单词 | pin |
释义 | pinn.1 I. A short length of wood, metal, or plastic, often tapering or pointed at one end, used for fastening or holding parts together, for hanging something upon, for plugging a hole, etc.; a peg. 1. As part of a mechanism or construction. a. A rigid pointer or indicator, esp. the gnomon of a sundial. Cf. needle n. 2d. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the world > time > instruments for measuring time > [noun] > sundial > parts of pinOE gnomon1546 style1577 cock1585 hour-line1593 substyle1593 index1594 noon-line1596 incliner1638 substylara1652 substylar linea1652 staff1669 nodus1678 node1704 stylus1796 noon-mark1842 sun line1877 the world > time > instruments for measuring time > clock > [noun] > part(s) of > hand(s) pinOE hand1563 teller1574 index1594 finger1603 palm1629 hour-hand1669 minute hand1720 index-hand1742 second-hand1760 moment-hand1766 little hand1829 big hand1849 set-hands1884 sweep hand1948 sweep second1948 society > communication > indication > marking > marking out > [noun] > peg, nail, etc., fixed to mark a place pin1639 the world > relative properties > measurement > measurement by weighing > equipment for weighing > [noun] > a weighing apparatus > a balance > tongue of a balance moment of a balancea1382 tongue1429 languet1483 clefa1513 needle1589 cock1611 trial1611 scape1633 pin1639 examen1719 OE Ælfric Gram. (Corpus Cambr.) 321 Gnomon, dægmæles pinn [OE Harl. 107 pin]. c1400 ( G. Chaucer Treat. Astrolabe (Brussels) (1940) ii. §38. f. 95 In the centre of the compas stike an euen pyn, or a wyr, vpriȝt. Promptorium Parvulorum (Harl. 221) 399 Pynne, of an orlage, or oþer lyke, schowynge þe owrys of the day or of þe nyghte. 1612 G. Chapman Widdowes Teares ii. sig. D4v I haue set her hart vpon as tickle a pin as the needle of a Diall. 1639 G. Daniel Vervicensis 568 Number will prevaile, And turne the pin of bright Astreaes Skale. 1703 tr. Plutarch Lives I. 497 The shadows of the Pins of Sundials. 1874 A. Rich Dict. Rom. & Greek Antiq. (ed. 4) 622/1 The pin or index of a sundial. 2003 Oshkosh (Wisconsin) Northwestern (Nexis) 4 June 1 a Multi-colored graffiti splattered over the brick floor and granite plate curving in a semi-circle before the gnomon, or pin of the sundial. b. ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > a building > parts of building > window or door > parts of door > [noun] > door fittings > devices for securing door pinlOE door-pina1300 door-bar13.. sneck1324 clicket-lock1342 haggaday1353 stecklea1400 slotec1440 rance1574 door-latch1678 door-locka1684 steeple1722 box staple1778 door-chain1836 chain1839 safety chain1845 door-catch1897 night chain1904 lOE Laws: Gerefa (Corpus Cambr.) xviii. §1. 455 Ne sceolde he nan ðing forgyman, ðe æfre to note mehte: ne forða musfellan ne, þæt git læsse is, to hæpsan pinn. a1200 Glossae in Apollinarem Sidonium in Anecdota Oxoniensia (1885) Classical Ser. I. v. 45 Pessulum opponis, i. pin. c1330 (?a1300) Arthour & Merlin (Auch.) (1973) 5677 (MED) Þo he was out and his feren eke, Fast oȝain þe gate he leke Wiþ lockes, haspes, and mani pin. c1410 (c1350) Gamelyn (Harl. 7334) 298 (MED) He smot þe wyket wiþ his foot and brak awey þe pyn. a1450 (c1412) T. Hoccleve De Regimine Principum (Harl. 4866) (1897) 1104 And vp is broken lok, hasp, barre, & pyn. a1500 (a1400) Sir Cleges (Adv.) (1930) 338 The panyere he toke the styward sone, and he pullyd out the pyne. (b) Scottish and English regional (northern) (archaic in later use). A door handle. Also: a type of door knocker consisting of a ring which is rattled against a twisted or notched bar; cf. to tirl at (†upon) the pin at tirl v.3 3a. Also figurative. ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > a building > parts of building > window or door > parts of door > [noun] > door fittings > handle or knob pina1600 button1712 door-handle1832 door-knob1847 a1600 ( W. Stewart tr. H. Boece Bk. Cron. Scotl. (1858) 18945 Thir tratouris tua..Come to the dur and choppit on ane pyn. c1650 Robin Hood his Death 44 in F. J. Furnivall Percy Folio I. 53 When they came to Merry church lees they knoc[k]ed vpon a pin. c1750 Garland Bon-accord (1886) 14 He tirl't the howdie's widden pinnie. 1816 W. Scott Antiquary III. xi. 230 Murther tirl'd at the door-pin. 1870 W. Morris Earthly Paradise: Pt. IV 39 There knocking, was he bidden in, And heedfully he raised the pin, And entering stood. 1926 ‘H. MacDiarmid’ Penny Wheep 56 Life keeks in the winda, Daith tirls at the pin. 1958 Jrnl. Amer. Folklore 71 555 After Isabell identifies herself, she is directed by the company to Gregory's castle, where she tirls at the pin. 1970 Rev. Eng. Stud. 21 482 The pin in many ballads is thirled or rattled, but it is not a latch or a knocker. It was a twisted or notched iron rod, of square section.., which was affixed vertically to an outer door so that a ring could be vigorously worked up and down. c. A tuning peg of a stringed musical instrument; = peg n.1 2a. Also in figurative context. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > stringed instruments > [noun] > parts generally > tuning-peg pina1475 peg1589 wrest-pin1783 temper-pin1788 tuning-peg1842 tuning-pin1877 society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > stringed instruments > harp or lyre > [noun] > parts of > pin pina1475 a1475 Sir Gawain & Carl Carlisle (1951) 434 (MED) The harpe was of maser fyne; The pynnys wer of golde. a1527 W. Peeris Prov. in Anglia (1892) 14 478 Stoppide in the freytis they [sc. lute-strings] abyde the pynnes wrest. 1587 R. Greene Morando ii. sig. G4v Fearing if he wrested not the pin to a right key, his melody would be marred. 1612 F. Bacon Ess. (new ed.) 53 Nero could touch and tune the Harpe well; But in gouernement sometimes he vsed to winde the pinnes too hie, sometimes to let them downe too lowe. 1759 Newport (Rhode Island) Mercury 26 June 4/3 Violins, Bows, Bridges, Pins, best Roman Violin Strings, [etc.]. 1828 P. Buchan Anc. Ballads & Songs N. Scotl. II. 130 Ye'll take a lith o' my little finger bane..And ye'll make a pin to your fiddle then. 1885 C. G. W. Lock Workshop Receipts 4th Ser. 285/2 As the pins and wires of pianos become worn, it is necessary to renew them. 1954 Lethbridge (Alberta) Herald 15 May 36 (advt.) That part of the string between the tuning pin and the bridge. 2004 N.Y. Times (Nexis) 1 Jan. b1/1 The next steps in building the piano involved machines..one to drill holes in the pinblock at a 4½-degree angle, the other to twist the strings around the pins. ΚΠ 1508 W. Kennedy Flyting (Chepman & Myllar) in Poems W. Dunbar (1998) I. 214 A stark gallowis, a wedy and a pyn. 1568 ( D. Lindsay Satyre (Bannatyne) l. 2841 in Wks. (1931) II. 300 Ane king is cum amang ws, That purposis to heid and hang ws. Thair is na grace and he may fang ws, Bot on ane pin. 1604 in R. Pitcairn Criminal Trials Scotl. (1833) II. 434 He and sundrie of his clane were hanged..the Laird of Magrigore was hanged a pinne above the rest. ?c1625 in E. Beveridge & J. D. Westwood Fergusson's Sc. Prov. (1924) No. 1638 Ye ar a lick the widdie or pin. 1827 Mary Hamilton in W. Motherwell Minstrelsy 320 To see the face of his Molly fair Hanging on the gallows pin. e. A cylindrical part of a lock on to which the hollow shank of a key fits. Also: the shank or stem of a key of this type. Cf. pin lock n.2 ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > building and constructing equipment > fastenings > [noun] > lock > part of lock > other parts of lock pin1678 reliever1801 locking plate1868 clawa1877 bent1881 1678 J. Moxon Mech. Exercises I. ii. 24 If you have a Pin to the Lock,..the Pin is rivetted into the Plate. 1850 J. Chubb Locks & Keys 33 A brass guard, in which there was a slot for a pin to slide in. 1875 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. Pin... 9. The part of a key-stem which enters the lock. 1969 Jrnl. Amer. Folklore 82 71 The fortuneteller would insert an old-fashioned door key between the pages of the Bible, with the pin and bit end marking Ruth's famous sentiment. 2003 Pract. Woodworking Nov. 70/4 Suppliers usually give the width and height of a lock although many also enquire as to the distance to the lock pin. f. Nautical. (a) A peg fixed in the side of a rowing boat as a fulcrum for the oar; = thole n.1 1. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > equipment of vessel > rowing apparatus > [noun] > rowlock > thole-pin tholec725 thole-pin1598 pin1705 oar-peg1875 oar-thole1889 1705 tr. G. Guillet de Saint-Georges Gentleman's Dict. iii Thowles, are those Pins in the Gunnel of a Boat, against which the Rowers bear the Oars. 1760 Naval Chron. 2 155 Their oars rested on a Pin at the Top of the Boat-side. 1832 H. Martineau Ella of Garveloch ii. 32 How are you to row? The pins are out that should fix your oars. 1886 R. L. Stevenson Kidnapped xxvi. 274 We heard the grinding of oars upon the rowing-pins. 1939 P. Gallagher My Story 208 We want John's oars and pins. 1996 R. Mabey Flora Britannica 344/2 The ‘thowelds’ or pins for the oars were cut by the fishermen themselves from the ‘boontree’ bushes. (b) A peg or bolt used on board a vessel for any of various purposes (see quots.). Cf. belaying-pin at belaying n. 2. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > equipment of vessel > other equipment of vessel > [noun] > pin for coiling of running ropes pin1762 belaying-pin1836 jack-pin1867 society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > equipment of vessel > other equipment of vessel > [noun] > capstan > bars fittings of bars pin1850 poppet1850 swifter1883 poppet hole1886 1762 Gen. Hist. Sieges & Battles VI. ii. 148 Blocks. Are fitted with shivers and pins for running rigging to go through, and are of different kinds. 1850 J. Greenwood Sailor's Sea-bk. 137 Pins, short iron rods fixed occasionally in the drum-heads of capstans, and through the ends of the bars, to prevent their unshipping. 1867 W. H. Smyth & E. Belcher Sailor's Word-bk. 161 Capstan-bars..are..held in their places in the drumhead holes, by little iron bolts called capstan or safety pins. 1908 Man. Seamanship (1915) I. iii. 121 The pin of the sheave working on the iron strop inside the shell is much stronger. 1999 Canad. Yachting (Nexis) Mar. 22/6 Tape all exposed pins and square edges to prevent sails and running rigging from chafing. g. Joinery. Each of the projecting pieces between which the tails of a dovetail joint fit. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > constructing or working with wood > [noun] > wooden structures or wooden parts of > means of fitting together > types of joint > projecting part of joint tenon14.. tenora1485 rabbet1678 dovetail1691 relish1703 teaze-tenon1703 coak1794 table1794 tusk tenon1825 tonguing1841 tongue1842 pin1847 cog1858 stub-tenon1875 cross-tongue1876 1847 A. C. Smeaton Builder's Pocket Man. (new ed.) 88 The projecting piece..is called the pin of the dovetail; and the aperture into which it is fitted..is called the socket. 1875 J. Lukin Carpentry & Joinery 64 Cabinet-makers..do not often make broad dovetails, as they make the pins narrower and further apart in general than joiners. 1966 A. W. Lewis Gloss. Woodworking Terms 22 Dovetail, joint in which the ‘tail’, shaped like a dove's spread tail, fits between correspondingly shaped pins. 2002 Better Homes & Gardens: Wood June 18/1 You can manually vary the pin spacing by cutting pins and tails one at a time. h. Each of the metal projections of a plug, thermionic valve, etc., which makes an electrical connection when inserted into a socket. Cf. two-pin adj. at two adj., n., and adv. Compounds 1a, three-pin adj. at three adj. and n. Compounds 3a(a). ΘΚΠ the world > matter > physics > electromagnetic radiation > electricity > electrical appliances or devices > [noun] > electric plug > projection square pin1867 pin1888 1888 D. Salomons Managem. Accumulators (ed. 3) ii. ii. 98 The portable lamp has a reel of twin wire at its base, with the ends of wires going to the lamp-holder and a connector respectively. This connector fits the wall plug by pushing in the two pins it carries. 1902 W. C. Clinton Electr. Wiring iv. 85 The flexible..terminates in two split pins, which are a spring fit into two tubular sockets. 1924 Wireless World 13 Aug. 569/1 Owing to the length of these [valve] pins, a bad fit will result if the holes are not perfectly square through the ebonite. 1945 F. Wiseman Penguin Handyman i. 19 One end is connected to the earth pin in the three-pin plug, whilst the other end is connected to the metal housing or frame of the fire. 1995 Macworld Oct. 61/1 The 9500 marks the shift to 70ns, 168-pin Dual In-line Memory Modules (DIMMs) for system RAM. i. Surgery. A metal rod used to immobilize the parts of a fractured bone to allow them to set. ΚΠ 1893 Lancet 10 June 1377/2 The object of this paper is to demonstrate a method of preventing or of removing shortening after fracture of the long bones by the use of..rigid metallic pins, inserted subcutaneously. 1957 J. C. Adams Outl. Fractures vi. 233 The results of this simple method of treatment compare favourably with those of the more elaborate techniques—such as mechanical traction through transfixion pins. 1967 Times 24 Feb. 20/5 Subject to the removal of a pin, the leg was better. 1996 Focus Apr. 8/1 Screws, pins and other means of fixing fractures could soon be replaced by an injection of liquid bone. j. A metal peg which holds down the activating lever on a hand grenade, and which must be pulled out in order to detonate the explosive. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > missile > [noun] > grenade > pin of grenade pin1909 1909 Times 11 Feb. 7/6 The total failure of the grenade to explode when the safety pin had not been withdrawn. 1920 A. R. Bond Inventions of Great War ii. 29 The Mills hand-grenade..was provided with a lever which was normally strapped down and held by means of a safety-pin. 1972 ‘H. Calvin’ Take Two Popes xv. 182 Soldiers..ready to pull out grenade pins with their teeth. 1991 Combat & Survival Nov. 18/1 If your mittens are wet when throwing a grenade, it may freeze to them—think of the effect of that if you had pulled the pin! k. Architecture. Each of the supports of an arch. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > architecture > arch > [noun] > parts of coin1350 pendant1359 voussoir1359 springer1435 spandrel1477 spring?1553 pitch1615 kneeler1617 gimmalsa1652 face1664 of the third point1672 turn1677 sweep1685 hance1700 skew-back1700 summering1700 springing1703 tympan1704 hip1726 reins1726 rib1726 third point1728 quoin1730 archivolt1731 opening1739 soffit1739 shoulder1744 extrados1772 intrados1772 haunch1793 arch-stone1828 twist1840 coign1843 architrave1849 escoinçon1867 pulvino1907 pin1928 1928 Daily Tel. 7 Feb. 14/1 The arch is a two ‘pin’ crescent structure, and the distance from ‘pin’ to ‘pin’..is 531 ft. 1931 Helena (Montana) Independent 20 May 4/6 Its [sc. the Goodyear hangar's] width, 325 feet, from center to center of arch pins. 1998 Australian (Nexis) 15 May 44 The basic structure [sc. of a train station] is a flattened three-pin arch consisting of two bowstring trusses. 2. As a marker or obstacle, esp. in certain sports and games. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > drink > containers for drink > drinking vessel > [noun] > vessel with measuring pegs > measuring peg pin?a1300 peg1617 ?a1300 in E. Stengel Codicem Manu Scriptum Digby 86 (1871) 100 (MED) Nou shulen þis wormes wonien þe wiþinne; Ne shalt þou neuere hailen wiþ nappe to þe pinne. c1330 (?a1300) Sir Tristrem (1886) l. 1663 (MED) Þe coupe was richeli wrouȝt, Of gold it was, þe pin. 1592 T. Nashe Pierce Penilesse (Brit. Libr. copy) sig. G3 King Edgar,..caused certaine yron cups to be chayned..at euerie Vintners doore, with yron pins in them, to stint euery man how much he should drinke: and he that went beyond one of those pins forfeyted a pennie for euerie draught. 1655 T. Fuller Church-hist. Brit. iii. 17 That Priests should not go to Publick Drinkings, nec ad pinnas bibant, nor drink at Pins. This was a Dutch trick..of Artificial Drunkenness, out of a Cup marked with certain Pins, and he accounted the Man, who could nick the Pin, drinking even unto it. 1673 Holborn Drollery 76 Edgar away with pins i' th' Cup To spoil our drinking whole ones up. 1700 J. Tyrrell Gen. Hist. Eng. II. 126 Men were forbidden to drink at one Draught below certain Pins, that were ordered to be fixed on the inside of the Cups and Goblets. 1708 J. Kersey Dict. Anglo-Britannicum To Nick the Pin, to drink just to the Pin plac'd about the middle of a Wooden Bowl or Cup. 1851 H. W. Longfellow Golden Legend i. 31 No jovial din Of drinking wassail to the pin. 1898 J. H. Ramsay Found. Eng. II. xvi. 246 They [sc. monks] must not attend carousals (potationes), nor ‘drink to the pin’. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > competitive shooting > archery > [noun] > archery target > parts of pin1584 gold1798 eye1818 blue1830 bull's-eye1833 garland1847 petticoat1864 bull1900 1584 W. Elderton in J. O. Halliwell Yorks. Anthol. (1851) 6 Walmsley did the vpshot win, With both his shafts so near the pin. 1597 W. Shakespeare Romeo & Juliet ii. iii. 14 The verie pinne of his heart cleft with the blinde bow-boyes but-shaft. View more context for this quotation 1642 T. Fuller Holy State v. xvii. 426 To cleave the pinne and do the deed. 1724 A. Crossly Signification Most Things in Heraldry 41 The same being directed by the Hand of a cunning and skillful Archer, it doth clave the Pin, or mark often times in Two. 1860 F. J. Child Eng. & Sc. Ballads V. (Gloss.) 445/1 Preke, the pin in the centre of a target. c. Billiards and Pool. A peg placed on the table as a hazard. Cf. bar billiards n. at bar n.1 Compounds 2, pin pool n. at Compounds 2. Now rare. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > billiards, pool, or snooker > [noun] > table > peg kinga1672 pin1678 1678 D. Manly Hexham's Woorden-boeck (rev. ed.) Pen op de Trock-Tafel, the Pin upon a Billyard table. 