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单词 runt
释义

runtn.

Brit. /rʌnt/, U.S. /rənt/
Forms: 1500s ront, 1500s runte, 1500s runttes (plural), 1500s–1600s rontes (plural), 1500s– runt; Scottish pre-1700 ront, pre-1700 rwnt, pre-1700 1700s– runt.
Origin: Of uncertain origin. Perhaps a borrowing from Dutch. Etymon: Dutch rund.
Etymology: Origin uncertain. In sense 1 perhaps originally < Dutch rund ox (Middle Dutch runt , ront : see rother n.), but if so probably influenced early by association with a word of different origin represented by sense 2; it is thus possible that two originally separate words may have merged; however, if so, the origin of the word represented by sense 2 is unknown. K. Malone in Language 20 (1944) 87–8 suggests that the word is cognate with Old Icelandic hrotti coarse, rude person, (in poetry) a sword, and Old Danish runte long pole used for jumping over a ditch (of uncertain origin), and perhaps also with Old Icelandic hrunki a brute, a big, strong man (also of uncertain origin, perhaps not related to hrotti ), although this assumes an early radical divergence in meaning. Sense 4a is unusual in denoting an uncommonly large rather than an uncommonly small animal; perhaps it may have arisen from the uses denoting a fattened animal in senses 1a and 1b.
1.
a. An ox or cow of a small size; esp. one belonging to the small breeds characteristic of Wales and the Highlands of Scotland, formerly bought to be fattened for slaughter, esp. in central and southern England. Now historical.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > mammals > group Ungulata (hoofed) > group Ruminantia (sheep, goats, cows, etc.) > breeds of ox > [noun] > of Wales
runt1549
Welsh runt1602
Welsh cattle1730
Welsh Black1742
black cattle1919
1549 Act 3 & 4 Edw. VI c. 19 §1 Any manner of Oxen, Steres, Rontes, Kyen, Heighfers or Calves.
1579 E. Spenser Shepheardes Cal. Feb. 5 My ragged rontes all shiver and shake, As doen high Towers in an earthquake.
a1627 T. Middleton Chast Mayd in Cheape-side (1630) iv. 47 She's full of Cattell, some two thousand Runts.
1652 W. Blith Eng. Improver Improved xxvi. 184 That year may put up three midling Runts upon an Acre, and feed them up.
1700 J. Brome Trav. i. 20 Multitudes of Oxen, which they call Runts.
1766 T. Pennant Brit. Zool. i. 8 The Welsh runts are much larger: The black cattle of Cornwall are of the same size with the last.
1823 W. Cobbett Rural Rides in Cobbett's Weekly Polit. Reg. 13 Sept. 659 The cattle here are chiefly Welsh; black, and called runts.
1847 W. C. L. Martin Ox 100/1 From the midland and western counties, 230 Herefords, runts, Devons, &c.
1926 J. A. S. Watson et al. Cattle-breeder's Handbk. iv. 72 These stores, under the name of Welsh ‘Runts’, [were] taken in large numbers to the rich pastures of the English Midlands.
1959 R. Trow-Smith Hist. Brit. Livestock Husbandry 1700–1900 iii. 110 The Welsh runt was the thrifty Irish store beast of the eighteenth century.
2000 R. J. Moore-Colyer in E. J. T. Collins Agrarian Hist. Eng. & Wales VII. i. v. 443 The highly variable native stock of the hills and uplands, comprising the bulk of the ‘runts’, were subject to little in the way of improvement until the later nineteenth century.
b. An old ox or cow; spec. one past breeding age which is fattened for slaughter. Now British regional and Irish English.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > mammals > group Ungulata (hoofed) > group Ruminantia (sheep, goats, cows, etc.) > bos taurus or ox > [noun] > of certain age
twinter1404
thrinter1535
runt1638
1638 W. Laud Let. in Wks. (1857) VI. 538 Your hung beef..was..as hard as the very horn the old runt wore when she lived.
1794 J. Anderson Gen. View Agric. Aberdeen 82 Working cattle are often sold off lean at the end of seed time at a great discount, and driven to the south of Scotland to be fed upon the grass during summer... These are called runts.
1823 E. Moor Suffolk Words 324 Runt, an obstinate old cow.
1836 Farmer's Mag. Jan. 20/2 I have seen these runts bought for very little money; but nevertheless they pay the feeder well, because having age, they feed rapidly on good pasture.
