单词 | twitcher |
释义 | twitchern. 1. A person who pulls, plucks, or snatches something; one who causes something to twitch or jerk. Also as the second element in compounds.See also curtain-twitcher n. at curtain n.1 Additions. ΚΠ 1531 G. Joye tr. Prophete Isaye l. sig. M.viiv In the morninge he twitched me by ye eare & wakened me... I offere my backe to the smyters & my chekes to the twitchers [L. vellentibus]. 1725 New Canting Dict. Cloak-Twitchers, villains who formerly, when Cloaks were much worn, us'd to lurk, in by and dark Places, to snatch them off the Wearer's Shoulders. 1899 Spectator 11 Nov. 684/2 We do not hold with twitching the driver's elbow, even if the twitcher has in fact hit upon a good theory. 1914 Theatre June 308/2 There is another pleasure derivable from seeing a play a second time... For the nonce we are the superiors of this twitcher of puppets [sc. the dramatist]. 2005 B. Cohen & L. Wysocky Front of Class iii. 34 There were the eye blinkers and the nose twitchers, the foot stompers and the neck jerkers. a. In plural. Tweezers or small pincers used to pluck out hairs. Also in pair of twitchers. Also occasionally in singular in the same sense. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > clutching or gripping equipment > [noun] > tongs or pincers > small pincette?1533 twitcher?a1549 tweezers1654 pair of tuckers1658 tweezer1904 ?a1549 Inventory Henry VIII (1998) I. 95/2 Item a paire of twicchers of silver. 1677 J. Phillips tr. J.-B. Tavernier New Relation Seraglio vii. 44 in tr. J.-B. Tavernier Six Voy. (1678) With a small kind of Pincers and twitchers, such as those, wherewith we take off the hair of the mustachoes. 1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory iii. 427/1 A Twitcher, or Twitchers; by them Hair superfluously growing in any part is pulled up by the Roots. b. A tool used to clinch hog rings (hog ring n. at hog n.1 Compounds 2a). Also in plural in the same sense. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > clutching or gripping equipment > [noun] > tongs or pincers tongsc725 tongsc890 pinsons1356 turkis1390 pincersa1400 twitches?a1425 pinching iron1519 pincette?1533 spinsers1539 pincher1573 twitcher1573 tenailles1597 quitch1600 tenalia1603 forceps1634 vellicle1676 snapdragon1833 the world > food and drink > farming > animal husbandry > keeping of pigs > [noun] > nose-ring > instrument to fasten ring twitcher1573 1573 T. Tusser Fiue Hundreth Points Good Husbandry (new ed.) f. 15v Hog yokes, & a twicher, & rings for a hog. 1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory iii. 244/1 Yoke for Swine, Twitchers or Rings. 1710 D. Hilman Tusser Redivivus Sept. 10 Twitchers are a sort of great Plyers to clinch the Hog-Ring withal. c. In plural. A utensil used for trimming or decorating pastry. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > food manufacture and preparation > equipment for food preparation > [noun] > baker's equipment > pastry cutter jagging-iron1598 runner1688 twitcher1688 paste cutter1845 cookie cutter1864 jagger1864 pastry cutter1869 cookie press1919 1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory (1905) xxii. 274/2 Instruments belonging to the Cook. The first is termed a Runner with Twichers. Some Cooks call these Iging [perhaps = edging] Irons. d. A device for restraining a horse during shoeing, veterinary procedures, etc.; = twitch n.1 1b. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > farming > animal husbandry > general equipment > [noun] > noose for muzzle twitcher1688 twitch1783 twister1940 1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory iii. 302/2 Horse Twichers, or Bracks..to put on Horses Noses, when they will not stand quietly to be Shooed [etc.]. 1880 Preston Guardian 4 Sept. 6/5 The pony had a twitcher on its nose, and he held it there until blood dropped from its mouth. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > impact > striking > striking with specific degree of force > [noun] > a severe blow rumble1489 revel1603 rattle1632 rebuke1692 twitcher1771 rattler1812 dingbat1843 wiper1846 a sleeve across the windpipe1952 the world > health and disease > ill health > pain > types of pain > [noun] > sudden pain stitchc1000 showera1300 shutea1300 gridea1400 gripa1400 shota1400 stounda1400 lancing1470 pang1482 twitch?1510 shooting1528 storm1540 stitching1561 stub1587 twinge1608 gird1614 twang1721 tang1724 shoot1756 darting1758 writhe1789 catch1830 lightning pain1860 twitcher1877 rash1900 1771 in Catal. Prints: Polit. & Personal Satires (Brit. Mus.) (1883) V. 13 Be advised by me and I'll give them a twitcher. 1806 H. Macneill Poet. Wks. (new ed.) I. 128 Prepared for blows, I'll make these foes Ere long, cry out... Ah! morbleu—there's a twitcher! 1828 W. Carr Dial. Craven (ed. 2) Twitcher, a severe blow. 1877 Sunday Mag. 182 ‘The rheumatis’ had, in his own phrase, ‘caught him on the hop and given him a twitcher’. 4. A person who makes short, sudden, convulsive or spasmodic movements; a twitchy or fidgety person. rare before 20th cent. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > motion in specific manner > sudden movement > [noun] > spasmodic movement or twitching > one who twitcher1793 1793 M. Wollstonecraft Let. 30 Dec. in Coll. Lett. (2003) viii. 19 Where shall I find a word to express the relationship which subsists between us?—Shall I ask the little twitcher? 1885 Rochester (Indiana) Republican 22 Jan. One of the sweetest belles, who unfortunately had an attack of the ‘hippo twitch’ walked down one of the streets showing her skill as a ‘twitcher’. 1952 Decatur (Alabama) Daily 8 Sept. 7/4 Are you a twitcher, a shifter, doodler, pumper, or back slapper? Well, calm down, mister! 1986 B. Michaels Shattered Silk v. 85 Fred's a good auctioneer; he knows a serious bidder from a nervous twitcher. 2005 J. Weiner Goodnight Nobody xv. 138 He didn't seem nervous, though. Maybe he was just one of those natural twitchers—the kind of guy who'd squirm in his seat through the credits before a movie. 5. colloquial (originally British). A birdwatcher whose main aim is to make sightings of rare birds; esp. one who travels great distances to do so, or who ticks off observations on a list; an enthusiastic or obsessive birdwatcher. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > sight and vision > one who sees > [noun] > bird-watcher birdwatcher1803 birder1900 bird spotter1931 birdo1950 birdman1955 twitcher1974 1974 Guardian 19 Aug. 1/3 An exhausted North American spotted sandpiper..has become the latest target for the ornithological ‘tick-hunters’ or ‘twitchers’ of Britain. 1982 Times 15 June 10/4 Twitchers are only interested in spotting rarities to claim they have seen them. Ornithologists are serious students, who despise and distrust twitchers. 1993 ‘J. Gash’ Paid & Loving Eyes (1994) xxii. 247 Which was how I finished up sitting in a twitcher's hide watching the mansion house. 2006 Independent on Sunday 19 Feb. (Review Suppl.) 31/2 If there was a prize for hiding from biologists, twitchers, collectors and tourists, this diminutive bird would surely win. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2019; most recently modified version published online June 2022). < n.1531 |
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