1864 W. B. Dick Amer. Hoyle 428 The game of Pin Pool is played with two white balls and one red, together with five small wooden pins. 1890 Cent. Dict. XVI. 4619/1 Pin-pool, a game played on a billiard table with three balls, and five small pins. 2003 Western Morning News (Plymouth) (Nexis) 15 Aug. 11 I'm not pretending that the three mushroom shaped pins which hovered over the holes in bar billiards were iconoclastic of a happier age. d. Quoits. The peg at which quoits are aimed; = hob n.2 2. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > quoits > [noun] > peg hob1589 block1598 pin1763 tee1789 pinhead1897 1763 H. S. J. Giral del Pino Dict. Eng. & Spanish II. (at cited word) To pitch upon the pin at quoits. 1857 Chambers's Information for People (new ed.) II. 704/2 The quoit being delivered..with a steady aim at the pin. 1897 S. R. Crockett Lads' Love xviii. 190 His first quoit fell within three inches of the pin. 1975 Oxf. Compan. Sports & Games 806/1 Each player, standing not more than 4 ft. 6 in. (1.372 m.) from his pin and in line with it, had to throw the quoit such that it lodged in the clay as near as possible to the hob. 2003 Philadelphia Inquirer (Nexis) 4 July d1 The distance between pins..is 40 feet for horseshoes, 21 for quoits. e. Golf. A pole bearing a small flag, used to mark the position of a hole. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > golf > golf course > [noun] > hole for ball > pin marking hole flagstick1871 pin1897 1897 Times 21 May 11/6 A magnificent cleek shot which laid the ball eight or nine yards from the pin. 1938 E. C. Bentley Trent Intervenes 38 A lovely brassie it was, too—though lucky. Rolled to within two feet of the pin. 1971 ‘D. Halliday’ Dolly & Doctor Bird xv. 215 Arrived on the green, he pursued the ball round the pin..and finally sank it at nine. 1993 Sun 31 May 32/1 A shot judged to 99.9 per cent perfection fell just seven feet from the pin. 3. Various general and technical uses. Also in figurative context. ΚΠ a1325 Gloss. W. de Bibbesworth (Cambr.) (1929) 844 Ki par deuz heces [glossed] pinnes [v.rr. axtre pinnes, axeltre nailes or pynnes] le tient ouwel. c1395 G. Chaucer Squire's Tale 127 And turne agayn with writhyng of a pyn [v.rr. pinne; penne]. Promptorium Parvulorum (Harl. 221) 390 Pegge, or pynne of tymbyr, cavilla. 1489 W. Caxton tr. C. de Pisan Bk. Fayttes of Armes ii. xxiv. 138 Pinnes of wode to ioine the palys. 1527 in W. L. Nash Churchwardens' Acct. Bk. St. Giles, Reading (1851) 31 For lathes, nayles,..tile pynnes for the new hous. ?1578 W. Patten Let. Entertainm. Killingwoorth 79 This Tent had seauen cart lode of pynz perteining too it. 1581 R. Norman Newe Attractiue 26 By sharping and dullyng of the Pinne, you maie make your Compasse fit for all Weathers. 1607 J. Norden Surueyors Dialogue iii. 125 As if a man should build a house, without pinne or nayle. 1664 J. Evelyn Sylva (1679) 27 Oak is excellent for..pinns and peggs for tyling, &c. a1713 T. Ellwood Hist. Life (1765) 98 The Keys were hung upon a Pin in the Hall. a1790 B. Franklin Autobiogr. (1981) 147 The fore and hind Wheels separated by taking out the Pin which united the two Parts of the Perch. 1825 ‘J. Nicholson’ Operative Mechanic 158 The lower frame-work..is connected by means of the pins or wedges. 1884 F. J. Britten Watch & Clockmakers' Handbk. (new ed.) 51 A..cylinder studded with pins for lifting the hammers in a chiming train. 1904 L. F. Baum Marvelous Land of Oz 16 By whittling a new and stouter pin for the shoulder-joint, he repaired the injury..successfully. 2000 C. Donaldson Skydive 53/1 A shackle..connected by a tape lanyard to a ring around the reserve ripcord cable, secured some distance above the pin. II. Something regarded as resembling a pin or peg. (In earlier uses after branch I.; in some later uses after branch III.) 4. A natural structure having the form of a pin. a. Medicine. An opacity of the cornea; the condition of having such a lesion; (perhaps also) a cataract. Chiefly in pin and web n. (also web and pin) (perhaps) a corneal opacity accompanied by more generalized clouding of the cornea or by conjunctivitis or pterygium (cf. web n. 12a) (also figurative). Now historical. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > disorders of eye > [noun] > film or web filmOE rima1382 weba1398 mailc1440 pin and weba1450 nebula1661 weft1661 haze1820 OE Recipe (Vitell. C.iii) in T. O. Cockayne Leechdoms, Wortcunning, & Starcraft (1864) I. 374 Ðis is seo seleste eahsalf wið ehwærce, & wið miste, & wið penne. a1400 in D. A. Trotter Multilingualism in Later Medieval Brit. (2000) 140 Item a le teye anglice ‘pyn’ medicine eprové. ?c1425 tr. Guy de Chauliac Grande Chirurgie (Paris) (1971) 458 (MED) Alle medecynes þat fordone þe pynne [?a1425 N.Y. Acad. Med. vngle; L. vngulam], sebel, and þe scabbe ben accordynge to webbes or spottes. a1450 Late Middle Eng. Treat. on Horses (1978) 145 (MED) Caste þe pouder in þe hors eye, & it wol destrie web & pynne. a1500 Med. Recipes (Sloane 3153) in F. Heinrich Mittelengl. Medizinbuch (1896) 101 (MED) For to make a precious water to clarifie þe iȝe of ony euyl þat is þer ine, & to distrie perle, hawe, pin, or web. 1541 T. Elyot Castel of Helthe (new ed.) 79 By these destillations or reumes hapneth many diseases..as..pynne and webe in the eyes. 1581 J. Bell tr. W. Haddon & J. Foxe Against Jerome Osorius iii. f. 280v But with what eyes doth he see this? with that left eye I thinke, which is couered with a pynne and webbe of desire to slaunder. 1608 W. Shakespeare King Lear xi. 106 This is the foule fiend fliberdegibek,..he giues the web, & the pin, squemes the eye, and makes the hare lip. 1672 J. Josselyn New-Englands Rarities 96 To take off a Pin and Web, or any kind of Filme growing over the Eye. 1725 R. Bradley Chomel's Dictionaire Œconomique Pearl, a Disease in an Horse's Eye, under which Head we shall comprehend Pins, Spots, Webs, &c. 1858 R. G. Mayne Expos. Lexicon Med. Sci. (1860) Pin and Web, an old popular name for an opacity of the cornea. 1922 Glasgow Herald 25 July 6 The nirles were a form of measles; the blabs, nettlerash;..pin-and-web, cataract. 1928 Lancet 1 Dec. 1152/2 Pin and Webbe almost certainly referred to corneal ulcers of various kinds. 1998 F. Getz Med. in Eng. Middle Ages iv. 77 A child who did not follow his surgeon's advice for treatment of ‘pin and web’ (an eye disease) occasioned a suit in Chancery to defend the surgeon's reputation. b. A pinnacle, point, or apex; the peak of a mountain. Now Irish English.In quot. a1475 at sense 1c with reference to Luke 4:9, where the Vulgate has Latin pinna. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > high position > [noun] > highest point or top > pointed pin?a1475 apex1590 punctilio1601 cone1611 cuspis1646 cusp1647 peak1785 ?a1475 Ludus Coventriae (1922) 197 Vp to þis pynnacle now go we; I xal þe sett on þe hyȝest pynne. 1792 D. A. Beaufort Mem. Map Ireland 79 The vast ridge called Beannabeola, or the Twelve Pins, which is a well-known sea-mark. 1827 W. Tennant Papistry Storm'd vi. 184 The sun was cockin' now upon The vera pin o' Mid-day's cone. 1892 J. Barlow Irish Idylls i. 2 Those twelve towering Connemarese peaks, which in Saxon speech have dwindled into Pins. 1961 L. D. Stamp Gloss. Geogr. Terms 364/1 Pin, (Irish dialect) a peak, but rarely used except for the Twelve Pins of Connemara. 1997 Irish Times (Nexis) 28 July (Weekend section) 62 Not one of them had seen my beloved mountains. Nobody had seen them for days. Not even one Pin. (a) A small knot in wood, resembling a peg driven in. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > part of plant > part of tree or woody plant > wood > [noun] > knot knara1382 warrec1407 knob1440 knot?1523 knur1542 pin1545 knag1555 snar1611 bur-knot1618 bur1725 gnarl1824 burl1885 snarla1891 1545 R. Ascham Toxophilus ii. f. 6v The boughe commonlye is verye knotty, and full of pinnes. 1585 J. Higgins tr. Junius Nomenclator 144/1 The pinne or hard corne of a knot in timber, which hurteth sawes. (b) Metallurgy. A hard spot occurring in steel during the process of manufacture. Cf. earlier pinny adj. 2. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > metal > steel > [noun] > faults in steel pin1816 roke1867 fish-eye1882 1816 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 106 114 Any irregularity in the annealing [of glass], or any imperfections analogous to what workmen call pins in pieces of steel, will thus be rendered visible. 1832 D. Brewster Lett. Nat. Magic v. 117 When the steel has hard portions called pins by the workmen. 1884 C. G. W. Lock Workshop Receipts 3rd Ser. 279/2 Free from those hard bright spots which workmen call ‘pins’. (a) A hard swelling on the underside of a hawk's foot; a disease characterized by such swellings; = pin gout n. at Compounds 2. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > animal disease or disorder > disorders of birds > [noun] > disorders of hawks crampc1430 frouncea1450 teena1450 crayc1450 ryec1450 aggresteyne1486 agrum1486 fallera1486 filanders1486 gall1575 pantas1575 pin1575 pin gout1575 stroke1575 apoplexy1614 crock1614 formica1614 privy evil1614 back-worma1682 verol1688 croak1707 1575 G. Turberville Bk. Faulconrie 260 Of the Pin in the Hawkes foote, a disease much like the corne in the foote of a man. 1614 S. Latham Falconry ii. xxxv. 134 With a sharpe knife search and pare out the pinne, or core, or corne. 1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory ii. 237/2 The Pynne. 1773 J. Campbell Treat. Mod. Faulconry 254 To cure the Pin. The pin is a disease which rises in the feet of hawks, from their restlessness in the mew. (b) A corn on the toe or foot. Obsolete. rare. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > disorders of visible parts > skin disorders > [noun] > hardening or thickening > hard skin > corn agnaileOE cornc1440 werrock?a1513 wrang-nail?c1530 core1532 crest1569 pin1611 warnel1611 clavus1807 1611 R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues Frouelle, an agnell, pinne, or warnell in the toe. e. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > part of plant > thorn or prickle > [noun] thornc950 pileOE prickOE pikec1300 spine1430 pricklec1484 brodc1550 sting1567 point1604 spears1607 stob1637 pin1650 pricket1663 spinet1672 aculeus1702 pricker1743 spicula1753 acicula1784 acicule1800 acicle1852 thornlet1882 sticker1889 1650 J. Trapp Clavis to Bible (Gen. xiii. 6) 110 There are pins in all the worlds roses. (b) The incipient burr or blossom of a hop plant. rare. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > particular plants > plants and herbs > climbing or creeping plants > [noun] > hop-plant > parts of hopc1440 gut1573 bell1594 hop-boll1652 hop-vine1707 bine1727 hop-bind1733 bind1792 hop-bine1813 lupulin1823 bur1832 rough bine1846 pin1885 1885 Times 10 Aug. 8/6 Hops... The development of the burr has also been checked, and the pin has dropped in many instances. 1900 Daily News 23 July 2/4 The hop plant has grown well this week, and the bine is already putting out pin for burr. f. Chiefly British. A projecting hip bone of a horse or cow. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > animal body > general parts > constituent materials > [noun] > hip bone pin bone1640 pin1703 huggin1740 the world > life > the body > structural parts > bone or bones > bony support for limbs > pelvis > [noun] > hip bone hip boneeOE coxec1400 haunch-bonec1405 huck-bonec1440 huckle-bone1529 sciatic?1541 coxendix1615 os coxae1634 pin bone1640 pin1703 coxa1706 huggin1740 the world > animals > mammals > group Ungulata (hoofed) > family Equidae (general equines) > body or parts of horse > [noun] > hip or type of > hip bone pin bone1640 pin1703 huggin1740 the world > animals > mammals > group Ungulata (hoofed) > group Ruminantia (sheep, goats, cows, etc.) > bos taurus or ox > [noun] > (miscellaneous) parts of > hip or thigh bone pin1703 hook1808 hook-bone1844 1703 London Gaz. No. 3886/4 A grey Nag,..gall'd upon the near Pin. 1726 Brice's Weekly Jrnl. 25 Mar. 3 A Brown Bay Nag..thin behind, the Pins standing a little out. 1808 C. Vancouver Gen. View Agric. Devon xiv. 327 Line of the back straight..lying completely on a level with the pin or huckles. 1903 Eng. Dial. Dict. IV. 507/1 A cow ‘high in the pins’. 1995 Farmers Weekly 21 July 46/1 Hip width on a Holstein cow can vary up to 325mm (13in), claims Mr Hobby, whereas pin and thurl width only alter by 75mm (3in) and 50mm (2in) respectively. g. Botany. A pin-eyed plant or flower. ΚΠ 1956 C. D. Darlington Chromosome Bot. vi. 146 The earliest seedlings [of Primula sinensis] varied in two respects. They were heterostyle and depended on inter-crossing of the pin and thrum types. 1964 F. H. Perring et al. Flora of Cambridgeshire 163 Nymphoides peltrata... The handsome yellow flowers are heterostylous; it is interesting that only the ‘pin’ form has been found in the county. 1984 D. Briggs & S. M. Walters Plant Variation & Evolution (ed. 2) vii. 121 The pollinations ‘pin’ x ‘thrum’ and ‘thrum’ x ‘pin’ yielded good seed set. 5. Other concrete uses. a. colloquial. Chiefly in plural. A leg. on one's pins: walking, up and about, in good health. shaky (also firm, etc.) on one's pins: shaky (also firm, etc.) when walking, or in one's general constitution; also in figurative context. ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > external parts of body > limb > leg > [noun] shanka900 legc1300 grainsa1400 limbc1400 foot?a1425 stumpa1500 pin?1515 pestlea1529 boughc1550 stamp1567 understander1583 pile1584 supporters1601 walker?1611 trestle1612 fetlock1645 pedestal1695 drumstick1770 gam1785 timber1807 tram1808–18 fork1812 prop1817 nethers1822 forkals1828 understanding1828 stick1830 nether person1835 locomotive1836 nether man1846 underpinning1848 bender1849 Scotch peg1857 Scotch1859 under-pinner1859 stem1860 Coryate's compasses1864 peg1891 wheel1927 shaft1935 ?1515 Hyckescorner (de Worde) sig. C.iv Than wolde I renne thyder on my pynnes As fast as I myght go. 1573 G. Harvey Let.-bk. (1884) 14 He was now altogither set on his merri pinnes and walkd on his stateli pantocles. 1628 J. Earle Micro-cosmogr. xxi. sig. E1 His body is not set vpon nice Pinnes. 1781 J. Burgoyne Lord of Manor iii. i. 77 I never saw a fellow better set upon his pins. 1829 P. Egan Boxiana New Ser. II. 10 With all his struggling to right himself, he could not recover the use of his pins. 1838 C. Dickens Oliver Twist I. viii. 60 Up with you on your pins. There! Now then! 1890 Harper's Mag. Jan. 269/2 Glad to hear that he is on his pins yet; he might have pegged out in ten years, you know. 1917 H. H. Richardson Fortunes Richard Mahony I. iv. viii. 355 Give your old pin here, and let me poultice it. 1960 M. Spark Ballad of Peckham Rye vii. 150 ‘Nelly's had a few,’ Humphrey said... ‘She's a bit shaky on the pins tonight.’ 1995 Sugar June 84/1 Tony reckons he's got a king pair of pins. ‘The best part of my body is my legs,’ he says not very sheepishly. b. A small cask or keg holding half a firkin (4½ gallons: approx. 20.5 litres). ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > receptacle or container > vessel > barrel or cask > [noun] > of specific size kilderkin1390 tierce1531 pin1570 quardeel1681 caroteel1704 queue1739 anker?c1750 eighteener1870 1570 in J. Raine Wills & Inventories N. Counties Eng. (1835) I. 341 iij pynnes for caryage of drenk a feld. 1610 Brechin Test. II. in Dict. Older Sc. Tongue f. 90 Thair is sum laikage with tua laiche rynning penis of Frenche wyne. 1699 B. E. New Dict. Canting Crew Pin, a small Vessel containing Four Gallons and a half, or the Eighth part of a Barrel. 1743 W. Ellis Suppl. to London & Country Brewer (ed. 2) 293 Powder one of the Balls and put it into a Pin or Half a Firkin. 1814 Sporting Mag. 43 112 He used to have a pin of beer. c1900 Advt. in N.E.D. (1906) Beer in Cask. Discount for Cash on or before Delivery; 3d. Pin; 6d. Firkin; 1s. Kilderkin. 1968 J. Arnold Shell Bk. Country Crafts 293 Each size of cask must have its respective size of chive and croze, i.e. pin, firkin [etc.]. 2003 Times (Nexis) 22 Feb. (Weekend section) 15 I make two casks a day, usually firkins, which take nine gallons, and sometimes pins (4.5 gallons) and kilderkins (18 gallons). c. A skittle; a point gained by knocking down a skittle. In plural: the game of skittles. Cf. ninepins n., ten-pins n. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > ninepins or ten-pins > [noun] kaylesc1325 skaylesa1566 ninepins1580 pin1580 skittles1634 kittle-pins1649 skayle-pins1656 nine pegs1675 four corners1730 Dutch pins1801 Dutch rubbers1801 long bowling1801 ten-pins1807 squails1847 ten-pin bowling1934 society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > ninepins or ten-pins > [noun] > pin(s) kaylesc1325 kayle-pin1621 ninepins1664 skittle1680 pin1694 kittles1697 1580 C. Hollyband Treasurie French Tong Quilles, as iouër aux quilles, to play at nine pins. 1600 S. Rowlands Letting of Humors Blood Satyre iv. sig. D8v To play at..nine holes, or ten pinnes. 1694 S. Johnson Notes Pastoral Let. 39 A cleaverer Tip..than taking out the Middle Pin and throwing down none of the rest. 1785 F. Grose Classical Dict. Vulgar Tongue at Tip Tipping, at these games [sc. skittles], is slightly touching the tops of the pins with the bowl. 1822 Sat. Evening Post (Philadelphia) 17 Aug. 2/3 The pins had lines attached to them by which the fellows employed in setting them up for the players could pull them down so as to win the bet. 1881 F. Young Every Man his own Mechanic §86 The large pins used in skittle playing. 1928 Daily Express 31 Mar. 3/4 Mine host and Mr. Herbert swung their arms, flung the cheeses, and skittled the pins. 1994 Bonnyville (Alberta) Nouvelle 15 Nov. a6/6 Sunday saw qualifiers for the Sun Bowl roll off for the most pins over average. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > board game > chess > [noun] > pieces > a piece chess1303 chequer1474 chessmen1474 piece1562 pin1688 chess man1853 1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory (1905) iii. xvi. 66/1 The King is the first and highest of all the chesse pins. 1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory (1905) iii. xvi. 66/1 The Queene is the next pin in height to the King. 1785 W. Cowper Task vi. 271 At the chequer'd board..with a hand Trembling, as if eternity were hung In balance on his conduct of a pin. e. Cookery. = rolling pin n. 2. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > food manufacture and preparation > equipment for food preparation > [noun] > baker's equipment > rolling-pin rollera1425 rolling pin1563 paste roller1648 paste-pin1752 pin1822 1822 W. Combe Hist. Johnny Quæ Genus iii. 80 He, with a pressing arm, embrac'd The busy cook's well-fatten'd waist, As with her pin she plied the paste. 1894 Cassell's Univ. Cookery Bk. 740 Keep the board and pin well floured. 1957 Tri City Herald (Pasco, Washington) 21 Nov. (Food section) 17/7 Flip one side of the pastry circle over the pin. 1996 Sainsbury's Mag. Jan. 94/1 Roll the pastry out into a circle.., then transfer it, rolling it over the pin, to the tin. f. A knitting needle; = knitting-pin n. at knitting n. Compounds 2. Frequently in plural. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > textile manufacture > manufacture textile fabric or that which consists of > manufacture of textile fabric > [noun] > knitting > needle knitting-prick1597 knitting needle1598 needle1598 wire?1746 pina1825 prick1838 steel1839 knitting-wire1850 knitting-pin1857 a1825 R. Forby Vocab. E. Anglia (1830) at Shiften To shift stitches from one pin to another in knitting. 1849 E. Copley Comprehensive Knitting-bk. 12 By reversing the right hand pin, so inserting it in two stitches, not in front but at the back of the left hand pin, and knitting them off as one. 1897 Tit Bits 4 Dec. 175/3 As the old lady put down her pins, the Princess took them up, and finished the stocking-heel. 1920 W. Davis Hosiery Manuf. ii. 11 If it is desired to make plain work on two hand pins, the worker..must push the needle into the old stitch in the reverse direction. 2002 Herald (Glasgow) (Nexis) 21 June 18 Stitch 'n' Bitch sessions could soon reach Scottish women, and Glaswegian men may yet dare to bare their pins in public. 6. Extended figurative uses. a. A point, matter, principle, etc., upon which something depends. Frequently with hang. Cf. peg n.1 4. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > importance > [noun] > that which is important > essential or central > upon which something depends harrec1000 pina1538 key1559 pinch1581 axle-treec1600 axlea1634 fulcrum1668 keystone1722 pivot1748 turning-point1836 landmark1859 axis1860 linchpin1954 a1538 T. Starkey Dial. Pole & Lupset (1989) 109 A grete parte of thys matur hangyth apon one pene. 1649 Εἰκων Βασιλικη xxiv. 236 A great part of whose piety hung upon that popular pin of rayling against, and contemning the Government and Liturgy of this Church. 1749 D. Hartley Observ. Man ii. ii. 116 That Point, being settled, becomes a capital Pin, upon which all the Pagan Chronology depends. 1851 E. S. Wortley Trav. in U.S. I. x. 96 I recollect Lady—telling me how her life had once hung on a pin. 1881 R. L. Stevenson Virginibus Puerisque 164 And when the business is done, there is sore havoc made in other people's lives, and a pin knocked out by which many subsidiary friendships hung together. 1989 Trans. Inst. Brit. Geographers 14 5/2 It is still a useful pin on which to hang this disquisition on Welsh towns. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > degree or relative amount of a quality, action, etc. > [noun] prickOE degreec1380 greec1386 largenessa1398 rate1523 size1534 pitcha1568 pin1584 scantling1586 intension1604 assize1625 proportion1641 process1655 to a certain extent1671 intensity1794 level1897 1584 R. Greene Myrrour of Modestie sig. Biii The Iudges..seeing she had infringed their reasons, by the power of the law thought to wrest hir vpon a higher pin. a1617 S. Hieron Penance for Sinne in Wks. (1620) II. 141 The prodigal sonne..sets his course euen vpon the racke, and stretcheth it out to the vtmost pinne. 1731 ‘C. Crambo’ Mr. Bowman's Serm. 28 To set ourselves on the same Pin With Paul, and Peter. 1776 C. Keith Farmer's Ha' 16 They mak a loud and joyfu' din, For ilka heart is raised a pin. 1804 W. Tarras Poems 121 It twines my heart-strings up to sic a pin, I b'lieve my saul will bout out through my skin. III. A small, thin, pointed piece of metal. 7. A small, thin, rigid piece of metal with a sharp point at one end and a flattened or rounded head at the other, used to hold objects in place or together, esp. pieces of fabric while they are fitted or sewn. Also: a fastener of similar shape, sometimes with a decorative head, used for securing the hair, a hat, scarf, etc., or worn as an ornament.drawing-, hat-, scarf-pin, etc.: see the first element. See also hairpin n., safety pin n. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > beautification > types of ornamentation > jewellery > brooch or pin > [noun] preenOE brooch?c1225 pina1275 lacec1384 ouchec1384 troche1434 fermilletc1475 bague1477 fermail1480 fibula1673 stickpin1890 society > occupation and work > equipment > building and constructing equipment > fastenings > [noun] > pin or peg preenOE prickOE kevel1251 pina1275 prag1354 key1434 peg1440 tholec1440 thole-pinc1440 lock1514 cotterel1570 pivot1730 pinning1742 steady pin1791 gib1795 needle1811 lockdown1832 cotter1842 peglet1890 pushpin1903 society > occupation and work > equipment > building and constructing equipment > fastenings > [noun] > pin or peg > wire pina1275 the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > textile manufacture > manufacture textile fabric or that which consists of > sewing or ornamenting textile fabric > [noun] > sewing > equipment for > pin pina1275 middlings1543 minikin1574 corking-pin?1690 lill1882 a1275 in C. Brown Eng. Lyrics 13th Cent. (1932) 47 (MED) Þenne sulen woremes woniin þe wid-innen, Ne salt þu þe nout weriin wid neppe ne wid pinne. 1343–4 in C. M. Woolgar Househ. Accts. Medieval Eng. (1992) I. 240 Et paie pur pinnes a ma dame v d. a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) (1969) Isa. iii. 22 In þat dai þe lord shal don awei þe ournement of shon & boces and beeyes..& sheetis & pynnes [a1425 L.V. needlis; L. acus] & sheweris. ?c1430 (c1383) J. Wyclif Eng. Wks. (1880) 12 (MED) Þei becomen pedderis, berynge knyues, pursis, pynnys, and girdlis and spices and sylk..for wymmen. 1496 (c1410) Dives & Pauper (de Worde) vii. xii. 295 A lady..can pynne her hode ayenst the wynde with a smale pynne of laton .xii. for a peny. 1545 Rates Custome House sig. c ij Pynnes the dossen thousande ii.s. a1593 C. Marlowe Edward II (1594) sig. D2v He would take exceptions at my buttons, And being like pins heads, blame me for the bignesse, Which made me curate-like in mine attire. a1640 P. Massinger City-Madam (1658) iv. iv. 76 A silver pin Headed with a pearl worth three-pence. 1668 S. Pepys Diary 2 Jan. (1976) IX. 7 He that will not stoop for a pin, will never be worth a pound. 1712 J. Addison Spectator No. 295. ¶4 A Pin a Day, says our frugal Proverb, is a Groat a Year. 1765 L. Sterne Life Tristram Shandy VIII. xvi. 44 Uncle Toby always took care..to have a plan of the place, fasten'd up with two or three pins at the top. 1806 C. Hutton Course Math. (ed. 5) I. 80 With the point of a fine pin or pricker, prick through all the corners of the plan to be copied. 1879 Mrs. A. G. F. E. James Indian Househ. Managem. 25 You must..have a work-case with thread, cotton, needles, pins, thimble, scissors, knife, and pencil. 1930 Times 17 Mar. 15/6 On the black grosgrain ribbon hat is a jewelled pin. 1988 N. Lowndes Chekago ii. 69 She nodded, fingering her hair and fastening a stray piece with a pin. 8. a pin's head (also point): a type of something very small, insignificant, or worthless. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > importance > unimportance > [noun] > that which is unimportant > of little worth ivy-leafc1000 needle?c1225 sloec1250 peasea1275 strawc1290 bean1297 nutc1300 buttonc1330 leekc1330 trifle1375 cress1377 goose-wing1377 sop1377 niflec1395 vetcha1400 a pin's head (also point)c1450 trump1513 plack1530 toy1530 blue point1532 grey groat1546 cherry-stone1607 jiggalorum1613 candle-enda1625 peppercorn1638 sponge1671 sneeshing1686 snottera1689 catchpenny1705 potato1757 snuff1809 pinhead1828 traneen1837 a hill of beans1863 gubbins1918 society > occupation and work > equipment > building and constructing equipment > fastenings > [noun] > pin or peg > parts of pin a pin's head (also point)c1450 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 c1450 C. d'Orleans Poems (1941) 7 If she wolde..But graunt me, loo, liche to a pynnys hed Part of hiris. 1526 W. Bonde Pylgrimage of Perfection i. sig. Bviiv It is nat so moche as a pynnes poynte, compared to the hole erth. 1622 J. Mabbe tr. M. Alemán Rogue i. 63 It had not beene a Pins-poynt matter. I should haue set light by it. 1698 S. Crisp Christ Exalted 61 Man's Law will not hang a Man for stealing a Pins head. 1749 J. Cleland Mem. Woman of Pleasure II. 224 Not one had made a pin's point impression on a heart impenetrable to the true love-passion. 1774 O. Goldsmith Hist. Earth VII. 301 The eggs are no larger than pins points. 1805 G. Colman Who wants Guinea? iii. i. 31 Andrew. That's tellings.—He ha' put I upon honour. Mrs. Glaston. Put you upon a pin's head! I wou'dn't give a farthing for your honour. 1879 Mrs. A. G. F. E. James Indian Househ. Managem. 76 We did not lose the value of a pin's head. 1925 Daily Tribune (Wisconsin Rapids) 19 Sept. 6/5 Folks who wouldn't steal a pin's point from anybody, will take everything they can from a hotel. 2003 Age (Melbourne) (Nexis) 23 July 13 Now—being as fair as possible to the Government—this is dancing on a pin's head. 9. Originally and chiefly North American. A badge with a hinged, pointed fastener on the reverse, by which it may be attached to clothing.Such badges are worn esp. in the U.S. to indicate membership of a university, college fraternity, etc. ΘΚΠ society > communication > indication > insignia > [noun] > badge > types of badge favoura1616 field mark1653 cockade1709 star1830 button1837 pin1848 brassard1870 patch1884 shoulder patch1947 badging1983 1848 Amer. Whig Rev. Nov. 536/1 A graduate of a famous college in New England, who wore on his breast that mysterious pin which was to be a symbol of learning and ‘fraternity’ the world over. 1871 L. H. Bagg Four Years at Yale 144 Its original badge was a rectangular gold plate, about the size and shape of the present Beta Xi pin. 1910 J. Hart Vigilante Girl 19 My dear fellow, you may cast aside your Eastern frigidity—in fact, I will call it your Cambridge frigidity, for I see you wear a Harvard pin. 1943 Amer. Speech 18 154/2 Plant a pin, the process by which a fraternity man signifies his willingness to wait in the hall for the same girl every time. It consists of presenting her with his pin to wear. 1996 F. Popcorn & L. Marigold Clicking ii. 66 Most of the staff members are wearing a small enameled pin of a planet, with glittery little stars and Saturnesque rings. 10. A gramophone needle. Now disused. ΘΚΠ society > communication > record > recording or reproducing sound or visual material > sound recording and reproduction > sound recording or reproducing equipment > [noun] > record-playing equipment > needle or stylus stylus1879 needle1902 pin1911 needlepoint1929 sapphire1943 thorn needle1950 1911 Stevens Point (Wisconsin) Daily Jrnl. 20 Dec. I hold a skein of wool over my arms, the one end of the wool on a reel, place the reel on a gramophone pin, and then start the machine. 1914 R. Kipling Lett. of Trav. (1920) 215 They slipped in pin and record. 1925 Times 17 Oct. 10/3 The only complaint to be made of the new machine is that the noise of its mechanism and the scratch of the pin on the record have become more noticeable. 11. Computing. Each of the thin projections on the print head of a dot-matrix printer which in different combinations generate the patterns of dots which make up individual characters. ΚΠ 1978 Bell Syst. Techn. Jrnl. 57 3517 An inexpensive, reliable, impact pin printer adjunct has been designed to increase the range of applications for the Transaction II telephone and Transaction III terminal. 1986 What Micro? Apr. 45/3 The LQ800 and LQ1000 print heads each have 24 pins (as opposed to the standard 9) arranged in a new pattern to create a far better definition of character. 1991 Which? June 356/2 Since there are no pins hitting the paper, ink-jet printers are very quiet. 2003 PC Mag. (Nexis) 30 Jan. bg3 The best known of these impact designs is the dot matrix printer, which uses a matrix of pins to create ragged text characters and equally ragged graphics from dots. Phrases P1. (Relating to branch I.) a. in (also †on) a (merry, etc.) pin: in a (good, etc.) mood or state of mind; of a disposition indicated by the modifying word. Also †to have the heart hanging on a jolly pin. Now archaic. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > pleasure > merriment > [adjective] blitheOE merryOE golikc1175 lustya1225 playfulc1225 jollyc1305 merrya1350 jocund?c1380 galliardc1386 in (also on) a (merry, etc.) pinc1395 mirthfula1400 baudec1400 gayc1400 jovy1426 jocantc1440 crank1499 envoisiesa1500 as merry as a cricket1509 pleasant1530 frolic?1548 jolious1575 gleeful1586 buxom1590 gleesome1590 festival1592 laughter-loving1592 disposed1593 jucund1596 heartsomec1600 jovial1607 jovialist1610 laughsome1612 jocundary1618 gaysome1633 chirpinga1637 jovialissime1652 airy1654 festivous1654 hilarous1659 spleneticala1661 cocket1671 cranny1673 high1695 vogie1715 raffing?1719 festal1724 as merry (or lively) as a grig1728 hearty1755 tittuping1772 festive1774 fun-loving1776 mirthsome1787 Falstaffian1809 cranky1811 laughful1825 as lively as a cricket1832 hurrah1835 hilarious1838 Bacchic1865 laughterful1874 griggish1879 banzai1929 slap-you-on-the-back1932 the mind > mental capacity > disposition or character > temporary state of mind, mood > [adverb] > in a different mood in (also on) a (merry, etc.) pinc1395 c1395 G. Chaucer Merchant's Tale 1516 By my fader kyn, Youre herte hangeth on a ioly pyn. a1450 Partonope of Blois (Univ. Coll. Oxf.) (1912) 8586 Youre hert ys on a-nother pynne. c1475 Wisdom (Folger) (1969) 492 (MED) I woll sett my soule a [v.r. on a] mery pynne. a1522 G. Douglas tr. Virgil Æneid (1960) xi. x. 15 With hart hyngand on the ioly pyn. 1569 R. Grafton Chron. II. 578 King Charles heart by gettyng of Paris, was set vpon a merye Pinne. 1622 J. Mabbe tr. M. Alemán Rogue ii. iii. i. 217 Seeing him thus set vpon the merry pin, I said unto him, [etc.]. 1658 F. Osborne Advice to Son (1896) i. 24 Success doth often wind him up to a jovial pin. 1676 T. Shadwell Virtuoso i. 5 I was never on a better pin in my life. 1694 R. L'Estrange Fables (1714) cccii. 316 The Woman was One day upon the Peevish Pin. 1770 Gentleman's Mag. 40 559 To express the Condition of an Honest Fellow and no Flincher under the Effects of Good Fellowship, he is said to be..On a merry pin. 1782 W. Cowper John Gilpin 178 Right glad to find His friend in merry pin. 1818 Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. 3 407 Were I in the pin. 1887 J. A. L. Riley Athos 210 Our prelate was in merry pin. 1958 N. Marsh Singing in Shrouds vii. 153 In merry pin, he..put a dummy woman in Mr. McAngus's bed. 1998 Richmond (Va.) Times-Dispatch (Nexis) 10 Nov. b1 Some Scotch woodcock would jolly well put me in a merry pin. ΚΠ a1624 Bp. M. Smith Serm. (1632) 188 They..went more roundly and roughly to worke with them, taking them downe a pinne or two lower. 1669 R. Montagu in Buccleuch MSS (Hist. MSS Comm.) (1899) I. 452 I am confident we shall bring them a pin lower. c. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > drink > thirst > excess in drinking > [verb (intransitive)] > go on drinking-bout Bacchanalize1656 to loose (also let loose) a pin1711 binge1854 to break outa1888 to go on the bust1890 toot1890 to go on the shout1892 pub-crawl1937 barhop1954 binge drink1975 1711 J. Anderson Countrey-man's Let. to Curat 34 The old Politick, that 'tis Dangerous to innovate or loose a Pinn. 1723 W. Meston Knight 107 Nor will we ever loose a Pin, To introduce the Man of Sin. 1856 Deil's Hallowe'en 14 in Eng. Dial. Dict. (1903) IV. 506/2 The Deil that e'en was ettlin' to let loose a pin. (b) figurative (chiefly Scottish). to put (also keep) in the pin: to refrain from drinking alcohol. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > drink > thirst > abstention from drinking > [verb (intransitive)] > totally abstain from alcohol abstain1784 to put (also keep) in the pin1827 to take (also sign, keep) the pledge1833 teetotal1883 to take the blue ribbon1884 teetotalize1898 1827 A. Rodger Peter Cornclips 158 I ance was persuaded to put in the pin, But..whisky's a thing so bewitchingly stout, The first time I smelt it, the pin it lap out. 1835 J. Monteath Dunblane Trad. (1887) 89 He had religiously abstained from drinking during the twelve months he had himself determined to keep in the pin. 1851 H. Mayhew London Labour I. 345/1 He had two or three times resolved to better himself, and had ‘put in the pin’, meaning he had made a vow to refrain from drinking. 1930 in Sc. National Dict. (1968) VII. 125/1 I hid three gless on Seturday nicht, bit I'm gaan t' pit in the pin. (c) Chiefly North American. to pull the pin: to remove the coupling mechanism of a trailer, railway wagon, etc.; (figurative) to abandon something, give up, resign. to pull the pin on: to abandon (a project, etc.); to dismiss (an employee). ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > completing > non-completion > abandon an attempt or enterprise [verb (intransitive)] unbenda1400 unbinda1400 to leave (a person) the field?c1450 to give upa1616 to call (it) quits1851 to pull the pin1860 to hang up one's fiddle1889 to pack in1906 to pack up1925 to cop out1942 to give it away1949 society > travel > rail travel > [verb (intransitive)] > specific railway operations work1810 to pull the pin1860 highball1911 society > occupation and work > lack of work > [verb (intransitive)] > vacate an office or position > resign resign1395 resignate1531 to go out1642 to lay down1682 to swear off1698 to turn up1819 to pull the pin1860 to send in one's papers1872 to step down1890 to snatch it or one's time1941 1860 Dawson's Fort Wayne (Indiana) Daily Times 1 Oct. 3 The brakeman pulled the pin connecting the freight cars with the passenger cars, just in time to save the latter from being precipitated into the river. 1926 Amer. Speech 1 250/2 To leave the service, ‘pull the pin’; to quit for the day is to ‘pin for home’. 