1897 J. C. Snaith Fierceheart (U.S. ed.) vi. 65 Hoot, sirs, ony the hide o' a runt!
1969 A. C. West in A. S. Eyler Celtic, Christian, Socialist (1993) 139 Their various sacred cows are now only barren old runts fit for the knacker's yard.
1996 C. I. Macafee Conc. Ulster Dict. 282/2 Runt... 5. an old cow or ox.
c. An undersized or otherwise inferior horse.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > mammals > group Ungulata (hoofed) > family Equidae (general equines) > equus caballus or horse > [noun] > inferior or old and worn-out
brockc1000
stota1100
jadec1386
yaud?a1513
roila1529
tit1548
hilding1590
tireling1590
dog horsec1600
baffle1639
Rosinante1641
aver1691
keffel1699
runt1725
hack horse1760
rip1775
kadisha1817
dunghill1833
pelter1854
crow-bait1857
caster1859
plug1860
knacker1864
plug horse1872
crock1879
skate1894
robbo1897
the world > animals > mammals > group Ungulata (hoofed) > family Equidae (general equines) > equus caballus or horse > [noun] > defined by size > small
hobbyc1400
tit1548
Galloway1598
hobby-horse1598
bidet1631
pony1659
runt1725
criollo1894
cuddyc1930
1725 in Hist. MSS Comm.: Rep. MSS Duke of Portland (1901) VI. 90 in Parl. Papers (Cd. 676) XXXVI. i. 1 We met a parcel of Scots horses... I should let them pass unremembered but for the extravagant value I thought they set upon one of their runts.
1797 ‘A. Pasquin’ Pin-basket to Children of Thespis 198 Some will gallop a runt till he trips down a hill, Who 'd crawl'd safe had the garon been left to its will.
1895 Westm. Gaz. 7 Sept. 2/1 He..drove a little ole runt that couldn't go seven mile a hour.
1914 C. W. Gay Productive Horse Husb. ii. v. 66 An undersized light harness horse..would be a runt, not a pony.
1934 W. Moffatt Shetland 20 A storm of protests from the female members of his household, who see their beloved cows' fodder being wasted on ‘dem useless runts ov hoorses’.
2008 J. Gregson East of Sun (2009) xix. 160 The horse had been a miserable runt when they'd first met.
d. A small pig, esp. the smallest in a litter; a pig that is small as a result of illness or malnutrition.Recorded earliest in figurative contexts.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > mammals > group Ungulata (hoofed) > order Artiodactyla (cloven-hoofed animals) > pig > [noun] > young > litter > runt
tantony1659
whinnock1691
runt1798
poke-shakings1808
Anthony1867
rit1880
1798 Porcupine's Gaz. 1 Mar. Tell us no more of your learned little pig,—In size a mere runt, tho' in science very big.
1815 Cobbett's Weekly Polit. Reg. 11 Nov. 179 We stood in the same relation to others, that the little pig called a runt usually does to the rest of the litter.
1886 Cent. Mag. 32 107 While the runt is the weakest and most forlorn of pigs [etc.].
1939 Nature 23 Sept. 552/2 Radiographic examination of a ‘runt’, the small starveling pig, shows evidence of arrested growth in the skeleton.
1977 P. R. English et al. Sow viii. 163 One can have a litter in which most piglets are thriving well but in which one or two are obviously suffering from malnutrition and are in danger of becoming nutritional ‘runts’.
2006 S. Montgomery Good Good Pig (2007) vi. 90 The baby pigs were all in with their huge moms—there were no stalls set aside for runts.
e. Any small or inferior animal; a weakling.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > animal body > [noun] > unhealthy animal > stunted animal
wreckling1601
wragland1611
crowl1621
wregling1679
stunt1726
runt1902
1902 W. S. Walker Zealandia's Guerdon 56 The first runts you see of what should be prime wethers.
1949 Boys' Life Mar. 7/2 For the first time in his life the runt fought back, trying to defend what was his.
1983 W. N. Rowe Clapp's Rock ii. 30 The shepherd himself pays no attention to the scraggy runt..while he cleans and cares for the beautiful lambs.
1991 New Scientist 7 Dec. 53/1 Broiler producers raise water bowls or nipple drinkers to kill unwanted runts (undersized birds) through dehydration.
