单词 | waster |
释义 | wastern.1 I. One who or something which wastes. 1. a. One who lives in idleness and extravagance; one who wastefully dissipates or consumes his resources, an extravagant spender, a squanderer, spendthrift. Now chiefly dialect, with some notion of sense 6, a worthless person, ‘ne'er-do-well’. ΘΚΠ the mind > goodness and badness > inferiority or baseness > worthlessness > worthless person > [noun] ribalda1250 brethelingc1275 filec1300 waynouna1350 waster1352 lorel1362 losel1362 land-leaper1377 javelc1400 leftc1400 lorerc1400 shackerellc1420 brethel1440 never-thrift1440 ne'er-thrifta1450 never-thrivinga1450 nebulona1475 breelc1485 naughty pack?1534 brathel1542 unsel155. pelf1551 wandrel?1567 land-loper1570 scald1575 baggage1594 arrant1605 good-for-nothing1611 hilding1611 vauneant1621 idle-pack1624 thimble-maker1654 never-do-well1664 ne'er-be-good1675 shack1682 vagabond1686 shag-bag1699 houndsfoot1710 blackguard1732 ne'er-do-well1737 trumpery1738 rap1742 good-for-naught1773 rip1781 mauvais sujet1793 scamp1808 waffie1808 loose fish1809 ne'er-do-good1814 hard bargain1818 vaurien1829 sculpin1834 shicer1846 wastrel1847 scallywag1848 shack-bag1855 beat1865 rodney1877 git1939 no-hoper1944 piss artist1962 the mind > possession > relinquishing > squandering or prodigality > [noun] > squanderer or prodigal waster1352 spender1393 fool-large?c1425 neve1440 stroyc1440 strawer1460 scapethrifta1500 prodigal son (also daughter, child)1508 nephew1532 scatterer1535 stroy-good1540 prodigal1547 spend-all1553 dingthrift1566 stroy-all1573 scattergood1577 slip-thrift1579 waste-good1585 slide-thrifta1591 spendthrift1601 unthrifta1602 prodiga1605 spend-good1605 wastethrift1608 prodigal1609 lavisher1611 squanderer1611 decoctor1615 profuser1616 extravagant1745 dissipater1799 wastrel1887 squander-bug1943 society > morality > moral evil > evil nature or character > lack of magnanimity or noble-mindedness > [noun] > worthlessness > good-for-nothing person brethelingc1275 filec1300 dogc1330 ribald1340 waynouna1350 waster1352 lorel1362 losel1362 land-leaper1377 triflera1382 brothelc1390 javelc1400 leftc1400 lorerc1400 shackerellc1420 brethel1440 never-thrift1440 vagrant1444 ne'er-thrifta1450 never-thrivinga1450 nebulona1475 breelc1485 naughty pack?1534 brathel1542 carrion1547 slim1548 unsel155. pelf1551 shifterc1562 rag1566 wandrel?1567 land-loper1570 nothing-worth1580 baggage1594 roly-poly1602 bash-rag1603 arrant1605 ragabash?1609 flabergullion1611 hilding1611 hard bargain1612 slubberdegullion1612 vauneant1621 knick-knacker1622 idle-pack1624 slabberdegullion1653 thimble-maker1654 whiffler1659 never-do-well1664 good-for-nought1671 ne'er-be-good1675 shack1682 vagabond1686 shabaroon1699 shag-bag1699 houndsfoot1710 ne'er-do-well1737 trumpery1738 rap1742 hallion1789 scamp1808 waffie1808 ne'er-do-good1814 vaurien1829 sculpin1834 shicer1846 good-for-nothing1847 wastrel1847 scallywag1848 shack-bag1855 beat1865 toe-rag1875 rodney1877 toe-ragger1896 low-lifer1902 punk1904 lowlife1909 ringtail1916 git1939 no-hoper1944 schlub1950 piss artist1962 dead leg1964 1352 Winner & Waster 194 ‘Ȝee wynnere’, quod wastoure, ‘thi wordes are vayne: With oure festes and oure fare we feden the pore.’ 1352 Winner & Waster 390 Who so wele schal wyn, a wastour moste he fynde, For if it greues one gome it gladdes anoþer. 1362 W. Langland Piers Plowman A. Prol. 22 Summe..In Eringe and in Sowynge swonken ful harde, Þat monie of þeos wasturs In Glotonye distruen. 1362 W. Langland Piers Plowman A. v. 24 He bad wastors go worche what þei best couþe, And wynne þat þei wasteden with sum maner craft. 1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (Rolls) VII. 445 Þe Kyng was a ravener in gaderynge and a greet wastour in spendynge. 1390 J. Gower Confessio Amantis II. 162 Bachus..A wastour was, and al his rente In wyn and bordel he despente. ?1472 M. Paston in Paston Lett. & Papers (2004) I. 362 Which..shuld cause..your frendes to thynk..þat ye shuld be a wastour and wuld wast your lyvelode. 