1947 R. O. Boyer Dark Ship ii. xvii. 227 The teamsters had pulled the pin too early. The strike is being lost. 1968 Amer. Speech 43 289 Pull the pin, to resign, quit, or be fired from a job. 1991 Sci. Fiction Writers of Amer. Bull. Fall 14/3 Occasionally a publisher will ‘pull the pin’ on a book because they're over-bought. P2. (Relating to branch III.) a. (a) not worth a pin (also not to care a pin (or two pins), etc.): indicative of something very small.Cf. pin matter n. ΚΠ c1400 (?a1300) Kyng Alisaunder (Laud) (1952) 6136 (MED) He seide al þat he had ywonne Jn þe werlde vnder sonne, He nolde ȝiue þere-of a pynne, Bot he miȝth þise wynne. a1500 (a1460) Towneley Plays (1897–1973) 34 (MED) Wheder I lose or I wyn, In fayth, thi felowship set I not at a pyn. 1577 H. Rhodes Bk. Nurture (new ed.) sig. D.iv Yet he is not worth a pin. 1579 W. Fulke Confut. Treat. N. Sander in D. Heskins Ouerthrowne 634 I would so esteeme them,..but not a pinne the more. 1628 J. Earle Micro-cosmogr. xlviii. sig. H12v He chuses this, not as better, but because there is not a pin to choose. a1669 J. Howard Eng. Mounsieur (1674) v. i. 59 I would now make use of all those Oaths to swear thou dost not care a pin for me, nor I for thee. 1706 R. Estcourt Fair Example iii. i. 39 To tell ye the Truth, Neighbour, I don't care a Pin for her. 1768 L. Sterne Sentimental Journey II. 5 My advice, my dear, would not have been worth a pin to you. 1841 T. Hood Tale of Trumpet i, in New Monthly Mag. May 121 No verbal message was worth a pin, Though you hired an earwig to carry it in! 1869 L. M. Alcott Little Women II. ix. 130 That's one of your foolish extravagances, sending flowers and things to girls, for whom you don't care two pins. 1922 J. Joyce Ulysses iii. xviii. [Penelope] 727 Would I go around by the quays there some dark evening..and pick up a sailor..thatd be hot on for it and not care a pin whose I was. 1996 B. Sterling Holy Fire 221 What a brave girl. You don't give two pins, do you? (b) Expressing cleanliness, smartness, or tidiness, as (as) neat (also clean) as a (new) pin, like a new pin. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > [adjective] > tidy queemc1450 trig1513 trimc1521 neat1594 polite1602 terse1602 unlittered1612 ship-shape1644 snod1717 tight1720 redd1753 (as) neat (also clean) as a (new) pin1769 mack1825 tidy1828 slick1833 ship-shapely1843 trimly1858 taut1870 the mind > attention and judgement > beauty > pleasing appearance > it was a fine sight [phrase] speck and span1615 (as) neat (also clean) as a (new) pin1769 1769 Batchelor II. 45 Jenny is every day as fine as a new pin, and as brisk as a bee. 1787 Columbian Mag. 1 636 [He was] neat as a new pin. 1849 W. M. Thackeray Pendennis (1850) I. xiii. 118 Major Pendennis, whom Miss Costigan declared to be a proper gentleman entirely,..and as neat as a pin. 1883 R. L. Stevenson Treasure Island ii. x. 80 The galley..he kept as clean as a new pin. 1933 L. A. G. Strong Sea Wall 245 Sheehan's pride was to have his cottage as neat as a new pin. 1989 Nursery World 5 Oct. 24/1 Happy children, house like a new pin, garden filled with flowers and a good marriage was all one could ask. (c) Expressing remarkable similarity between two or more people or things, as alike as a row of pins, etc. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > relationship > similarity > [adjective] ylikeeOE likeOE anlikeOE accordanta1325 of a (also one) mouldc1330 kindred1340 lichy1370 likelyc1384 alikea1393 ontinkela1400 evenly?c1400 similable?a1440 semble1449 of a sort1463 seemable1501 uniform1548 resembled1553 self-like1556 like-natured1566 resembling1573 kindlike1579 of the same, that, every, etc. feather1581 resemblant1581 marrow1585 similar1586 like-seeming1590 twin-like1599 connatural1601 similary1610 semblativea1616 otherlike1620 like-shaped1640 connate1641 homogeneous1641 consimilar1645 congenerous1646 resemblancing1652 congeniousa1656 congenerate1657 equaliform1660 congenial1669 similitive1678 symbolizant1685 synonymous1690 of akin1723 consimilary1736 like-sized1742 cogeneric1777 alike as a row of pins1785 congenerica1834 Siamese1833 congener1867 lak1881 sorty1885 homoeomorphic1902 homogenized1958 1652 W. Temple Early Ess. (1930) 152 I cannot see two pins or two feathers (allwaies meant there be a difference) but I shall more like one.] 1785 E. Blower Maria I. 73 He drew a sketch of the face of Mr. Hardwick, and it was immediately pronounced..as like the old man as ever were two pins heads. 1802 R. Bloomfield Rural Tales 7 As like him, ay, as pin to pin. 1896 R. Kipling Seven Seas 193 When you get to a man in the case, They're like as a row of pins—For the Colonel's Lady an' Judy O'Grady Are sisters under their skins! 1921 Amer. Legion Weekly 12 Aug. 14/1 They're like as a pin to the ones where the Boche had their put-puts dug in. 1941 Daily Tribune (Wisconsin Rapids) 22 Nov. 12/4 (advt.) Alike as two pins..That load you bought last year and the load you order today. 1966 Times 29 Oct. 6/5 The pictures are alike as a row of pins. (d) Chiefly British. for two pins: at the slightest provocation, without compunction. ΚΠ 1794 Times 18 Sept. 3/1 I'll blow you up for a sodomite, for two pins. 1861 C. Reade Cloister & Hearth II. xvii. 294 For two pins I'd go thither in all their teeth. 1890 ‘R. Boldrewood’ Squatter's Dream xiv. 157 For two pins I'd put a match in every gunyah on the place. 1946 K. Tennant Lost Haven (1947) ii. 37 For two pins I'd tell him where to go. 1995 J. Collins Booing Bishop 36 For two pins, she said, when our mother got home, she'd tell her The Truth about me. b. you could have heard a pin drop (also †fall) and variants: indicating absolute silence or stillness. ΚΠ 1737 tr. K. L. von Pöllnitz Amusemens de Spa II. 192 And yet the People of the Place are so us'd to it [sc. the noise], that they can hear a Pill fall.] 1751 Ld. Chesterfield Let. 11 Feb. (1932) (modernized text) IV. 1678 They alone are so attended to, in that numerous and noisy assembly, that you might hear a pin fall while either of them is speaking. 1793 J. Williams Serio-comic & Admonitory Epist. 18 Fear and attention occupi'd them all;—Did a pin drop; you'd plainly hear it fall. 1824 S. E. Ferrier Inheritance ii. xiv. 156 You might have heard a pin drop in the house while that was going on. 1870 D. M. Mulock Fair France (1871) iv. 145 As the phrase is, ‘you might have heard a pin fall’. 1934 A. Christie Murder on Orient Express iii. ix. 246 Every eye was fixed upon him. In the stillness you could have heard a pin drop. 1995 P. McCabe Dead School (1996) 231 You could hear a pin drop as he stood by the window staring out at the chestnut tree with the sun in its leaves. c. figurative. to stick pins into: to goad; to irritate or annoy; to attack verbally. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > anger > irritation > irritate [verb (transitive)] gremec893 grillc897 teenOE mispay?c1225 agrillec1275 oftenec1275 tarya1300 tarc1300 atenec1320 enchafec1374 to-tarc1384 stingc1386 chafe?a1400 pokec1400 irec1420 ertc1440 rehete1447 nettlec1450 bog1546 tickle1548 touch1581 urge1593 aggravate1598 irritate1598 dishumour1600 to wind up1602 to pick at ——1603 outhumour1607 vex1625 bloody1633 efferate1653 rankle1659 spleen1689 splenetize1700 rile1724 roil1742 to put out1796 to touch (also get, catch, etc.) (a person) on the raw1823 roughen1837 acerbate1845 to stroke against the hair, the wrong way (of the hair)1846 nag1849 to rub (a person, etc.) up the wrong way1859 frump1862 rattle1865 to set up any one's bristles1873 urticate1873 needle1874 draw1876 to rough up1877 to stick pins into1879 to get on ——1880 to make (someone) tiredc1883 razoo1890 to get under a person's skin1896 to get a person's goat1905 to be on at1907 to get a person's nanny1909 cag1919 to get a person's nanny-goat1928 cagmag1932 peeve1934 tick-off1934 to get on a person's tits1945 to piss off1946 bug1947 to get up a person's nose1951 tee1955 bum1970 tick1975 1879 W. Besant & J. Rice Seamy Side in Appletons' Jrnl. Dec. 530/1 When you've got an enemy..you can stick pins into him all day long. 1881 H. James Portrait of Lady I. vii. 73 Isabel presently found herself in the singular situation of defending the British constitution against her aunt; Mrs. Touchett having formed the habit of sticking pins into this venerable instrument. 1903 A. H. Lewis Boss 184 This ain't meant to stick pins into you. 2001 Financial Times (U.S. ed.) (Nexis) 11 Oct. 17 They can soon get back to the game of sticking pins into the government of Tony Blair. Compounds C1. pin box n. ΚΠ 1649 Mercurius Pragmaticus Charls II No. 6 46 Sir George Aiscough is as rampant as a Leviathan, having taken 29 prises, and all in a Pin-box. 1678 T. Duffett Psyche Debauch'd iv. ii. 53 Save your Princes, still whining after your Pin-box, are there no more Maids but Maukin? 1707 J. Stevens tr. F. de Quevedo Comical Wks. 483 The Spaniard..giving a kick to the Pin-Box, it tumbled down the Rocks, and flew open, strewing the Mountain with Pins and Combs. 1858 P. L. Simmonds Dict. Trade Products Pin-box, Pin-case, a small fancy box for holding pins. 1981 Good Housek. Embroidery 8 Use..steel pins and protect them from rusting by keeping a small square of specially prepared damp-absorbent paper in your pin box. pin manufactory n. ΚΠ 1775 N.Y. Gaz. & Weekly Mercury 10 July 3/4 (advt.) Richard Lightfoot, from Dublin, at his Pin Manufactory at the Crown and Cushion. 1835 A. Ure Philos. Manuf. 304 The hardships which children have to endure in pin-manufactories. 2000 Daily Tel. (Nexis) 2 Dec. 13 In 1978, the Bowler business was reconstituted at the Camden Works.., having been constructed as a real tennis court in 1777, and later converted into a pin manufactory. pin seller n. ΚΠ 1608 H. Clapham Errour Right Hand 39 Tom Lace-seller and Abraham Pin-seller. 2002 USA Today (Nexis) 22 Feb. 3 d They are the ones who run to get to the pin seller, or the ticket broker or the restaurant they've heard so much about. pin snatcher n. ΚΠ 1900 Echo 12 June 3/4 Pick pockets and pin-snatchers reaped a rich harvest. 1963 Oshkosh (Wisconsin) Daily Northwestern 22 July 6/1 But the pin snatcher displayed his true character when his conscience told him his act was an improper one. pin-thrusting n. ΚΠ 1892 Pall Mall Gaz. 27 Dec. 3/2 Two survivals of the pin-thrusting process—to tear the heart of an obdurate lover—are mentioned [sc. in a book of folklore]. 1906 N.E.D. at Pin sb.1 Pin-thrusting. C2. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > piercing or boring tools > [noun] > auger or gimlet > types of pin auger?1523 breast wimble1588 turrell1611 screw auger1676 band-wimble- ?1523 J. Fitzherbert Bk. Husbandry f. iiii An axe, a hatchet, a hedgyngbyll, a pyn nawger, a rest nawger. 1603 in H. M. Hulme Explor. in Shakespeare's Lang. (1962) 333 A pynne Auger. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > piercing or boring tools > [noun] > drill > other drills jumper1769 screw drill1821 stop-drill1843 hand drill1845 Swiss drill1846 traverse-drill1853 crown borer1854 pin drill1858 foot drill1860 perforator1861 pin-bit1873 Archimedean drill1889 paddy1895 stope drill1908 stem1914 screw gun1945 1873 E. Spon Workshop Receipts 1st Ser. 134/2 With a..pin-bit, bore a hole about a ¼ of an inch deep. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > fishing > fishing-tackle > float > [noun] > for net float1577 pinbole1615 bowl1884 float-barrel1891 1615 E. Sharpe Britaines Busse sig. A3v Corke, Pynbols or Buyes belonging to those Nets. 1615 E. Sharpe Britaines Busse sig. B3v For every two Nets there must be a Pynboll or Bwy hooped... Each Pynboll or Bwy must haue a Rope of a yard long, to fasten it to the Warrope. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > order Coleoptera or beetles and weevils > [noun] > Polyphaga (omnivorous) > superfamily Curculionoidea or Rhyncophora > family Scolytidae > member of (bark-beetle) timber-capricorn1803 timber-beetle1841 bark-borer1859 bark-beetle1862 pin borer1890 scolytid1890 timberman1894 engraver beetle1896 ambrosia beetle1897 pinhole borer1916 shot-hole borer1916 1890 Cent. Dict. Pin-borer, the pear-blight beetle, Xyleborus dispar, of the family Scolytidæ... (Canada.) 1894 Amer. Naturalist 28 87 There is a brief review of the work of the field agents of the division, and summarized accounts of the pea and bean weevils.., the sugar-cane pin borer (Xyleborus perforans Woll.), and the new insectary of the department. pin-brained adj. having a very small brain, foolish, stupid. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > lack of understanding > stupidity, dullness of intellect > [adjective] sloweOE stuntc960 dullOE hardOE stuntlyc1000 sotc1050 dillc1175 dulta1225 simplea1325 heavy1340 astonedc1374 sheepishc1380 dull-witteda1387 lourd1390 steerishc1411 ass-likea1425 brainless?a1439 deafc1440 sluggishc1450 short-witted1477 obtuse1509 peakish1519 wearish1519 deaf, or dumb as a beetle1520 doileda1522 gross1526 headlessa1530 stulty1532 ass-headed1533 pot-headed1533 stupid?1541 sheep's head1542 doltish1543 dumpish1545 assish1548 blockish1548 slow-witted1548 blockheaded1549 surd1551 dull-headed1552 hammer-headed1552 skit-brained?1553 buzzardly1561 witless1562 log-headeda1566 assy1566 sottish1566 dastardly1567 stupidious1567 beetle-headed1570 calvish1570 bluntish1578 cod's-headed1578 grout-headed1578 bedaft1579 dull-pated1580 blate1581 buzzard-like1581 long-eared1582 dullard1583 woodena1586 duncical1588 leaden-headed1589 buzzard1592 dorbellical1592 dunstical1592 heavy-headeda1593 shallow-brained1592 blunt-witted1594 mossy1597 Bœotian1598 clay-brained1598 fat1598 fat-witted1598 knotty-pated1598 stupidous1598 wit-lost1599 barren1600 duncifiedc1600 lourdish1600 stockish1600 thick1600 booby1603 leaden-pated1603 partless1603 thin-headed1603 leaden-skulledc1604 blockhead1606 frost-brained1606 ram-headed1608 beef-witted1609 insulse1609 leaden-spirited1609 asininec1610 clumse1611 blockheadly1612 wattle-headed1613 flata1616 logger-headeda1616 puppy-headeda1616 shallow-patedc1616 thick-brained1619 half-headed1621 buzzard-blinda1625 beef-brained1628 toom-headed1629 thick-witted1634 woollen-witted1635 squirrel-headed1637 clod-pated1639 lean-souled1639 muddy-headed1642 leaden-witteda1645 as sad as any mallet1645 under-headed1646 fat-headed1647 half-witted1647 insipid1651 insulsate1652 soft-headed1653 thick-skulleda1657 muddish1658 non-intelligent1659 whey-brained1660 sap-headed1665 timber-headed1666 leather-headeda1668 out of (one's) tree1669 boobily1673 thoughtless1673 lourdly1674 logger1675 unintelligenta1676 Bœotic1678 chicken-brained1678 under-witted1683 loggerhead1684 dunderheaded1692 unintelligible1694 buffle-headed1697 crassicc1700 numbskulled1707 crassous1708 doddy-polled1708 haggis-headed1715 niddy-noddy1722 muzzy1723 pudding-headed1726 sumphish1728 pitcher-souleda1739 duncey1743 hebete1743 chuckheaded1756 dumb1756 duncely1757 imbecile1766 mutton-headed1768 chuckle-headed1770 jobbernowl1770 dowfarta1774 boobyish1778 wittol1780 staumrel1787 opaquec1789 stoopid1791 mud-headed1793 borné1795 muzzy-headed1798 nog-headed1800 thick-headed1801 gypit1804 duncish1805 lightweight1809 numbskull1814 tup-headed1816 chuckle-pate1820 unintellectuala1821 dense1822 ninnyish1822 dunch1825 fozy1825 potato-headed1826 beef-headed1828 donkeyish1831 blockheadish1833 pinheaded1837 squirrel-minded1837 pumpkin-headed1838 tomfoolish1838 dundering1840 chicken-headed1842 like a bump on a log1842 ninny-minded1849 numbheadeda1852 nincompoopish1852 suet-brained1852 dolly1853 mullet-headed1853 sodden1853 fiddle-headed1854 numb1854 bovine1855 logy1859 crass1861 unsmart1861 off his chump1864 wooden-headed1865 stupe1866 lean-minded1867 duffing1869 cretinous1871 doddering1871 thick-head1873 doddling1874 stupido1879 boneheaded1883 woolly-headed1883 leaden-natured1889 suet-headed1890 sam-sodden1891 dopey1896 turnip-headed1898 bonehead1903 wool-witted1905 peanut-headed1906 peanut-brained1907 dilly1909 torpid-minded1909 retardate1912 nitwitted1917 meat-headed1918 mug1922 cloth-headed1925 loopy1925 nitwit1928 lame-brained1929 dead from the neck up1930 simpy1932 nail-headed1936 square-headed1936 dingbats1937 pinhead1939 dim-witted1940 pea-brained1942 clueless1943 lobotomized1943 retarded1949 pointy-headed1950 clottish1952 like a stunned mullet1953 silly (or crazy) as a two-bob watch1954 out to lunch1955 pin-brained1958 dozy1959 eejity1964 out of one's tiny mind1965 doofus1967 twitty1967 twittish1969 twatty1975 twattish1976 blur1977 dof1979 goofus1981 dickheaded1991 dickish1991 numpty1992 cockish1996 1958 S. Kunitz Sel. Poems 66 A triumph of chinoiserie He seemed, in green and gold Enameling, pin-brained, With swizzle-stick for tail. 1964 Listener 20 Feb. 313/1 A smug biologist and his pin-brained wife. 2001 Times 30 Nov. ii. 2/2 This great, overblown, pin-brained Gargantua of a people's sport. pin bush n. †(a) a reaming or polishing tool for small holes, delicate metalwork, etc. (obsolete); (b) Australian any of various shrubs or trees of the genera Hakea (family Proteaceae) and Acacia (family Mimosaceae ( Leguminosae)), with spiny or pointed leaves or phyllodes. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > shaping tools or equipment > [noun] > smoothing or polishing > for metal agate1728 lap1881 pin busha1884 a1884 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. Suppl. 682/1 Pin Bush, a reaming or polishing tool for pin holes. 1888 Proc. Linn. Soc. New S. Wales 3 518 Hakea leucoptera..‘Needle bush’, ‘Pin bush’. Good drinking water is got from the fleshy-roots of this bush in the arid districts in which it grows. 1933 Bulletin (Sydney) 7 June 25/2 Pin bush..will grow in poor soils. pin cherry n. North American the wild red cherry of North America, Prunus pensylvanica; the fruit or wood of this tree. ΚΠ 1884 C. S. Sargent Rep. Forests N. Amer. 66 Pin Cherry... The small acid fruit used domestically and by herbalists in the preparation of cough mixtures, etc. 1962 W. Stegner Wolf Willow iv. iii. 260 We could make some small change..picking saskatoons, pin cherries, or gooseberries. 1987 K. Rushforth Tree Planting & Managem. (1990) 195/2 Pin cherry... This is mainly grown as the cultivar ‘Schubert’, which is unique in the foliage starting off green and then ageing to purple. 