2005 K. Michalowski 15 Minutes to Great Puppy ii. 37 If you pick the runt, you can feed him up to get him as big as the breed can get.
2.
a. An old or decayed tree stump. Now British regional (chiefly Scottish) and Irish English (northern).figurative in quot. a1585.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > part of plant > part of tree or woody plant > [noun] > stump > old or decayed
runt?1553
stagger1739
?1553 (c1501) G. Douglas Palice of Honour (London) i. l. 151 in Shorter Poems (1967) 18 Not throu the soyl, bot muskan treis sproutyt,..Ald rottyn runtis quhairin na sap was leuyt.
a1585 Ld. Polwart Flyting with Montgomerie 789 Iock Blunt, deid runt! I sall dunt whill I slay thee.
1601 P. Holland tr. Pliny Hist. World I. xvi. 480 Neither yong poles nor old runts are fit for durable building.
1775 Daily Advertiser 25 Apr. Some Hundred Stacks of Runts, and grubbed Wood; to be sold in Lots.
1841 C. H. Hartshorne Shropshire Gloss. 552 Runts, decayed stumps of trees.
1917 J. Buchan Poems 50 As we socht oor shauchlin' way Atween the runts o' Bernafay.
1928 J. G. Horne Lan'wart Loon 14 He'd rax his wey, Whaur birny runts wad gie a grup.
1996 C. I. Macafee Conc. Ulster Dict. 282/2 Runt, a stump (of a tree).
b. Scottish, Irish English (northern), and English regional (northern). A hardened stem or stalk of a plant, esp. of a cabbage.Recorded earliest in kale-runt n. at kale n. Compounds 2.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > part of plant > stem or stalk > [noun] > hardened
runt1602
stock1629
1602 in H. Paton Dundonald Parish Rec. (1936) 7 Scho..seithit kaill rwntis in watter for an ill..scho had in hir head.
1786 R. Burns Poems & Songs (1968) I. 154 Poor hav'rel Will..pow't, for want o' better shift, A runt was like a sow-tail Sae bow't that night.
a1810 R. Tannahill Poems & Songs (1815) 204 They got naething for crowdy, but runts boil'd to sowdie.
1896 J. Parker Tyne Folk 175 I have even searched among the runts in the cabbage field.
1908 E. B. Simpson Folk Lore in Lowland Scotl. i. 14 If the runts were of goodly growth, stout of stem, all was well for the pullers.
1928 R. Campbell Wayzgoose ii. 58 The Sacred Carrot with the golden rind, Whose magic runt..The more one nibbled it, the larger grew.
1996 C. I. Macafee Conc. Ulster Dict. 282/2 Runt,..2. the dry stalk of a cabbage-plant.
3. figurative.
a. An ignorant, uncouth, or uncivilized person. Obsolete.Frequently with punning allusion to sense 1a and Welsh runt n. at Welsh adj. and n. Compounds 1c.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > want of knowledge, ignorance > cultural ignorance > [noun] > uncultured person
runt1602
home-bred1609
pork1645
Huna1744
savage1762
heathen1817
Philistine1825
stringy-bark1833
roughneck1834
yahoo1861
yapc1894
lowbrow1901
meatball1937
primitive1967
1602 Contention Liberalitie & Prodigalitie iv. iv. sig. E2 O thou vile, ill-fauoured, crow-troden, pye-pecked Ront!
1631 B. Jonson Bartholmew Fayre iv. vi. 66 in Wks. II Sir, you are a welsh Cuckold, and a prating Runt, and no Constable.
1649 J. Cleveland Hue & Cry Sir John Presbyter (single sheet) Reforming Tweed Hath sent us Runts, even of Her Churches breed.
1719 T. D'Urfey Wit & Mirth II. 77 Shone a Welch Runt, and Hans a Dutch Boor.
1723 S. Centlivre Artifice iii. i. 41 This City spoils all Servants. I took a Welsh Runt last Spring.
1782 J. Elphinston tr. Martial Epigrams ii. 201 Dost now fill the seat of thy patron, thou runt? Where I'm mad that thou e'er hadst a stall.
1830 G. R. Gleig Country Curate II. iii. 62 Things have come to a pretty pass, when a set of beggarly Welsh runts use threats to their betters.
b. An old person (typically a woman), esp. one who is ill-tempered or disagreeable. Now British regional (chiefly Scottish) and Irish English (northern).
