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单词 pintle
释义

pintlen.

Brit. /ˈpɪntl/, U.S. /ˈpɪn(t)əl/
Forms: Old English–1700s pintel, Middle English pentyll, Middle English pintil, Middle English pintile, Middle English pyntal, Middle English pyntel, Middle English pyntell, Middle English pyntelle, Middle English pyntul, Middle English pyntyl, Middle English pyntyle, late Middle English (in a late copy)–1600s pintell, 1500s pyntil, 1500s pyntill, 1500s pyntyll, 1500s–1600s pintill, 1500s– pintle, 1700s pntl (nonstandard); Scottish pre-1700 pintil, pre-1700 pintill, pre-1700 pynntill, pre-1700 pyntill, pre-1700 pyntyll, pre-1700 1700s– pintle. N.E.D. (1906) also records forms late Middle English pentill, late Middle English pyntil.
Origin: Apparently formed within English, by derivation. Etymon: -le suffix.
Etymology: Apparently < a first element (not attested in English as a simplex) cognate with Old Frisian pint , penth , Middle Low German pint , Middle High German pint (German regional and nonstandard pint ), Danish regional pint penis (further etymology uncertain; perhaps cognate with pin n.1) + -le suffix (see -le suffix 1). Compare Icelandic pintill (17th cent.), Norwegian regional pintol, Old Danish pintel (Danish regional pintel).The first element may also be cognate with early modern Dutch pint penis (Dutch pint (now rare)), but this is more commonly considered to be a variant of Dutch punt in the same sense (which is in turn a spec. use of punt point). A connection with German regional (Low German: East Friesland) pink in the same sense has also been suggested. Occurrence of the first element as a simplex in English could perhaps be implied by cuckoo-pint n., but this seems much more likely to be shortened < cuckoo-pintle n.
1. The penis of a man or a male animal. In later use regional and colloquial.Cf. also cuckoo-pintle n.
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the world > life > the body > sex organs > male sex organs > [noun] > penis
weapona1000
tarsec1000
pintleOE
cock?c1335
pillicock?c1335
yard1379
arrowa1382
looma1400
vergea1400
instrumentc1405
fidcocka1475
privya1500
virile member (or yard)?1541
prickc1555
tool1563
pillock1568
penis1578
codpiece1584
needle1592
bauble1593
dildo1597
nag1598
virility1598
ferret1599
rubigo?a1600
Jack1604
mentula1605
virge1608
prependent1610
flute1611
other thing1628
engine1634
manhood1640
cod1650
quillity1653
rammer1653
runnion1655
pego1663
sex1664
propagator1670
membrum virile1672
nervea1680
whore-pipe1684
Roger1689
pudding1693
handle?1731
machine1749
shaft1772
jock1790
poker1811
dickyc1815
Johnny?1833
organ1833
intromittent apparatus1836
root1846
Johnson1863
Peter1870
John Henry1874
dickc1890
dingusc1890
John Thomasc1890
old fellowc1890
Aaron's rod1891
dingle-dangle1893
middle leg1896
mole1896
pisser1896
micky1898
baby-maker1902
old man1902
pecker1902
pizzle1902
willy1905
ding-dong1906
mickey1909
pencil1916
dingbatc1920
plonkerc1920
Johna1922
whangera1922
knob1922
tube1922
ding1926
pee-pee1927
prong1927
pud1927
hose1928
whang1928
dong1930
putz1934
porkc1935
wiener1935
weenie1939
length1949
tadger1949
winkle1951
dinger1953
winky1954
dork1961
virilia1962
rig1964
wee-wee1964
Percy1965
meat tool1966
chopper1967
schlong1967
swipe1967
chode1968
trouser snake1968
ding-a-ling1969
dipstick1970
tonk1970
noonies1972
salami1977
monkey1978
langer1983
wanker1987
OE Brussels Gloss. in T. Wright & R. P. Wülcker Anglo-Saxon & Old Eng. Vocab. (1884) I. 292 Uirilius, pintel.
c1350 Nominale (Cambr. Ee.4.20) in Trans. Philol. Soc. (1906) 4* Vyt coyloun et furchure, Pyntul ballok and greynes.
