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单词 quern
释义

quernn.1

Brit. /kwəːn/, U.S. /kwərn/
Forms:

α. Old English cern (Northumbrian), Old English coern (Northumbrian), Old English curn, Old English cwearne (Northumbrian), Old English cweorne, Old English cwern (Mercian), Old English cwiorn, Old English cwurn, Old English cwyrn, Old English–early Middle English cweorn, Middle English queern, Middle English queerne, Middle English queren, Middle English qwerne, Middle English qweryn, Middle English–1500s qwern, Middle English–1700s (1800s Irish English (Wexford)) querne, Middle English– quern, late Middle English quyerne, late Middle English–1500s quyrne, 1500s quarn, 1500s qweyrn, 1500s–1600s quearn, 1600s quarne; English regional 1600s corne (south-western), 1800s quarn (East Anglian), 1800s quions (Lincolnshire), 1800s quons (East Anglian, plural), 1800s quorn, 1800s– quearn (Lincolnshire); Scottish pre-1700 corn, pre-1700 cuirne, pre-1700 kewrne, pre-1700 kuirne, pre-1700 kurn, pre-1700 kurne, pre-1700 queirn, pre-1700 queirne, pre-1700 querne, pre-1700 quorne, pre-1700 quyirne, pre-1700 qweirne, pre-1700 1700s quarn, pre-1700 1700s quearn, pre-1700 1700s (1800s north-eastern) quirn, pre-1700 1700s– quairn, pre-1700 1700s– quern, pre-1700 1800s curn, pre-1700 1800s curne, 1700s quiern, 1900s– kweern, 1900s– kwern (northern), 1900s– queen (Orkney), 1900s– queern, 1900s– querren (north-eastern).

β. Chiefly northern Middle English qwhern, Middle English whereen, Middle English wheren, Middle English whern, Middle English–1500s wherne, 1500s whearne, 1500s wheirne, 1500s wyrne; Scottish pre-1700 quhern, 1900s– hwern (Orkney and Shetland).