1508 J. Stanbridge Vulgaria (W. de W.) C iij b He is a waster. Profusus est pecunie. 1597 in J. Stuart Misc. Spalding Club (1841) I. 177 The said Walter did never strik his wyff, nather yit onis fund fault with hir,..althocht scho wes ane westour. a1598 D. Fergusson Sc. Prov. (1641) sig. Dv It is weill warit that wasters want geir. 1603 P. Holland tr. Plutarch Morals 94 Prodigall ding~thrifts and wasters. 1631 F. Lenton Characterismi sig. G7 A Good Husband... He is the sole happinesse of a good wife, and the torment of a Waster. a1697 J. Aubrey Brief Lives: Hobbes (1898) I. 347 His lord, who was a waster, sent him up and downe to borrow money. 1741 S. Richardson Pamela IV. lvii. 369 This would..instruct him..to avoid being a Squanderer or Waster. 1775 J. Adair Hist. Amer. Indians 407 He who will not work, must..leave the town, as they will not sweat themselves for an healthy idle waster. 1818 W. Scott Heart of Mid-Lothian iii, in Tales of my Landlord 2nd Ser. III. 69 Ye will think I am turned waster, for I wear clean hose and shoon every day. 1877 E. Peacock Gloss. Words Manley & Corringham, Lincs. Waster,..a wasteful person. 1887 J. W. Matthews Incwadi Yami ii. 20 The class of wasters which public grumbling bred and fostered. 1897 R. S. S. Baden-Powell Matabele Campaign i. 20 A mining population of whites and blacks and ‘wasters’,..‘Wasters?’—oh, it's a South African word, and most expressive; applies to the specious loafer who is so common in this country. 1904 J. Sweeney At Scotland Yard viii. 203 Here was a wretched invertebrate fellow, an absolute ‘waster’. b. One who wastefully dissipates or consumes (something specified; in early use money, resources). Const. of. ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > relinquishing > squandering or prodigality > [noun] > squanderer or prodigal > of something specified wasterc1380 the world > action or operation > harm or detriment > disadvantage > uselessness > misuse > [noun] > waste > one who wastes wasterc1380 spendthrifta1616 c1380 J. Wyclif Wks. (1880) 200 & ȝif men..wolden fayn paie, & traueile bisily þerfore in treuþe, & ben not wastouris of here litil good. c1386 G. Chaucer Merchant's Tale 291 Men moste enquere..Wher she be wys..or wastour of thy good. 1422 J. Yonge tr. Secreta Secret. 131 He is a wastoure of his goodes, and destrueth his roialme whate he may. 1549 J. Cheke Hurt of Sedicion sig. E5v But what is a loyterer, a sucker of honye, a spoyler of corne, a destroyer of fruite? Naye a waster of money, [etc.]. 1569 R. Grafton Chron. II. 73 A man of an yll lyfe and an inordinate waster of the goodes of the Church. 1611 B. Jonson Catiline i. sig. B3 Diuers Roman Knights (The profuse wasters of their patrimonies). View more context for this quotation 1701 W. Penn in Mem. Hist. Soc. Pennsylvania (1870) IX. 72 Learn who have been the wasters of timber. 1815 W. H. Ireland Scribbleomania 81 This waster of ink, this defiler of paper. 1842 J. Wilson Christopher North (1857) II. 18 No waster was she of her tears, or her smiles. 1883 American 7 6 But the good sense of the majority soon suppressed these wasters of time. c. An action or habit that causes waste. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > harm or detriment > disadvantage > uselessness > misuse > [noun] > waste > action that causes wastera1633 a1633 G. Herbert Outlandish Prov. (1640) sig. A2v Building and marrying of Children are great wasters. 1747 S. Richardson Clarissa I. xii. 69 Gaming, that great waster of time, as well as fortune, is not his vice. 2. a. One who lays waste, despoils or plunders; a devastator, ravager, plunderer. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > [noun] > devastation or desolation > one who or that which wastera1382 harrowerc1450 harrier1596 desolation1608 ravager1611 dispeopler1616 depopulator1623 desolatora1638 vastator1659 havocker1680 devaster1789 devastator1818 a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(1)) (1850) Isa. xvi. 4 Moab, be thou the lurkyng place of hem fro the face of the wastere [L. a facie vastatoris]. a1400–50 Wars Alex. 5310 Þe werreour of all þe werd & wastoure of ynde. c1440 Promptorium Parvulorum 518/1 Wastowre, of a place, dilapidator. 