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 60 Among þe gentals [read genitals], on hatte þe pyntyl veretrum in latyn, for it is a man his owne membre oþer for virus come ouȝt þerof.
c1425 Edward, Duke of York Master of Game (Vesp. B.xii) (1904) 58 (MED) A rennyng hounde..shulde have..a litel pintel and long, smale hangyng ballokis.
1470 J. Paston in Paston Lett. & Papers (2004) I. 415 It is reportyd that hys pyntell is asse longe as hys legge.
a1475 Sidrak & Bokkus (Lansd.) (Ph.D. diss., Univ. of Washington) (1965) 7950 (MED) Þat blood comeþ ful swiftly And to þe ballockes goþ ful hastifly, And fro þenne it issueth so Whan it cometh þe pintile vnto.
?1541 R. Copland Guy de Chauliac's Questyonary Cyrurgyens ii. sig. K j Questyons vpon the Anathomy of the pyntyll.
?1550 H. Llwyd tr. Pope John XXI Treasury of Healthe sig. B.iii The pintle and splene of an Asse.
1621 Rec. Perth Kirk Session 24 Sept. That the said Alexander come to hir with his pynntill stiff in his hand.
?c1680 Sodom 1st Prol., in Earl of Rochester Wks. (1999) 679 Well stuf't with whores..that can abide the brunts Of many Pintles, in their lusty Cunts.
1741 T. Stretser New Descr. Merryland vii. 27 [A creature] of the serpentine kind, known by the name of Pntl; it is often found plunging about in the great canal.
1749 B. Martin Lingua Britannica Reformata (at cited word) Pintel, or Pintle, a man's yard.
a1796 R. Burns Poems & Songs (1968) I. 457 We'll tak tway thumb-bread to the nine, And that's a sonsy p–ntle.
1881 A. Trumble Slang Dict. 43 I may bid as high as your pintle, and make you squint like a bag of nails.
1903 Eng. Dial. Dict. IV. 516/2 Pintle, the membrum virile.
1956 Kentucky Folklore Rec. 2 20 In Western Kentucky, one finds..peter, prick, pintle, pizzle [etc.].
1990 T. McEwen McX (1991) iii. 102 From that distance all the man can see is McX waving his pintle at a group of cows.
2. A pin or bolt, esp. one on which another part in a mechanism turns; spec.
a. Nautical. A pin forming part of the hinge of a rudder, usually fixed on the rudder and fitting into a ring on the sternpost.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > equipment of vessel > steering equipment > [noun] > rudder > pin or socket
pintle1486
gudgeon1589
brace1850
1486 in M. Oppenheim Naval Accts. & Inventories Henry VII (1896) 15 A pyntell & a gogeon for the Rother.
1611 R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues Masles, the pintles of a sterne; the yron pinnes that enter into the rings, or gudgeons thereof.
1627 J. Smith Sea Gram. ii. 11 The holes wherein the pintels of the murderers or fowlers goe into.
1691 T. Hale Acct. New Inventions 49 Her Rudder wrought it self out of the Irons, hanging only by the upper~most Pintell.
1704 J. Harris Lexicon Technicum I Pintles in a Ship, are those Hooks by which the Rudder hangs to the Stern-post.
1785 N.Y. Packet 11 July (advt.) Anchors of all sizes, made of sterling refined iron warranted... Ships windless Irons, Rudder Pintels and Bars.
1815 ‘J. Mathers’ Hist. Mr. John Decastro & Brother Bat I. 313 [She] turned round in it as if Madam Stickleback's body moved upon a gudgeon and pintle exactly in the middle of her bed.