1994 Country Connection (Boulter, Ont.) Summer 14/2 Carved from pin cherry, his ‘Midsummer's Night’ catches a spring peeper upon a jack-in-pulpit. pin clover n. U.S. regional (western) = pin grass n. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular cultivated or ornamental plants > particular flower or plant esteemed for flower > [noun] > geranium and allied flowers > allied flowers > stork's bill ground-needlea1400 pookneedlea1425 pink needle1548 stork's bill1562 heronsbill1578 moschata1578 musk cranesbill1640 Muscovy1648 musk stork's-bill1853 pin clover1880 1880 Amer. Naturalist 14 493 Two species of Alfillerilla, or pin clover (Erodium cicutarium L'Heer and E. moschatum L'Heer), are very common. 1925 W. L. Jepson Man. Flowering Plants Calif. 592 The term filaree..is, like the names Pin Clover or Pin Grass, indifferently applied to either this species [sc. Erodium moschatum] or to no. 5 [sc. E. cicutarium]. 2001 Dallas Morning News (Nexis) 28 Mar. 1 a The pin clover are out now, but usually you see them in February. pin-connected adj. connected by means of a pin connection. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > [adjective] > building bridges > by specific process pin-connected1876 1876 J. D. McCabe Illustr. Hist. Centennial Exhib. 141 To rapidity and facility of erection allowed by the pin-connected mode of construction. 1968 E. H. Gaylord & C. N. Gaylord Struct. Engin. Handbk. vi. 71 The AISC Specification requires that the allowable tensile stress on the net section transverse to the axis of the member be reduced 25 percent at pinholes in pin-connected plates. pin connection n. Engineering a connection of the parts of an iron or steel bridge by pins (instead of rivets, etc.); cf. pin-joint n. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > [noun] > building or repair of bridges > specific processes pin connection1869 1869 T. C. Clarke Acct. Iron Railway Brige across Mississippi River 19 Phenix rolled posts, and bottom chords, composed of open links with pin connections. 1974 Encycl. Brit. Macropædia III. 177/2 The first major iron-truss bridge, with pin connections, was built in the United States in 1851. 1995 Science 14 Apr. 280/2 The bridge model in fig. 3 was assumed to stand alone, and the bases of the pier columns were assumed to behave as pin connections. pin dot n. a tiny dot, esp. as part of a design on fabric; a fabric design using such dots; cf. pin spot n. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > ornamental art and craft > pattern or design > [noun] > spots polka dot1857 pin dot1871 1871 Kingston (Jamaica) Gleaner 15 Aug. 3/4 (advt.) Pieces White Lappet Muslins..Ditto pin dot. 1891 R. Kipling Light that Failed x. 201 There were only weaving circles and floating pin-dots before his eyes. 1995 Kay & Co. (Worcester) Catal. Autumn–Winter 862/1 Westminster patterned cut pile carpet... Woven backing. Available in floral or pindot. pin drill n. Engineering a drill having a central projecting bit surrounded by a cutting face, used for countersinking. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > piercing or boring tools > [noun] > drill > other drills jumper1769 screw drill1821 stop-drill1843 hand drill1845 Swiss drill1846 traverse-drill1853 crown borer1854 pin drill1858 foot drill1860 perforator1861 pin-bit1873 Archimedean drill1889 paddy1895 stope drill1908 stem1914 screw gun1945 1858 Z. Colburn & A. L. Holley Permanent Way App. 166 The ferrules are turned up at each end and the stays are faced up true around the rivet-holes, by a pin drill. 1884 F. J. Britten Watch & Clockmakers' Handbk. (new ed.) 94 For making square sinks to receive screw heads and the like, a pin drill is used. 1955 Van Wert (Ohio) Times-Bull. 21 July 12/2 A hand-powered pin drill may be used for making the many holes for the wires. 2001 Constr. Equipm. (Nexis) 1 June 42 A hydraulic dowel pin drill can be mounted on backhoes, curb-and-gutter machines, graders and skid-steer loaders. pin embroidery n. very fine-textured embroidery. ΚΠ 1909 Westm. Gaz. 1 Oct. 8/4 The bodice is of the chiffon, with pin embroideries cut round below the neck and bordered with heavier work in silks. pin flag n. a miniature flag attached to a pin. ΘΚΠ society > communication > indication > insignia > standard > [noun] > flag > small geton?1392 phanekill1535 fanikin1539 fanion1706 pin flag1870 flaglet1872 1870 Times 7 Sept. 6/1 (advt.) War maps. The best of every description, German, French, and English..and Pin Flags, 6d. a1916 ‘Saki’ Toys of Peace (1919) 290 To-day we are putting little pin-flags again into maps of the Balkan region. 1999 Amer. Midland Naturalist 141 4 We marked each trail with pinflags, and used a unique color of flag to mark stopping points. pin-flat n. U.S. rare a cardboard holder for dressmaking pins (see quot. 1890). ΚΠ 1890 Cent. Dict. XVI. 4498/2 Pin-flat, a small disk of double cardboard covered with some textile material so arranged that pins can be stuck into the edge. 1906 N.E.D. at Pin sb.1 Pin-flat. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > animal body > general parts > body and limbs > [adjective] > of feet > having feet > having feet like fins pinniped1858 pin-footed1864 Pinnipedian1880 1864 Webster's Amer. Dict. Eng. Lang. Pin-footed, having the toes bordered by a skin. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > animal disease or disorder > disorders of birds > [noun] > disorders of hawks crampc1430 frouncea1450 teena1450 crayc1450 ryec1450 aggresteyne1486 agrum1486 fallera1486 filanders1486 gall1575 pantas1575 pin1575 pin gout1575 stroke1575 apoplexy1614 crock1614 formica1614 privy evil1614 back-worma1682 verol1688 croak1707 1575 G. Turberville Bk. Faulconrie 345 Of the swelling in a Hawkes foote, which we tearme the pin, or pin Goute. pin grass n. [from the shape of the carpels] U.S. regional (western) either of two European species of storksbill, Erodium cicutarium and E. moschatum, that are naturalized in the south-western United States and used as fodder; cf. pin clover n., alfilaria n. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular cultivated or ornamental plants > particular flower or plant esteemed for flower > [noun] > geranium and allied flowers > allied flowers herb Roberta1300 stick pile?a1450 culverfootc1450 devil's needlea1500 crane's-bill1548 dove's-foot1548 geranium1548 shepherd's needle1562 bloodroot1578 Gratia Dei1578 sanguine root1578 pigeon's-foot1597 Roman cranesbill1648 robin1694 redshanka1722 musk1728 ragged Robert1734 pigeon-foot1736 rose geranium1773 mountain flowera1787 wood cranesbill1796 peppermint-scented geranium1823 stork's bill1824 wild geranium1840 musk geranium1845 pin grass1847 Robert1847 stinking crane's bill1857 mourning widow1866 pinweed1876 ivy-leaved pelargonium1887 ivy-geranium1894 regal1894 peppermint geranium1922 1847 Californian 10 July 3/1 Quality of Pasture—Bunch Grass; Clover; Wild Oats and Pin Grass, all in abundance. 1889 J. S. Farmer Americanisms Alfilaria (Erodium cicutarium). Also known as Storksbill, Pin-grass, Filaree, &c. A valuable forage plant of the dry regions from Colorado and New Mexico to Southern California. 1914 C. F. Saunders With Flowers & Trees in Calif. iii. 55 Still another wild pasture-plant..is the stork's-bill.., commonly known as pingrass or filaree. 1958 R. C. Rollins Fernald & Kinsey's Edible Wild Plants Eastern N. Amer. (ed. 2) 259 Storksbill, Pin-grass, Erodium cicutarium. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > textile fabric or an article of textile fabric > textile fabric > textile fabric manufactured in specific way > [noun] > patterned > spotted > ground pin ground1825 1825 R. Cobden in J. Morley Life R. Cobden (1903) i. 8 Black and purple and pin grounds. pin-heel n. a high pointed heel. ΚΠ 1959 Lethbridge (Alberta) Herald 2 Oct. 19/4 (caption) On the left, is the high pin heel, next is the high French heel. 1993 V. Sage Mirror for Larks 60 She flung open the door. ‘Air,’ she said, and stood poised on pin-heels. pin-heeled adj. having a high pointed heel. ΚΠ 1771 A. Skinn Old Maid II. 191 Polly..wore such a pair of high pin-heeled shoes, that she moved as if a pair of stilts had supplied the place of legs. 1960 C. Storr Marianne & Mark iv. 54 A pair of tight pinheeled patent-leather shoes. 2003 Western Mail (Cardiff) (Nexis) 15 Apr. 4 Slouch boots look sexy with micro minis and pin-heeled boots give every outfit that extra sizzle. pin high adj. (and adv.) Golf (of a ball) level with the hole, but off to one side, as viewed from the front of the green; also as adv. ΚΠ 1921 Times 10 June 10/6 Kirkwood was pin high with a beautiful long iron shot, held into the wind. 1974 Golfer's Handbk. 525 The remaining distance is a steep uphill approach to the green, and his ball finished pin high. 2003 Richmond (Va.) Times-Dispatch (Nexis) 9 June c6 The ball died 18 feet from the hole in pin-high position. pin hinge n. a hinge in which the two leaves are pivoted on a pin passing through a sheath in each. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > building and constructing equipment > fastenings > [noun] > hinge > other types of hinge window band1419 garnet1459 cross-garnet1659 side hinge1678 H hinge1726 strap hinge1737 butt1765 setback hinges1833 parliament hinge1841 pin hinge1910 1910 R. Cobleigh Handy Farm Devices 220 By using hinges as used on doors or any pin hinge, you can easily change the style of block. 1940 Chambers's Techn. Dict. 644/2 Pin hinge. 1997 Independent 5 July (Long Weekend section) 22/4 He also produces a small range of strap hinges and pin hinges. pinhold n. rare the point at which a pin fastens something. ΚΠ 1836 B. H. Smart Walker Remodelled Pin-hold, a place at which a pin holds or makes fast. 1922 J. Joyce Ulysses ii. v. [Lotus Eaters] 75 He tore the flower gravely from its pinhold..and placed it in his heart pocket. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > clothing for body or trunk (and limbs) > [noun] > loose clothing > cloak, mantle, or cape > parts of hood?c1225 pell1404 amyta1450 pin hood1491 butterham1673 over-front1889 1491 in T. Dickson Accts. Treasurer Scotl. (1877) I. 187 Item, ij elne sattin to lyne the cap of that cloyke, and to be a pyn hwd. pin-joint n. Engineering a joint in which two parts are connected by a pin passing through an eye in each. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > building or providing with specific parts > specific parts built or constructed > [noun] > joint > types of gemew?a1400 match-joint1683 matched joint1688 joggle1703 water joint1810 pin-joint1835 shackle-joint1837 screw shackle1847 through-joint1851 joggling1858 leg joint1858 splice1875 bed-joint1876 butting joint1887 saddle joint1901 contraction joint1909 1835 Brit. Patent 6770 (1856) 2 The series of levers..are connected at their respective ends by pin joints. 1919 A. J. S. Pippard & J. L. Pritchard Aeroplane Struct. x. 122 An important case occurs when..a pin-joint is made in an aeroplane spar at any place other than near one of the positions of the points of inflection. 2000 P. W. B. Semmens & A. J. Goldfinch How Steam Locomotives really Work iv. 130 Although the pin-joints could easily be grease-lubricated, in later versions they were replaced by sealed needle-roller bearings which required even less servicing. pin-jointed adj. fixed with a pin-joint. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > building or providing with specific parts > specific parts built or constructed > [adjective] > type of joint > joined by joggled1823 spliced1859 pin-jointed1872 1872 J. G. Barnard Rep. on North Sea Canal of Holland 43 Boom w1 is pin-jointed at the centre to a float or saddle-piece at the centre of the pipe t. 1989 RIBA Jrnl. Aug. 66/3 The entire space of 37,000 sq. ft. is covered by a double glazed translucent glass roof, supported by a pin-jointed truss system. pin key n. (a) a key with a solid stem; (b) a key for removing or loosening part of an electrical hand tool. ΚΠ 1927 R. A. Freeman Certain Dr. Thorndyke ii. xv. 220 These wardless pin-keys are more subtle than they look. 1970 Daily Gleaner (Kingston, Jamaica) 17 Aug. 16/1 (advt.) ‘Grand Prix’ disc sander..supplied with..combined spanner and pin key. 1983 Buck & Hickman Catal. 1983–5 453 Supplied with depressed centre wheel two spanners and pin key. pin machine n. (a) a machine for making pins; (b) a machine in a bowling alley which automatically sets up the pins after they have been knocked down. ΚΠ 1804 S. T. Coleridge Let. 28 Mar. (1956) II. 1111 The Rope room is a very low broad room... A pin machine has been lately introduced. a1884 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. Suppl. 682/2 Pin Machine,..a machine for making wooden pins for securing mortise and tenon joints. 1965 Edwardsville (Illinois) Intelligencer 4 June 10/4 Wanted..pin machine man for new 24 lane bowling alley. 1986 Sci., Technol., & Human Values 11 93/2 Both pin-machine inventors in the United States took advantage of their patent. ΚΠ 1680 J. Moxon Mech. Exercises I. xi. 198 Pin-Mandrels..are made with a..Shank, to fit stiff into a round hole that is made in the Work that is to be Turned. pin-mark n. Type-founding (now disused) a circular impression on the side of a piece of type, made by the ejection mechanism of the casting mould. ΘΚΠ society > communication > printing > types, blocks, or plates > relating to type > [noun] > marks on types batter1824 pin-mark1888 1888 C. T. Jacobi Printers' Vocab. 100 Pin mark.—This is the slight mark in the side of a type near the top of the shank made in casting by machinery. 1922 D. B. Updike Printing Types I. ii. 16 The pin-mark is an indentation on the upper part of the body, made by the pin in casting. 1960 G. A. Glaister Encycl. Bk. 315 Pin-mark, a round depression in the side of a shank of typefounder's type made by the pin which ejects the type from the mould. pin mill n. (a) (now historical) = pin manufactory n. at Compounds 1; (b) = pinwheel n. 1b. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > equipment for working with skins or leather > [noun] > for washing hides pin mill1837 paddle-tumbler1883 paddle wheel1883 wash-mill1897 paddle-vat1902 1837 Times 19 July 6/6 The lightning also struck a cottage near to Messrs. Ormrod and Son's pin mill. 1885 C. T. Davis Manuf. Leather (1897) xxiii. 331 From the ‘soaks’ the skins are removed,..and placed..in the ‘pin-mill’. 1927 Bedford (Pa.) Gaz. 29 Apr. 1/1 While working at the Bedford pin mill Monday morning, Joseph Welshonce suffered a badly lacerated..right hand. ΚΠ 1890 Cent. Dict. Pin-necked, pinnated, as a grouse. The pin-necked grouse belong to Cupidonia. pin-new adj. brand new. ΘΚΠ the world > time > relative time > the future or time to come > newness or novelty > [adjective] > brand new span-newc1300 spon-new13.. brand-newc1570 spick and span new1579 new-new1592 fire-new1597 fiery-new1644 spick and span1665 split-new1695 spander-new1707 spank span-new1775 spick-span1815 spleet-new1818 brand-span-new1828 spick-span new1880 firebrand new1882 spanking new1886 spandy new1903 pin-new1967 box-fresh1990 1967 T. Keneally Bring Larks xxviii. 222 By the time he sighted the pin-new East Indiaman, it had already ripped through the oyster-shell horizon far out to the south-east. 1976 New Society 19 Feb. 373/1 A dozen girls sit in the toy department of a pin-new department store. pin paper n. now historical a paper wrapper for holding pins; (figurative) a collection of samples. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > kind or sort > individual character or quality > an individual case or instance > [noun] > typical or representative case > part as representative of the whole > sample or specimen > a collection of samples pin paper1673 pattern book1772 pattern card1822 specimen-book1871 sample book1938 swatch-book1956 the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > textile manufacture > manufacture textile fabric or that which consists of > sewing or ornamenting textile fabric > [noun] > sewing > equipment for > pin > paper or cloth containing clout1805 pin paper1817 1673 A. Marvell Rehearsal Transpros'd II. 170 His Sermon is extant..some Heads and Points of it I gave you..as a Pinne-paper of your modern Orthodoxy. 1727 J. E. A. B. tr. D. de Saavedra Fajardo Respublica Literaria 40 The satirical [books of poetry] he [sc. the censor] ordered to be made Needle and Pin-Paper of. 1817 S. T. Coleridge Biogr. Lit. 209 The pin-papers, and stay-tapes, which might have been among the wares of his pack. 1908 Newark (Ohio) Advocate 18 Aug. 7/4 Give each feminine competitor an empty pin paper which she is required to fill in a certain length of time. 1997 Morning Call (Allentown, Pa.) (Nexis) 27 Oct. b4 On display are pin papers, sewing birds and fancy pin cushions. pin party n. (a) U.S. a party to which pin-wearing members of a particular club or organization are invited; (b) Navy slang a group of ground staff on an aircraft carrier responsible for preparing aircraft for take-off. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > hostilities at sea > navy > a naval force or fleet > [noun] > squad or crew for special duty > aircraft carrier party pin party1903 1903 Daily Rev. (Decatur, Illinois) 24 May 11/4 (heading) A Pin Party. 1917 Fort Wayne (Indiana) News 21 May 2/1 Thursday evening the young people will have a ‘pin party’ in the lecture rooms of the church. 1946 J. Irving Royal Navalese 135 Pin party,..the working party, in a Carrier, which prepares aircraft on the flying deck for taking off. 2002 Palm Beach (Florida) Post (Nexis) 5 July 11 c A pin party will be held at 6:30 tonight at the Wellington Community Center pool. pin-patch n. English regional (chiefly East Anglian) a periwinkle (the mollusc). ΘΚΠ the world > animals > invertebrates > subkingdom Metazoa > grade Triploblastica or Coelomata > class Gastropoda > [noun] > superorder Branchifera > order Prosobranchiata > section Holostomata > family Littorinidae > member of genus Littorina (periwinkle) periwinkle1530 winkle1585 wrinkle1589 pin-patch1694 wink1851 Littorina1857 1694 L. Echard tr. Plautus Rudens ii. i, in tr. Plautus Comedies 164 Whole beds o' crabs, lobsters, oysters, pinpatches, coral, muscles, and cockles. 