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单词 rubble
释义

rubblen.

Brit. /ˈrʌbl/, U.S. /ˈrəb(ə)l/
Forms:

α. Middle English robel, Middle English robeyl, Middle English robill, Middle English roboyll, Middle English robyl, Middle English–1500s robell, late Middle English robelle, 1500s robele, 1600s roble.

β. late Middle English rowble, late Middle English rubbele, late Middle English rubel, late Middle English rubule, late Middle English rubyll, 1500s rubell, 1500s–1600s rubbell, 1500s–1800s rubbel, 1500s– rubble, 1600s rubbil, 1600s–1800s ruble, 1700s ribble (Scottish).

Origin: Of uncertain origin.
Etymology: Origin uncertain; perhaps related to rubbish n., although if so the nature of any relationship is unclear. Compare post-classical Latin roboillum , rubylla (from 1302 in British sources), which probably implies slightly earlier currency of the English word. Compare rubble v. and discussion at that entry; if rubble v. 1 is < rub v.1 + -le suffix 3, it is perhaps possible that the noun could (in spite of the discrepancy in the chronology) be derived from the verb, denoting the result of the action. Perhaps compare also rammel n.1Quots. 1376-7 and ?a1400 at sense 1a could instead show an otherwise unrecorded Anglo-Norman equivalent.
1.
a. Waste or rough fragments of stone, brick, concrete, etc., esp. such debris resulting from the demolition of buildings. Formerly also: †rubbish or refuse in general (obsolete).
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > refuse or rubbish > [noun]
wrakea1350
outcastingc1350
rammel1370
rubble1376
mullockc1390
refusec1390
filtha1398
outcasta1398
chaff?a1400
rubbishc1400
wastec1430
drossc1440
raff?1440
rascal1440
murgeonc1450
wrack1472
gear1489
garblec1503
scowl1538
raffle1543
baggage1549
garbage1549
peltry1550
gubbins?1553
lastage1553
scruff1559
retraict1575
ross1577
riddings1584
ket1586
scouring1588
pelf1589
offal1598
rummage1598
dog's meat1606
retriment1615
spitling1620
recrement1622
mundungus1637
sordes1640
muskings1649
rejectament1654
offscouring1655
brat1656
relicts1687
offage1727
litter1730
rejectamenta1795
outwale1825
detritus1834
junk1836
wastements1843
croke1847–78
sculch1847
debris1851
rumble1854
flotsam1861
jetsam1861
pelt1880
offcasting1893
rubbishry1894
littering1897
muckings1898
wastage1898
dreck1905
bruck1929
crap1934
garbo1953
clobber1965
dooky1965
grot1971
tippings-
the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > refuse or rubbish > [noun] > refuse part of anything > of stone
rubble1376
brockle1552
brackle1710
1376–7 in S. G. Hamilton Compotus Rolls Priory of Worcester (1910) 20 Item Henrico Cleche carianti robeyl et euacuanti quareram apud Ombresleye 59s.
?a1400 in F. B. Bickley Little Red Bk. Bristol (1900) II. 31 (MED) Omnes qui ocuparunt communes vicos..cum fimo et robyl quod admouere faciant.
tr. Palladius De re Rustica (Duke Humfrey) (1896) i. 340 (MED) On part of lyme and tweyne of rubel [v.r. robell] haue.
1496 Epit. Iaspar Late Duke of Beddeforde (Pynson) sig. aiii His body..In a graue in the grounde Deth depe hath drounde Amonge robel and stonys.
1531–2 Act 23 Hen. VIII c. 8 §1 Whiche persons..conueied..grauell, stone, robell, earth, slime, and filthe in the said portes.
1593 J. Norden Speculum Brit.: Middlesex ii. 25 A hautie citie..smothered in the ashes of her owne rubble and ruynes.
1614 W. Raleigh Hist. World i. ii. ix. §1. 368 There are found..goodly marble pillers, with other hewen and carued stone in great abundance, among the rubble.