ΘΚΠ
the world > people > person > old person > old woman > [noun]
old wifeeOE
old womanOE
trota1375
carlinec1375
cronec1386
vecke1390
monea1393
hagc1400
ribibec1405
aunt?a1425
crate14..
witchc1475
mauda1500
mackabroine1546
grandam?1550
grannam1565
old lady1575
beldam1580
lucky1629
granny1634
patriarchess1639
runta1652
harridan1699
grimalkin1798
mama1810
tante1815
wifie1823
maw1826
old dear1836
tante1845
Mother Bunch1847
douairière1869
dowager1870
veteraness1880
old trout1897
tab1909
bag1924
crow1925
ma1932
Skinny Liz1940
old bag1947
old boot1958
tannie1958
LOL1960
a1652 R. Brome Eng. Moor iii. iii. 47 in Five New Playes (1659) Sure some old runt with a splay-foot has crost him.
1676 E. Coles Eng. Dict. An old runt, vetula.
1769 Herd's Songs (1904) 159 I think the auld runt be gone mad.
1787 W. Taylor Scots Poems 26 At last brave Jess..Did had Dad's hands, till the auld runt, Wi' boilin broe, John Ploughman brunt.
1823 E. Moor Suffolk Words 324 Runt,..an ill-conditioned woman.
1851 G. Outram Legal Lyrics 16 Catch the doited runt forget To ca' for her annuity.
1876 F. K. Robinson Gloss. Words Whitby at Runty ‘A hard aud runt,’ a hale old person.
1886 R. L. Stevenson Kidnapped xxix. 302 Ye donnered auld runt.
1920 C. Murray In Country Places 33 There's runts syne o' fifty, o' saxty an' mair, Would hooie their sauls for a kiss an' a clap.
1934 ‘L. G. Gibbon’ Grey Granite i. 21 Folk thought her an interfering old runt, ay God! she'd find her custom go.
1996 C. I. Macafee Conc. Ulster Dict. 282/2 Runt,..6. a wizened old woman.
c. A short person of thickset build; a small or undersized person. Also as a term of abuse.Early quots. are figurative uses of sense 1a; later quots. show the influence of sense 1e.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > goodness and badness > inferiority or baseness > inferior person > [noun] > as abused
warlockOE
swinec1175
beastc1225
wolf's-fista1300
avetrolc1300
congeonc1300
dirtc1300
slimec1315
snipec1325
lurdanc1330
misbegetc1330
sorrowa1350
shrew1362
jordan1377
wirlingc1390
frog?a1400
warianglea1400
wretcha1400
horcop14..
turdc1400
callet1415
lotterela1450
paddock?a1475
souter1478
chuff?a1500
langbain?c1500
cockatrice1508
sow1508
spink1508
wilrone1508
rook?a1513
streaker?a1513
dirt-dauber?1518
marmoset1523
babiona1529
poll-hatcheta1529
bear-wolf1542
misbegotten1546
pig1546
excrement1561
mamzer1562
chuff-cat1563
varlet1566
toada1568
mandrake1568
spider1568
rat1571
bull-beef1573
mole-catcher1573
suppository1573
curtal1578
spider-catcher1579
mongrela1585
roita1585
stickdirta1585
dogfish1589
Poor John1589
dog's facec1590
tar-boxa1592
baboon1592
pot-hunter1592
venom1592
porcupine1594
lick-fingers1595
mouldychaps1595
tripe1595
conundrum1596
fat-guts1598
thornback1599
land-rat1600
midriff1600
stinkardc1600
Tartar1600
tumbril1601
lobster1602
pilcher1602
windfucker?1602
stinker1607
hog rubber1611
shad1612
splay-foot1612
tim1612
whit1612
verdugo1616
renegado1622
fish-facea1625
flea-trapa1625
hound's head1633
mulligrub1633
nightmare1633
toad's-guts1634
bitch-baby1638
shagamuffin1642
shit-breech1648
shitabed1653
snite1653
pissabed1672
bastard1675
swab1687
tar-barrel1695
runt1699
fat-face1740
shit-sack1769
vagabond1842
shick-shack1847
soor1848
b1851
stink-pot1854
molie1871
pig-dog1871
schweinhund1871
wind-sucker1880
fucker1893
cocksucker1894
wart1896
so-and-so1897
swine-hound1899
motherfucker1918
S.O.B.1918
twat1922
mong1926
mucker1929
basket1936
cowson1936
zombie1936
meatball1937
shower1943
chickenshit1945
mugger1945
motherferyer1946
hooer1952
morpion1954
mother1955
mother-raper1959
louser1960
effer1961
salaud1962
gunk1964
scunge1967
the world > life > the body > bodily height > shortness > [noun] > and broadness > person
