单词 | butt |
释义 | buttn.1 Any of various flatfishes, as a sole, plaice, turbot, flounder, halibut, etc. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > fish > superorder Acanthopterygii (spiny fins) > order Perciformes (perches) > order Pleuronectiformes (flat-fish) > [noun] > family Pleuronectidae > member of genus Platichthyes (flounder) flukea700 buttc1300 floundera1450 suanta1609 salmon flounder1815 Monterey halibut1882 the world > animals > fish > superorder Acanthopterygii (spiny fins) > order Perciformes (perches) > order Pleuronectiformes (flat-fish) > [noun] > family Soleidae (soles) > member of genus Solea > solea solea (sole) buttc1300 sole1347 sole-fish1538 sea partridge1584 sea-capon1620 sole-fluke1684 yellowfin sole1949 the world > animals > fish > superorder Acanthopterygii (spiny fins) > order Perciformes (perches) > order Pleuronectiformes (flat-fish) > [noun] > family Pleuronectidae > genus Pleuronectes > pleuronectes platessa (plaice) schullea1300 buttc1300 plaicec1300 plaice-fluke1596 suanta1609 sea sparrow1672 the world > animals > fish > superorder Acanthopterygii (spiny fins) > order Perciformes (perches) > order Pleuronectiformes (flat-fish) > [noun] > family Scophthalmidae (turbot) > genus or member of Scophthalmus > scophthalmus maximus (turbot) buttc1300 turbotc1300 sprent1324 breta1475 birt1552 sea pheasant1633 rhomb1720 brat1760 rodden fluke1793 king-fluke1895 c1300 Havelok (Laud) (1868) l. 759 He tok..Hering, and þe makerel, Þe Butte, þe schulle, þe þornebake. 1373–5 in R. Sillem Rec. Sessions Peace Lincs. (1936) 228 Forstallatores piscium videlicet buttys schullys codelynges wilkys et aliorum piscium. Promptorium Parvulorum (Harl. 221) 56 But, fysche, pecten. c1475 Babees Bk. (Harl. 5086) (2002) i. 175 Grene sawce is good with grene fisch..botte lynge, brett & fresche turbut. 1530 J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 202/1 Butte fysshe, plye. 1599 T. Nashe Lenten Stuffe 50 The Playse and the Butte..for their mocking haue wry mouthes euer since. 1655 T. Moffett & C. Bennet Healths Improvem. xviii. 173 Turbuts... Whilst they be young..they are called Butts. 1672 J. Narborough Jrnl. 29 July in R. C. Anderson Jrnls. & Narr. Third Dutch War (1946) (modernized text) 128 Much good fish caught by our small vessels by trawling great plaice and soles and buts and brets. 1776 W. Cowper Let. 12 Nov. (1979) I. 265 Whatever Fish are likely..Butts, Plaice, Flounder or any other. 1841 E. Forbes Hist. Brit. Starfishes 134 When they hook a But (Holibut) they immediately give the poor Starfish its liberty. 1886 R. C. Leslie Sea-painter's Log x. 192 The butt or sole, the turbot, the halibut or holybut,..all belong to that strange family of fish. 1946 A. F. M. MacMahon Fishlore xxx. 198 (heading) The flounder (Pleuronectes flesus—Plaice family) (Fluke, Butt). 1969 Countryman Autumn 170 The ‘butt’ was an extra large sand-dab or plaice, to be found there only in January and February. 1995 J. M. Sims-Kimbrey Wodds & Doggerybaw: Lincs. Dial. Dict. 46/2 Butt, 1) Flounder. 2) Sole. 3) Any flatfish as yet unidentified. 2011 C. J. Jackson Seafood 364/2 Turbot. Psetta maxima. Also known as britt, butt, breet, it's one of the most expensive of all flat fish. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2018; most recently modified version published online December 2021). buttn.2 1. a. A raised strip of cultivated land between two furrows, a ridge. Also: a measure of land equivalent to this in size. Now British regional. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > farming > farm > farmland > land suitable for cultivation > [noun] > broken land > arable or ploughed land > divisions of ploughed land ridgeOE butt1304 landc1400 rig1428 sheth1431 shed1473 stitch1493 loon1611 furlong1660 size-land1744 slit1775 kench1799 stimpart1896 the world > relative properties > measurement > measurement of area > [noun] > a system or process of measuring land > other units of land measure wandalec1150 wista1200 landc1400 ridge1439 peck1442 scrophec1450 buttc1460 rig1485 mark1488 stick1531 farthingdeal1543 plough-gang1548 quarterland1563 ploughgate1565 last1576 wand1596 ox-skin1610 garbred1621 plank1631 nooka1634 buttal1635 farthinga1640 rick1641 familia1676 rhandir1688 setiera1690 worthine1701 fierding1768 whip-land1811 rai1933 1304 Manorial Documents in Mod. Philol. (1936) 34 56 (MED) De uno vetere curtilagio cum iiijor buttes terre jacentibus. c1460 in A. Clark Eng. Reg. Oseney Abbey (1907) 68 (MED) I..haue i-yeve..ij sellions or buttes of lond to a wey to be made. a1500 in T. Wright & R. P. Wülcker Anglo-Saxon & Old Eng. Vocab. (1884) I. 737/20 Hic selio..a butt. a1525 ( Coventry Leet Bk. (1908) II. 510 Within whech bandes the parcell of grounde first inclosed be Briscowes ffadir lieth; and conteyneth xl landes & vj buttes. 1589 in W. Greenwell Wills & Inventories Registry Durham (1860) II. 167 I give to..my servantt, thre buttes or rigges of land. 1611 R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues Seillon,..the narrow trench, reyne, or furrow, left betweene butt and butt for the drayning thereof. 1681 in Rec. Parl. Scotl. to 1707 (2007) 1681/7/111 That other rigg or butt of land of the samen lyand in the field called the Gallowbank. 1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory ii. ii. §32 Smaller parcells according to that quantity of ground it containeth, both for length and breadth..3 Ridges, Butts, Flats, Stitches or small Butts, Pikes. a1722 J. Toland Coll. Several Pieces (1726) I. 198 Leape to the Grwmg, that is, the breadth of a Butt of Land. 1776 Farmer's Mag. Oct. 267 The buts, or ridges, which lay north and south in the former course, are ploughed to lie east and west. 1812 T. Quayle Gen. View Agric. Isle of Man vii. 70 In the month of July, butts of the usual dimensions, and with the usual intervals, are traced on grass land designed for next year's potatoes. 1859 Jrnl. Royal Agric. Soc. 20 i. 221 The fashion was to plough in ‘five-bolt butts’, that is, small lands or stetches of ten furrows each. 1901 Nature 17 Oct. 605 (caption) Portion of a cultivated area at Lokoja, showing butts and furrows. 1951 Manx Jrnl. Agric. Jan. 40 When judging was completed, the winner of each of the tractor classes was required to plough another smaller butt to decide the championship. 1966 Recorded Interview (Brit. Libr. Sound Archive) (Surv. Eng. Dialects: C908) (MS transcript) Track 12 [Barlaston, Staffordshire] You would plough one or two butts a day and carry on until you had ploughed a field. 1999 D. Parry Gram. & Gloss. Conservative Anglo-Welsh Dial. Rural Wales 135/1 Bouts, butts, the ridges of a ploughed field. b. Such a ridge when short of its full length, typically owing to the irregular shape of the boundary of the field. Now British regional and Irish English. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > farming > cultivation or tillage > breaking up land > ploughing > [noun] > ridge thrown up by plough > short butt1523 1523 J. Fitzherbert Bk. Surueyeng xxi. f. 39 If it be lasse than a rodde, than call it a but. 1649 W. Blith Eng. Improver xviii. 105 I had about fifteene or sixteene little short Lands, or Butts. 1787 G. Winter New Syst. Husbandry 276 A few buts or short ridges, which were planted with a proportion of one bushel to an acre. 1803 A. Rees Cycl. Butt, a provincial term applied to such ridges or portions of arable land as run out short at the sides or other parts of the field. 1851 H. Stephens & J. P. Norton Farmer's Guide Sci. & Pract. Agric. II. 551/2 On account of the inequality in the lengths of butts, much more time is consumed in working them than a square piece of ground of the same area. Butts are therefore highly objectionable in fields. 1883 F. Seebohm Eng. Village Community 6 Where the strips abruptly meet others, or abut upon a boundary at right angles, they are sometimes called butts. 1935 W. M. Alexander in Sc. National Dict. (1941) II. 334/3 [Aberdeen] When a ploughman finds his rig is losing shape, say, becoming too narrow at one end, he will put in a short fur or two to make it straight. These short furs are called butts. 1974 J. R. Ravensdale Liable to Floods 15 Four butts which had been cropped in the recent past were now mowing meadow. 1996 T. P. Dolan & D. Ó Muirithe Dial. Forth & Bargy 23 Butts, the short drills in an irregularly shaped field. 2. British regional. A small piece of land, esp. of an irregular shape; a paddock.Frequently (in plural) in place names (cf., e.g., quot. 1686). ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > farming > farm > farmland > grassland > [noun] > pasture > enclosed pasture ham901 green yard1418 pasture field1464 ward1473 butt1542 paddock1547 septuma1552 staff1786 camp1877 night paddock1922 run-off1933 1542 in C. Rogers Rental Bk. Cupar-Angus (1880) II. 19 Certane sowmis of money geving to ws be our louitt Alexander Jaksone in the watre buttis. 1686 in Quarter Sessions Rec. (N. Riding Rec. Soc.) (1886) IV. 171 Certain closes known as Long Coverdale Close and the Butts thereunto belonging. 1876 F. K. Robinson Gloss. Words Whitby Butts, uneven shaped portions of waste sward. 