1660 G. Tooke Eagle-trussers Elegie 1 Can Hamath then the great, and populous Turn into rubble thus?
1707 Miscellanea Curiosa (Royal Soc.) III. 182 One can see nothing..but old ruined Walls with Rubbel, Bricks and Stones.
1754 London Evening Post 10–12 Sept. The Ground on a sudden gave Way, and they all fell to the Bottom on a Heap of Rubble.
1824 Steam-boat Compan. Queenhithe to Richmond 14 The old mansion being in a dangerous state, was thrown down, and the rubble removed.
1855 C. Kingsley Westward Ho! xxx A pop-gun fort, which a third class steamer would shell into rubble for an afternoon's amusement.
1864 G. O. Trevelyan Competition Wallah ix. 304 Those are..the sand and rubble that overspread the land.
1937 R. Byron Road to Oxiana iii. 99 Unless repairs are done and foundations strengthened, the other monuments will soon be rubble too.
1958 Listener 18 Sept. 418/2 High mounds of rubble and tangled, bombed machinery which spiked into the air like the legs of dead animals.
2001 Sydney Morning Herald 3 Nov. 17/4 The Taliban..reduced the Buddhas to rubble with explosives and rocket launchers.
b. figurative.
ΚΠ
1566 T. Becon New Postil i. f. 24v My righteousnes & iustice, is but rubble and rubbyshe.
1589 T. Cooper Admon. People of Eng. 249 Casting out the rubble of the Synagogue of Antichriste.
1614 J. Sylvester tr. J. Bertaut Panaretus 27 in Parl. Vertues Royal Even while I raze, I raise; and of the Rubble Of pettie States, I build One hundred double.
1751 J. Bate Script. Meaning of Aleim & Berith 89 He does not..know the Value of the rich Jewel they are burying under that Heap of Rubble.
1863 E. C. Gaskell Sylvia's Lovers I. ii. 22 Feyther's liker me, and we talk a deal o' rubble; but mother's words are liker to hewn stone.
1887 Scribner's Mag. Sept. 378 For fancies they gave us their microscopies; For knowledge, a rubble of fact and doubt.
1939 Sun (Baltimore) 22 Mar. 12/3 The rubble of Central Europe slowly rearranges itself in yet another new pattern.
1965 E. Dahlberg Reasons of Heart 20 Only when affections ebb do we see the flats and rubble our tidal emotions had covered.
2002 N.Y. Times (National ed.) 22 Apr. a15/1 He is part of the human rubble of the war, one of thousands of Pakistanis who remain prisoners of the Afghan Army.
2.
a. Pieces of undressed stone used in building walls, as hard core, etc.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > materials > raw material > stone or rock > [noun] > building stone > small or undressed stones for filling in
pinning1534
rubble1542
rubble work1675
rubble stone1833
hearting1837
spalled rubble1839
hardcore1842
scruff-stone1869
moellon1875
1542 T. Elyot Bibliotheca Cementa, litle stones & rubbel, which ar layd betwene great stones in the making of a wal.
1565 T. Cooper Thesaurus Caementitius,..made of rubbell or ragge stones.
1608 Bp. J. King Serm. Ps. xi. 2–4. 20 Peeces of timber, barres of iron, massy stones, togither with all..the rubble and stones in the wals of that great and glorious pile.
1699 Contract Bk. 26 Jan. in Drawings & Models Constr. St. Paul's Cathedral (1939) i. 26 The ffoundation..to be rammed and filled with Burrs and Gallets and hard rubble of the Quarry.
1764 T. Smollett Trav. (1766) I. xxiii. 353 The houses are built of a ragged stone dug from the mountains, and the interstices are filled with rubble.
1793 J. Smeaton Narr. Edystone Lighthouse (ed. 2) §114 The interior filling of the walls was with rough Rubble, and fragments of the quarries.
1839 W. B. Stonehouse Hist. Isle of Axholme 265 In the walls, which are scarcely ten feet high and built chiefly of rubble, are great ashlar stones.
a1878 G. G. Scott Lect. Mediæval Archit. (1879) I. 20 They were equally at home in the use of brick, or flint, or rubble.