Origin: A word inherited from Germanic.
Etymology: Cognate with Old Frisian quern mill (East Frisian (Saterland) tserne , North Frisian querne ), Middle Dutch querne , queerne , queern handmill (Dutch kweern ), Old Saxon quern , querna mill (Middle Low German querne , quērne , quern handmill), Old High German quirna , quirn , kurn millstone, mill (Middle High German kürne , kürn , kurn ), Old Icelandic kvern handmill (Icelandic kvörn ), Old Swedish qvärn , qvarn mill (Swedish kvarn ), Danish kværn mill (1603 as quernn , or earlier), Gothic -qairnus mill (in asiluqairnus donkey mill), ultimately < the same Indo-European base as classical Latin gravis (see grave adj.1), ancient Greek βαρύς (see baro- comb. form), and perhaps Gothic kaurus, all in sense ‘heavy’; compare < variants (ablaut variants and extended forms) of the same Indo-European base Sanskrit grāvan pressing stone, Early Irish brao, bró (genitive broon; Irish bró), Welsh breuan (13th cent.), Old Church Slavonic žrŭny, Russian žërnov, Polish żarna, Old Prussian girnoywis, plural, Lithuanian girnos, all in sense ‘millstone’. Compare post-classical Latin querna (1358 in a British source).In Old English originally a strong feminine of the u -stem declension, it is largely assimilated to the more common ō -stems; a rare weak feminine by-form (cweorne , cwearne ) is also attested. The 19th-cent. regional forms quions , quons apparently show singular agreement, and probably arose from the plural use in a pair of querns ; compare Older Scots ane peppircornis (compare pepper-quern n.).
A simple, typically hand-operated, device for grinding corn, etc., consisting of two stones, the upper of which is rotated or rubbed on the lower. Also: a small hand-mill for grinding pepper, mustard, etc. pair of querns: a pair of quernstones. hand-, malt-, mustard-, pot-, saddle-quern, etc.: see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > food manufacture and preparation > preparation of grain > milling or grinding > [noun] > corn-mill > hand-mill
quernOE
hand mill1523
quern mill1590
kibbling-mill1826
pot-quern1851
mano1901
OE (Northumbrian) Lindisf. Gospels: Matt. xxiv. 41 Duę molentes in mola : tuoege uel tuu wif gegrundon on coernæ [OE Rushw. ad molam : æt cweorne].
OE Old Eng. Hexateuch: Exod. (Claud.) xi. 5 Þære wylne..sunu þe sit æt ðære cweornan [L. ancillae quae est ad molam].
c1300 Pilate (Harl.) 5 in F. J. Furnivall Early Eng. Poems & Lives Saints (1862) 111 (MED) Bi a melewardes douȝter he lai..And biȝat on hire vnder þe querne þe liþere bern.
1340 Ayenbite (1866) 181 (MED) Samson..uil into þe honden of his yuo, þet him deden grinde ate querne.
?a1400 Apocalypse St. John: A Version (Rawl.) (1961) 157 (MED) In here ne no man of craft shal any more be-founden; in here ne no vois of querne shal be herd in here more.
c1475 St. Patrick's Purgatory (Yale Beinecke 365) in L. T. Smith Common-place Bk. 15th Cent. (1886) 95 (MED) Yt semyth a trendyll þat ran so ȝarne, Ryght as a stone of a qwerne.
1513 G. Douglas tr. Virgil Æneid i. iv. 39 For skant of victuall the cornes in quernis of stane Thai grand.
1561 in P. C. D. Brears Yorks. Probate Inventories 1542–1689 (1972) 12 The kytching—Item one pair of whearnes £0. 4s. 0d. Item 1 lead 1 masket 1 wort trough 1 gylefat.
1612 S. Sturtevant Metallica viii. 63 A Windmill is an intermixt Inuention, because some of the partes, as namely the Milne-stones, the rong-wheeles and the Cogg-wheeles were first extant in a water-milne or horse-milne and quernes.
1647 W. Lilly Christian Astrol. l. 354 Some necessary thing..to use in his house, as a Furnace or Quern, or such like.
1699 J. Evelyn Acetaria 104 The Seeds are pounded in a Mortar; or..ground in a Quern contriv'd for this purpose.
1716 Worlidge's Compl. Syst. Husbandry & Gardening xi. 380 Mills have been invented, some to be used by hands, as Querns, others to be moved by Horses.
1771 T. Pennant Tour Scotl. (1794) 232 Saw here a Quern, a sort of portable mill made of two stones.
1815 Wks. of Alexander Pennecuik 121 (note) A kiln for drying corn, when querns or hand-mills for grinding it were commonly used.
1841 S. C. Hale Ireland III. 296 Two women generally worked the Quern, one sitting facing the other, the quern between them.
1884 J. Colborne With Hicks Pasha in Soudan 60 The circular querns of Lower Egypt, which are turned by means of a wooden handle.
1900 C. Murray Hamewith 10 He'd querns for grindin' either meal or snuff.
1972 G. M. Brown Greenvoe i. 30 The ox, the plough, the seedjar, the harrow, the sickle, the flail, the quern, the oven, made a great circle of fruition.
1991 New Scientist 23 Feb. 42/1 Romans used..hand mills, sometimes called querns, which typically measured between 33 and 36 centimetres across.