1881 H. Smith & C. R. Smith Isle of Wight Words Butt, a small enclosure of land, as the church butt at Shanklin. 1979 N. Rogers Wessex Dial. 74/2 Butt, a paddock, a small plot of land. 1988 J. Lavers Dict. Isle of Wight Dial. 23 Butt, a small meadow or enclosure, generally near a house. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2018; most recently modified version published online December 2021). buttn.3ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > fighting sports > fencing > [noun] > actions buttc1330 overheadc1400 stopc1450 quarter-strokea1456 rabbeta1500 rakea1500 traverse1547 flourish1552 quarter-blow1555 veny1578 alarm1579 venue1591 cut1593 time1594 caricado1595 fincture1595 imbroccata1595 mandritta1595 punta riversa1595 remove1595 stramazon1595 traversa1595 imbrocado1597 passado1597 counter-time1598 foinery1598 canvasado1601 montant1601 punto1601 stock1602 embrocadoc1604 pass1604 stuck1604 stramazo1606 home thrust1622 longee1625 falsify?1635 false1637 traversion1637 canvassa1641 parade1652 flanconade1664 parry1673 fore-stroke1674 allonge1675 contretemps1684 counter1684 disengaging1684 feint1684 passing1687 under-counter1687 stringere1688 stringering1688 tempo1688 volte1688 overlapping1692 repost1692 volt-coupe1692 volting1692 disarm?1700 stamp1705 passade1706 riposte1707 swoop1711 retreat1734 lunge1748 beat1753 disengage1771 disengagement1771 opposition1771 time thrust1771 timing1771 whip1771 shifting1793 one-two1809 one-two-three1809 salute1809 estramazone1820 remise1823 engage1833 engaging1833 risposta1838 lunging1847 moulinet1861 reprise1861 stop-thrust1861 engagement1881 coupé1889 scrape1889 time attack1889 traverse1892 cut-over1897 tac-au-tac riposte1907 flèche1928 replacement1933 punta dritta1961 c1330 (?a1300) Arthour & Merlin (Auch.) (1973) l. 5247 Galathin smot first Guinbating Wiþ his sword ful but. c1425 (c1400) Laud Troy-bk. l. 6135 (MED) Ector ȝaff him suche a but And fro his hors Ector him put. c1460 (?c1400) Tale of Beryn l. 1287 (MED) Fawnus..gaff þe chayir a but, And lepe out of the Chambir. 1718 M. Prior Alma i, in Poems Several Occasions (new ed.) 326 If Disputes arise..To prove, who gave the fairer Butt, John shows the Chalk on Robert's Coat. 2. Chiefly with reference to an animal: a push or shove with the head, horns, or a specified body part. Cf. headbutt n.In quot. 1642 figurative with reference to a battering ram. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > by habits or actions > habits and actions > [noun] > thrusting or striking with head > push or thrust butt1600 push1849 the world > movement > impact > striking > striking in specific manner > [noun] > striking with pushing action > pushing > (as) with the head > a push (as) with the head butt1600 jur1600 the world > movement > impact > striking > striking with specific thing > [noun] > with the head bushing1398 butting1598 butt1826 headbutt1925 Liverpool kiss1944 nutting1963 Glasgow kiss1982 1600 Heroicall Aduentures Knight of Sea xviii. 174 Like the Ramme, recoyling to giue ye fiercer butte. 1629 T. May tr. Martial Epigrams sig. C7 Wee saw faint Deere with furious butts of late Each other meet, and dye with mutuall fate. 1642 H. More Ψυχωδια Platonica sig. D3v The fiercest but of Ram no'te make them [sc. the walls] fall. 1781 J. Rickman Jrnl. Capt. Cook's Last Voy. Pacific 52 This freedom, used by him, offended old Will, the ram goat, who gave him a butt with his horns, and knocked him backward on the deck. 1826 M. R. Mitford Our Village II. 202 [One of the ewes] has selected her own [lamb], given her a gentle butt, and trotted off. 1869 R. D. Blackmore Lorna Doone II. xiv. 180 Then fighting Tom [sc. a sheep] jumped up at once, and made a little butt at Watch. 1889 A. Conan Doyle Micah Clarke (1895) vi. 40 I gave a butt with my shoulder which cleared the box out of the way, and enabled me to enter the room. 1931 Jrnl. Royal Asiatic Soc. 1 42 When the goat gave a butt in the belly of the wolf, he ripped it. 1988 T. Highway Rez Sisters 58 (stage direct.) With a resounding belly butt from Emily, they begin to wrestle. 1992 Herald (Glasgow) (Nexis) 6 Apr. 13 Having licked the platter clean, she [sc. a pig] then gave the pipe a sharp butt with the top of her nose. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2018; most recently modified version published online December 2021). buttn.4 1. a. A large cask used to store liquids, typically varying in capacity from 108 to 140 gallons (approx. 491 to 637 litres) though often much smaller in early use. In later use also: the contents of such a cask; a liquid measure of capacity equal to the capacity of a butt, equivalent to half a tun (tun n.1 2a).Often equated with pipe (pipe n.2). ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > drink > containers for drink > [noun] > large for liquor > for wine wine-barrelc950 wine-bottlec950 wine-bowlc950 wine boxc950 wine-buttc950 wine-canc950 wine-caskc950 wine-cupc950 wine-decanterc950 wine-flaskc950 wine-jarc950 wine jugc950 wine-tunc950 wine-vesselc950 pipe1314 lake1382 ampullaa1398 wine-pot14.. butt1418 stick1433 vinagerc1440 rumneya1475 fust1481 pece1594 sack-butt1599 fudder1679 Shaftesbury1699 wine glass1709 quarter pipe?1763 leaguer1773 porron1845 solera1863 octave1864 wine fountain1889 yu1904 lei1929 papsak1999 1418 Guildhall Let.-bk. in R. W. Chambers & M. Daunt Bk. London Eng. (1931) 76 (MED) We lowely send..Tritty botes of swete wyne, that is to seye ten of Tyre, ten of Romeney, ten of Maluesey. 1484 Rolls of Parl.: Richard III (Electronic ed.) Parl. Jan. 1484 §31. m. 21 Whereas buttes of wyne called malvesey..hilde in mesuare .vijxx. galon apece..and the lexte [sic] of theym helde .vixxvi. galons apece..a butte of their malveseyes at this day scantly holdith in measure .vxxviij. galons. a1535 T. More Hist. Richard III in Wks. (1557) 37/1 Hastely drouned in a Butte of Malmesey. 1593 T. Nashe Christs Teares 32 a Buts of Sack and Muscadine. a1616 W. Shakespeare Tempest (1623) ii. ii. 119 I escap'd vpon a But of Sacke, which the Saylors heaued o'reboord. View more context for this quotation 1653 Mercurius Democritus No. 55. 439 All the Livery men of Cuckolds Haven are to attend the Coarse to the Devill of St. Dunstans, where his Corps is to be interred in a Butt of old Charingo. 1727 R. Bradley Chomel's Dictionaire Oeconomique (Dublin ed.) Butt, or Pipe, a Liquid Measure, whereof two Hogsheads make a Butt or Pipe, as two Pipes or Butts make one Tun. 1751 T. Smollett Peregrine Pickle II. lxxi. 268 There was a butt of strong beer abroach in the yard. 1833 H. Coleridge Biographia Borealis 16 Did not Joseph Hume graciously receive a butt of cider? 1935 D. L. Sayers Gaudy Night xx. 414 There were better ways of killing care than drowning it in a butt of malmsey. 1980 Shakespeare Q. 31 379 A camp wagon, holding a butt of wine, is positioned in the center of the frame. 2006 Tatler Aug. 51/1 The Sherry Institute of Spain traditionally gives a new Poet Laureate a butt of sherry, just under 700 bottles' worth. b. A large cask used to contain dry goods (esp. foodstuffs), of a capacity varying according to the contents and locality. Also: the contents of such a cask; a measure of capacity equal to the capacity of such a cask. Now rare and chiefly in historical contexts. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > container for food > [noun] vessel1340 binc1405 butt1423 pancheon1601 preserving glass1628 conchac1660 pan-mug1688 conch1839 pankin1864 food vessel1866 food-vase1871 kuei1935 caddy1960 1423–4 Rolls of Parl.: Henry VI (Electronic ed.) Parl. Oct. 1423 §53. m. 30 Buttes of samon..shulden be...iiijxxiiij. galons full pakked..and..now..bene made of lesse mesure..of .iijxxx. galons. 1481 in J. P. Collier Househ. Bks. John Duke of Norfolk & Thomas Earl of Surrey (1844) 120 xv. buttes. Schrempes viij.d. ij.d. 1540 Act 32 Henry VIII c. 14 §2 in Statutes of Realm (1963) III. 761 For a butt of currantis, iij s. iiij d. 1649 F. Thorpe Charge York Assizes 28 In a Butt of Salmon four-score and four gallons. 1728 E. Chambers Cycl. (at cited word) A Butt of Currants, is from fifteen to twenty two hundred Weight. 1753 W. Maitland Hist. Edinb. v. 327 For ilk Bale of Madder or Butt of Prunes, 1/-. 1804 Trans. Missionary Soc. 2 145 To reimburse him, we have, with some difficulty, sent by the Nautilus a tierce, and by the Dart shall send a butt of pickled pork. 1930 Jrnl. Dept. Agric. Victoria 28 165 A butt of wheat can be poured into this, thoroughly stirred, and the floating smut balls skimmed off. 2003 J. Goring Burn Holy Fire iv. 63 Walter Brett the younger, a grocer, was deprived of two barrels of sugar after a butt of currants had proved too heavy to shift. 2. Any large cask or barrel; spec. (in later use) one used to collect and store rain water; = water butt n. 1. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > receptacle or container > vessel > barrel or cask > [noun] barrelc1300 kovec1320 rubbour1362 bossc1375 rundlet1380 cade1387 kemp1391 cuve14.. keup1480 tonnel1483 colle?a1500 fostella1510 cap1519 firkett1523 cask1557 butt1572 botozio1622 rindell1640 drum1871 1572 W. Malim tr. N. Martinengo True Rep. Famagosta f. 9v Whole Buts [It. botte] of water..were throwen downe from an high Commaunder. 