1920 Archit. Rec. 47 478/2 The intermediate spaces were filled in with rubble.
1975 H. Venables Right Way to keep Ponies v. 43 It [sc. concrete] is best put on a layer of rubble or some other hard-core.
2005 D. Cruickshank Around World in 80 Treasures 191 This amazing granary..is built of rubble rendered with a gypsum plaster so it has an organic, undulating surface.
b. = rubble work n.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > building or constructing with stone > [noun] > stonework or masonry > types of
ashlar-work1398
rough wall1398
keying1483
corbelling1548
rustic1610
channel1611
rustic work1615
ledge1624
coffer-work1668
rubble work1675
canal1723
rockwork1755
ashlaring1758
rubble1815
ragwork1840
striped work1842
1815 J. Smith Panorama Sci. & Art I. 223 The best kind, or coursed rubble, admits of bond timbers without difficulty.
1825 ‘J. Nicholson’ Operative Mechanic 537 In uncoursed rubble the stones are placed promiscuously in the wall.
1879 Cassell's Techn. Educator (new ed.) I. 97/1 In uncoursed rubble.., stones of any size..are used without any reference to their heights.
1915 M. A. Howe Masonry ii. iii. 72 When no attempt is made to form courses the masonry is called uncoursed rubble.
1990 F. G. Dimes in J. Ashurst & F. F. Dimes Conservation of Building & Decorative Stone (1998) iv. 98/2 In coursed rubble the stones are squared up, more or less roughly according to the quality.
3. Medicine. Coarse aggregates of urinary crystals; = gravel n. 4. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > growth or excrescence > [noun] > concretion > fragments of
rubble1545
1545 T. Raynald in tr. E. Roesslin Byrth of Mankynde i. sig. G.viiv When it is broken,..the grauel, rubbell, or peecis therof, descend from the raynes or kydnees in to the bladder.
1561 J. Hollybush tr. H. Brunschwig Most Excellent Homish Apothecarye f. 39 If the rubbel or shardes of the stone do put the to payn, then vse that bath.
4. The bran or husk of wheat, barley, etc., separated from the flour after grinding. Also: any refuse material present in grain. Also in plural.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > corn, cereals, or grain > [noun] > chaff or husks of grain
grita700
chaffc1000
crapa1425
coralc1440
pug?1440
shelling1598
shood1601
ray1656
scufting1688
rubble1767
cosh1787
sheeling-seeds1802
1767 J. Hanway Lett. Importance Rising Generation II. xliii. 310 The meal, being 58½ lb. passed the clothes only once, and produced flour..33 lb. 2oz. Rubbles or bran..25 lb. 7 oz.
1855 Adulteration of Food, Drink & Drugs 12 More than one half, of 30 samples [of oatmeal], were adulterated with large proportions of barley meal, while others contained the refuse husk, termed rubble.
1858 P. L. Simmonds Dict. Trade Products Rubbles, a miller's name in some counties for the whole of the bran or outside skin of the wheat, before being sorted into pollard, bran, sharps, etc.
1876 A. H. Hassall Food: its Adulterations (new ed.) 361 The principal adulterations of oatmeal..are those with the refuse matter of oats, of barley, and even wheat, termed ‘rubble’ and ‘sharps’.
1912 P. A. Amos Processes Flour Manuf. xii. 94 A shaking shoe or screen is placed above the scourer, and removes the odd rubble still remaining in the wheat mixture.
1994 B. Krahn Last Bachelor viii. 154 They'll put potato flour in yer lard, water yer milk, shake barley rubble in yer oats, and put pea flour in yer pepper.
5.
a. Geology. Loose angular stones or broken rock fragments, esp. as forming a mantle over solid rock or a stratum beneath alluvium or soil; (also) water-worn stones. Cf. rubble stone n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > structure of the earth > constituent materials > stone > stony material > [noun] > rubble
rubble stones1677
rubble1796
1728 J. Woodward Fossils All Kinds i. 12 Those call'd Rubble-Stones. [Note] They owe their Name, Rubble, to their being thus rubb'd and worn.]