Compounds

quern-chant n. = quern song n.
ΚΠ
1898 Edinb. Rev. Apr. 440 In the North, where he often heard the rhythmical quern-chant.
quern-house n. a building in which a quern or querns are kept or operated.
ΚΠ
1525 in Southwell Visit. (1891) 123 ij leads that standes in wherne-house.
1710 R. Newcourt Repertorium Ecclesiasticum II. 309 A Stable, a Quern-House, two Small Cotes to fat Fowl in.
1904 W. B. Yeats Stories Red Hanrahan (1914) 158 Brother Bald Fox, whose business it was to turn the great quern in the quern-house..was getting old.
1963 M. Barley in I. L. Foster & L. Alcock Culture & Environment 498 The quern-house..usually had a quern, or a pair of querns (singular and plural were used indifferently) for grinding malt, but other things such as cheese-press or barrels are often found there.
quern mill n. (a) a hand-mill; (b) a building or structure housing querns.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > food manufacture and preparation > preparation of grain > milling or grinding > [noun] > corn-mill > hand-mill
quernOE
hand mill1523
quern mill1590
kibbling-mill1826
pot-quern1851
mano1901
the world > food and drink > food > food manufacture and preparation > preparation of grain > milling or grinding > [noun] > corn-mill > other types of mill
water corn mill1327
watermill1371
quern mill1590
water grist mill1636
tide-mill1640
parish mill1676
whin-mill1793
roller mill1828
saddle quern1867
walk-around1869
kibbler1882
1590 in F. G. Emmison Essex Wills (1989) (modernized text) V. 159 To him a table with a pair of dormans..and a quern mill.
1600 P. Holland tr. Livy Rom. Hist. xxxiii. xlv. 706 Troughs and querne mils.
1697–9 in A. M. Munro Rec. Old Aberdeen (1899) I. 223 Ane quearn mill.
1814 J. Train Strains of Mountain Muse 144 With platter, glaiks and quern mill.
1892 Times 24 Oct. 3/3 The upper stone of a quern mill, of unusual weight, and broken through the middle into two portions.
1965 Daily Times (Salisbury, Maryland) 7 Oct. 29/2 The old Mill House.., built in 1680 and originally a quern Mill.
2006 Gastronomica Winter 87/1 A large version of the quern mill traveled with armies on military excursions to grind flour for the troops' bread.
quernpecker n. a person whose occupation is to carve quernstones. Now historical.
ΚΠ
1381 in A. H. Thomas Cal. Plea & Mem. Rolls London Guildhall (1932) III. 290 (MED) [William Alayn] quernpeckere.
1441 in S. Tymms Wills & Inventories Bury St. Edmunds (1850) 256 (MED) [William Toly], quernepykker.
1975 Winnipeg Free Press 30 Aug. (Features) 13/4 Some of the obsolete trades bear names that sound positively ludicrous, the quernpecker, for instance..busied himself at chipping..indentations into the faces of hard millstones.
quern song n. a song composed or sung while operating a quern.
ΚΠ
1816 Monthly Rev. 81 73 We will now subjoin the Grotta-Saungr or quern-song.
1936 L. M. Hollander Old Norse Poems 72 The valkyries are chanting their magic song to safeguard only their favorite..much as the giant maidens in the Quern Song ‘grind out’ the fate of their captor, King Fróthi.
2004 Independent 15 Dec. 29/2 The book comprises songs in significant cultural variety..milking songs, spinning songs, waulking songs, clapping songs and quern songs.
quern staff n. a handle for turning a quern. Now rare.
ΚΠ
c1350 Nominale (Cambr. Ee.4.20) in Trans. Philol. Soc. (1906) 17* Rouloun,..Qwernestaf.
a1425 Medulla Gram. (Stonyhurst) f. 42 Moluerum [perh. read molucrum], a querne stafe.
?c1475 Catholicon Anglicum (BL Add. 15562) f. 101 A Qwern [1483 BL Add. 89074 a Querne staffe], molucrum.
1988 E. Friberg tr. Kalevala xix. 166/2 She herself was grinding grain, Swaying lightly on the quern staff.