knarc1405
hoddy-doddya1556
trunk1586
truncheon1601
stump1602
fubs1614
dumpling1617
punch1669
Punchinello1669
spud1688
knur1691
knurl1691
runt1699
squab1699
swad1706
humpty-dumpty1785
junt1787
knurlinga1796
pudge1808
stumpie1820
nugget1825
podge1834
dump1840
dumpy1868
pyknic1925
mesomorph1940
1699 B. E. New Dict. Canting Crew Runt, a little, short, truss Man.
1785 F. Grose Classical Dict. Vulgar Tongue Runt, a short squat man or woman, from the small cattle called Welch runts.
1854 A. E. Baker Gloss. Northants. Words II. 190 Runt or Runty, a dwarfish person; particularly a child stunted in its growth by short food or over work.
1890 L. C. D'Oyle Notches Rough Edge Life 65 My brother Bill..was a fine, tall fellow—not a little bit of a ‘runt’ like me.
1896 Dial. Notes 1 423 Runt, worthless fellow. (Cowboys.)
c1926 ‘Mixer’ Transport Workers' Song Bk. 52 As a slimy runt, I'm it!
1936 National Geographic Mag. June 787/2 A cadet's height determines his assignment, the tall men going to the ‘flanker’ companies, A and M, the ‘runts’ to companies F and G in the center.
1969 I. Opie & P. Opie Children's Games viii. 234 ‘Come on you miserable runts,’ we say, and one of the runts runs up the steps, only to be thrown over the side of the railing.
2003 K. Slater & J. Borte Pipe Dreams (2004) v. 95 As a high school freshman in 1988, I was four-feet-ten-inch, ninety-five pound, squeaky-voiced runt.
d. Something compared to a runt in being small, undersized, or in some way inferior.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > extension in space > measurable spatial extent > smallness > [noun] > that which is small > a small thing
minutea1450
minim1590
mite1594
titmouse1596
moteling1605
atom1633
thingling1652
long-little1653
parvitude1659
bodikin1668
eschantillon1720
niff-naff1808
smolt1808
runt1819
titty-tottya1825
featherweight1838
thinglet1839
shable1842
thumb1854
nubbin1857
speckle1882
teeny-weeny1894
hickey1909
tiddler1937
pinhead1951
1819 M. Wilmot Let. 8 Dec. (1935) 32 What think you of my deeply regretting not having brought a white Tabinet gown. 'Tis admired here beyond satin, and my old runt has in consequence been jinkumbobbed out of Mamselle and white satin till the poor dear old dress..is become the most admired thing I have.
1845 Punch 8 224 You work in that little runt of a garden of yours for half-an-hour or so before breakfast.
1873 W. Carleton Farm Ballads 43 Takin' all the biggest apples, leavin' all the littlest runts.
1900 R. Barr Unchanging East 258 This insignificant runt of a Turkish steamer.
1970 Pop. Sci. Mar. 44/3 There they squatted, pudgy little runts with half-a-dozen doughnut tires.
1996 Data Communications Internat. May 86/2 The error-handling test verified whether switches can filter four kinds of illegal frames: runts (undersized frames), jabbers (oversized frames), [etc.].
4.
a. A domestic pigeon belonging to any of several breeds or varieties characterized by large size and stoutness of build. See also Compounds 1b.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > birds > perching birds > order Columbiformes (pigeons, etc.) > domestic pigeon > [noun] > other types