1626 T. Hawkins tr. N. Caussin Holy Court I. iii. 343 He liueth like a But [Fr. tonneau], which doth nothing, but leake, and roule vp, and downe. 1708 Mil. Dict. (ed. 3) The standing Quoyns..a fit Length to be driven a-cross betwixt the Buts..to keep the Chine of the But steady from jogging. 1820 L. Hunt in Indicator 15 Nov. 46 As in a leathern butt of wine..Stuck that arrow with a dump. 1836 C. Dickens Sketches by Boz 1st Ser. I. 58 An open rain-water butt on one side. 1913 J. Masefield Daffodil Fields 92 The water..gurgled through the rain-pipe to the butt. 1988 D. Madden Birds of Innocent Wood vi. 88 Sarah..continues trailing her fingers through the soft green scum on the water of the butt. 2008 Guardian (Nexis) 1 Mar. (Mag.) 70 An overflow system that tops the butt up when it rains and diverts excess water back into the downpipe. 3. A type of beer usually identified as a type of porter. Frequently in entire butt (see entire adj. 2b). Now historical. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > drink > intoxicating liquor > ale or beer > beer > [noun] > other kinds of beer spruce beerc1500 March beer1535 Lubecks beer1608 zythum1608 household beer1616 bottle1622 mumc1623 old beer1626 six1631 four1633 maize beer1663 mum beer1667 vinegar beer1677 wrest-beer1689 nog1693 October1705 October beer1707 ship-beer1707 butt beer1730 starting beer1735 butt1743 peterman1767 seamen's beer1795 chang1800 treacle beer1806 stock beer1826 Iceland beer1828 East India pale ale1835 India pale ale1837 faro1847 she-oak1848 Bass1849 bitter beer1850 bock1856 treble X1856 Burton1861 nettle beer1864 honey beer1867 pivo1873 Lambic1889 steam beer1898 barley-beer1901 gueuze1926 Kriek1936 best1938 rough1946 keg1949 IPA1953 busaa1967 mbege1972 microbrew1985 microbeer1986 yeast-beer- 1743 Beef & Butt Beer against Mum & Pumpernickle 4 Who that drinks Calvert's Butt so clear, For muddy Mum wou'd stickle? 1754 Connoisseur (1755) No. 15. 89 A publican..ventured an hogshead of intire butt on the candidate who serves him with beer. 1769 Wilkes's Jest Bk. 55 Drink not a drop of Calvert's butt; Proclaim at ev'ry ale house, That you will never set a foot In Whitebread's or in Thrale's house. 1802 J. Feltham Picture of London 249 Porter obtained its name about the year 1730..[it had previously been] the practice to call for a pint of three threads, meaning a third of ale, beer, and twopenny... A brewer of the name of Harwood conceived the idea of making a liquor which should partake of the united flavours of [all three]..calling it entire or entire butt. 1850 Reynolds's Misc. 24 Aug. 70/3 About the beginning of the eighteenth century a malt liquor called entire butt was much in use. 1995 M. J. Lewis Stout ii. 9 His beer was called ‘Entire’ or ‘Entire Butt,’ which evolved into porter, named for the workers and working classes who drank it. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > [noun] > (a) great quantity or amount felec825 muchc1230 good wone1297 plentyc1300 bushelc1374 sight1390 mickle-whata1393 forcea1400 manynessa1400 multitudea1400 packc1400 a good dealc1430 greata1450 sackful1484 power1489 horseloadc1500 mile1508 lump1523 a deal?1532 peckc1535 heapa1547 mass1566 mass1569 gallon1575 armful1579 cart-load1587 mickle1599 bushelful1600–12 a load1609 wreck1612 parisha1616 herd1618 fair share1650 heapa1661 muchness1674 reams1681 hantle1693 mort1694 doll?1719 lift1755 acre1759 beaucoup1760 ton1770 boxload1795 boatload1807 lot1811 dollop1819 swag1819 faggald1824 screed1826 Niagara1828 wad1828 lashings1829 butt1831 slew1839 ocean1840 any amount (of)1848 rake1851 slather1857 horde1860 torrent1864 sheaf1865 oodlesa1867 dead load1869 scad1869 stack1870 jorum1872 a heap sight1874 firlot1883 oodlings1886 chunka1889 whips1888 God's quantity1895 streetful1901 bag1917 fid1920 fleetful1923 mob1927 bucketload1930 pisspot1944 shitload1954 megaton1957 mob-o-ton1975 gazillion1978 buttload1988 shit ton1991 1831 J. Galt in Fraser's Mag. Jan. 708/2 This single fact speaks more than butts and tons of declamation. Compounds butt beaker n. Archaeology a barrel-shaped beaker. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > receptacle or container > vessel > [noun] > beaker (Bronze Age) > specific bell-beaker1902 butt beaker1933 funnel-beaker1954 1933 Antiquity 7 29 There are no butt-beakers, no imported Italic wares. 1941 Proc. Prehistoric Soc. 7 140 Butt-beaker of sandy, biscuit-coloured ware. 2001 Oxoniensia 65 248 Belgic wares in forms similar to those found at Slade Farm..were found in association with butt beakers and Samian of Flavian date. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > drink > intoxicating liquor > ale or beer > beer > [noun] > other kinds of beer spruce beerc1500 March beer1535 Lubecks beer1608 zythum1608 household beer1616 bottle1622 mumc1623 old beer1626 six1631 four1633 maize beer1663 mum beer1667 vinegar beer1677 wrest-beer1689 nog1693 October1705 October beer1707 ship-beer1707 butt beer1730 starting beer1735 butt1743 peterman1767 seamen's beer1795 chang1800 treacle beer1806 stock beer1826 Iceland beer1828 East India pale ale1835 India pale ale1837 faro1847 she-oak1848 Bass1849 bitter beer1850 bock1856 treble X1856 Burton1861 nettle beer1864 honey beer1867 pivo1873 Lambic1889 steam beer1898 barley-beer1901 gueuze1926 Kriek1936 best1938 rough1946 keg1949 IPA1953 busaa1967 mbege1972 microbrew1985 microbeer1986 yeast-beer- 1730 ‘T. Thumb’ Helter Skelter Way of Writing 48 A Link-boy, a Chimney-sweeper..and a Kennel-raker, were very lately assembled at a Cellar in Soho, over a Full-Pot of Butt-Beer. 1735 W. Ellis London & Country Brewer I. ix. 54 Molosses or Treacle has certainly been formerly made too much use of in the brewing of Stout Beer, common Butt Beers, brown Ales and small Beer when Malts have been dear. 1771 T. Smollett Humphry Clinker II. 15 Whom he treats with..Calvert's entire butt beer. butt cooper n. a cooper who makes butts to hold liquids, esp. beer. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > worker > workers according to type of work > manual or industrial worker > producer > makers of containers or receptacles > [noun] > maker of casks or cooper > types of white cooper1688 dry-cooper1715 under-cooper1745 butt cooper1813 tight cooper1889 herring-cooper1892 1813 ‘T. Martin’ Circle Mech. Arts 235/1 Iron hoops are obviously the best for the butt cooper, whose staves are usually of good substance. 1837 N. Whittock et al. Compl. Bk. Trades (1842) 161 The Butt-cooper is confined to working for brewers or distillers. 1988 A. Niederer in A. Fenton & J. Myrdal Food & Drink & Travelling Accessories 151 As opposed to the butt cooper who manufactures vats with metallic hoops, the white cooper uses wood only. ΚΠ 1855 Technologisches Wörterbuch II. 76/1 Butt-howel, (a kind of an adze or howel, used by coopers). ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > drink > intoxicating liquor > ale or beer > [adjective] > suitable for keeping butt-keeping1735 1735 W. Ellis London & Country Brewer I. iv. 22 Many thousand Quarters of this Malt has been formerly used in London for brewing the Butt-keeping-beers with. butt-shaped adj. now rare shaped like a butt; barrel-shaped. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > receptacle or container > vessel > [adjective] > of specific shape round-bellied1611 flaring1627 urceolate1760 butt-shaped1855 Ali Baba1877 caliciform1902 Megarian1905 situliform1937 situlate1945 1855 Ann. Rep. Commissioner Patents 1854: Agric. 738 in U.S. Congress. Serial Set (33rd Congr., 2nd Sess.: House of Representatives Executive Doc. No. 59, Pt. 3) VII Making the surface to which the buckets are affixed concave or butt-shaped, in combination with spiral-formed buckets, so curved as to receive the water perpendicularly. 1864 P. Fitzgerald ‘Le Sport’ at Baden iv. 53 A portly butt shaped basso, and an almost veteran soprano. 1916 T. May Pottery at Silchester 168 Tall ‘butt-shaped vase’. 1930 T. May Catal. Rom. Pottery Colchester & Essex Mus. 12 ‘Butt-shaped’ beaker. butt sling n. Nautical a sling, consisting of a single length of rope, for transporting butts or other casks. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > lifting or hoisting equipment > [noun] > sling sling1323 parbuckle1625 butt sling1642 loop1883 1642 H. Bond Boate Swaines Art 17 2 Paire of Butt slings... 2 Paire of Hogshead slings. 1836 Fraser's Mag. 14 477 A pair of butt-slings, strong enough to have held up the cupola of St. Paul's. 1933 Mariner's Mirror 19 facing p. 270 (caption) Both ends of a long butt sling were passed over the arms [of the anchor]. 2003 J. Dennis Living Great Lakes viii. 120 He had mastered the butt sling, the Chinese Crown knot, and the narrow Turk's head. butt stave n. now historical each of the staves which are hooped together to make a butt. ΚΠ 1613 R. Boyle Diary 14 June in Lismore Papers (1886) 1st Ser. I. 26 Butt staves and hogshead staves. 1731 Regulations & Instr. relating to His Majesty's Service at Sea (Royal Navy) iii. 127 Always accounting each Stave above Forty four Inches long, for a Butt Stave. 1913 Lumber Trade Jrnl. 15 Oct. 33/1 1,721 pieces Canada butt staves. 