1544 R. Tracy Supplycacion to Kynge Henry VIII sig. Cij Truly no lytle wasters, spoylers, and robbers, and that of the most poore. 1575 T. Vautrollier tr. M. Luther Comm. Epist. to Galathians ii. 9 Of a persecuter and waster of the Church, he was made an Apostle. 1583 G. Babington Very Fruitfull Expos. Commaundem. viii. 361 It cannot bee, that our heartes shoulde bee right in affections towards our brethren, and wee spoylers and wasters, or anie way harmers of the commodities which they inioy. 1738 J. Wesley Coll. Psalms & Hymns (new ed.) cxxxvii. xi The Lord shall all thy Pow'r o'erthrow And lay the mighty Waster waste. 1817 W. Scott Harold i. ix. 19 Witikind the Waster. 1868 W. Morris Earthly Paradise ii. 649 And press around each new-come man to learn If Harfleur now the pagan wasters burn. 1879 S. H. Butcher & A. Lang tr. Homer Odyssey 115 Odysseus..the waster of cities. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > [noun] > one who or that which destroys baneOE losera1340 leeserc1380 stroyerc1380 destroyer1382 ravenerc1390 castera1400 confounder1401 wastera1425 stroyc1440 undoerc1440 unmakerc1450 confounderess1509 hydraa1513 stroy-good1540 abolisher1548 thunderbolt1559 disannullera1572 stroy-all1573 ruiner1581 down-puller1583 murdererc1585 spendingc1595 blaster1598 assassin1609 ruinater1609 dissolver1611 minerc1614 destructioner1621 fordoer1631 sinker1632 destructive1640 deletery1642 assassinatea1658 ruinator1658 destroyeress1662 destructora1691 dissolvent1835 solvent1841 wrecker1882 destructant1889 a1425 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Galba) l. 27983 Þis licheri es..waster of man-kin. c1480 (a1400) St. Mary of Egypt 791 in W. M. Metcalfe Legends Saints Sc. Dial. (1896) I. 319 Þu art..confowrt of wrech, waster of syn. 1645 H. Hammond Of Conscience (new ed.) §67 That onely sinne continued in for any long time,..was a farre greater waster to Conscience. 3. a. The designation of a class of thieves mentioned along with ‘Roberdesmen’ and ‘Drawlatches’ in a statute of Edw. III. Obsolete exc. archaic.The occurrence of the word in the Anglo-Norman statute of 1331 is no proof that it was current in English at that date. All subsequent examples merely echo the statute. ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > taking > stealing or theft > thief > [noun] > company of thieves > specifically in fourteenth century waster1331 1331 Statutes Realm 1.268 Diverses roberies, homicides, & felonies ont este faitz..par gentz qi sont appellez Roberdesmen, Wastours, & Draghlacche. 1543 tr. Act 5 Edw. III c. 14 Bycause there hath ben dyuers manslaughters, felonies, and roberies done in tymes past, by people that be called Roberdesmen, wastes [sic], and Drawlaches. 1581 W. Lambarde Eirenarcha i. xix. 186 Drawlatches, Wastours, or Robertsmen, that is to say, either myching or mightie theeues. 1706 Phillips's New World of Words (new ed.) Wastors, a kind of Thieves, or Robbers anciently known by that Name. 1890 A. Conan Doyle White Company iv It shall never be said whilst I am Bailiff of Southampton, that any waster, riever, drawlatch or murtherer came scathless away from me and my posse. b. Misused to render Anglo-Norman westour in a statute relating to Wales. Obsolete. rare.The Anglo-Norman word represents Welsh gwestwr ( < gwest lodging, hospitality + gwr man), a vagrant who went about exacting free board and lodging. ΚΠ 1543 tr. Act 4 Hen. IV c. 27 Mischieues, whiche hath happened before this tyme in ye land at wales, by many wasters, rymours, mynstrels, and other vacabondes [Fr. Westours, Rymours, Ministralx & autres vacabondes]. 4. a. An animal that is wasting away or losing flesh, or that will not fatten. Also attributive as †waster ox. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > animal disease or disorder > [noun] > sick or injured animal waster14.. piner1882 symmelian1894 14.. in Walter of Henley's Husb. (1890) 51 Þe feble ox costithe as moche and more þen þe beste ox for yeff he be a wayster ox he moste be þe more spared. 1614 G. Markham Cheape & Good Husbandry ii. [ii.] i. 45 Which [healthfulness of an ox] you shall know by a good taile and a good pyzel, for if the haire..be lost, then hee is a waster and will be long in feeding [for the butcher]. 1689 J. Chetham Angler's Vade Mecum (ed. 2) xli. 308 A lean, slender Pike, though he seem to advance in length; yet is commonly a waster, and in a decaying condition;..yet he'll live and be as hungry and greedy as ever. 1895 W. Rye Gloss. Words E. Anglia Waster, a rabbit or other animal that looks like a dier, wasting away. 1907 Daily Chron. 13 Sept. 6/7 In an adjoining shed there was a ‘waster’ [i.e. a cow affected with tuberculosis], which was so ill that it could not stand up. b. a bad waster: said of a jockey who has difficulty in ‘wasting’ (see waste v. 11c). ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > racing or race > horse racing > people involved in horse racing > [noun] > rider > types of feather1760 lightweight1773 welter1804 steeple hunter1830 a bad waster1833 steeplechaser1837 heavyweight1857 stoner1862 roper1870 point-to-pointer1929 jumping jockey1947 jump jockey1970 1833 Q. Rev. 49 399 He is a bad waster, and is much punished to bring himself to the three-year-old weights. 1849 Bentley's Misc. 31 581 Some men are bad wasters, when nothing but very severe exercise, aided by medicine,..suffices to get off the last twenty-four ounces. 5. a. Something which causes or allows waste or loss of material. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > condition of matter > bad condition of matter > [noun] > loss of material > cause of waster1842 1842 Penny Cycl. XXII. 142/1 [Sluices] also act as wasters, to allow the surplus water of a reservoir to escape. 1880 C. H. Spurgeon John Ploughman's Pictures 135 A leaking tap is a great waster. b. A foreign body in the wick of a candle which causes it to gutter and waste. dialect. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > light > artificial light > an artificial light > candle > [noun] > guttering > cause of waster1788 1788 G. Wilson Coll. Masonic Songs 72 (Jam.) Oft on the wick there hangs a waster, Which makes the candle burn the faster. 1877 F. Ross et al. Gloss. Words Holderness Wasther, a thief in the candle. 1888 F. T. Elworthy W. Somerset Word-bk. Waster. c. Pathology. = comedo n. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > eruption > [noun] > comedo comedo1730 worm1730 blackhead1837 whitehead1886 waster1899 1899 T. C. Allbutt et al. Syst. Med. VIII. 752 It is also known as grub, worm, black-head, or ‘waster’. II. Something regarded as waste material. 6. Something rejected as waste. a. An article of faulty or inferior manufacture. ΘΚΠ the mind > goodness and badness > inferiority or baseness > inferior thing > [noun] poornessa1382 chaffc1386 cold roast?1406 arse-guta1413 short end1560 under-kind1571 inferior1589 canvas-back1605 underthing1620 under-sort1655 wasteling1750 slouch1767 shamea1771 neck beefa1777 rep1786 wastrel1790 wastera1800 shoddy1862 piece1884 tinhorn1887 robbo1897 cheapie1898 buckeye1906 reach-me-down1916 dog1917 stinkeroo1934 bodgie1964 cheapo1975 society > trade and finance > merchandise > [noun] > low quality goods brayed ware1603 breathed ware1640 mattress1685 third1768 wastera1800 imperfects1862 fifths1881 cheaps1930 irregular1940 borax1942 tat1951 braided wares- the mind > goodness and badness > inferiority or baseness > imperfection > [noun] > that which is imperfect wind-egg1398 rib-roast1654 wastera1800 semi-form1836 spoil1892 square wheels1924 a1800 S. Pegge Suppl. Grose's Provinc. Gloss. (1814) Wasters, damaged or misshapen goods. North. 1828 W. Carr Dial. Craven (ed. 2) Waster, any thing among wares that is damaged or of inferior workmanship. 1829 J. Hunter Hallamshire Gloss. Waisters, articles of cutlery laid aside on account of any imperfection. 