1869 E. J. Reed Shipbuilding iv. 60 The rudder post, with its lugs for the pintles.
1932 ‘N. Shute’ Lonely Road vii. 155 He wanted new rudder pintles.
1982 M. Rule Mary Rose i. 19 The obverse bears..the earliest representation..of a rudder slung to the aft side of the sternpost with pintles and gudgeons.
b. Gunnery. (a) An iron pin lessening or controlling the recoil of a cannon; (b) the vertical bolt on which a gun carriage or gun mount revolves; (c) the pin on the axle-tree of a limber to which the trail-plate eye is attached. Cf. pintail n.2
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society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > device for discharging missiles > firearm > parts and fittings of firearms > [noun] > recoil gear > types of
coiler rope1600
pintle1644
pintail1794
compressor1859
hydraulic buffer1871
butt pad1884
recuperator1889
shovel1899
check rope1918
society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > device for discharging missiles > firearm > gun carriage > [noun] > other parts of carriage
tail-pin1497
brack1622
head-plate1647
transom1688
prise-bolt1705
bracket1753
bracket-bolt1753
pintle1769
rider1779
trail-plate-eye1828
cleat1834
wheel-guard1860
spade1862
nave-hole1867
chassis1869
turntable1889
gun-crutch1898
trail-spade1904
1644 H. Mainwaring Sea-mans Dict. 75 A Pintell. Is a small iron Pin, which is fastned to murderers [a type of gun]..to keep the peece from recoyling.
1706 Phillips's New World of Words (new ed.) Pintel or Pintle, (in Gunnery) an Iron-pin that serves to keep the Gun from recoiling.
1769 W. Falconer Universal Dict. Marine at Mortar The pintle..serves as an axis to the bed; so that the mortar may be turned about horizontally.
1876 G. E. Voyle & G. de Saint-Clair-Stevenson Mil. Dict. (ed. 3) at Limber At the back of the limber is an iron hook or pintle, termed a limber-hook, to which the trail of the gun carriage is attached.
1918 E. S. Farrow Dict. Mil. Terms Pintle, in artillery, the vertical bolt around which the chassis is traversed.
1939 Florida: Guide to Southernmost State (Federal Writers' Project) iii. 448 The iron pintles and track for the guns are still in place.
1991 Soldier 28 Oct. 22/2 Supacat can be fitted with a Milan firing post at the rear and a pintle-mounted general purpose machine gun in the front.
c. The pin inside a hinge; the bolt of an axle.
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society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > device for discharging missiles > firearm > gun carriage > [noun] > fore part > part of
pintle1843
1843 Chambers's Jrnl. 17 June 176/3 The pintle upon which a looking-glass swings is commonly a piece of iron wire, having a screw-thread turned at each end.
a1877 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. II. 1707/2 Pintle, a pivot pin, such as that on a hinge.
1906 N.E.D. (at cited word) Pintle, the king-bolt upon which the axle of a carriage turns in rounding a curve.
1987 Canal & Riverboat Apr. 9/1 Apparently some of the pintles are breaking up making the bridge difficult to open.
1993 Mother Earth News June–July 38 The eye goes into the post, the L-shaped pintle into the gate, and the eye simply slips down over the pintle—and can easily be removed if necessary.

Compounds

pintle chain n. a sprocket chain.
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1921 Iowa Recorder 10 Aug. 6/1 (advt.) All gears and clutches are eliminated and a single continuous pintle chain drives both the upper and lower beaters.
1988 Farm & Country 24 May 37/4 (advt.) Conveyor/Feeder Specials..24' taper board cattle feeders with pintle chain.
pintle end n. Obsolete the foreskin.