1766 E. Buys Sewel's Compl. Dict. Eng. & Dutch (new ed.) II. 46 Alikruik, a cockle, wilk, pinpatch. a1825 R. Forby Vocab. E. Anglia (1830) Pin-patches, Pin-paunches, the small shell fish called periwinkles... They are commonly drawn out of their shells with a pin. 1890 P. H. Emerson Wild Life Tidal Water x. 58 We cooked the periwinkles (‘pin-patches’ Joey called them). 1982 J. B. Gidmark Melville Sea Dict. 279 Periwinkle, the win-winde of the Anglo-Saxons, a favorite little shellfish, the pin-patch, or Turbo Littoreus. pin plate n. Engineering a plate with a hole for the pin in a pin joint. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > parts of machines > other parts > [noun] > plates pressure plate1845 throat plate1857 tympan1883 pin plate1893 1893 J. B. Johnson et al. Theory & Pract. Mod. Framed Structures xxi. 338 The Lengths of Bearing or Pin Plates are determined by the following considerations. 1968 E. H. Gaylord & C. N. Gaylord Struct. Engin. Handbk. vi. 71 Usually, a pin plate is assumed to transmit a fraction of the main member force proportional to its thickness. pin pool n. a game resembling billiards, played with three balls and five small pins; (also) any of various related games. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > billiards, pool, or snooker > [noun] > varieties of game carambole1775 portobello1777 carambole game1807 go-back game1839 pyramid1850 pin pool1864 shell-out1866 pocket billiards1871 pocket pool1877 snooker('s) pool1889 puff billiards1897 kelly1898 slosh1938 bar billiards1966 1864 W. B. Dick Amer. Hoyle 428 The game of Pin Pool is played with two white balls and one red, together with five small wooden pins. 1900 G. Ade Fables in Slang 16 The Local Editor..was playing Pin-Pool with the Superintendent. 1990 Washington Post (Nexis) 22 Mar. v1 Jack spelled the obscure word (it's a term used in the game of pin pool) correctly. pin poppet n. now historical a cylindrical case for pins. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > textile manufacture > manufacture textile fabric or that which consists of > sewing or ornamenting textile fabric > [noun] > sewing > equipment for > pin > pin-case pincase1480 tabouret1656 pin poppet1778 1778 J. Sympson in F. Beaumont & J. Fletcher Dramatick Wks. II. 318 (note) The fashionable pin-cases in our Authors' days, were made in the shape of little puppets, or poppets; and tho' that custom is discontinued, we still retain the word pin poppets to this very day in the North of England. 1866 Routledge's Every Boy's Ann. 642 Driven into the ‘pin-poppet’, the old name by which these curious cases were best known. 1963 Times 9 Mar. 11/5 Early pins, hammered and filed in hand-wrought iron, were so liable to rust that they were kept in air-tight pin-poppets of metal or wood lest they stain milady's wimple. 1989 Miller's Collectables Price Guide 1989–90 340/1–3 A Georgian fruitwood pin poppet, 1¾in. (2 cm) long. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > constitution of matter > granular texture > [noun] > state of being powdery > dust > dust of other specific materials bark-dustc1440 pin powder1502 pin-dust1552 brick dust1573 gun dust1703 flue-dust1857 wood powder1870 pouce1880 stone-dust1896 paper dust1906 1502 in N. H. Nicolas Privy Purse Expenses Elizabeth of York (1830) 27 Item for pyn powdre xij d. pinprod n. †(a) a pinprick (obsolete); (b) a small probe or similar instrument (cf. prod n.1 1a). ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > anger > irritation > [noun] > action of irritating > cause of irritation > one who or that which irritates > in minor way pinprick1853 niggle1865 ankle-biter1872 pinprod1893 1893 E. E. Crowe With Thackeray in Amer. i. 11 Reflection made him think the onslaught harmless, and the sting in it only of the pin-prod order. 1960 Edwardsville (Illinois) Intelligencer 27 Feb. 4/4 (list) Edwardsville Machine Shop—for making 2 pin prods..5.00. 1979 Frederick (Maryland) Post 22 May a10/2 Determining moisture content of forages is not always easy. There are pinprod testers on the market which are acceptably accurate. ΚΠ 1608 T. Cocks Diary (1901) 35 Payde for a pynne purse for my va[lentine] vs. pin rib n. a fine rib woven into fabric. ΚΠ 1890 Cent. Dict. Pin-rib, a delicate card or rib woven in the substance of fine muslin. 1972 Lima (Ohio) News 11 June d5 Palmer-engineered slacks of polyester doubleknit, perhaps of pin rib. ΚΠ 1890 Cent. Dict. XVI. 4502/2 Pin-rod, in a locomotive, a tie-rod connecting the brake-shoes on opposite sides. pins and needles n. a prickling or tingling sensation, paraesthesia; on pins and needles: in a state of agitated suspense or extreme uneasiness. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > suffering > state of being upset or perturbed > worry > anxiety > [phrase] > acutely anxious on the gridiron1590 on the rack1600 on pins and needles1710 the world > health and disease > ill health > pain > types of pain > [noun] > pricking or tingling prickinga1398 tinglinga1450 punction1596 dindling1597 compunction1604 punto1617 prickling1656 sharpness1694 puncture1709 puncturation1733 pins and needles1813 tingle1832 pringling1890 the mind > emotion > fear > nervousness or uneasiness > nervous or uneasy [phrase] > in a state of excessive uneasiness on pins and needles1897 1710 E. Ward Satyrical Refl. on Clubs V. xx. 240 Clap'd Beaus and Rakes..Inflamed with Pins and Needles. 1786 J. Cobb Strangers at Home iii. 72 Where is your master? Aside.—I sit on pins and needles! 1813 W. Dunlap Mem. G. F. Cooke II. xxx. 265 As it was—it was bad enough—my voice—haw!—there are pins and needles—I must send for a physician. 1897 Pall Mall Mag. Aug. 530 He was plainly on pins and needles, did not know whether to take or to refuse a cigar. 1899 T. C. Allbutt et al. Syst. Med. VIII. 64 Subjective sensations such as heat and cold, pins and needles,..may persist during the intervals. 1934 P. Lynch Turf-cutter's Donkey xviii. 178 But she was sitting on her foot, and it was pricking with ‘pins and needles’ so that she could hardly bear it. 1944 W. S. Maugham Razor's Edge iii. 112 The bishop had been a cavalry officer..and his austere, cadaverous vicar general was always on pins and needles lest he should say something scandalous. 1993 M. Atwood Robber Bride xlix. 386 Roz's legs have gone to sleep. Every step she takes sends pins and needles shooting into them. 2003 N.Y. Post (Nexis) 32 Sept. 29 The suspense had landlords, brokers and downtown advocates on pins and needles. pinscreen n. Film (now chiefly historical) a metal plate pierced with rows of holes through which pins are pushed to give shadows of variable density when obliquely lit, used to create images which are then filmed frame by frame to produce an animation. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > cinematography > projection > [noun] > screen scrim1891 cinema screen1912 movie screen1912 widescreen1920 silver screen1924 bead screen1934 screen1952 split screen1953 pinscreen1959 1959 in J. Halas & R. Manvell Technique Film Animation xxvi. 304 The pin screen is designed for black-and-white films. 1976 Oxf. Compan. Film 11/2 After watching L'Idée (1934) in production in 1932 he [sc. Alexandre Alexeïeff] experimented with animation techniques and invented the pin screen, a metal surface pierced by about five million tiny holes through which he pressed metal pins which, obliquely lit, created shadows with all possible gradations from black to white according to the length of pin protruding from the screen. 1987 D. Clandfield Canad. Film vi. 118 In 1960 he donated a miniature pinscreen (10,000 nails) that composer Maurice Blackburn used for his film Ciné-crime (1968). pin stenter n. Textiles a stenter in which cloth is held by means of two rows of pins, one along each edge. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > textile manufacture > manufacture textile fabric or that which consists of > manufacture of textile fabric > treating or processing textile fabric > [noun] > stretching > machine > types of growme1601 pin stenter1947 1947 J. T. Marsh Introd. Textile Finishing i. 20 The beater untangles the matted pile, and the fabric then passes into the pin stenter which is equipped with from eight to sixteen rotating cards. 2001 Advances Textile Technol. (Nexis) 1 May 2 Again the fabric was dried using a pin stenter at 100°C for five minutes to restore the width and length to that of the grey cloth. pin switch n. a switch in which the electrical connection is made by a metal pin entering a gap between two conductors. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > parts of machines > control(s) > [noun] > switch > types of pin switch1865 limit switch1886 press-key1896 rocker switch1898 pressel switch1916 snap switch1926 toggle switch1938 microswitch1941 1865 J. E. Smith Man. Telegraphy 72 Western Union Pin Switches, with Improved Disc Lightning Arresters. 1982 N.Y. Times (Nexis) 3 July i. 22/2 Alarms can be set off by voltage-drop sensors that detect the light going on when the car door opens. They can also be activated by pin switches on doors. 2004 Vancouver Sun (Nexis) 6 Feb. e6 The interior courtesy light refuses to turn off... The old cars had a pin switch in the door frame that was a snap to change. pin's worth n. an extremely small amount. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > smallness of quantity, amount, or degree > [noun] > a small quantity or amount > a very small amount shredc1000 farthingsworthc1325 pennyworthc1330 incha1350 sliverc1374 chipa1393 gnastc1440 Jack1530 spoonful1531 crumba1535 spark1548 slight1549 pin's worth1562 scruple1574 thought1581 pinch1583 scrap1583 splinter1609 ticket1634 notchet1637 indivisible1644 tinyc1650 twopence1691 turn of the scale(s)1706 enough to swear by1756 touch1786 scrimptiona1825 infinitesimal1840 smidgen1841 snuff1842 fluxion1846 smitchel1856 eyelash1860 smidge1866 tenpenceworth1896 whisker1913 tidge1986 1562 W. Bullein Bk. Use Sicke Men f. lxxv, in Bulwarke of Defence Did me neuer a pinsworthe of pleasure. 1674 J. T. tr. G. Harvey Theoret. & Pract. Treat. Fevors v. 91 Though the root hath been given in a double dose to those, that lay sick in fevors,..it scarce did a pins worth of good. 1750 Hist. Charlotte Summers I. i. x. 211 Touch a Pins worth more at your Peril. 1873 Catholic World June 424/2 I have not known an instance of their stealing a pins's worth, though they had ample opportunities to pilfer. 1928 Decatur (Illinois) Herald 24 July 8/2 You two boys know about as much as a pin's worth, compared to the least of the Yard's detective. 2000 R. Flowers tr. T. O'Crohan Islandman ix. 77 Yerra..there's not a pin's worth wrong with the leg. pin tongs n. (plural) tongs or pliers for holding pins or similar small objects. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > clutching or gripping equipment > [noun] > tongs or pincers > other tongs or pincers mullets1585 corn-tongs1622 pin tongs1846 1846 C. Holtzapffel Turning & Mech. Manip. II. 862 Small wires and other pieces are also held in a species of pliers,..called pin-tongs, or sliding-tongs. 1940 Chambers's Techn. Dict. 644/2 Pin tongs, small hand-vices with a split draw-in chuck. 1992 A. Kurzweil Case of Curiousities xii. 89 There were also screw plates, hacksaws, pin tongs, calipers, bench keys. ΚΠ 1875 E. H. Knight Amer. Mech. Dict. III. 1707/2 Pin-tool, a tubular cutter for making pins for sash, blind and door makers. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > farming > animal husbandry > general equipment > [noun] > harness of draught animal > traces tracec1350 side rope1370 wain-rope1371 trace14.. soam1404 pintrace1440 side-trace1445 wain-string1464 theats1496 treat1611 trek-tow1822 trace-chain1844 tug-strap1882 trek-rope1883 trace-rope1900 1440–1 in J. T. Fowler Extracts Acct. Rolls Abbey of Durham (1901) III. 627 Pro 1 pyntrase. 1536–7 in J. T. Fowler Extracts Acct. Rolls Abbey of Durham (1901) III. 697 iij par. pyntracez. pin valve n. = needle valve n. at needle n. Compounds 2. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > parts of machines > control(s) > [noun] > valve > needle needle valve1886 pin valve1903 1903 Electr. World & Engineer 18 July 115 The pressure is admitted to or withdrawn from the piston by means of a pin-valve. 1991 R. Cooke Paintball 14/2 The gun comes well supplied with flash suppressor,..pin valve and shoulder sling. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > birds > parts of or bird defined by > [adjective] > having wings > having feathers on > of particular type or colour standardwinga1867 sword-flighted1868 standard-winged1875 pin-winged1890 the world > animals > birds > perching birds > order Columbiformes (pigeons, etc.) > [adjective] > of or belonging to pigeon and dove > of parts of damask-coloured1630 clean1886 pin-winged1890 gravel-eyed1951 1890 Cent. Dict. Pin-winged, having a short attenuated falcate first primary. The pin-winged doves are pigeons of the genus Æchmoptila..of Texas and Mexico. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2006; most recently modified version published online June 2022). pinn.2 Chess. The act of trapping an opponent's piece so that it cannot be moved without exposing a more valuable piece; the fact of being trapped in this way; a configuration in which a chess piece is pinned. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > board game > chess > [noun] > strategy > specific strategies or tactics unpinning1607 defence1614 fork1656 attack1733 backgame1750 castling1813 exchange1823 pin1868 fringe-variation1898 fidation1910 sacrifice1915 unpin1922 pawn storm1926 Siesta variation1935 liquidation1965 sac1965 1868 G. H. Selkirk Bk. Chess 72 Removing his Queen to obviate the ‘pin’. 1911 A. C. White First Steps Classif. Two-movers 73 The Black King moves into a triple pin, which is the feature of the problem. 1932 Times Lit. Suppl. 8 Dec. 948/3 Forcing the king where he wanted it, and then releasing the ‘pin’ paved the way for the threatened 26. 1976 Daily Tel. 4 Dec. 11/6 Black thinks it time to bring his queen into play and finds an unexpectedly troublesome pin. 1994 Daily Tel. 12 Oct. 26/8 The threat is 1.Nc6 exploiting the pin of the black queen by the white rook along the d file. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2006; most recently modified version published online March 2022). pinn.3 English regional and Australian. Now rare. The middle place in a team of three draught horses harnessed one behind the other; (also Australian) the third place in a team of four bullocks. Cf. pin-horse n. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > mammals > group Ungulata (hoofed) > family Equidae (general equines) > horse defined by purpose used for > [noun] > draught-horse > that pulls vehicle > team of three > member of leader1699 pin-horse1877 flanker1879 pin1879 1879 G. F. Jackson Shropshire Word-bk. 325 Pin, the middle place for a horse,—between the shafter and the leader in a team of three... ‘Yo'd'n better put that cowt i' the pin a bit.’ 1892 M. C. F. Morris Yorks. Folk-talk (at cited word) We'll put him i' t' pin. 1928 A. E. Pease Dict. Dial N. Riding Yorks. 96/1 Gin he caan't leyd (lead) he winnot pull i' t' pin. 1959 H. P. Tritton Time means Tucker 36 A bullock-team is made up in four parts: polers, pin, body and leaders. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2006; most recently modified version published online March 2022). PINn.4 Originally U.S. A confidential, usually 4-digit, number allocated to an individual by a bank, etc., and used for the validation of electronic transactions. Also more generally: a confidential number giving the holder access to a particular service. ΘΚΠ society > communication > indication > that which identifies or distinguishes > personal identification > [noun] > other methods of identification anthropometrics1881 bertillonage1892 Bertillon system1896 Bertillon measurement1928 pink triangle1950 electronic signature1957 genetic profile1959 genetic fingerprint1969 digital signature1976 PIN1976 PIN code1979 racial profiling1989 society > trade and finance > money > medium of exchange or currency > paper money > cheques and drafts > [noun] > credit card > associated identification number PIN1976 PIN number1976 card number1982 1976 Lincoln (Nebraska) Star 14 July 2 (advt.) Personal Identification Number (P.I.N.)..(any 4 numbers of your choosing). 1979 Amer. Banker 10 Jan. 9/3 Mosler Identikey permits customers to choose their own personal identification numbers and enter them on a PIN pad in drive-in windows. 1986 Financial Times Surv. 12 Mar. p. vi/2 Access and Barclaycard and Standard Chartered Visa card holders who have taken up the option of a PIN..can draw cash from the ATMs of the supporting banks. 1998 Daily Tel. 8 Oct. (Connected section) 6/1 Discovering his car stolen, he simply dials a number on his mobile phone..and keys in a six-digit PIN. 2003 Daily Tel. 17 Mar. 15/4 By 2005, we will all have abandoned our pens in favour of pins. Compounds PIN code n. = main sense. ΘΚΠ society > communication > indication > that which identifies or distinguishes > personal identification > [noun] > other methods of identification anthropometrics1881 bertillonage1892 Bertillon system1896 Bertillon measurement1928 pink triangle1950 electronic signature1957 genetic profile1959 genetic fingerprint1969 digital signature1976 PIN1976 PIN code1979 racial profiling1989 1979 Amer. Banker 14 May 27/1 A plastic card which accesses our electronic terminals will provide greater convenience and..reduce customer waiting time by providing identification via a PIN code. 1996 F. Popcorn & L. Marigold Clicking iii. 384 It's hoped that the shortsighted solution for car and cell phones of punching in a longer string of numbers and PIN codes will be short-lived. 2003 Observer 26 Oct. (Cash section) 12/6 In the past, users had to tap in a four-digit pin code before dialling the normal number. PIN number n. = main sense. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > money > medium of exchange or currency > paper money > cheques and drafts > [noun] > credit card > associated identification number PIN1976 PIN number1976 card number1982 1976 Lincoln (Nebraska) Star 2 May 11 a/2 (advt.) Choose your own PIN number when you establish your Money Service account. 