1963 C. Lloyd St. Vincent & Camperdown iv. 62 We find the master of the Orion sadly noting in his log that because of delay in clearing ship..spare stores such as canvas berths, tables, bread bags and butt staves had to be thrown overboard in haste. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2018; most recently modified version published online December 2021). buttn.5 1. Nautical. ΚΠ c1419 in H. Ellis Orig. Lett. Eng. Hist. (1827) 2nd Ser. I. 72 Ther be twey new Carrakas of makyng at Bartholem, the on of xiiij.C. botts that other off x.C. botts. b. In a vessel: the end of a plank or plate which meets that of another. ΚΠ 1769 W. Falconer Universal Dict. Marine Butt, the end of any plank in a ship's side which unites with the end of another, continuing its length: when a plank is loosened..she is said to have started or sprung a butt. 1783 in Ld. Nelson Dispatches & Lett. (1846) VII. Add. 6 Found a but at the starboard bow to have started, from which the Ship made much water. 1859 Mercantile Marine Mag. (1860) 7 15 Some of the paint had cracked at the joining of the butts..amidships. 1873 Jrnl. Franklin Inst. 96 98 I also propose to make equally strong with the seam, by turning up or flanging in the end and welding, as I do the seam, which gives me transverse stiffening at each butt. 1948 W. Abell Shipwright's Trade 183 If the seams and butts are joined with rivets, then all the floors are put up so that the workmen can have a clear run for riveting. 1985 Mariner's Mirror 71 438 Shift of butts between planks enabled the shell to act in tension to contribute to hull bending. 2017 N. R. Mandal Ship Constr. & Welding xvii. 248 The welding of butts and seams in plate panel assemblies may cause an angular deformation along the weld lines. 2. More fully butt hinge. A hinge consisting of two rectangular plates joined by a pin or ball bearings such that the interior edges of the plates meet one another when the hinge is opened fully.One of the most common types of hinges used with doors. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > building and constructing equipment > fastenings > [noun] > hinge > other types of hinge window band1419 garnet1459 cross-garnet1659 side hinge1678 H hinge1726 strap hinge1737 butt1765 setback hinges1833 parliament hinge1841 pin hinge1910 1765 London Evening Post 9 Feb. (advt.) Dove-tail, Side, Pew, Shutter, and Butt Hinges. 1797 P. Nicholson Carpenter & Joiner's Asst. 25 The top hinge may be a common butt hinge. 1861 H. Stephens & R. S. Burn Bk. Farm-buildings 184 Form a trap-door to gain access to roofs..hung with 2-inch butts and screws. 1881 F. Young Every Man his own Mechanic ii. vii. 377 The window must then be attached to the frame by a pair of hinges, 2½ in. or 3 in. common iron butts being the most suitable. 1933 Standards & Specif. for Metals & Metal Products (U.S. Dept. Commerce) 979/3 If, standing outside of a door, the butts are on the right, it takes a right-hand lock; if on the left, it takes a left-hand lock. 1944 E. E. Haycraft in R. Greenhalgh Pract. Builder v. 208/1 The principal types of window constructed of wood are the casement variety, and the cased window. In the former the frame is of solid sections with the sashes hung on butt hinges. 2014 J. Holloway Illustr. Theatre Production Guide (ed. 3) ii. 154/1 Butt hinges are usually sized by the height of the leaf. Three inch butts are fairly small, while 4 inch butts are quite large. 3. a. Coal Mining. Either of the two surfaces on a block or pillar of coal adjacent and perpendicular to the face (face n. 22a). ΚΠ 1876 3rd Ann. Rep. State Mine Inspector to Governor of Ohio 12 Rooms are then started on the butts of the coal from both sides of the face entries. 1881 Trans. Amer. Inst. Mining Engineers 1880–1 9 130 End of coal, the direction or section at right-angles to the face; sometimes called the butt. 1955 Coal Mine Modernization 31/1 When the butts are all extracted on both sides of a panel, the panel heading stumps are retreated. 2012 N. J. Hyne Nontechnical Guide to Petroleum Geol., Explor., Drilling, & Production (ed. 3) xxvii. 478 There are two sets of cleats, face and butt, that are perpendicular to each other and are at right angles to the coal bedding. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > workplace > places where raw materials are extracted > quarry > [noun] > parts of quarry heugh1592 jad1871 butt1884 overlay1886 1884 F. W. Sperr in Rep. Building Stones U.S. 1880 iv. 38 in S. F. Peckham Rep. Production Petroleum (U.S. Dept. Interior, Census Office) The Butt of a quarry is where the overlying rock comes into contact with an inclined stratum of slate rock. Compounds butt chain n. now rare (in a plough, cart, etc.) either of two chains connecting the swingletree to the harness of a draught animal. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > farming > animal husbandry > general equipment > [noun] > harness of draught animal > for connecting animals tugwithe?1523 coupling-strapa1732 incatenation1762 coupling-reins1795 ox-riem1817 trek-tow1822 butt chain1857 trek chain1878 jockey-stick1887 1857 Direct. City of Richmond (Indiana) 146 (advt.) Manufacturers of..Collars, Whips, Trunks, Carpet Bags, Horse Covers, Fly Netts, Trace, Breast and Butt Chains, &c. 1874 E. H. Knight Amer. Mech. Dict. I. 414/1 Butt-chain (Saddlery), a short chain which reaches from the leather tug to the single-tree, to each of which it is hooked. 1958 Amer. Speech 33 269 Butt chain, the chain links at the end of a harness tug used to fasten a horse to a singletree. Also sometimes said of any short length of chain. butt joint n. (a) a joint in which two pieces of wood are fixed at right angles to one another, with the end of one flat against the other; = butting joint n. 1; (b) a joint in which two panels, plates, etc., lying in the same plane as one another are joined end to end. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > working with specific materials > working with metal > [noun] > joints shem1688 butt joint1775 abutting joint1801 seam1825 plumb-joint1875 seam joint1882 1775 J. Smeaton Reports (1812) II. 354 Securing the butt joint as before. 1864 Jrnl. Board Arts & Manufactures Upper Canada 4 131/1 It is this butt joint which is generally made in girder work. 2002 C. DeKorne Trim Carpentry & Built-ins 35/1 The simplest method of joining the head to the side casings is with a simple butt joint. 2006 Saltscapes (Canada) May 90/1 If you are locating your mailbox in a sheltered spot, you could just use butt joints and squeeze a bead of caulking along the seams to keep them weather-tight. butt joint v. transitive to join with a butt-joint. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > constructing or working with wood > build or construct with wood [verb (transitive)] > join > with specific joint or method mortisea1450 culver-tail1616 scarf1627 tenon1652 dovetail1657 cock1663 shoot?1677 knee1711 indent1741 mitre1753 halve1804 box1815 tongue1823 sypher1841 cog1858 butt joint1859 jag1894 lap-join1968 1859 Engineer 16 Sept. 215/1 Butt-jointing and securing..[several short pieces of timber] together at their ends. 1947 Pop. Sci. Monthly Feb. 171/1 These pieces are butt-jointed to the back. 2007 H.-D. Hensel in K. R. Hoigard & M. J. Scheffler Dimension Stone Use in Building Constr. 36 Butt-jointing stone tiles is another poor practice that frequently leads to failure. butt riveting n. now rare a joint in which two panels, plates, etc., are laid end to end and secured in place by a butt strap riveted across both ends; (also) this kind of jointing; the action of joining two panels, plates, etc., in this way. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > building and constructing equipment > fastenings > [noun] > rivet > types of butt riveting1860 tack-rivet1874 pop rivet1932 1860 Trans. Inst. Naval Architects 1 136 Chain riveting is evidently the best mode in which an attachment can be made, and as you are obliged to weaken the plate by the butt riveting. 1874 S. J. P. Thearle Naval Archit. (new ed.) I. xix. 313 In edge or butt riveting the space between two consecutive rows of rivets must not be less than one and a half times their diameter. 1904 G. F. Goodchild & C. F. Tweney Technol. & Sci. Dict. 77/2 Butt riveting, a riveted joint where the plates touch at the edge only, and a strip overlaps and is riveted to both of them. 1922 Rules for Constr. & Classif. Steel Ships (Amer. Bureau of Shipping) 72 Floors with single bottoms, which are not attached to center girders, are to have butt-riveting. 1946 E. E. Seelye Data Bk. Civil Engineers II. ix. 297/1 Butt riveting. The making of a butt joint by using cross plates and rivets. butt strap n. chiefly Nautical a strip of reinforcing material fitted over the join of two plates, panels, etc., in a butt joint (butt joint n. (b)). ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > parts of vessels > body of vessel > [noun] > plating > strip riveted over join butt strip1856 butt strap1860 1860 Trans. Inst. Naval Architects 1 103 Bar-iron, or iron-plate, having the fibre in the direction of the length of the butt-strap, was also tried. 