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the world > life > the body > secretory organs > gland > specific glands > [noun] > glans penis > integument of
filmOE
circumcisea1325
prepucya1382
yard-fella1382
preputiuma1400
prepuce?a1425
pintle end?c1475
foreskin1535
sheath1555
?c1475 Catholicon Anglicum (BL Add. 15562) f. 96 A pyntyll ende, prepucium.
pintle-fish n. Scottish Obsolete any of various long, slender, edible fishes, as a ling, pipefish, or sand eel.
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the world > animals > fish > unspecified types > [noun]
whalec950
tumbrelc1300
sprout1340
squame1393
codmop1466
whitefish1482
lineshark?a1500
salen1508
glaucus1509
bretcock1522
warcodling1525
razor1530
bassinatc1540
goldeney1542
smy1552
maiden1555
grail1587
whiting1587
needle1589
pintle-fish1591
goldfish1598
puffin fish1598
quap1598
stork1600
black-tail1601
ellops1601
fork-fish1601
sea-grape1601
sea-lizard1601
sea-raven1601
barne1602
plosher1602
whale-mouse1607
bowman1610
catfish1620
hog1620
kettle-fish1630
sharpa1636
carda1641
housewifea1641
roucotea1641
ox-fisha1642
sea-serpent1646
croaker1651
alderling1655
butkin1655
shamefish1655
yard1655
sea-dart1664
sea-pelican1664
Negro1666
sea-parrot1666
sea-blewling1668
sea-stickling1668
skull-fish1668
whale's guide1668
sennet1671
barracuda1678
skate-bread1681
tuck-fish1681
swallowtail1683
piaba1686
pit-fish1686
sand-creeper1686
horned hog1702
soldier1704
sea-crowa1717
bran1720
grunter1726
calcops1727
bennet1731
bonefish1734
Negro fish1735
isinglass-fish1740
orb1740
gollin1747
smelt1776
night-walker1777
water monarch1785
hardhead1792
macaw-fish1792
yellowback1796
sea-raven1797
blueback1812
stumpnose1831
flat1847
butterfish1849
croppie1856
gubbahawn1857
silt1863
silt-snapper1863
mullet-head1866
sailor1883
hogback1893
skipper1898
stocker1904
1591 Charter in H. Marwick Orkney Norn (1929) 131/2 Four casseis..of coklis witht twa hundretht pintill fiches callit spowtis, in augmentation of the rental.
1655 T. Moffett & C. Bennet Healths Improvem. xviii. 174 Dr. Wotton termeth it grosly the Pintle fish.
a1690 D. Monro Descr. W. Isles (1961) 75 In this Ile [sc. Eriskeray] thair is [dylie] gottin verie abundant of [werey grate] pintill fisch at ebb seais.
pintle hide n. Scottish Obsolete = pintle end n.
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a1540 (c1460) G. Hay tr. Bk. King Alexander 17339 Quhill that the barne baith borne and babtesit was And cuttit of his pintill hide before.
pintle hook n. (a) Gunnery = sense 2b(c) (obsolete); (b) a pin or hook on a vehicle, to which a trailer may be attached.
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1850 Ordnance Man. for Use of Officers (U.S. Army Ordnance Dept.) (ed. 2) xii. 344 Lash the piece to the pintle hook, with the prolonge, by passing the ring of the prolonge twice through the handles.
1861 H. L. Scott Mil. Dict. 438 (caption) The Caisson is composed of a body and a limber... 12. Pintle-hook.
1971 M. Tak Truck Talk 119 Pintle hook, a hooking device seen on oil field rigs and used to couple a full trailer to a truck or to pull a semi-trailer onto a fifth wheel.
1990 Wheels & Tracks No. 32. 13/1 The ‘Jeep’ was a good puller and had a pintle hook for towing trailing equipment.
pintle-monger n. slang a prostitute.
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?1800 Knight Errant (Harl. 7319) 420 Our Countesses, leud Pintle-mongers call Who mix with young ware, shrivel'd up & stale.
1902 J. S. Farmer & W. E. Henley Slang V. 210/1 Pintle-monger, a harlot.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2006; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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