1833 J. Holland Treat. Manuf. Metal II. 360 The former [i.e. needles with broken eyes]..are thrown aside as wasters. 1846 W. Greener Sci. Gunnery (new ed.) 135 A great number of barrels declared ‘wasters’, such as..having holes in the sides, or some other fault sufficient to condemn them in the eyes of a..barrel-maker. 1869 F. Kohn Iron & Steel Manuf. 106 If cast in a fireclay mould, the contraction was still irregular, and 10 per cent. of all tyre castings were ‘wasters’. 1878 L. Jewitt Ceramic Art I. iv. 76 A kiln..in and around the remains of which were many vessels—‘wasters’ as they would be technically called—of various kinds. 1879 Cassell's Techn. Educator (new ed.) II. 177/2 Such lenses, together with those that possess..other defects, are technically called ‘wasters’. 1880 P. W. Flower Hist. Trade in Tin xiii. 173 Some of the sheets thus thrown out are called menders.., others are called wasters, for which there is always a market at a reduction in price; the worst are called waster waste. 1892 Athenæum 30 Apr. 577/1 A pottery, worked at however distant a period, leaves traces of coccj and ‘wasters’. 1900 Bath Herald 15 Sept. Galvanized Corrugated Iron, for Roofing, best quality only, no wasters. 1928 W. B. Honey Old Eng. Porcelain i. 15 Nothing short of an undoubted ‘waster’ can prove conclusively that a particular type was made on the factory site in question. 1950 D. T.-D. Clarke Roman Pottery Kiln 4 Pots of similar grey ware have been found at Market Overton..which are undoubtedly wasters. 1961 M. Kelly Spoilt Kill ii. 81 Pots that were twisted, shrunken and collapsed... Wasters, they called them. 1974 Canad. Antiques Collector Sept.–Oct. 27/2 There are remains of many little potteries scattered all over southern Ontario, and mounds of ‘wasters’ or broken or discarded ware. b. An animal, bird, etc., which is not good enough to be kept for breeding purposes. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > domestic animal > [noun] > livestock > stock or breed > animals kept for breeding > not good enough for breeding wastera1722 a1722 E. Lisle Observ. Husbandry (1757) 405 A young sow,..having as many as nine pigs, it could not be expected any of them would be so properly fat for wasters, as if she had brought but four or five. 1904 Nature 25 Aug. 408/2 But now let him breed from his ‘wasters’ and he will find that the extracted blacks are pure and give blacks only. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1923; most recently modified version published online December 2021). † wastern.2 Obsolete. 1. A wooden sword or a foil used in sword-exercise and fencing. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > fighting sports > fencing > [noun] > foil waster1455 foil1594 hilt1609 blunt1611 fleureta1648 foin1655 small sword1679 back-sword1747 flamberg1885 épée1889 sabre1910 wafter- society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > fighting sports > fencing > fencing or exercise with sticks or cudgels > [noun] > stick waster1455 hilt1609 sworda1648 lath sword1697 tickler1765 sword of lath1819 basket-stick1833 single-stick1837 1455 in Meyrick Ant. Armour (1824) II. 144 Furst viij swerds and a long blade of a swerde made in wafters [read wasters]..for to lerne the king to play in his tendre age. 1541 in Hist. MSS Comm.: MSS Duke of Rutland (1905) IV. 313 in Parl. Papers (Cd. 2606) LXIII. 301 For Bryngyng..of hiltes for the crosse wasters for my Lorde Roose, iiij d. 1561 T. Hoby tr. B. Castiglione Courtyer i. sig. E.iiiv Yf goyng about to cast a darte, or houldyng in hys hand a sworde or any other waster. 1600 P. Holland tr. Livy Rom. Hist. xl. vi. 1063 Foule worke they made with their wodden wasters and headlesse pikes. 1606 Bp. J. Hall Heauen vpon Earth xi. 80 Euen with wooden wasters we learn to play at the sharp. a1661 B. Holyday tr. Juvenal Satyres (1673) 111 The fencer's staffe or waster..was call'd rudis (as some think) because with such cudgels they practiz'd the rudiments of fencing, before they came in publick to fight at sharp. 