1915 R. J. Leonard Some Facts Conc. People, Industries & Schools of Hammond ii. 22 Where butt joints are made, plates are chipped and planed to fit, butt straps placed over the joints, bolted in position and holes in plates and strap reamed to match. 1941 Mariner's Mirror 27 190 These side diagonal tie plates are connected to the bilge strake and the sheerstrake by means of butt straps. 2010 H. Du Plessis Fibreglass Boats (ed. 5) xi. 66 A single butt strap is weak. The tendency is for a hinge effect along the line of the join. butt-strapped adj. Nautical (now rare) equipped or fitted with a butt strap. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > parts of vessels > body of vessel > [adjective] > joined in specific way (of plates) jump-jointed1867 butt-strapped1869 1869 E. J. Reed Shipbuilding ii. 33 The keel angle-irons..are properly butt-strapped. 1922 Machinery Aug. 978/2 The butt-strapped, double-riveted joint has an efficiency of about 82 per cent. 2012 D. Dix Shaped by Wind & Wave xiii. 108 If you give up on scarphs after that, then you can resort to butt-strapped joints or glassing the joints both sides. butt strip n. now rare = butt strap n. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > parts of vessels > body of vessel > [noun] > plating > strip riveted over join butt strip1856 butt strap1860 1856 Engineer 14 Nov. 621/1 This invention consists in uniting or joining the plates, which form the skin of the ship or vessel, by strips, commonly called butt strips, placed outside of the skin, thus dispensing with the liners, or filling pieces. 1904 G. F. Goodchild & C. F. Tweney Technol. & Sci. Dict. 77/2 Butt strip, the strip of plate used to cover a butt joint. 1968 Pop. Mech. May 146/2 Temporarily join the two yard-wide pieces of plywood with an 8×36-in. butt strip. butt weld n. a joint in which two panels, plates, etc., are laid end to end and welded together. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > working with specific materials > working with metal > [noun] > welding > joint made by > types of rust joint1839 butt weld1850 jump-weld1864 jump-joint1874 tee-joint1888 spot weld1908 tack weld1919 seam weld1920 fillet weld1929 fusion weld1930 braze1934 projection weld1938 flash weld1959 1850 J. McCarty U.S. Patent 6956 in Rep. Commissioner Patents 1849: Pt. 1 375 in U.S. Congress. Serial Set (31st Congr., 1st Sess.: House of Representatives Executive Doc. 20) VI What I do claim, is a pipe composed of a combination of the butt-weld with lap-welded ends. 1944 Jrnl. Iron & Steel Inst. 150 50A The abrupt change in section at the edge of the reinforcement of a butt weld is a serious stress raiser. 2010 D. Blockley Bridges iv. 140 Butt welds are suitable for joining plates in line—for example, the plates of a box girder or the two ends of a tube. butt weld v. transitive to join (two plates, panels, etc.) by welding the ends together. ΚΠ 1860 Mechanics' Mag. 6 Apr. 224/2 The same circumferential strength as Sir William Armstrong gains by his method of winding bars of iron round a mandril, and then butt-welding the tubes thus formed. 1941 Pop. Mech. May 787 Parts to be butt-welded or soldered at right angles can be held accurately in this jig. 2002 R. D. Treloar Plumbing: Heating & Gas Installations (ed. 2) ix. 334 Firstly, a piece of lead wide enough is turned around a piece of rigid pipe and its meeting edges are butt welded together. butt-welded adj. joined with a butt weld. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > metal > metal in specific state or form > [adjective] > welded > in specific manner butt-welded1848 lap-welded1848 three-iron1892 spot-welded1921 fusion-welded1930 projection-welded1933 microwelded1963 1848 Jrnl. Franklin Inst. Dec. 414 Lot of butt welded Iron tubes, by Morris, Tasker &. Morris, Philadelphia. 1927 Glasgow Herald 27 Aug. 12 Butt-welded tubes. 2003 Daily Tel. (Nexis) 4 Jan. 1 It's a bit messy underneath, covered in butt-welded plates like an old Aston Martin platform chassis. butt welding n. the action of butt weld vb. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > working with specific materials > working with metal > [noun] > welding > types of butt welding1878 lead burning1886 arc welding1890 thermite process1905 thermite welding1906 resistance welding1908 spot welding1908 seam welding1917 fusion welding1918 projection welding1918 stud welding1918 metal arc welding1926 pressure welding1926 metallic arc welding1927 flash-butt welding1933 flash welding1933 stitch welding1934 rightward welding1936 block welding1943 submerged-arc welding1945 friction welding1946 T.I.G.1960 microwelding1962 1878 Specif. & Drawings of Patents (U.S. Patent Office) 12 Feb. 317/2 The die I use for butt-welding is shown at f' of Fig. 6. 1925 Jrnl. Iron & Steel Inst. 112 463 Butt welding and its application to joining wires. 2005 Daily Herald (Arlington Heights, Illinois) 28 July (Classified section) 75/4 (advt.) We have an opening for an experienced operator of bandsaw blade welding equipment (or similar operations such as butt welding of sheet or wire). This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2018; most recently modified version published online March 2022). buttn.6 I. Senses relating to the end of something. 1. The thicker end of a tool, weapon, or other object; the part by which a tool or weapon is held or on which it rests; esp. the lower end of a fishing rod, or the broad end of the stock of a gun.lance-butt, musket butt, pistol-butt, rifle butt, shoulder-butt, spear-butt, etc.: see the first element. ΘΚΠ the world > space > shape > flaring at extremity > [noun] > thick end of anything buttc1425 butt end1548 butt-head1630 chump1861 stub-end1875 society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > [noun] > appendages of weapon > handle helvec897 buttc1425 hilt1574 gripe1748 society > occupation and work > equipment > tool > parts of tools generally > [noun] > other parts neck?a1425 buttc1425 cheek1487 wing1577 face1601 ear1678 wood1683 strig1703 thumb-piece1760 jaws1789 crown1796 lug1833 sprig1835 point angle1869 bulb1885 nosepiece1983 the world > space > extension in space > measurable spatial extent > thickness > [noun] > great thickness > that which is thick > thick end of anything buttc1425 butt end1548 chump1861 society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > sharp weapon > spear or lance > [noun] > shaft of spear > end of buttc1425 c1425 (c1400) Laud Troy-bk. l. 14640 Euery man..made hem..Piked staues with heuy bottis. a1470 T. Malory Morte Darthur (Winch. Coll. 13) (1990) II. 563 Sir Trystram awakyd hym wyth the butte of hys speare. 1548 Hall's Vnion: Henry V f. lxxxii Round about the charet rode .CCCC. men of armes..with the but of their speres vpward. 1687 in Bk. Old Edinb. Club (1949) XXVII. 140 I thought upon the new fashon of guns with butt in the middle..especially with reiffelled guns that are weighty. 1710 D. Hilman Tusser Redivivus Sept. 9 A Rifle or Rufle is no more than a bent Stick standing on the butt of Sithe handle, by which the Corn is struck together in Rows. 1760 J. Hawkins in Walton's & Cotton's Compl. Angler 139 The winch must be screwed on to the butt of your rod. 1814 W. Scott Waverley II. xiii. 205 The pedlar, snatching a musket..bestowed the butt of it..on the head of his late instructor. View more context for this quotation 1870 Instr. Mil. Engin. I. v. 338 The whole of the ladders are of similar construction, they taper from butt to tip. 1871 C. Kingsley At Last II. xiii. 214 Three eyes in the monkey's face, as the children call it, at the butt of the nut. 1873 J. Bennett & ‘Cavendish’ Billiards 25 The cues should taper gradually from a diameter of two and a half inches at the butt. 1919 E. Hemingway Let. 27 Apr. (2011) I. 183 The lines are run out and then we put a weight on the butt of the rod..and set the click on the reel and wait. 1947 R. B. Yocom & H. B. Hunsaker Individual Sports for Men & Women iv. 51 Leather pieces on the butt of the racquet handles should be securely fastened. 1959 J. Thompson Getaway xi. 64 Rudy pulled the heavy .38 from his belt, twirled it by the trigger guard and let the butt smack into his palm. 2003 Brisbane News 30 Apr. 13/2 You should suspect that your horse has Queensland itch if it develops a recurring itchy skin condition every summer and if it occurs mainly around the butt of the tail and around its mane. 2009 Mail & Guardian (Johannesburg) 11 June 3/5 Njova has claimed he was beaten with..the butt of a gun. 2. a. The trunk of a (felled) tree; the thickest part of this. Cf. butt end n.1 3. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > part of plant > part of tree or woody plant > [noun] > stem, trunk, or bole stovenc1000 bolec1314 bodyc1330 stock1340 shaft1398 stealc1440 truncheonc1449 trunk1490 stud1579 leg1597 butt1601 truncus1706 stam1839 1601 P. Holland tr. Pliny Hist. World II. xxiv. i. 176 Trees..prove harder to be hewed..if a man touch them with his hand before hee set the edge of the ax to their butt. 1653 T. Barker Art of Angling 6 The Oake-Flie is to bee had on the butt of an Oake, or an Ash..: it is a brownish Flie. 1735 W. Somervile Chace iii. 234 Then in the midst a Column high is rear'd, The But of some fair Tree. 1787 G. Winter New Syst. Husbandry 103 The tops and buts of ash and oak are more advantageous for burning into charcoal than if sold for firing. 