porcelainc1530
turn-pate1611
light horseman1661
runt1661
smiter1668
helmet1676
mammet1678
Cortbeck1688
turbit1688
turner1688
dragoon1725
finicking1725
Leghorn1725
nun1725
owl1725
petit1725
trumpeter1725
horseman1735
Mahomet1735
barbel1736
turn-tail1736
frill-back1765
blue rock1825
beard1826
ice pigeon1829
toy1831
black1839
skinnum1839
splash1851
whole-feather1851
spangle1854
swallow1854
shield1855
stork pigeon1855
Swabian1855
yellow1855
archangel1867
dragon1867
starling1867
magpie1868
smerle1869
bluette1870
cumulet1876
oriental1876
spot fairy1876
turbiteen1876
blondinette1879
hyacinth1879
Modena pigeon1879
silver-dun1879
silverette1879
silver-mealy1879
swift pigeon1879
Victoria1879
visor1879
ice1881
swallow pigeon1881
velvet fairy1881
priesta1889
frill1890
1661 I. Walton Compl. Angler (ed. 3) iv. 73 Of the tame [pigeons] there be Cropers, Carryers, Runts.
1668 W. Charleton Onomasticon Zoicon 77 Columbæ Russicæ, Runts.
1725 R. Bradley Chomel's Dictionaire Œconomique at Pigeon Of Runts are different Sorts, one called Spanish Runts, generally of a Blood Red, or Mottled Colour.
1735 J. Moore Columbarium 44 There are other Sorts of Runts, as the Roman Runt.., and the Smyrna Runt.
1841 C. Dickens Barnaby Rudge i. 230 The wheeling and circling flights of runts, fantails, tumblers, and pouters, were perhaps not quite consistent with the grave and sober character of the building.
1881 J. C. Lyell Fancy Pigeons 104 In appearance runts are like huge common pigeons.
1939 C. A. Naether Bk. of Pigeon viii. 199 Most commonly in demand as squabbing pigeons are Kings, Carneaux,..and Runts.
1999 S. Jones Almost like Whale i. 24 It shows how breeders have produced birds as distinct as the pouter, the runt, the barb, the turbit and the laugher from that drab source, the rock pigeon.
b. A canary more than three years old. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > birds > order Passeriformes (singing) > arboreal families > family Fringillidae (finch) > [noun] > subfamily Carduelinae > genus Serinus > serinus canaria (canary) > of particular kind or colour
runt1675
jonquil1865
lizard canary1865
macaroni1876
roller1884
Yorkshire1898
1675 J. Blagrave New Additions Art Husbandry (new ed.) 116 The Old Birds above three years old are called Runts.
1699 B. E. New Dict. Canting Crew Runts, Canary-Birds above three years old.
1769 E. Buys New & Compl. Dict. Terms Art II Runts, Canary Birds above three Years old.

Phrases

runt of the litter: the smallest animal in a litter; (figurative and in extended use) the smallest, weakest, or least significant member of a group. Cf. sense 3d.
ΚΠ
1841 Western Farmer & Gardener Aug. 264/2 In the first place, we only procured of Dr. M., one young four or five months' barrow, the runt of the litter.
1870 Appletons' Jrnl. 28 May 609/2 Each of these old papers has a history... ‘Art’ is an old Dial paper, and is the runt of the litter.
1915 Forum (N.Y.) Apr. 420 She was speaking now to the runt of the litter... A puny stripling—weak, girl-like. He was no male man.
1949 Boys' Life Mar. 6/1 Behind him came a much smaller tom, the runt of the litter, and last of all a pale colored female.
1979 New Scientist 25 Jan. 267/2 Instead of becoming..independent Royal colleges they were absorbed into the university system where they have tended to form the under-developed runts of the UGC's litter.
2004 Time Out N.Y. 11 Nov. 95/3 The limited-to-none distribution of major South Korean movies abroad does leave them looking like the runt of the Asian cinema litter.

Compounds

C1.
a. General attributive and appositive.
ΚΠ
1551 in N. W. Alcock People at Home (1993) v. 69 10 Kyne & hefers & 3 calves... 8 Ront oxon.
1575 in J. M. Bestall & D. V. Fowkes Chesterfield Wills & Inventories 1521–1603 (1977) 131 3 Runte oxsen... 6 draught oxsen.
1603 P. Holland tr. Plutarch Morals 399 Like unto old runt-trees or dodils, which repining as it were at others, do manifestly hinder and take away the spring and growth of yoong poles and plants which come up under them, or grow neere about them.
1710 Tusser Redivivus in Tusser's Husb. (1878) 78 Few Pollards perish for want of it [sc. lopping], but Runt-wood will.
1874 E. Coues Birds Northwest 36 In a large number examined, little ‘runt’ eggs are sometimes found.
1884 West Sussex Gaz. 25 Sept. 2/5 25 Scotch cows and heifers, 16 runt steers.
1886 Daily News 15 Sept. 2/4 Prime sides of English runt beef.
1916 Successful Farming June 7/1 A sow had a large litter, and among them was a runt pig.
1994 Dog World Aug. 25/2 It might also be useful for increasing growth efficiency, especially in runt pups.
b. In sense 4a.