1796 W. Marshall Rural Econ. W. Eng. II. 5 The subsoil is also similar:—namely, a slatey rock, and a kind of rusty rotten slate, or rubble.
1852 C. Lyell Elem. Geol. (ed. 4) vii. 81 To this mass the provincial name of ‘rubble’ or ‘brash’ is given.
1860 M. F. Maury Physical Geogr. Sea (ed. 8) i. 15 Treating the rocks less gently, it..rolls, and rubs them until they are fashioned into pebbles, rubble, or boulders.
1879 A. R. Wallace Australasia iv. 74 The few inches of surface soil and rubble overlying the Silurian rock on the slopes and spurs of the hills.
1943 National Geographic Mag. Dec. 704 (caption) Each column has, or did have, an umbrella of hard stone protecting its soft mass of glacial rubble.
1990 H. Thurston Tidal Life 77/3 He climbed halfway up the cliff face to search in the basaltic rubble.
2003 R. MacFarlane Mountains of Mind (2004) ii. 34 Rubble eroded from the continents and laid down in sedimentary layers on the sea-floor.
2003 W. Ferguson Hokkaido Highway Blues (abridged ed.) 28 In among the sea rubble, at the bottom of the cliff, is a large misshapen boulder called ‘Turtle Rock’.
b. Coal Mining. Small pieces of coal; slack. Also in plural (rare). Cf. rubble coal n. at Compounds 3. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > materials > fuel > coal or types of coal > [noun] > small, refuse, impure, or coal-dust
slackc1440
smith coal1466
smithy coal1482
coal dusta1529
panwood1531
smith's coal1578
kirving1599
culm1603
coom1611
small coal1643
smit1670
smut1686
slag1695
duff1724
duff coal1724
small1780
gum1790
stinking coal1803
cobbles1811
nubbling1825
stinkers1841
rubble1844
pea1855
nuts1857
nut coal1861
slap1865
burgee1867
smudge1883
waste1883
treble1901
coal smut1910
gumming1938
nutty slack1953
1794 J. Whitaker Course Hannibal over Alps II. ii. 142 As our own people in the north call the rubble of coal stone-coal.]
1844 R. Garner Nat. Hist. Stafford vi. 220 As many as twenty beds of coal of various thicknesses..occur; and the principal beds descending are the heathen coal, penny or rubble, stinking or sulphur coal, new mine, fire-clay coal, [etc.].
1868 W. Fairley Gloss. Terms Coal-mining-districts 28 Rubble, screened coal.
1883 W. S. Gresley Gloss. Terms Coal Mining 207 Rubbles. 1. (F[orest of] D[ean]) See Kibbles and Nuts. 2. (S[outh] W[ales]) Slack or small.
1904 Trans. Inst. Mining Engin. 25 196 The coal may be sampled as follows:—Steam-coal and rubble (rubble is 1½ inches cubes) 85 per cent, and less than rubble (smithy and dust) 15 per cent.
c. English regional (southern). A hard chalk used in making field roads, pathways, etc. Cf. rubble chalk at Compounds 1a.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > materials > raw material > stone or rock > [noun] > for making roads > type of
rubble1852
blue metal2000
1852 Gloss. Provinc. Words Berks. 11 Rubbel, a species of hard chalk.
1879 R. Jefferies Wild Life ii. 20 The byroads and paths made with the chalk or ‘rubble’ glare in the sunlight.
6. Naturally occurring fragments of ice, esp. as floating in water. Cf. rubble ice n. at Compounds 3.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > water > ice > body of ice > [noun] > broken ice
porridge ice1820
brash1837
land-trash1856
trash1856
trash-ice1864
posh1876
rubble1876
1876 Nature 9 Nov. 31/1 The head of the bay..was filled with pack ice consisting of numerous small floe pieces..intermixed with ‘rubble’, or ‘boulder’ ice.
1916 J. G. Needham & J. T. Lloyd Life Inland Waters iii. 82 Minute icicles are forming and their tips are being broken off by the oscillations of the current. These broken tips constitute the rubble.