1808 C. Vancouver Gen. View Agric. Devon i. 52 An oak..which squared 15 inches at the butt. 1881 R. Jefferies Wood Magic I. i. 4 A round wooden box..hollowed out from the sawn butt of an elm. 1922 Times 27 Mar. 22/4 Inquiries were received for dry prime English oak, clean beech butts, and sycamore butts. 1942 Walkabout Nov. 33/3 Attached to the axle of the dray was a stout chain, at one end of which was a large hook that was fastened around the butt of the tree. 2010 L. McDougall Self-reliance Manifesto 162 You'll want to step back several feet from the falling tree's butt. b. The base of a branch, stem, or leaf stalk. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > part of plant > leaf > petiole or leaf-stalk > [noun] > base butt1683 pericladium1832 phyllopodium1884 1683 J. Reid Scots Gard'ner ii. ii. 61 Joyn round the butt of the Graff, and cover the stock close over. 1735 R. Ross Considerations Improvem. Linen Manuf. 9 His Ripples get off all his Seed, without disordering or turning his Flax-heads and Butts. 1829 W. Cobbett Eng. Gardener v. §152 The butts of the [horse-radish] leaves will grow, if put into the ground. 1870 C. Kingsley in Good Words 390/1 It is all jagged with the brown butts of its old fallen leaves. 1926 Washington Post 17 Dec. 14/1 The cans are filled with water and the butts of the branches immersed clear to the bottom. 1961 Tobacco in U.S. (U.S. Dept. Agric. Misc. Publ. No. 867) 43 The tobacco is arranged with the butts at the outside ends and the tips overlapping in the middle. 2005 N.Z. Jrnl. Bot. 43 89/1 The repeated measurements of leaf length did not differentiate between blade and butt. c. The bottom or cut end of a sheaf of a cereal crop. ΚΠ 1724 L. Slator Instr. Cultivating & Raising Flax & Hemp vi. 22 After the Eaves are well made, be careful skilfully to draw in by Degrees..by laping the Seed-ends of the Sheaves over the Butts. 1766 L. Carter Diary 30 June (1965) I. 311 The rest of the wheat I ficxed [sic] in triangular Gavels..that is 3 large sheaves in such a form laid that the heads of each sheave lay on the butts of the other so that I hope they will not take much damage. 1842 Jrnl. Royal Agric. Soc. 3 ii. 305 It is a good plan to have the shocks of sheaves thrown down a little time before they are pitched into the waggon, that the butts of them may dry if damp. 1893 Brewers' Guardian 26 Sept. 274/2 (caption) Sheaf with butt higher than ears, as when the middle of stack is too low. 1946 A. Nelson Princ. Agric. Bot. xxii. 440 Coltsfoot may retain moisture in the butts of sheaves to such an extent that carting of straw crops is delayed or stacks heat. 1992 A. Symons Tremedda Days (2007) iii. 91 These shocks were little wigwam-like structures of eight sheaves, each one standing on its butt with the grain leaning in to a point. 3. a. An end or part of something which has been burnt down or otherwise diminished; a leftover end or part of something. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > wholeness > incompleteness > part of whole > that which is left or remainder > [noun] > remaining fragment stobc1420 end1481 stump1516 fragment1531 stuba1533 remainder?1570 remain1572 fag1582 snub1590 remnant1597 butt1612 heeltap1776 hagsnar1796 tag-end1807 shank1828 nuba1834 nubbin1857 snar1892 1612 T. Shelton tr. M. de Cervantes Don-Quixote: Pt. 1 iii. 22 With a but of a candle which a boy held lighting in his hand before him..he came to Don-Quixote. 1862 D. T. Ansted & R. G. Latham Channel Islands ii. ix. 238 The creature when deprived of food, throwing off part after part, till nothing remains but a little spherical butt, crowned with tentacles. 1886 Eastern Reporter 7 192 The plaintiffs notified the defendants that the rent of the saw-mill for the past year was due.., and claiming the slabs and butts not disposed of. 1990 I. Gold Sams in Dry Season (1992) 94 [He would] find whatever ethnic stuff might still lie around in the thirty-year-old fridge from some earlier entertainment, a salami butt, perhaps, and be more than grateful for it. 2014 M. P. Taylor et al. Control for Aluminum Production & Other Processing Industries 216 Build-up of too much bath or alumina on the anode butts in the pots causes a problem in the automated cleaning of this bath from the butts in the rodding room. b. (a) spec. The end of a smoked cigarette or cigar.cigar-butt, cigarette-butt, fag butt: see the first element. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > use of drugs and poison > tobacco > smoking > articles or materials used in smoking > [noun] > thing which may be smoked > cigar or cigarette > butt or end of doup1710 butt end1827 old soldier1834 butt1847 stub1855 cigar-end1870 stub-end1875 cigarette-end1889 cigar-butt1891 snipe1891 fag end1892 fag1897 bumper1899 scag1915 cigarette-butt1923 dout1928 dog-end1934 roach1939 stompie1947 1847 Paddiana I. 235 Will yer honor give me the butt? 1888 R. Kipling Departm. Ditties (1890) 106 Like the butt of a dead cigar. 1918 P. G. Wodehouse Piccadilly Jim i. 5 ‘Smoking cigarettes.’.. ‘There are two butts in the ash-tray.’ 1940 D. Thomas Portrait of Artist as Young Dog 117 I cupped a match..I puffed my last butt. 1958 S. Ellin Eighth Circle (1959) ii. v. 62 A litter of used paper cups and cigarette butts. 2010 P. Murray Skippy Dies i. 28 The air is dense with a day's smoke, and the ashtray piled high with crushed butts and frazzled matchsticks. (b) U.S. colloquial. A cigarette. Cf. sense 3b(a). ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > use of drugs and poison > tobacco > smoking > articles or materials used in smoking > [noun] > thing which may be smoked > cigarette cigarito1832 paper cigar1833 cigarette1842 papelito1845 coffin-nailc1865 fag1885 butt1893 pill1901 scag1915 nail1925 quirly1932 tab1934 burn1941 draw1946 tube1946 snout1950 cancer stick1958 straight1959 ciggy1962 square1970 bifter1989 lung dart1990 dart2000 1893 Kokomo (Indiana) Daily Tribune 21 Nov. 4/3 Lighting a fresh butt from the one he had been smoking he pulled his hat down over his eyes. 1918 Stars & Stripes 22 Mar. 7b/2 Right after the distribution of cigarettes from the company fund, you get slathers of 'em from home—whereas you hadn't had a butt of any kind for a month before. 1967 ‘Iceberg Slim’ Pimp xviii. 260 I gave a cell-house orderly two packs of butts for an extra blanket. 2010 M. Gibson Reason iii. xix It was really her niece sneaking out onto the roof every night and smoking a butt. c. U.S. Military slang. An additional fraction of a year, month, etc., left to be served of a term of enlistment. Later also in Prison slang with reference to a term of imprisonment. ΚΠ 1887 J. D. Billings Hardtack & Coffee v. 89 Even those troops having nearly three years to serve would exclaim, with a cheerfulness more feigned than real, as each day dragged to its close, ‘It's only two years and a but.’ 1912 D. Lowrie My Life in Prison xxii. 286 I've only got two months an' a butt left now. 1940 Amer. Legion Mag. Dec. 60/3 You were a short-timer, Mike; you had only a couple of months and a butt to do, when we got back to Diego, to wind up sixteen years and go out on a pension. 1976 M. Braly False Starts 199 When we were getting short and someone asked how long we had left, we said, ‘Six days and a butt.’ ‘Four days and a butt.’ The butt is your last morning. 1991 C. Sellers Men at Arms: Gathering Storm xxxviii. 248 My old man, sir. He's still soldiering; two years and a butt to go for his thirty. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > metal > iron > [noun] > pieces of other form clouta1000 share mould1568 sole1729 butt1831 shape1845 1831 J. Holland Treat. Manuf. Metal I. 89 The blocks out of which iron anvils are formed..consist of what are known to the trade by the appellation of butts. These butts are of various sizes, being composed of three or four or more blooms, solidly welded together into a cubical mass. 5. Chiefly U.S. A piece of meat trimmed from another cut; esp. (a) a large cut of pork taken from the upper shoulder of a pig (contrasted with picnic n. 4); (b) a piece of beef cut from the sirloin.Recorded earliest in pork butt n. at pork n.1 Compounds 2.Boston butt: see the first element. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > animals for food > beef > [noun] > other cuts or parts tild1342 ox foota1398 oxtaila1425 neat's foot?c1450 beef-flick1462 sticking piece1469 ox-tonguea1475 aitch-bone1486 fore-crop?1523 sirloin1525 mouse-piece1530 ox-cheek1592 neat's tongue1600 clod1601 sticking place1601 skink1631 neck beef1640 round1660 ox-heart1677 runner1688 sticking draught1688 brisket-beef1697 griskin1699 sey1719 chuck1723 shin1736 gravy beef1747 baron of beef1755 prime rib1759 rump and dozen1778 mouse buttock1818 slifta1825 nine holes1825 spauld-piece1828 trembling-piece1833 shoulder-lyar1844 butt1845 plate1854 plate-rand1854 undercut1859 silver-side1861 bed1864 wing rib1883 roll1884 strip-loin1884 hind1892 topside1896 rib-eye1926 buttock meat1966 onglet1982 the world > food and drink > food > animals for food > pork > [noun] > cuts or parts pig's footc1475 hog's foot1561 hog's cheek1573 bald-rib1598 spring1598 list1623 griskin1699 chine1712 pork griskin1725 rearing1736 pork chop?1752 hand1794 faggot1815 hog round1819 sweet-bone1826 butt1845 pig trotter1851 pork belly1863 Hodge1879 fore-end1906 fore-hock1923 1845 Milwaukie (Wisconsin Territory) Daily Sentinel 3 May (advt.) Cheap for cash—Whiskey, dried Apples, do Peaches, Mess Pork, Pork Butts, Superfine Flour by the barrel. 