. Jerome Hist. Amer. Clock Business iii. 44 I took about one dozen of the Pillar Scroll Top Clocks, and went to..Wethersfield to sell them.
1929 G. H. Baillie Watchmakers & Clockmakers of World 349/2 They were at first wall clocks, but from 1814 brackets or shelf clocks known as Pillar Scroll Top clocks.
pillar-stone n. (a) a standing stone, a menhir; (b) a foundation stone or cornerstone (obsolete).
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > record > memorial or monument > [noun] > structure or erection > stone
stone847
standing stone1180
longstone1651
hoar-stone1666
pillar-stone1723
lech1768
holed-stone1769
stela1776
bluestone1812
menhir1819
stele1820
monolith1836
tanist-stone1851
megalith1853
orthostat1909
society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > disposition of stones or bricks > [noun] > specific stone or brick
hirne-stonec1000
parpen1252
coin1350
coin-stone1350
angler1365
parpal1369
corner-stonea1382
cunye1387
tuss1412
quoin1532
table stone1554
quoining1562
copestone1567
ground-stone1567
lock bandc1582
quinyie1588
perpender1611
whelmer1618
parpen stone1633
capstone1665
headera1684
through1683
quoin-stone1688
stretcher1693
closer1700
bed-stone1723
coping-brick1725
girder1726
footstone1728
heading brick1731
bossage1736
lewis-hole1740
shoulder1744
headstone1745
pawl1753
tail-bond1776
coping-stone1778
slocking-stone1778
throughband1794
through-stone1797
stretching-bond1805
core1823
keystone1823
tail-binder1828
stretching-stone1833
header brick1841
coign1843
pawl-stone1844
bay-stone1845
bonder1845
pillar-stone1854
bond-piece1862
stretcher-brick1867
toothing-stone1875
bond-stone1879
pierpoint1891
jumper1904
tush1905
padstone1944
1723 H. Rowlands Mona Antiqua Restaurata vii. 51 How should our Columns and Pillar-Stones come to be generally plac'd near our Heaps [i.e. burial cairns]?
1854 Ecclesiologist 15 361 A word that has lately become popular in the Ecclesiastical Gazette and elsewhere—for what we used to know as the ‘first’ or corner stone of a church—I mean ‘pillar stone’.
1999 M. Greenwood et al. Ireland: Rough Guide ii. x. 357 A superb, rounded pillar-stone, this is decorated with the bold swirls of Celtic La Tène art.
pillar-symbol n. Obsolete a pillar erected as a religious symbol.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > deity > [noun] > idol > phallus
phallus1613
dildo1698
lingam1719
pillar-symbol1873
society > faith > artefacts > symbol (general) > non-Christian symbols or images > [noun] > representing phallus
phallus1613
Priapus1613
priapisma1680
lingam1719
pillar-symbol1873
1873 Jrnl. Anthropol. Inst. 2 376 The serpent and pillar symbols of the Phœnician deity confirm the identification between Set or Saturn, the Siva of the Hindu Pantheon.
1874 H. M. Westropp & C. S. Wake Anc. Symbol Worship 51 Another instance of the use of the pillar-symbol.
pillar tap n. a tap with a vertical inlet pipe and a free outlet, such as is found on sinks and washbasins.
ΚΠ
1925 S. B. Bennett Man. Techn. Plumbing & Sanitary Sci. (ed. 4) iv. 89 The following requirements are intended to apply to step, bib, pillar, and globe taps of the ordinary pattern.
1988 A J Focus Feb. 48/1 Among new brassware collections from Stelrad Doulton is the Rio range consisting of..pillar taps, monoblock mixers and three-hole mixers.
1993 Collins Compl. DIY Man. (new ed.) viii. 352/2 To replace the washer in a traditional bib or pillar tap, first drain the supply pipe.
pillar wall n. Mining (a) a row of pillars (sense 10) dividing the sections of a working (obsolete); (b) the wall or face of a pillar.
ΚΠ
1839 A. Ure Dict. Arts 980 Taking out all the coal, either on the Shropshire system, or with pillar-walls and rooms.
2001 Toronto Life (Nexis) Mar. The ground started talking and creaking like the whole thing was going to collapse. All of us, five of us, we just stood against the pillar wall and waited.
pillar working n. Mining a working in which pillars (sense 10) are left in place; (also) mining carried out using such pillars.
ΚΠ
1860 W. Fordyce Hist. Coal 32 The hewers working at the face of the bords or the pillar workings.
1877 Encycl. Brit. VI. 64/2 Fig. 9 represents the Lancashire system of pillar-working.
1931 Iron & Coal Trades Rev. 122 622/1 The system briefly is pillar working by shortwall faces, the extraction of the pillars being accomplished on the return journey.
2002 Internat. Jrnl. Rock Mech. & Mining Sci. 39 9 Factors affecting..stability in level contiguous pillar workings in coal mines.