1965 Pop. Mech. Dec. 95/1 The two ships did fairly well for 15 miles, but the weaker Polarhav frequently stopped against the ice rubble left by the icebreaker.
1983 R. Fiennes To Ends of Earth xiii. 343 The sea ice was broken and reared up in huge waves of rubble that smothered the shoreline.
2003 Cumulative Environmental Effects Oil & Gas Activities on Alaska’s N. Slope (National Res. Council (U.S.) Div. Earth & Life Studies) 221/1 Rough ice such as rubble and rafting ice led to thick oil pools and limited spreading.

Compounds

C1. General attributive.
a. (Chiefly in sense 5a.) With the senses ‘of the nature of rubble’, ‘consisting of rubble’, as rubble bed, rubble chalk, rubble granite, rubble pile, rubble rock, etc. See also rubble stone n.
ΚΠ
1610 P. Holland tr. W. Camden Brit. i. 302 An house of the Kings in the West part of the towne neere unto Haling, where the husband men dig up otherwhiles rubble stone.
1712 Philos. Trans. 1710–12 (Royal Soc.) 27 542 A dark, gray, hard Iron Oar, called the Rubble Iron-Stone.
a1773 J. Hutchins Hist. Dorset (1774) I. 176/1 The castle stands a little N. of the town, opposite to the church, on a very steep rocky hill, mingled with hard rubble chalk-stone.
1799 R. Kirwan Geol. Ess. 184 Rubble slate, or coticular slate, or indurated clay.
1844 A. W. Pugin in E. S. Purcell Life & Lett. A. P. de Lisle (1900) I. iv. 82 From the nature of the material used—a sort of rubble granite.
1886 S. Baring-Gould Germany xxxiii. 196 Above Mannheim the river is too rapid and too full of shifting rubble-beds to be safely navigated.
1920 A. W. Grabau Gen. Geol. xviii. 569 The rubble-rock or rubble-stone, or rudyte, which when the fragments are rounded is a conglomerate and when angular a breccia.
1952 Q. Film, Radio & Television 7 68 That picture played in the great rubble pile of Berlin.
1992 Garden Hist. 20 151/2 Rubble chalk was found under the garden path.
2007 Victorian Nov. 20/3 The building is in a Gothic Revival style, in coursed and squared rubble limestone with ashlar dressings.
b. With the sense ‘constructed of, making use of, rubble’, as rubble building, rubble masonry, rubble wall, etc.
ΚΠ
1754 E. Burt Lett. N. Scotl. I. iii. 65 The Rubble-Walls of these Houses are composed of Stones of different Shapes and Sizes.
1825 ‘J. Nicholson’ Operative Mechanic 537 A wall built of unhewn stone, whether it be built with mortar or otherwise, is called a rubble wall.
1835 T. Rickman Attempt to discriminate Styles Archit. Eng. (ed. 4) 308 Rubble walling is generally of pieces more nearly approaching a cube.
1844 H. Stephens Bk. of Farm I. 170 To test if rubble masonry is well built.
1856 J. C. Morton Cycl. Agric. (new ed.) II. 386/1 Breaking joint over every small stone in the wall in rubble building.
1881 S. Walpole Rep. Salmon Fish. App. 77 A rubble weir..has recently been built across the Severn at Llanidloes.
1926 Pop. Sci. Monthly Oct. 157/1 Local building code may require a twelve-inch wall up to grade or outside ground level but eight-inch thickness is enough in anything except rubble masonry.
1972 Rep. Tribunal Events Londonderry in Bloody Sunday, 1972 (2001) 58 From this point it is possible to look due south down Rossville Street to the rubble barricade in that street.
2006 Build It May 42/2 Reconstructing rubble walls created structural worries, as these provide the core of the building.
C2. Instrumental, as rubble-covered, rubble-filled, rubble-strewn, etc.
ΚΠ
1870 Ohio Farmer 20 Aug. 531/1 The sower was asked what he expected to reap from that piece of rubble-strewn land.
1888 Trans. Royal Geol. Soc. Cornwall 26 Oct. 172 These beds of sandstone..share with the hills the remarkable brightness of colour which is so characteristic on the rubble-covered sides.