1884 Harper's Mag. July 299/1 Sirloins, butts, rump butts, strips, rounds, and canning beef. 1888 S. O. Addy Gloss. Words Sheffield 33 Butt, part of the shoulder of a pig. 1901 E. L. Grant Thirty Years Marketman 40 The Boneless Sirloin Butt is that part of the Loin proper extending from the pin bone backwards, with all bone removed. 1938 Sausage & Ready-to-serve Meats 24 Cappicola is of Italian origin and is made of boneless pork shoulder butt, seasoned with ground red-hot or sweet peppers, salt and sugar, mildly cured and air dried. 1950 Proc. Amer. Dial. Soc. 14 18 Butts, chunks of pork, mostly fat, trimmed from other pieces, as hams, and salt cured. 1955 F. G. Ashbrook Butchering, Processing & Preserv. Meat x.131 When the shoulder is separated into picnic and butt, the clear plates, which is the covering of fat on the top of the shoulder butt, is skinned off. 1986 R. Smith My Life in North Woods i. 15 The meat served at supper..was always some form of beef butts. 2009 Urner Barry's Reporter Summer 28/1 Less expensive steak cuts such as the boneless sirloin steaks (fabricated from the top butt) have made their way onto quite a few menus. 2015 S. Stewart-Howard Barbecue Lover's Memphis & Tennessee Styles 68 Whole hog is a very different taste than the usual smoked lean butts and shoulders. ΚΠ 1860 Sci. Amer. 6 Oct. 235/2 800 feet of hose, open butt. 1867 Amer. Artisan 6 Feb. 215/2 This invention consists in forming the entering butt of the coupling with studs or projections. 1882 Sci. Amer. 25 Feb. 118/1 The butt is fitted at its end with a number of screw nipples or tubes. 7. Bookbinding. The piece of the inner margin of a single leaf of a book which projects as a narrow strip beyond the sewing or other fastening when the book is bound. ΘΚΠ society > communication > book > leaves or pages of book > [noun] > leaf > parts of leaf bolt1875 butt1921 1921 A. Esdaile in Library Dec. 185 The last leaf of B..is a single leaf, whose butt is visible after B. 1. 1981 Bull. Cleveland Mus. Art Dec. 351/2 Large miniatures in Flemish prayerbooks of quality were painted on versos of single leaves which were inserted and sewn into a quire by means of a short butt. II. Senses relating to the buttocks. 8. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > animals for food > part or joint of animal > [noun] > rump butta1450 rump1469 buttock1593 tut1856 a1450 in T. Austin Two 15th-cent. Cookery-bks. (1888) 40 (MED) Take..motoun of þe bottes, & kytte in þe maner of Stekys. ?a1475 Noble Bk. Cookry in Middle Eng. Dict. at Butte To mak pyes of pairis, tak..fair buttes of pork and buttes of vele..To mak hairblad opyne, Tak Buttes of pork and smyt them to peces. 1486 Bk. St. Albans sig. av The marow of hogges that is in the bone of the butte of porke. 1601 P. Holland tr. Pliny Hist. World I. 344 A Lion likewise hath but very little marrow, to wit, in some few bones of his thighes & buts behind. 1654 E. Gayton Pleasant Notes Don Quixot iii. vi. 107 So Sancho wind-eas'd of his rumbling guts, Discharges softest Lees, from his bare buts. 1750 W. Ellis Country Housewife's Family Compan. 68 The Hertfordshire Way of roasting Joints of Pork.—Some roast, or bake, or boil the Butt or Gammon Part of a Porker. 1825 J. Jennings Observ. Dial. W. Eng. Gloss. 28 But, applied to beef, always means buttock. b. colloquial (chiefly English regional (north-western) and U.S. regional (western) in early use, now chiefly North American). A person's buttocks; the posterior, the backside, the rump; (also) the anus, the rectum.bubble butt, plumber's butt: see the first element. ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > external parts of body > trunk > back > buttock(s) > [noun] flitcha700 arse-endseOE culec1220 buttockc1300 tail1303 toutec1305 nagea1325 fundamentc1325 tail-end1377 brawna1382 buma1387 bewschers?a1400 crouponc1400 rumplec1430 lendc1440 nachec1440 luddocka1475 rearwarda1475 croupc1475 rumpc1475 dock1508 hurdies1535 bunc1538 sitting place1545 bottom?c1550 prat1567 nates1581 backside1593 crupper1594 posteriorums1596 catastrophe1600 podex1601 posterior1605 seat1607 poop1611 stern1631 cheek1639 breeka1642 doup1653 bumkin1658 bumfiddle1661 assa1672 butt1675 quarter1678 foundation1681 toby1681 bung1691 rear1716 fud1722 moon1756 derrière1774 rass1790 stern-post1810 sit-down1812 hinderland1817 hinderling1817 nancy1819 ultimatum1823 behinda1830 duff?1837 botty1842 rear end1851 latter end1852 hinder?1857 sit1862 sit-me-down1866 stern-works1879 tuchus1886 jacksy-pardy1891 sit-upon1910 can1913 truck-end1913 sitzfleisch1916 B.T.M.1919 fanny1919 bot1922 heinie1922 beam1929 yas yas1929 keister1931 batty1935 bim1935 arse-end1937 twat1937 okole1938 bahookie1939 bohunkus1941 quoit1941 patoot1942 rusty-dusty1942 dinger1943 jacksie1943 zatch1950 ding1957 booty1959 patootie1959 buns1960 wazoo1961 tush1962 1675 C. Cotton Burlesque upon Burlesque 175 For to behold those goodly horns, That py'd beard..That single wagging at thy Butt, Those Cambrils, and that cloven foot. 1859 J. R. Bartlett Dict. Americanisms (ed. 2) Butt..the buttocks. The word is used in the West in such phrases as, ‘I fell on my butt’, ‘He kick'd my butt’. 1878 W. Dickinson Gloss. Words & Phrases Cumberland (ed. 2) 13/2 Butty, bulky at the butt or lower end, ‘like oald Bennett wife’. 1897 B. Kirkby in Eng. Dial. Dict. (1898) I. 464/1 [Westmorland] This shirt doesn't cover mi but. 1933 J. Conroy Disinherited ii. v. 196 Give a worker a full gut and he's satisfied, even if you kick him in the butt every day. 1949 T. Capote Other Voices v. 104 I had me a rising on my butt big as a baseball. 1969 N. Cohn Pop from Beginning ix. 85 Music splintering and feet shuffling, butts twitching by the megaton. 1994 A. Radakovich Wild Girls Club 182 My girlfriend has been jamming her finger up my butt. 2014 Hot 1 Mar. 24/1 Speculations have risen that she's had an augmentation surgery to make her butt bigger. 9. slang (chiefly North American). With possessive adjective or genitive. Cf. ass n.2 3. a. Oneself, one's body. Typically used to impart greater force or vehemence to a statement than the use of a pronoun would convey. ΚΠ 1954 L. Peterson Take Giant Step ii. 66 You can't afford to get your butt thrown out of school too often. You understand? 1963 C. L. Cooper Yet Princes Follow viii. 64 in Black! I got a good mind to clear out right now and leave your silly butt! 1975 T. N. Moon & C. F. Eifler Deadliest Col. 78 Lieutenant, get your drunk butt in bed. 2008 D. Jordan Hot Girl 92 Funny how knuckleheads like her always pressuring me to be down, but when I get my butt in trouble, they ain't never around. b. One's life, safety, or reputation. Typically used in various phrases as a more forceful or vehement alternative to neck, skin, etc.; cf. neck n.1 Phrases 2a, skin n. Phrases 1c. ΘΚΠ the world > life > source or principle of life > [noun] > as possession headOE lifeOE heart-blood?c1225 innocent blood1382 heart's-blood1562 fanny1936 ass1948 butt1964 arse1970 the mind > attention and judgement > esteem > reputation > good repute > [noun] > one's reputation manhooda1425 reputationc1550 repper1910 fanny1936 ass1948 butt1964 arse1970 1964 C. Trillin Educ. Georgia ix. 131 We may not be able to do anything about it, and I'm sure not going to risk my butt trying. 1989 Q Dec. 93/2 He took the chance, he put his butt on the line with the Freak Out! album. 2002 Sunday Mail (Brisbane) 28 July (Factor X section) 5 Why you sorry excuse for a manager! After all the times I saved your butt! Phrases P1. Angling. to give (a fish) the butt and variants: to turn the butt end of the fishing rod towards (a hooked fish) so as to get a more rigid hold upon the line. Cf. butt v.4 2. ΚΠ ?1784 T. Shirley Angler's Museum 62 As soon as you have struck it, give it the butt of your rod; for if you hold it the least upon a level, you run a great risque of losing your line. 1828 J. Wilson in Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. 24 275 Give her [sc. a fish] the butt—or she is gone for ever. 1835 Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. July 121/2 Is the writer of ‘The Bashful Irishman’ an angler? He writes like a man who could give the butt. 1872 S. W. Baker Nile Tributaries Abyssinia (new ed.) ix. 150 Giving him the butt, I held him by main force. 1916 Sunset Jan. 30/2 ‘Doc’..was ‘giving it the butt’, reeling it in ‘inch by inch’ and otherwise living up to the eminence accorded him. 2008 T. Stienstra Calif. Fishing (ed. 8) 55/1 Csutoras gave it the butt..and managed to stop a long power run at a pool just above a big rapid. P2. to get one's butt in gear: see gear n. Additions; to take it up the butt: see take v. Phrases 1m; to work one's butt off: see work v. Phrases 5b. Compounds C1. In senses 1 and 2a. See also butt-cut n., butt end n.1, butt pad n., butt piece n., etc. butt adjuster n. now rare a mechanism for squaring the butts of the sheaves in a self-binding reaping machine; cf. sense 2c. ΚΠ 1883 Official Gaz. (U.S. Patent Office) 20 Feb. 679/1 The swinging butt-adjuster. 