Derivatives

ˈpillar-ˌlike adj. and adv.
ΚΠ
1599 T. Blundeville Art of Logike i. x. 32 Cubicke, or piller like.
1682 T. Creech tr. Lucretius De natura rerum vi. 198 Dark, and heavy Clouds..Pillar-like descend, and reach the Seas.
1787 W. Withering Bot. Arrangem. Brit. Plants (ed. 2) II. 961 Roundish; fixed to a pillar-like receptacle.
1849 Times 11 July 5/3 Tall pillar-like chimneys.
2000 Independent 9 Oct. i. 6/6 Cetiosaurus resembled the more familiar Brontosaurus, with a long neck and tail and pillar-like legs.
ˈpillar-ˌwise adv.
ΚΠ
1625 J. Poole in S. Purchas Purchas his Pilgrimes III. iii. xiii. 565 Two mayne square pieces of Timber, which stand Pillar wise in the loose of the ship.
1790 J. Bell Bell's New Pantheon I. 182/2 Oblong stones erected pillar-wise.
1857 Ld. Dufferin Lett. from High Latitudes vii. 160 The brass carronades set on end, pillar-wise.
1999 Milwaukee (Wisconsin) Jrnl. Sentinel (Nexis) 14 Apr. 1 We had a lot of restrictions pillar-wise.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2006; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

pillarv.

Brit. /ˈpɪlə/, U.S. /ˈpɪlər/
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: pillar n.
Etymology: < pillar n. Compare earlier pillared adj. and pillaring n.
1.
a. intransitive. To rest on or as on a pillar. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > building or providing with specific parts > build or provide with specific parts [verb (transitive)] > provide with beams or supports
needle1502
joista1615
pillar1711
truss1823
strut1828
tree1887
girder1938
beam-
society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > architecture > pillar > [verb (intransitive)] > supported by pillar
pillar1711
1711 W. Sutherland Ship-builders Assistant 36 So order the Beams, that they may pillar on the Floor-riders.
b. transitive. To furnish or support (a structure) with pillars; to buttress, prop up. Also figurative.
ΚΠ
1787 ‘Vicarius’ Sketches of Beauty v. 171 Those massy props, pillaring the firmament, shall reel, shall crumble, shiver into ruins.
1839 J. Rogers Antipopopriestian xvi. iv. 333 Five particular plans for pillaring up the priesthood.
1880 J. Legge Mem. iv. 46 It needs the props of truth to pillar it.
1920 G. Arthur Life Ld. Kitchener III. cxxxiii. 350 An ally whom it behoved us to pillar up as much and for as long as possible.
2002 World Mining Equipm. (Nexis) 1 Jan. 22 The general mine plan requires one panel to be advancing while another is being pillared on retreat.
2. transitive. To form (material) into a pillar; to embody or display in the form of a pillar. Also figurative.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > shape > curvature > curved three-dimensional shape or body > cylinder > form cylinder [verb (transitive)]
pillar1787
1787 Father Tammany's Almanac sig. Dv Fine white marble, either curiously arched, pillared, or blocked up into fine building stones.
1812 Ld. Byron Childe Harold: Cantos I & II i. vii. 6 Yet strength was pillar'd in each massy aisle.
1846 Ld. Tennyson Let. 4 Aug. (1982) I. 259 Hotel full of light..pillaring its lights in the quiet water.
1890 Dublin Rev. Oct. 424 The inward and outward wholeness of sincerity..pillars itself aloft over their heads.
1992 Sci. Amer. Apr. 86/3 Pillaring the clays for catalysis has two benefits.
3. transitive. to pillar and post: to drive from one place to another; to harass. Cf. from pillar to post at pillar n. 8. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > cause to move in a direction [verb (transitive)] > hither and thither
fleck1567
ballotte1680
tig-tag1846
to pillar and post1901
1901 G. Keats Tales Dunstable Weir 62 He must have been pillared and posted a deal in his bit of life.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2006; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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