1903 G. V. Poore Colonial & Camp Sanitation ii. 24 There being..no indication of the rubble-filled trench beneath.
1944 Manch. Guardian 27 June 3/2 The rubble-strewn trail of modern warfare looks much the same whether the buildings and homes laid waste are in France, Italy, or Russia.
1976 Evening Post (Nottingham) 17 Dec. 14/2 Sunken and rubble-littered uneven pavements, pitfalled with miniature craters.
1992 W. McGowan Only Man is Vile (1993) iv. 75 The area bore signs of fierce fighting, with its shattered houses and rubble-strewn streets.
2004 Smithsonian Oct. 27/1 ‘We're looking for builders' trenches’, Bates said, meaning the rubble-filled ditches that 18th- and 19th-century builders employed to support foundations.
C3.
rubble coal n. Coal Mining (now rare) = sense 5b.
ΚΠ
1794 J. Whitaker Course Hannibal over Alps II. ii. 142 This discovery of burning rubble-coal into lime, is as unknown and as valuable..as my Lord Dundonald's of extracting tar from it.
1855 J. Phillips Man. Geol. 193 Heathen and rubble coals and partings.
1905 Minutes Proc. Inst. Civil Engineers 160 323 Altogether about 3,300 tons of rubble-coal were used on the work.
rubble drain n. a drain filled with loose broken stones; cf. rumble drain, French drain n.
ΚΠ
1810 W. Nicol Gardener's Kalendar 152 It may be a rubble drain, or a box-drain, according to necessity.
1876 Manch. Guardian 5 Aug. 8/5 Surface drains, mostly rubble drains, serve to carry off slop and storm water to the nearest watercourse.
1952 E. L. Leeming Road Engin. (ed. 3) vii. 79 Where banks are liable to wash away, rubble drains (such as may be observed in railway cuttings) are useful for guiding storm-water to the base without erosion.
1995 N. Hudson Soil Conservation (ed. 3) xiii. 325 Drainage of the sloping face of the embankment is usually carried out by rubble drains, that is drains excavated to a rectangular section of about 300 to 500 mm2 and backfilled with rocks.
rubble ice n. = sense 6.
ΚΠ
1877 Proc. Royal Geogr. Soc. 21 101 This rubble ice, as we call it,..breaks away from the heavy, deeper-floating fields of somewhat smoother ice.
1994 Up Here (Yellowknife, N.W. Territories) Mar. 54/2 As we twisted our way through the rubble ice, fog from the nearby open water often obscured our view.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2011; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

rubblev.

Brit. /ˈrʌbl/, U.S. /ˈrəb(ə)l/
Forms: see rubble n.
Origin: Perhaps of multiple origins. Formed within English, by conversion. Perhaps also partly formed within English, by derivation. Etymons: rubble n.; rub v.1, -le suffix 3.
Etymology: In sense 1 either < rubble n. or < rub v.1 + -le suffix 3. In other senses < rubble n.
1. transitive. To crush to pieces, to smash; to destroy. Obsolete. rare.In quot. ?a1425: to put an end to.
ΚΠ
?a1425 (?1373) Lelamour Herbal (1938) f. 11 (MED) Þe levis y stampid and sodyn wiþ gots mylke and vsyd renuyth þe brest and rowbliþ and abatiþ the cough.
a1450 Castle Perseverance (1969) l. 1943 Ȝone rappokys I ruble and al to-rase.
1637 J. Balfour Let. in R. Chambers Hist. Rebellions in Scotl. (1828) I. 305 A strong tempest, which at two several times menaced destruction to all, yet rubbled the noddles of bot two or three.
2. intransitive. To poke or crawl about among rubble or rubbish; to rummage. Also figurative. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > dirtiness > dirty person > behave as dirty person [verb (intransitive)]
slotter1553
pig1637
rubble1637
slaister1756
slattern1851
1637 J. Bastwick Vanity & Mischeife Old Letany iii. 22/2 By rubbling and grubbing in those old errors and heresies, you may perhaps get some infection.