ΚΠ
1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory ii. 244/1 The Runt Pigeon, or Russian Dove,..are large Pigeons as big as young Hens.
1854 L. A. Meall Moubray's Treat. Poultry 252 In size it would seem to be the smallest of the Runt family.
1939 C. A. Naether Bk. of Pigeon ix. facing p. 211 (caption) This blue runt male, a great winner at the Classic Shows in England.
2004 Guardian (Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island) (Nexis) 13 Nov. c3 His other wins were: black hamburg: second hen;..runt pigeon: first cock and first hen (breed champion) and nun pigeon: second cock and second hen.
C2.
runt disease n. a syndrome observed in laboratory animals injected as newborns with lymphoid cells from an adult individual, characterized by growth retardation and abnormalities of the liver, spleen, and lymph nodes (later recognized as a form of graft-versus-host disease).
ΚΠ
1957 Jrnl. Cellular & Compar. Physiol. 50 Suppl. i. 135 Billingham and Brent's ‘runt disease’ seems to obey similar laws.
1978 Jrnl. Immunol. 120 1600 (title) Prolongation of allogeneic skin graft rejection and prevention of runt disease by a combination of drugs acting on neuroendocrine functions.
2003 J. H. Antin & N. A. Kernan in R. I. Handin et al. Blood lx. 2133/1 It was later realized that this secondary disease, or runt disease, was actually a graft-versus-host reaction.

Derivatives

runt-like adj.
ΚΠ
1854 L. A. Meall Moubray's Treat. Poultry 249 In the head and bill the Archangel is very Runt-like.
1926 E. M. Roberts Time of Man vi. 207 A skinny little thing, runt-like.
2000 T. Graves Bread & Oil (2002) ii. 39 The smaller, runt-like apricot..will contain four times as much natural sugar.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2011; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

runtv.

Forms: Middle English ront, Middle English runte.
Origin: Of unknown origin. Etymon: arunt v.
Etymology: Origin unknown. Compare arunt v.The difference in meaning makes a connection with Old French runeter to whisper, to murmur (12th cent.) extremely unlikely.
Obsolete.
transitive. To berate, rebuke.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > disapproval > rebuke or reproof > rebuke or reprove [verb (transitive)]
threac897
threapc897
begripea1000
threata1000
castea1200
chaste?c1225
takec1275
blame1297
chastya1300
sniba1300
withnima1315
undernima1325
rebukec1330
snuba1340
withtakea1340
reprovec1350
chastisea1375
arate1377
challenge1377
undertake1377
reprehenda1382
repreync1390
runta1398
snapea1400
underfoc1400
to call to account1434
to put downc1440
snebc1440
uptakec1440
correptc1449
reformc1450
reprise?c1450
to tell (a person) his (also her, etc.) own1450
control1451
redarguec1475
berisp1481
to hit (cross) one over (of, on) the thumbs1522
checkc1530
admonish1541
nip1548
twig?1550
impreve1552
lesson1555
to take down1562
to haul (a person) over the coals1565
increpate1570
touch1570
school1573
to gather up1577
task1580
redarguate?1590
expostulate1592
tutor1599
sauce1601
snip1601
sneap1611
to take in tax1635
to sharp up1647
round1653
threapen1671
reprimand1681
to take to task1682
document1690
chapter1693
repulse1746
twink1747
to speak to ——1753
haul1795
to pull up1799
carpet1840
rig1841
to talk to1860
to take (a person) to the woodshed1882
rawhide1895
to tell off1897
to tell (someone) where he or she gets off1900
to get on ——1904
to put (a person) in (also into) his, her place1908
strafe1915
tick1915
woodshed1935
to slap (a person) down1938
sort1941
bind1942
bottle1946
mat1948
ream1950
zap1961
elder1967
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add. 27944) (1975) I. vi. xiv. 311 He runtiþ [a1425 Morgan routeþ] and betiþ him ofte lest a drawe to euel maners.
c1450 J. Capgrave Life St. Katherine (Arun. 396) (1893) iii. 96 Euere his body wolde he chyde and ront [v.r. runte; rhyme wont, blont]: ‘What eyleth the now?’
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2011; most recently modified version published online December 2021).
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