1992 Financial Times 22 Feb. IV/4 Lost and stolen cards: does the code make clear that unless you knowingly let someone else use your card and PIN number, your liability is limited to a maximum of £50? 2004 Daily Tel. 11 Nov. 2/2 Gangs use ‘skimming’ devices placed near cashpoint slots to copy security details on a card's magnetic strip, while a tiny camera records the pin number tapped on the keypad. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2006; most recently modified version published online March 2022). pinv.1 1. transitive. To hold, fasten, or join (one thing to or on another, or things or parts of a thing together) with a peg, dowel, rod, nail, etc. (see pin n.1 4); to hold down with a nail, spike, etc. Also: †to fasten (a door or gate); to latch or lock (obsolete). Also figurative.to pin the basket: see to pin the basket at basket n. 1d. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > closed or shut condition > close or shut [verb (transitive)] > close (a door, window, etc.) > bolt, bar, or lock sparc1175 pena1200 louka1225 bara1300 shutc1320 lockc1325 clicketc1390 keyc1390 pinc1390 sneckc1440 belocka1450 spare?c1450 latch1530 to lock up1549 slot1563 bolt1574 to lock to?1575 double-lock1594 stang1598 obserate1623 padlock1722 button1741 snib1808 chain1839 society > occupation and work > industry > working with tools or equipment > fastening > fasten [verb (transitive)] > with pins or pegs biprenec1275 pinc1390 pin1449 key1577 peg1598 cotter1649 writhe1683 nog1711 cotterel1747 society > occupation and work > industry > working with tools or equipment > fastening > fasten [verb (transitive)] > with pins or pegs > fasten together pinc1390 c1390 in F. J. Furnivall Minor Poems Vernon MS (1901) ii. 612 (MED) Cros, þou dost no trouþe On a pillori my fruit to pinne. c1400 (c1378) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Laud 581) (1869) B. xx. 296 (MED) Conscience..made pees porter to pynne [a1450 Bodl. penne] þe ȝates. a1450 ( tr. Vegetius De Re Militari (Douce) f. 65 (MED) Aboue þis bank moot be piȝte pales or stakes wel scharped and nyȝ y-sette to gidre, wele & sadliche yframed and pynned to gidre wiþ craft of carpunteres. c1515 Ld. Berners tr. Bk. Duke Huon of Burdeux (1882–7) cxvi. 411 No shyppe can depart hens without it be pynnyd with nayles of woode and not of Iron. 1579–80 T. North tr. Plutarch Lives (1595) 750 Rafters or great peeces of tymber pinned together. 1607 G. Markham Cavelarice v. 3 All along as your sleepers lye to which you pinne downe the boardes, must a Trench or sincke bee digged. 1663 B. Gerbier Counsel to Builders 43 They pin down a planck. 1679 J. Moxon Mech. Exercises I. vii. 126 They pin it up with wooden Pins. 1763 J. Woolman Jrnl. 20 June (1971) viii. 135 About forty houses.., mostly built of split plank, one end set in the ground and the other pinned to a plate. 1820 W. Hazlitt Lect. Dramatic Lit. 317 He is pinned down in more than one Review..as an exemplary warning. 1881 F. J. Britten Watch & Clockmakers' Handbk. (ed. 4) 36 The lever is pinned to the pallets. 1904 L. F. Baum Marvelous Land of Oz 11 Pinning the edges together with wooden pegs. 1990 Pract. Woodworking Mar. 29/1 Offer up topboard A to the rebates at the top of the cheekboards and glue and pin in position. 2. Building. a. transitive. Chiefly Scottish. To fill in the joints or interstices of (a wall) with a mortar of small stones or chips of stone, shells, etc. Also intransitive. Cf. pinning n.1 5a. Now rare. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > surfacing or cladding > clad or cover [verb (transitive)] > clad or cover with stone or brick pin1426 brick1579 to brick over1696 ashlar1836 society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > building or constructing with stone > build or construct with stone [verb (transitive)] > other processes raggle1525 pin1680 rusticate1715 heart1776 tool1815 boast1823 fine-axe1834 ashlar1836 riprap1837 stroke1842 ditch1865 wraggle1875 bush-hammera1884 thorough-bind1884 1426–7 in H. Littlehales Medieval Rec. London City Church (1905) 65 ij masouns to pynne þe same hous. 1556 Edinb. Dean of Guild Rec. 24 July in Dict. Older Sc. Tongue (at cited word) Gif he pynnis it ony time heirefter. 1589 Baillie Court Bk. St. Andrews & Deerness 17 Sept. in Dict. Older Sc. Tongue (at cited word) Harll and pyn sufficientlie the haill wark sa far as neid requyris. 1680 in W. Cramond Church of Grange (1898) 35 That the churchyard dykes should be pinned with stone and lyme to prevent their ruine. 1774 J. Carter Builder's Mag. 70 All, and every such cuttings and recesse must be..pinned up, with brick, stone, slate, tile, shell, or iron, bedded in mortar. 1800 G. Nicol & W. Nicol Communications Board Agric. II. 74 The mason carefully pins or fills up all the interstices of the building with small stones. 1824 J. Mactaggart Sc. Gallovidian Encycl. 191 He didna batter, line, and pin, To please the e'e. 1912 Rymour Club Misc. II. 44 Formula for Dry-dykers: Pin weel, pack sma', Lay ae stane abune twa. ΚΠ 1546 T. Langley tr. P. Vergil Abridgem. Notable Worke iii. v. 71 Mamurra a Knight that was Master of July Caesar's woorkes in Fraunce pinned first the Walles of his house wyth broken marble. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > support > [verb (transitive)] > by or as something placed underneath undersetc1220 understiprec1230 underpin1533 pin1589 underbuild1610 understand1632 understay1679 1589 J. Rider Bibliotheca Scholastica 1090 To Pin an house under the grounsile, substruo. 3. a. transitive. To attach, fasten, or fix with or as with a pin or pins (pin n.1 7). Also with out, up, etc. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > working with tools or equipment > fastening > fasten [verb (transitive)] > with pins or pegs biprenec1275 pinc1390 pin1449 key1577 peg1598 cotter1649 writhe1683 nog1711 cotterel1747 J. Metham Amoryus & Cleopes (1916) 1626 (MED) And as sche ran, a kerchyff pennyd losely Fyl fro her hed awey vp-on the gres. 1530 J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 658/1 Pynne your jacket togyther for taking of colde. 1594 W. Shakespeare Henry VI, Pt. 2 sig. D2, (stage direct.) Enter Dame Elnor Cobham bare-foote,..with a waxe candle in her hand, and verses written on her backe and pind on. 1617 F. Moryson Itinerary iii. 168 Gownes made with long traines, which are pinned vp in the house. 1665 C. Cotton Scarronnides 32 He wore a hat, Instead of Sattin fac'd with fat, Which being limber-grown, we find Most swashingly pin'd up behind. 1701 London Gaz. No. 3725/4 Lost.., 3 Sheets of Paper made up in 3 Books, and pin'd in the middle. 1787 F. Burney Diary 8 Nov. (1842) III. 451 The wardrobe woman was pinning up the Queen's hair. 1838 G. P. R. James Robber I. vi. 140 With a sort of shawl of fine white lace pinned across her shoulders. 1893 Earl of Dunmore Pamirs II. 1 Pinning out his entomological specimens. 1923 W. Cather Lost Lady ii. ii. 113 Mrs. Forrester sat up suddenly and pinned on her white hat. 1995 Independent 13 Nov. 6/1 Some wore their poppies pinned outside their Barbours. b. transitive. To fasten the clothing of (a person) with pins; to secure clothing on (a part of the body). Frequently with up. ΚΠ 1484 W. Caxton tr. G. de la Tour-Landry Bk. Knight of Tower (1971) xxx. 53 Shall not this lady this day be pynned. 1612 B. Jonson Alchemist i. i. sig. Bv You went pinn'd vp. View more context for this quotation 1702 R. Steele Funeral v. 67 Come, lay down that Sentence and the Pin-cushion, and Pin up my shoulder. 1766 J. Entick New Hist. London I. 9 He met with British graves; in which were found ivory and wooden pins..used to pin up the corps in a woollen shroud. a1865 E. C. Gaskell Wives & Daughters (1866) I. ii. 23 She even went out into the stable-yard to pin Molly up in the shawl. 1926 Bridgeport (Connecticut) Telegram 27 Apr. 15/5 (advt.) They have an expert Fashion Advisor..who will tell you what styles and colors bring out your personality, and will cut and pin you into them, all ready for the sewing. 2001 Calgary (Alberta) Herald (Nexis) 20 Jan. 7 I have pinned myself into the gown. c. transitive (in passive). To stud or decorate with a pin or pins. Also figurative.rare before 20th cent. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > beautification > types of ornamentation > ornament [verb (transitive)] > stud with ornaments > with specific ornament nailc1400 pin1688 1688 [implied in: London Gaz. No. 2408/4 A Silver Minute Pendulum Clock, in a pinn'd Case, the Shagreen a very fine grain. (at pinned adj.4 2)]. 1713 London Gaz. No. 5155/4 The out-side Case Shagreen,..pinn'd with Gold Pins. 1909 M. J. Cawein New Poems 100 I saw the acolytes of Eve, the mystic sons of Night,..Their sombre cloaks were pinned with stars. 1967 News Jrnl. (Mansfield, Ohio) 22 Oct. 4 b/1 A one shoulder pale yellow chiffon dress pinned with a flower of diamonds and turquoises. 1996 Independent 14 Dec. (Mag.) 29/1 Gilded box-leaves pinned with gilded cloves in a pattern of fleurs-de-lis were among the heraldic decorations. d. transitive. To roll out (dough or pastry) with a rolling pin. rare. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > food manufacture and preparation > preparation for table or cooking > preparing pastry, biscuits, or cake > prepare pastry, biscuits, or cake [verb (transitive)] > roll out pin1889 1889 R. Wells Pastrycook & Confectioner's Guide 39 Pin them out not too thick, and cut them into four. 1999 Daily Rec. (Scotl.) (Nexis) 17 Nov. (Features section) 38 Put the pinned out pastry into the fridge to rest for 10 minutes before baking. e. transitive. Australian and New Zealand slang. To cause trouble for (a person); to have a grudge against. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > anger > indignation or resentment > be indignant at or resent [verb (transitive)] to take in (also on, to) griefc1325 to bear (a person or thing) hard (also heavily, heavy, etc.)c1384 to take agrief?a1400 disdaina1513 stomach1523 to take it amiss1530 to have a grudge against (to, at)1531 to think amiss1533 envy1557 to take‥in (the) snuff (or to snuff)1560 to take snuff1565 to take scorn1581 to take indignly1593 to bear (one) upon (also in) the spleen1596 spleena1629 disresent1652 indign1652 miff1797 pin1934 1934 C. Stead Seven Poor Men of Sydney iv. 122 A poor man..never 'as anything but a poor, miserable, wretched, untidy, un'appy life. They don't let 'im even be honest or 'ave a friend, if some one wants to pin 'im. 1941 S. J. Baker Pop. Dict. Austral. Slang 54 To pin someone, to have someone ‘set’, to have a grudge against a person. 1997 Sunday Star-Times (Auckland) (Nexis) 26 Oct. 3 A grudge-bearing Supreme Court judge ‘never gave up trying to pin those he disliked’. 4. figurative. a. transitive (frequently reflexive). To make dependent, contingent, or reliant on or upon; to make beholden, subject, or attached to. Formerly frequently in †to pin oneself on (also to) a person's sleeve. ΘΚΠ society > authority > subjection > subjecting or subjugation > subject [verb (transitive)] > make dependent on pin1578 1578 J. Lyly Euphues f. 40 Alas fonde foole arte thou so pinned to theire sleeues that thou regardest more their babble then thine owne blisse? 1598 W. Shakespeare Love's Labour's Lost v. ii. 321 This Gallant pins the Wenches on his sleeue. View more context for this quotation 1639 T. Fuller Hist. Holy Warre ii. xxv. 75 He made himself absolute master of all orders, pinning them on himself by an immediate dependance. 1660 F. Brooke tr. V. Le Blanc World Surveyed 97 They wholly pin themselves upon the advice of those Magitians. 1710 Tatler No. 219. ⁋1 A Couple of professed Wits, who..had thought fit to pin themselves upon a Gentleman. 1771 T. Smollett Humphry Clinker I. 151 He had been very assiduous to pin himself upon George Prankley,..knowing the said Prankley was heir to a considerable estate. 1841 E. Bulwer-Lytton Night & Morning ii. iv I might pin my fate to yours. 1885 H. M. Milner Turpin's Ride to York i. iii. 5/2 No wonder he's in trouble. When a man once pins himself to the petticoats, it's all up with him. 1907 Times 9 Sept. 17/3 He should dubitate very much if he were leader of the Unionist party before he pinned himself to protection. 2002 Jrnl. News (Westchester County, N.Y.) (Nexis) 4 Apr. 7 b It gives them the beginning of something they can really pin themselves to. b. transitive. To entrust (one's hope, faith, reputation, etc.) entirely to a particular person or thing; to make entirely consequent or dependent on or upon a person or thing. Frequently in to pin one's faith (also hope, etc.) on (also to) a person's sleeve. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > existence > intrinsicality or inherence > inhere in or be an attribute of [verb (transitive)] > attribute or ascribe as an attribute > to a person reputea1425 supposea1450 threaten1555 to threap (something) upon1559 to pin one's faith (also hope, etc.) on (also to) a person's sleeve1583 intend1615 the mind > mental capacity > expectation > hope > confident hope, trust > trust in, rely on [verb (transitive)] > put trust in setc825 besetc1175 laya1307 putc1400 repose1538 pin1583 the mind > mental capacity > expectation > hope > confident hope, trust > trust in, rely on [verb (transitive)] to set one's heart on (also (in)c825 littenc1175 leanc1230 fie1340 trusta1382 resta1393 reappose1567 repose1567 lite1570 rely1574 to set (up) one's rest1579 rely1606 to look back1646 recumba1677 to pin one's faith (also hope, etc.) on (also to) a person's sleeve1791 to look to ——1807 bank1884 1583 G. Babington Very Fruitfull Expos. Commaundem. iv. 184 I should..neuer pin my euerlasting estate in paine or blisse vpon so slender..perswasions. 1599 Life Sir T. More in C. Wordsworth Eccl. Biogr. (1853) II. 149 I never intended to pinne my soule to another mans sleeve. 1615 H. Crooke Μικροκοσμογραϕια 318 It is not good..to pin a mans knowledge vpon any particular mans sleeue. 1677 W. Hughes Man of Sin ii. i. 11 Tradition..deserveth rather nailing to the Pillory, than pinning Faith upon it. 1710 T. Hearne Remarks & Coll. 4 Mar. Some pin..their Faith on..Hoadly. 1791 R. Broome Exam. Expediency continuing Present Impeachment 70 The members of both sides of the House pinned their faith on the sleeves of their leaders. 1828 Countess Granville Lett. (1894) II. 19 I now pin my hopes on a meeting at Dieppe. 1857 A. Mathews Tea-table Talk I. 92 She pinned her faith upon a horseshoe nailed upon the outer gate. 1904 J. Conrad Nostromo i. vi. 70 I pin my faith to material interests. 1991 Motorboat & Yachting June 60/1 It's one thing to put a triangle on the chart to represent an EP (estimated position), and quite another to pin your faith on it. c. transitive. To fix (blame, guilt, responsibility, etc.) on a person or thing; to fix or put blame for (a crime, error, etc.) on a person or thing. rare before 19th cent. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > testing > accusation, charge > accuse [verb (transitive)] > fasten upon fastOE fastenc1390 rub1618 pina1627 the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > disapproval > blame > [verb (transitive)] > throw blame on witec893 putc1380 pina1627 load1662 to lay (or cast) the loada1715 scapegoat1943 a1627 T. Middleton Women beware Women iii. i, in 2 New Playes (1657) 145 You were pleas'd of late to pin an error on me. 1819 P. B. Shelley Cenci i. iii. 13 You seem too light of heart..To act the deeds that rumour pins on you. 1866 G. W. Harris Sut Lovingood's Yarns (1966) 270 Ise pow'f'ly feard some ornry cuss am a tryin to pin that ar freak ore genus to my cotail on the sly. 1924 ‘W. Fabian’ Sailors' Wives 34 Dorrisdale credits me with at least three [lovers], but they've never been able to pin it on me with anyone. 1942 E. Paul Narrow Street xxi. 169 As usual, when anything sinister happened, his enemies tried to pin everything on Caillaux, who cleared himself promptly. 1977 L. Meynell Hooky gets Wooden Spoon xii. 150 ‘Can the Law connect her with you?’..‘No, they couldn't pin anything on me.’ 1993 Bks. in Canada Apr. 9/2 I'm going to pin the blame..on Mosaic, the publisher. 5. figurative. a. transitive. To hold (a person) to a promise, course of action, etc.; to constrain. Chiefly with down to. ΘΚΠ society > morality > duty or obligation > moral or legal constraint > bind (a person) morally or legally [verb (transitive)] obligea1325 conclude1393 astrainc1475 astringe1523 obstringe1528 obligate1533 bind1549 debt-bind1563 astrictc1600 tie1608 engage1642 to put (a person) on his or her honour1656 pin1710 1710 H. Prideaux Orig. & Right Tithes ii. 74 The Law of God..doth not absolutely pin us down to the manner of doing it. 1739 Coll. Parl. Deb. XIX. 52 If they had made that payment at the time appointed, we should have been pinned down to a new ten year's negotiation. 1811 J. Austen Sense & Sensibility I. ii. 21 I would not pin myself down to the payment of one [sc. an annuity] for all the world. View more context for this quotation 1894 Pop. Sci. Monthly Feb. 507 I am pinned this year by the meeting of the British Association at Liverpool. 1945 E. Bowen Ivy Gripped Steps in Horizon Sept. 199 Mrs Nicholson, so far, could be pinned down to nothing more than a promise to send cakes from her own, or rather her cook's kitchen. 1992 J. Creighton Oil on Troubled waters (BNC) 99 Perez de Cuellar's task..was now to pin them down to an actual cease-fire on the ground. b. transitive. Chiefly with down. To manoeuvre (a person) into a position where evasion is impossible; to force (a person) to be specific or make a commitment. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > difficulty > hindrance > restriction of free action > restrict in free action [verb (transitive)] bindc1200 hamper?a1366 chain1377 coarctc1400 prison?a1425 tether?a1505 fetter1526 imprisona1533 strait1533 swaddle1539 measure1560 shacklea1568 to tie up1570 manacle1577 straitena1586 hopple1586 immew16.. scant1600 cabina1616 criba1616 trammela1616 copse1617 cramp1625 cloister1627 incarcerate1640 hidebind1642 strait-lace1662 perstringe1679 hough-band1688 cabin1780 pin1795 strait jacket1814 peg1832 befetter1837 to tie the hands of1866 corset1935 society > authority > subjection > restraint or restraining > restriction or limitation > restrict or limit [verb (transitive)] > in free action bind971 hamper?a1366 chain1377 coarctc1400 prison?a1425 tether?a1505 fetter1526 imprisona1533 strait1533 swaddle1539 measure1560 shacklea1568 to tie up1570 manacle1577 straitena1586 hopple1586 immew16.. scant1600 cabina1616 criba1616 trammela1616 copse1617 cramp1625 cloister1627 incarcerate1640 hidebind1642 to box up1659 strait-lace1662 perstringe1679 hough-band1688 cabin1780 pin1795 strait jacket1814 peg1832 befetter1837 to tie the hands of1866 hog-tie1924 corset1935 1795 J. Barlow Hist. Eng. 1765–95 I. 298 Lord Camden, on his part, gave intimations that he would pin down the chief justice, and drive him to a legal contest on these great points. 1874 Atlantic Monthly Aug. 228/2 If you want to pin me down to facts, I must own that no part of my story happened. 1881 Appletons' Jrnl. Mar. 263/2 I wish your connections of thought had less eccentricity. I can't pin you down to anything. 1904 G. Ade True Bills 40 Horace tried to side-step the Questions about Drinking and Smoking, but Uncle pinned him down. 1991 Atlantic June 68/1 When Tyrone says he went to school, he might mean he went to one class in a whole week, so Ronan tries to pin him down. 6. transitive. figurative. With down. To characterize, define, or specify precisely; to restrict to. ΘΚΠ society > authority > subjection > restraint or restraining > restriction or limitation > restrict or limit [verb (transitive)] > to something tinec1430 naila1522 conclude1548 astrict1588 to keep to ——1698 pin1718 thirl1864 the world > relative properties > kind or sort > individual character or quality > quality of being special or restricted in application > quality of being restricted or limited > restrict or limit [verb (transitive)] > to or within something tinec1430 naila1522 restrict1535 conclude1548 strait1581 astrict1588 retract1713 pin1718 thirl1864 1718 D. Jones Compleat Hist. Turks IV. 26 Being now pinned down to this Sense, there is none among them that dare in the least make a doubt of it. 1775 J. Burgh Polit. Disquisitions I. v. 316 We apprehend, that pinning down the petitioning lords to the precise words of the order, may be attended with this fatal consequence. 1846 Times 14 May 6/6 It seems that Mr. French and his counsel pin it down to the precise time of taking it. 1868 Overland Monthly Nov. 426/1 Attempt to pin it [sc. Bohemianism] down to a formulary, and you destroy its existence, which depends upon freedom from all conventional restraints. 1927 V. Woolf To Lighthouse iii. x. 283 When he looked up, as he did now for an instant, it was not to see anything; it was to pin down some thought more exactly. 2000 C. Tudge Variety of Life ii. xviii. 455 The kinds of generalized-looking creatures whose relationships are hardest to pin down. 7. a. transitive. To hold fast, esp. in such a way as to make escape or resistance difficult; to hold down so as to restrict actions or movement. Also intransitive. ΘΚΠ society > authority > subjection > restraint or restraining > restraint depriving of liberty > deprive of liberty by restraint [verb (transitive)] at-hold?c1225 to hold inc1300 withholda1325 distrainc1340 restrain1397 stressa1425 detain1485 to lay fast1560 constrain1590 enstraiten1619 embinda1628 pin1738 coerce1780 deport1909 the world > relative properties > kind or sort > individual character or quality > quality of being special or restricted in application > quality of being restricted or limited > restrict or limit [verb (transitive)] thringc1250 circumscrivec1374 arta1382 bound1393 limita1398 restrainc1405 pincha1450 restringe1525 coarcta1529 circumscribe1529 restrict1535 conclude1548 narrow?1548 limitate1563 stint1567 chamber1568 contract1570 crampern1577 contain1578 finish1587 conscribe1588 pound1589 confine1597 border1608 circumcise1613 constrain1614 coarctate1624 butta1631 prescribe1688 pin1738 1738 T. Shaw Trav. Barbary & Levant 375 The Hawks are for the most Part, of the same Size and Quality with our Goss-Hawks, being sufficiently strong to pin down a Bustard. 1773 B. Franklin Let. Dec. in London 709 Will not these Scottish Lairds be satisfied unless a Law passes to pin down all Tenants to the Estate they are born on? 1816 W. Scott Antiquary III. xiv. 302 Forth bolts the operative brother to pin like a bull-dog. 1888 J. W. Burgon Lives Twelve Good Men II. v. 66 He caught me by my elbows, and pinned me up against the wall..so that I could not stir. 1945 Sun (Baltimore) 21 Feb. 1/7 (heading) 4th Division pinned down by mortar fire 17 hours. 1986 Philadelphia Inquirer 11 July b6/1 The victim was pinned in the cab. b. transitive. Chess. To trap (an opposing piece) so that it cannot be moved without exposing a more valuable piece to capture. Also with down. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > board game > chess > [verb (transitive)] > tactics to shut up1474 to take upc1475 neck1597 catch1674 to discover check1688 attack1735 retreat1744 fork1745 pin1745 retake1750 guard1761 interpose1761 castle1764 retract1777 to take (a pawn) en passant1818 capture1820 decline1847 cook1851 undouble1868 unpin1878 counter1890 fidate1910 sacrifice1915 fianchetto1927 1745 P. Stamma Noble Game of Chess 112 Look first whether your Adversary cannot pin that Piece down. 1841 G. Walker New Treat. Chess (ed. 3) 15 The Bishop is able in certain cases to confine and pin the Knight, until the King or some other piece comes up and takes him. 1868 G. H. Selkirk Bk. Chess 73 White would then pin the Rook by Queen to Queen's 3rd. 1938 Times 31 Dec. 14/4 Euwe captured the gambit pawn and supported it with P–Q Kt 4, allowing Szabo to pin his K Kt. 1993 New Scientist 4 Sept. 29/3 White has to sacrifice his queen to pin down Black's king in a deadly crossfire of bishops. c. transitive. Wrestling. To hold (an opponent) down so that both shoulder blades touch the mat for a specified length of time; to subject (an opponent) to a pinfall. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > fighting sports > wrestling > wrestle with [verb (transitive)] > manoeuvres casta1300 hurl1613 hip1675 back-clamp1713 buttock1823 fling1825 hipe1835 cross-buttock1878 pin1879 hank1881 hammer-lock1905 scissor1907 body slam1932 powerbomb1993 1879 N.Y. Times 16 Feb. 1/6 After a sharp tussle by Miller for his favorite neck-lock, he was hipped, thrown, and pinned to the floor, both shoulders down. 1911 Indianapolis Star 5 Sept. 12/1 Second fall—Gotch pinned Hackenschmidt with a toe lock. 1952 H. E. Kenney & G. C. Law Wrestling vi. 11 The objective of all wrestling offense is to pin your opponent. 1974 J. Irving 158-Pound Marriage ix. 211 Bender, voted outstanding wrestler in the Eastern tournament at Annapolis two weeks ago, has pinned eighteen out of his last twenty opponents. 1996 Guardian 16 Mar. (Weekend Suppl.) 34/2 In five years of wrestling at Exeter, I probably pinned no more than a half-dozen opponents. d. transitive. Physics. To cause (magnetic flux) to undergo pinning (pinning n.1 4). ΚΠ 1963 Physical Rev. 131 2495/1 The central feature of the theory is that flux pinned by physical irregularities present in the material can creep by thermal activation. 1980 Science 23 May 887 For A15 compounds, the fluxoids are probably pinned by dislocation clusters. 1996 Nature 29 Aug. 761/1 If the vortices are pinned down so that they cannot move, then no energy is dissipated and a current will flow without loss. 8. transitive. colloquial. To seize, grab; to steal. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > taking > seizing > seize [verb (transitive)] gripea900 afangOE to lay hands (or hand) on or upon (also in, to)OE repeOE atfonga1000 keepc1000 fang1016 kip1297 seize1338 to seize on or upon1399 to grip toc1400 rapc1415 to rap and rendc1415 comprise1423 forsetc1430 grip1488 to put (one's) hand(s) on (also in, to, unto, upon)1495 compass1509 to catch hold1520 hap1528 to lay hold (up)on, of1535 seisin?c1550 cly1567 scratch1582 attach1590 asseizea1593 grasp1642 to grasp at1677 collar1728 smuss1736 get1763 pin1768 grabble1796 bag1818 puckerow1843 nobble1877 jump1882 snaffle1902 snag1962 pull1967 1768 Earl of Carlisle in J. H. Jesse G. Selwyn & his Contemp. (1843) II. 340 I am sure they intended to pin my money. 1843 J. F. Cooper Ned Myers vii. 85 I saw an ivory rule lying on the boards, with fifteen pence alongside of it. These I pinned, as a lawful prize, being in an enemy's country. 1864 J. C. Hotten Slang Dict. (new ed.) 201 Pin, to catch, apprehend. Also, to steal rapidly. 1901 ‘G. Douglas’ House with Green Shutters xxvi Just twa e'en, and they aye keep thegither, though they're aye moving. That's why I canna pin them. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > breaking or cracking > break [verb (transitive)] > windows mill1699 nick1717 pin1824 the world > space > relative position > condition of being open or not closed > making holes or becoming holed > make (an opening or hole) [verb (transitive)] > by boring, piercing, or perforating piercec1392 bore?1523 drive?a1525 thirl1609 drill1669 perforate1777 stick1834 puncture1851 sieve1875 pin1897 1824 W. Scott Redgauntlet I. i. 7 And who taught me to pin a losen, head a bicker? 1897 Daily News 7 June 2/3 Drills shrieking shrill accompaniment to the hum of whirring machinery as they pinned rivet-holes in metal plates. Phrases P1. a. U.S. colloquial. to pin a person's ears back: to defeat a person; to chastise or rebuke a person. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > disapproval > rebuke or reproof > rebuke or reprove [verb (intransitive)] reprovec1330 sniba1400 reprehend?a1439 expostulate1574 to rap (a person) on the knuckles (also fingers)1584 give it1594 reprimand1681 to pin a person's ears back1861 yell1886 to jump down a person's throat1916 to chew (a person's) ass1946 to slap (a person) down1960 1861 Southern Literary Messenger Oct. 311/1 All you got to do is take his shoes off and pin back his ears, and I'll eat him 'fore the cumpny. 1936 Sheboygan (Wisconsin) Press 29 Aug. 10/6 The Brownies had pinned their ears back 8-1 in the opener with a 15-hit attack. 1949 P. G. Wodehouse Uncle Dynamite ix. 160 His manner that of a man who has had his ears pinned back. 2004 Vanity Fair (N.Y.) May 273/3 Baldrige had endured having her ‘ears pinned back’..by Jackie one too many times. b. to pin one's ears back and variants: to listen attentively. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > attention > notice, observation > listen attentively [phrase] to bow the earc1230 to lend audience1580 to lend an ear or one's ears1583 to lend hearing1603 to prick up one's ears1682 to cock one's ears1700 to have one's ears flapping1925 to pin one's ears back1947 1947 K. Amis Let. 16 June (2000) 135 Meantime I'll keep my ears pinned back for a better proposition. 1966 ‘L. Black’ Bait iii. 33 I shall keep eyes open. And ears pinned back. 1994 Straight No Chaser Summer 25/2 I pinned my ears back to hear what the artist has to say about this ‘man ting’. P2. to pin the tail on the donkey and variants: to play a party game in which blindfolded players attempt to place a representation of a tail on the appropriate spot on a picture of a donkey or other animal; to succeed in doing this. Also in extended use.Also in imperative, as the name of this game; cf. pig n.1 14b. ΚΠ 1887 Daily Northwestern (Oshkosh, Wisconsin) 31 Jan. After whirling around three times he starts out to pin the tail to the donkey. 1919 Lima (Ohio) Daily News 13 Feb. 7/1 ‘Pin the Arrow on the Heart’ is a game suitable for a Valentine party. it is similar to the game known as ‘Pin the Tail on the Donkey’. 1966 Times 21 Nov. 13/4 Small children enjoy games like musical bumps, statues, follow-my-leader, pinning the tail on the reindeer and a button treasure hunt. 1969 Washington Post 5 Aug. c2/3 Maybe we're just looking for scapegoats, some way to pin the tail on the donkey. 1971 N.Y. Times 20 Oct. 51/1 Mr. Sadowsky called the program's method of operating a ‘pin-the-tail-on-the-donkey procedure’. 1987 R. McCammon Swan Song 180 Look what I won at the party! I pinned the tail on the donkey the best! 2004 L. Fox Lost Girls 84 Well, you pinned the tail on the donkey: my childhood was pretty darn near perfect. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2006; most recently modified version published online June 2022). pinv.2 1. a. transitive. To confine, to imprison; to hem in; (also) to shut up; spec. to put (an animal) in a pound, fold, etc.; to impound. Now rare except as merging with pin v.1 7a. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > enclosing or enclosure > enclosing or confining > enclose or confine [verb (transitive)] pena1200 bebar?c1225 loukc1275 beshuta1300 parc1300 to shut in1398 to close inc1400 parrockc1400 pinc1400 steekc1400 lock?a1425 includec1425 key?a1439 spare?c1450 enferme1481 terminea1500 bebay1511 imprisona1533 besetc1534 hema1552 ram1567 warda1586 closet1589 pound1589 seclude1598 confine1600 i-pend1600 uptie1600 pinfold1605 boundify1606 incoop1608 to round in1609 ring1613 to buckle ina1616 embounda1616 swathe1624 hain1636 coopa1660 to sheathe up1661 stivea1722 cloister1723 span1844 society > authority > subjection > restraint or restraining > restraint depriving of liberty > confinement > confine [verb (transitive)] beloukOE loukOE sparc1175 pena1200 bepen?c1225 pind?c1225 prison?c1225 spearc1300 stopc1315 restraina1325 aclosec1350 forbara1375 reclosea1382 ward1390 enclose1393 locka1400 reclusea1400 pinc1400 sparc1430 hamperc1440 umbecastc1440 murea1450 penda1450 mew?c1450 to shut inc1460 encharter1484 to shut up1490 bara1500 hedge1549 hema1552 impound1562 strain1566 chamber1568 to lock up1568 coop1570 incarcerate1575 cage1577 mew1581 kennel1582 coop1583 encagea1586 pound1589 imprisonc1595 encloister1596 button1598 immure1598 seclude1598 uplock1600 stow1602 confine1603 jail1604 hearse1608 bail1609 hasp1620 cub1621 secure1621 incarcera1653 fasten1658 to keep up1673 nun1753 mope1765 quarantine1804 peg1824 penfold1851 encoop1867 oubliette1884 jigger1887 corral1890 maroon1904 to bang up1950 to lock down1971 c1400 (a1376) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Trin. Cambr. R.3.14) (1960) A. v. 127 I..Putte hem in a pressour & pynnede hem þereinne. Promptorium Parvulorum (Harl. 221) 400 Pynnyn, or put yn a pynfold, intrudo, detrudo. a1513 H. Bradshaw Lyfe St. Werburge (1521) i. xxiv. sig. i.iiv To be pynned, and punysshed for theyr trespace. 1590 E. Webbe Rare & Wonderfull Things (new ed.) sig. C2v I found two thousand Christians pinde vp in ston walles lockt fast in yron chaynes. 1632 L. Rowzee Queenes Welles iii. 16 To contract and pin up the Sea into narrower limits, by..dikes [etc.]. 1691 J. Ray Coll. Eng. Words (ed. 2) 17 A Coop is generally used for a Vessel or place to pin up or enclose any thing. 1715 Hist. Wars Charles XII. King of Sweden 366 King Augustus with their main Army had begun to draw a Line from Grypsswald to Trebeses,..by which he supposed to pin up the Swedish Army in Straelsund. 1824 Ld. Byron Don Juan: Canto XV xxvi. 18 Pinned like a flock, and fleeced too in their fold. 1847 A. Brontë Agnes Grey iv. 63 I had got Tom pinned up in a corner, whence, I told him, he should not escape till he had done his appointed task. 1999 J. Lethem Motherless Brooklyn 3 A lone town house pinned between giant doorman apartment buildings. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > board game > play (a board game) [verb (transitive)] > tactics pin1688 1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory (1905) iii. xvi. 68/1 The play is, by so many geese to pinne the fox, that he cannot stire one hole further. ?1870 F. Hardy & J. R. Ware Mod. Hoyle 107 The object [in Draughts]..is to capture all your adversary's men, or to ‘pin’ them, or hem them in so that they cannot be moved. ΘΚΠ society > authority > subjection > restraint or restraining > restriction or limitation > restrict or limit [verb (transitive)] thringc1250 restrain1384 bound1393 abounda1398 limita1398 pincha1450 pin?a1475 prescribec1485 define1513 coarcta1529 circumscribe1529 restrict1535 conclude1548 limitate1563 stint1567 chamber1568 contract1570 crampern1577 contain1578 finish1587 pound1589 confine1597 terminate1602 noosec1604 border1608 constrain1614 coarctate1624 butta1631 to fasten down1694 crimp1747 bourn1807 to box in1845 ?a1475 Lessons of Dirige (Douce) 138 in J. Kail 26 Polit. Poems (1904) 125 (MED) Shewe thow forth thy grete goodnes, And thyne hardshyp vp thow pynne. 1587 D. Fenner Def. Godlie Ministers sig. Ci Howe hath he..pinned vp her authoritie, when he sought to enlarge it? 1635 S. Birckbek Protestants Evid. (new ed.) Pref. 2 An Allusion which Saint Austin used against the Donatists, (who pinned up the Church within a corner of Africk). 1638 F. Junius Painting of Ancients 314 To have his phantasie pinned up within the narrow compass of a poor..invention. 3. transitive. Mechanics. Of metal filings: to clog (the teeth of a file). ΚΠ 1880 Manfacturer & Builder Feb. 28/3 The filings, especially of wrought iron, tend to ‘pin’ or clog the file teeth. 1964 S. Crawford Basic Engin. Processes i. 10 When filing soft metals there is a tendency for the file teeth to become clogged or pinned with small particles of metal. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2006; most recently modified version published online March 2022). † pinv.3 U.S. Obsolete. rare. Apparently only attested in dictionaries or glossaries. transitive. = peen v. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > working with tools or equipment > work with tools or equipment [verb (transitive)] > driving or beating tools strike1340 hammerc1430 maul?1440 riveta1450 calla1522 peena1522 peck1533 mallet1594 beetle1608 pickaxe1800 sledge1816 sledgehammer1834 tack-hammer1865 pin1875 pile-drive1894 staple gun1960 1875 E. H. Knight Amer. Mech. Dict. III. 1706/1 Pin,..11. To swage by striking with the peen of a hammer; as splaying an edge of an iron hoop to give it the flare corresponding to that of the cask. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2006; most recently modified version published online December 2021). < n.1OEn.21868n.31879n.41976v.1c1390v.2c1400v.31875 |
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