2. A cudgel, staff, club. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > club or stick > [noun] sowelc893 treec893 cudgelc897 stinga900 bat?c1225 sticka1275 clubc1275 truncheon14.. bourdonc1325 bastona1400 warderera1400 plantc1400 kibble1411 playloomc1440 hurlbatc1450 ploykc1450 rung1491 libberlac1500 waster1533 batonc1550 macana1555 libbet1562 bastinado1574 crab-tree comb1593 tomahawkc1612 billeta1616 wiper1622 batoon1637 gibbeta1640 crab-bat1647 kibbo1688 Indian club1694 batterdasher1696 crab-stick1703 bloodwipea1705 bludgeon1730 kierie1731 oaken towel1739 crab1740 shillelagh1772 knobstick1783 pogamogganc1788 whirlbat1791 nulla-nulla1798 waddy1800 kevel1807 supple1815 mere1820 hurlet1825 knobkerrie1826 blackthorn1829 bastera1833 twig1842 leangle1845 alpeen1847 banger1849 billy1856 thwack-stave1857 clump1868 cosh1869 nulla1878 sap1899 waddy1899 blunt instrument1923 1533 J. Heywood Mery Play Iohan Iohan sig. A.iv Nought shulde preuayle me, nother staffe nor waster Within a whyle she wolde be my mayster. 1555 W. Waterman tr. Josephus in tr. J. Boemus Fardle of Facions sig. X.ij Let there bee giuen vnto hym by the commune Sergeaunt of the batte .xxxix. stripes with a waster. 1570 J. Foxe Actes & Monumentes (rev. ed.) I. 92/1 Verianus and Marcellianus..were beat with wasters or trunshons, after that [they] were hanged..vpon the gibbet. 1598 J. Stow Suruay of London 70 The youthes of this citie, also haue vsed on holy dayes after euening prayer, at their maysters dores, to exercise their wasters and bucklers. ?1608 S. Lennard tr. P. Charron Of Wisdome Pref. sig. a5 A weake arme wanting power and skill well to weld a waster or staffe that is somewhat too heauie for it, wearieth it selfe and fainteth. 1611 J. Davies Scourge of Folly 177 A Groning Horse and grunting Wife neuer failes their Master. Yes, if the Master haue not life to ply them with the waster. 3. Fencing with a ‘waster’; single-stick, cudgel-play. Also plural esp. in to play at wasters. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > fighting sports > fencing > fencing or exercise with sticks or cudgels > [noun] waster1519 wastership1575 single billeta1625 cudgels1630 quarterstaff1631 cudgel-playa1635 back-sword1699 cudgel-playing1717 hurlbatting1744 single-stick1771 short-staff1775 cudgelling1787 stick fighting1845 stick play1849 back-swording1857 kendo1921 1519 W. Horman Vulgaria xxxii. f. 281 Let vs pley at buckeler and at waster in feyre game... This waster [L. rudis] is nat laufull. 1594 1st Pt. Raigne Selimus sig. H I thought my selfe as proper a fellow at wasters, as any in all our village. 1596 T. Nashe Haue with you to Saffron-Walden sig. T To see a Gillian draggell taile..play at wasters with a quil for the britches. 1630 T. Dekker Second Pt. Honest Whore ii. ii. 96 If o're husbands their wiues will needes be Masters, We men will haue a law to win't at wasters. 1631 W. Gouge Gods Three Arrowes iii. §11. 206 Such kind of recreations as..playing at wasters and foines. 1636 King & Queenes Entertainement Richmond (Bang) 11 And what can Richard doe, play a little at wasters, and make the blood..run about his vellowes eares at a Wake. 4. figurative. ΚΠ ?1608 S. Lennard tr. P. Charron Of Wisdome Pref. sig. a4 v Science or Learning is a very good and profitable staffe or waster. 1640 G. Abbot Whole Bk. Iob Paraphr. xi. 73/1 Be perswaded to lay downe the wasters, to give over reasoning the matter. 1646 Sir T. Browne Pseudodoxia Epidemica i. iii. 8 Being unable to weild the intellectual armes of reason, they are faine to betake themselves unto wasters and the blunter weapons of truth. View more context for this quotation This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1923; most recently modified version published online December 2020). wastern.3 Scottish. A fishing-spear. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > fishing > fishing-tackle > spear > [noun] pricka1350 garfanglec1440 wawsper1472 spear1551 waster1580 fizgig1589 visgee1593 fish-spear1611 glaive1640 fish-giga1642 gaff1656 gig1705 lance1728 sticker1772 graina1818 picaroon1837 pickpole1837 fishing-spear1840 lily-iron1852 gambeering iron1883 mackerel gaff1883 1580 [implied in: Reg. Mag. Sig. Scot. 55/1 Cum omni alia piscatione salmonum..inter dict. bondas, sive reticulis et modo appellato vastering. (at wastering n.)]. 1634 [implied in: Reg. Mag. Sig. Scot. 70/2 Cum cetera piscatione salmonum..reticulis aut modo vocato wastering. (at wastering n.)]. 1815 W. Scott Guy Mannering II. 61 This chase, in which the fish is pursued and struck with barbed spears, or a sort of long-shafted trident, called a waster, is much practised at the mouth of the Esk, and in the other salmon rivers of Scotland. 1815 W. Scott Guy Mannering II. 65 Ground the waster weel, man! 1825 J. Jamieson Etymol. Dict. Sc. Lang. Suppl. Waster, a kind of trident used for striking salmon, Dumfr., Eskdale; the same with Wester. a1835 J. Hogg Shepherd's Wedding ii, in Tales & Sketches (1837) II. 152 My teeth war a' waterin to be in him, but I kend the shank o' my waster wasna half length. 1843 W. Scrope Days & Nights Salmon Fishing in Tweed ix. 195 I shall give a description of the clodding, or throwing leister, or waster, as he was used to term it... The spear has five prongs of unequal, but regularly graduated, length. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1923; most recently modified version published online December 2021). wasterv. Scottish. transitive. To spend or use extravagantly, to waste. ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > relinquishing > squandering or prodigality > squander [verb (transitive)] forspendc893 scatter1154 dispend1303 waste1340 misspendc1390 miswastec1400 consumec1425 waste1474 profund1527 lasha1535 prodige1538 lavish1542 to play away1562 riot1566 embezzle1578 dilapidate1590 squander1593 confound1598 to make ducks and drakes of or withc1600 prodigalize1611 profuse1611 squander1611 paddle1616 bezzle1617 to run out of ——1622 to piss away1628 prodigal1628 decoct1629 to bangle (away)1632 debauch1632 deboise1632 to fribble away1633 to fool out1635 to run outa1640 to fiddle away1667 slattera1681 dissipate1682 to play off1693 duck-and-drake1700 liquidate1702 sparkle away1703 waster1821 befool1861 to frivol away1866 to play (at) duck and drake with1872 to fling away1873 mislive1887 slather1904 mucker1928 profligate1938 peter1956 spaff2002 society > trade and finance > management of money > expenditure > waste of money or extravagance > spend extravagantly [verb (transitive)] to piss (money, an opportunity, etc.) against the wall1540 lavish1542 melt1607 to piss away1628 unbowel1647 tap1712 sport1785 waster1821 blue1846 spree1859 to frivol away1866 blow1874 bust1878 skittle1883 to blow in1886 burst1892 bang1897 the world > action or operation > harm or detriment > disadvantage > uselessness > misuse > [verb (transitive)] > waste spilla1000 scatter1154 aspilla1250 rospa1325 waste1340 spend1390 consumec1425 waste1474 miswenda1500 forsumea1510 to cast away1530 to throw away1561 embezzle1578 squander1593 palter1595 profuse1611 squander1611 ravel1614 sport1622 to fool away1628 to stream out1628 to fribble away1633 sweal1655 frisk1665 to fiddle away1667 wantonize1673 slattera1681 swattle1681 drivel1686 swatter1690 to muddle away1707 squander1717 sot1746 slattern1747 meisle1808 fritter1820 waster1821 slobber1837 to cut to waste1863 fringe1863 potter1883 putter1911 profligate1938 to piddle away1942 haemorrhage1978 spaff2002 1821 J. Galt Ann. Parish v. 58 My servant lasses..wastered every thing at such a rate..that, long before the end of the year, the year's stipend was all spent. 1823 J. Galt Entail II. xix. 184 Since that time he's been neither to bind nor to haud,..wastring his income in the most thoughtless way. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1923; most recently modified version published online December 2021). < n.11331n.21455n.31580v.1821 |
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