1828 W. Jerdan in A. A. Watts Poet. Album 361 Wearing and splashing through these rocks, Whose adamant the struggle mocks; In eddies whirled, in deep chasms lost, Rubbling in straits, in spray up-tost.
1896 G. F. Northall Warwickshire Word-bk. 196 Don't let the child rubble among them 'ere dusty things.
1906 Proc. Somersetshire Archaeol. & Nat. Hist. Soc. 1905 51 87 Found by a workman named David Dodge in the spring of 1896, while ‘rubbling’ in a now-disused quarry.
1987 A. R. Ammons Sumerian Vistas 125 However far Into the Dark the worm Rubbles under the root, Life takes a Bow, Gives The go-ahead.
3.
a. transitive. To cover or strew (an area) with rubble.In quot. 1998 as part of an extended metaphor.
ΚΠ
1771 J. Smeaton Reports (1837) I. 358 The bank next the river from the bridge to the lock to be..rubbled next the river where worn.
1860 Rep. Supreme Court Vermont 31 156 The pier to be well based upon..a good and sufficient timber platform properly sunk into the bed of said river and thoroughly rubbled about the base with rubble stones.
1895 Proc. Rochester Acad. Sci. 2 233 The propulsion of canal boats by steam power is..injurious to the canal unless the entire prism of the canal is rubbled.
1918 Living Age 24 Aug. 458/1 The ground is rubbled with stones—fallen, and still falling.
1998 C. Hamilton Memory Palace 3 Once I was a block of stone... I woke alone in a room rubbled with what had been chiseled from me.
b. transitive. To reduce to rubble.
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > breaking or cracking > break [verb (transitive)] > break down, demolish, or ruin
spillc950
fellOE
to cast downc1230
destroy1297
to turn up?c1335
to throw down1340
to ding downc1380
to break downa1382
subverta1382
underturn1382
to take downc1384
falla1400
to make (a building, etc.) plain (with the earth)a1400
voida1400
brittenc1400
to burst downc1440
to pull downc1450
pluck1481
tumble1487
wreck1510
defacea1513
confound1523
raze1523
arase1530
to beat downc1540
ruinate1548
demolish1560
plane1562
to shovel down1563
race?1567
ruin1585
rape1597
unwall1598
to bluster down16..
raise1603
level1614
debolish1615
unbuilda1616
to make smooth work of1616
slight1640
to knock down1776
squabash1822
collapse1883
to turn over1897
mash1924
rubble1945
to take apart1978
1945 Daily Progress (Charlottesville, Va.) 2 Mar. 1/8 Cologne, rubbled anew after dawn by a thousand British heavy bombers.
1978 Islands (N.Z.) Aug. 67 O Brave New World..without cities and the bombs to rubble them.
2005 Observer 17 Apr. (Mag.) 42/2 While other buildings were being rubbled, he made ‘an insane act of private listing’ by offering to buy 40,000 sqft of what was left.
4. intransitive. English regional (Hampshire). To remove gravel deposits from the New Forest (see quot. 1863). Obsolete. rare.
ΚΠ
1863 J. R. Wise New Forest 285/2 To Rubble, to remove the gravel, which is deposited throughout the Forest in a thick layer over the beds of clay or marl.

Derivatives

ˈrubbled adj. resembling, or of the nature of, rubble; reduced to rubble; also figurative.
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1708 E. Hatton New View London II. 679/1 The Rubbled Alcyon, given by Capt. Th. Fissenden. It looks not much unlike Linen-cloath.
1811 J. Parkinson Org. Remains Former World III. xvi. 244 Fossils..are said to be mixed, in a confused state, with rounded and rubbled porous lava.
1911 J. Galsworthy Patrician ii. ii. 215 A building,..outside which were only the rubbled remains of what had built it.
1926 F. M. Ford Man could stand Up i. ii. 37 Things had become more rubbled—mixed up with alarums.
2002 Vanity Fair (N.Y.) May 109/1 Refugees returning to rubbled cities whose streets have been reduced to rows of jagged teeth.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2011; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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