Derivatives

ˈquern-like adv.
ΚΠ
1605 J. Sylvester tr. G. de S. Du Bartas Deuine Weekes & Wks. i. vi. 211 Two equall rankes of Orient Pearles..(Quern-like) grinding small Th' imperfect food.
1993 C. Spencer Heretic's Feast (1996) p. xii The huge quern-like cheek teeth of Australopithecus robustus were used for grinding roots, seeds and nuts.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2007; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

quernn.2

Brit. /kwəːn/, U.S. /kwərn/, Scottish English /kwɛrn/
Forms: late Middle English qwern, late Middle English qweryn; Scottish pre-1700 querne, pre-1700 quhayrne, pre-1700 quheyrne, pre-1700 qwern, pre-1700 qwerne, 1800s– quern.
Origin: Probably a variant or alteration of another lexical item. Etymon: curn n.
Etymology: Probably a variant of curn n.
Now Scottish.
1. Perhaps: a large piece of ice; a crack or crevice in a piece of ice. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > games of chance > dice-playing > [noun] > throw > (throw of) specific number
ace?a1300
cinquec1386
sicec1386
sice cinquec1386
treyc1386
quernc1450
ames-acec1460
cater-trey?a1500
twoa1500
cater1519
deuce1519
quatrec1540
trey-acea1556
sice-ace1594
four1599
size-point1648
trey-deuce1680
boxcar1909
trey-point-
c1450 (?a1400) Wars Alexander (Ashm.) 3003 Alexander..rydis To þe grete flode of Granton, & it on a glace fyndis; Or he was soȝt to þe side ȝit sondird þe qweryns [a1500 Trin. Dub. qwernes].
2. Scottish. A lump or piece of material solidified from a molten state, such as metal, wax, or rosin. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1482 in T. Thomson Acts Lords Auditors (1839) 109/1 For the wrangwis spoliatioun & with-halding of..thre bolle of malt a qwern of rosate of vj stane certane petis [etc.].
a1500 (c1425) Andrew of Wyntoun Oryg. Cron. Scotl. (Nero) iv. l. 1922 Al þe metale moltynnyt þan, And in a qwerne togedyr ran [L. confluxissent in unum].
1576 Edinb. Test. IV. f. 114v, in Dict. Older Sc. Tongue at Quern(e n.2 Tua quernis of rosat.
3. Scottish. In early use: a small (specified) quantity of grain. Later: a grain; (also figurative) a small quantity of anything, a modicum. Cf. curn n. 2. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > constitution of matter > granular texture > [noun] > a grain or granule
grainc1290
curn1474
quern1503
granule1652
granula1694
the world > relative properties > quantity > smallness of quantity, amount, or degree > [noun] > a small quantity or amount
speckc725
littleOE
somethingc1200
lutewihtc1230
little whatc1384
ouncec1387
lap1393
smalla1400
modicumc1400
nekedc1400
spota1413
tinec1420
nieveful?a1425
handfulc1443
mouthful?c1450
smatchc1456
weec1480
quern1503
halfpennyworth1533
groatsworth1562
dram1566
shellful1578
trickle1580
snatch1592
sprinkling1594
fleck1598
snip1598
pittance1600
lick1603
fingerful1604
modicum1606
thimbleful1607
flash1614
dasha1616
pipa1616
pickle1629
drachm1635
cue1654
smack1693
starn1720
bit1753
kenning1787
minikin1787
tate1805
starnie1808
sprat1815
harl1821
skerrick1825
smallums1828
huckleberry1832
scrimp1840
thimble1841
smite1843
nattering1859
sensation1859
spurt1859
pauchlea1870
mention1891
sketch1894
sputterings1894
scrappet1901
titch1937
tad1940
skosh1959
smattering1973
1503 in D. Littlejohn Rec. Sheriff Court Aberdeenshire (1904) I. 74 That ilk place will gif the thrid querne of ats and the ferd querne of beir.
1868 J. Young Poems 45 We've seen that Tammie, when a bairn, O' wut possess'd an extra quern.
1873 D. Gilmour Reminisc. Pen Folk 46 She placed the sugar mug in her lap; and..if any daring urchin tried to abstract a quern while her eyes were closed, a finger and thumb caught the intruder.
1952 in Sc. National Dict. (1968) VII. 307/1 The small seed-grains of raspberries or brambles or the like are called querns.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2007; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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