1902 Encycl. Brit. XXV. 174 The butts are at the front of the machine and are evened up by a device called a butt adjuster, which is..given an elliptical movement..thus squaring the butt of the sheaf. 1936 W. R. Humphries Care & Repair Mowers & Binders (U.S. Dept. Agric. Farmers' Bull. No. 1754) 14 On its way down the deck the butts of the grain are evened up by a lever-controlled butt adjuster. butt cap n. a (typically rubber or metal) cap fitted to the butt end of a fishing rod, firearm, or tennis racket. ΚΠ 1867 Bentley's Misc. Jan. 251 She had picked up on the sandy road also the brass screw butt-cap of my trout-rod. 1985 Survival Weaponry Dec. 42/1 The tang may pass right through the handle..and the handle..secured by a nut or ‘butt cap’. 2003 O. Shine Lang. Tennis 18 The butt cap usually displays the manufacturer's logo. butt log n. a log from the butt of a tree; see sense 2a. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > materials > raw material > wood > wood in specific form > [noun] > undressed trunk or log > types of butt log1779 upper1877 stave bolt1878 sinker1884 teak log1889 peeler1935 1779 M. Patten Diary 27 Feb. (1903) 396 My brors Sam and john and I with both our Teams together hauled 2 butt logs that I Cut to Orrs mill. 1879 Lumberman's Gaz. 15 Oct. If, in sawing a butt log, one end of the stick is set out from the standard, our Dog will reach it and hold it firmly in its place. 1999 D. J. Mead et al. in J. White & J. Hodgson N.Z. Pasture & Crop Sci. xviii. 278/1 This species [sc. radiata pine] is often thinned and pruned to produce high quality, high-value butt-logs. butt man n. originally Military (chiefly in plural) any of the men assigned to handle the butt or foot of a scaling ladder. ΚΠ 1870 Instr. Mil. Engin. I. v. 343 If any obstacle such as a low wall, railing, &c. has to be passed, the butt men on arriving at it will place the butts of their ladders on the top and pass the obstacle rapidly. 1918 Electric Railway Jrnl. 17 Aug. 282/1 As it approaches the vertical the butt man twists it [sc. a pole] if necessary to keep the arms properly lined. 1978 Fire Engin. Apr. 10/2 The building foundation wall can be used to replace the butt man—or both butt men in a six-man pole ladder raise. buttplate n. a (typically metal) protective plate on the butt end of a firearm. ΚΠ 1840 North Amer. & Daily Advertiser (Philadelphia) 5 Oct. 3/2 (advt.) The Philadelphia Malleable Iron Works... Gun Smith's Work, such as Percussion Hammers, Lock Plates, Triggers and Guards, Butt Plates and Slides. 1941 E. Linklater Man on my Back ii. 30 The rifle..became an almost living thing, its butt-plate firm and faithful, its bolt flying quickly. 2001 S. King Dreamcatcher i. 57 Jonesy raised the Garand, settled the buttplate into the hollow of his shoulder, and prepared to shoot himself a conversation-piece. butt-sheath n. (a) a leather case for holding a mounted soldier's carbine (obsolete rare); (b) a metal sheath enclosing the butt of a tool or weapon (now rare). ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > device for discharging missiles > firearm > equipment for use with firearms > [noun] > gun-case or sling > for mounted soldier's gun budget1816 butt piece1847 butt-sheath1848 1848 W. K. Kelly tr. L. Blanc Hist. Ten Years II. 47 Their pistols were in their holsters, and their carbines in the butt-sheaths [Fr. au porte-crosse]. 1897 Surrey Archaeol. Coll. 13 21 Butt-sheaths of spears are not found very commonly, although they must have offered a great advantage over bare wood for planting the weapon upright in the ground. 1943 J. H. Gaul in Papers Peabody Mus. Amer. Archaeol. & Ethnol. 20 171/1 ‘Copper’ axes, with wood handles, circa 40 cm. long, having ‘copper’ butt-sheath (stave-end). buttstock n. the broad end of a firearm which rests on the shooter's shoulder when firing, and to which the barrel and firing mechanism are attached; = sense 1. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > device for discharging missiles > firearm > parts and fittings of firearms > [noun] > stock or shaft tiller1353 gun-stock1495 stocking1532 stock1541 buttstock1866 1866 Merchants' Mag. Nov. 341 The magazine is situated along the entire length of the interior of the butt stock. 1974 Encycl. Brit. Micropædia IX. 412/1 Spencer carbine, military rifle with a magazine in the buttstock that contained seven cartridges. 2010 S. Junger War i. iii. 41 A medic whose gun jammed during a firefight flipped it around and beat an attacker to death with the buttstock. C2. In sense 8b. See also butt-fuck v., butt-head n.1, butt-hole n.1, butt-kicking n., buttmunch n., butt plug n., etc. butt boy n. U.S. colloquial (chiefly in political contexts) an obsequious or servile individual; a sycophant; cf. bumboy n. 3. ΚΠ 1948 Kingsport (Tennessee) News 8 July 9/1 Our political machines, our political bosses, the fair-haired butt boys of the political cliques..will..slip right back into office again. 1986 S. O'Shea Just for Rec. 215 His butt boy even has his coffee waiting for him. 2008 Ruidoso (New Mexico) News (Nexis) 9 Sept. Every thing you and I do is done for the President by legions of messengers, attendants, butt boys and followers. butt call n. originally and chiefly North American colloquial an inadvertent call made on a mobile phone in one's rear trouser pocket, as a result of pressure being accidentally applied to the keypad or touch screen; = butt dial n. ΚΠ 2003 Tennessean (Nashville) 14 June 2 a/6 Often, calls are inadvertent, such as when people sit on their cell phones—known in the business as ‘butt calls’. 2009 Irish Independent (Nexis) 2 Sept. We've all received a phone call from a friend which consists simply of them jingling the change in their pocket. Yes, they've sat on their mobile phone and made a butt call. 2015 San Gabriel Valley (Calif.) Tribune (Nexis) 26 May Nothing helped break the case..better than the butt call from a fleeing gang member. butt cheek n. colloquial (originally and chiefly North American) (occasionally, singular) either of the buttocks; (more usually, plural) the buttocks. ΚΠ 1953 L. M. Uris Battle Cry i. iii. 33 Vaccination..in the buttocks... One corpsman painted the butt cheek and popped in a needle as though he was tossing darts. 1987 Orange County (Calif.) Register 25 Nov. k3 We'd have a better chance of playing pick-up sticks with our butt cheeks than we would getting a flight out of here tonight. 2008 C. Alter Up for Renewal 201 For this move, I had to squeeze my butt cheeks together as I lifted my hips off the floor. butt crack n. colloquial (originally and chiefly North American) the cleft between the buttocks. ΚΠ 1975 M. Dennis Hard on his Buddy xii. 176 Mike moaned as he worked an index finger right down into his buttcrack. 1997 D. F. Wallace Supposedly Fun Thing I'll never do Again 98 [His] jeans have worked down his hips to the point where the top of his butt-crack is clearly visible. 2015 Courier Mail (Brisbane) (Nexis) 1 Nov. 32 The easiest areas of the body to wax are the nostrils, the butt crack and the underarms. butt dial v. originally and chiefly U.S. colloquial transitive to inadvertently call (someone) on a mobile phone in one's rear trouser pocket, as a result of pressure being accidentally applied to the keypad or touch screen. ΚΠ 2005 A. Peckham Urban Dict. 65 Butt dial, to accidentally call someone when your phone is in your pocket. She heard me call her a bitch 'cause my phone butt dialled her. 2013 Wall St. Jrnl. 26 Mar. More often than not, the people he butt-dials are the ones he rarely, if ever, intentionally calls. 2016 K. B. Draper Fade-Out iii. 58 God, if you butt dialed me again I'm so going to have to go to therapy. butt dial n. originally and chiefly U.S. colloquial an inadvertent call made on a mobile phone in one's rear trouser pocket, as a result of pressure being accidentally applied to the keypad or touch screen; = butt call n. ΚΠ 2008 @mistabhilash 22 Feb. in twitter.com (O.E.D. Archive) I hate being the first in everyone's phone. 2-3 butt-dials/week. 2011 J. Shevlin Marked Money 79 It was a butt-dial, Lindsay concluded. 2017 Los Angeles Times (Nexis) 3 Mar. b1 It was a barely audible conversation between a man and a woman, and Ian Thompson figured the call was an accidental ‘butt dial’ from his friend. butt dialing n. originally and chiefly U.S. colloquial the action of inadvertently placing a call on a mobile phone in one's rear trouser pocket, as a result of pressure being accidentally applied to the keypad or touch screen. ΚΠ 2007 www.computerworld.com 22 June (OED Archive 2017) Like many people these days, Sara Winkler dreads being the butt of ‘butt dialing.’ 2010 PC World Oct. 106/1 Turn off the touchscreen before pocketing the phone. Not only does this lengthen the battery life, but it also prevents butt-dialing. 2016 B. Carpentier Dust from Attic 179 I may have inadvertently completed more calls in this manner than anyone in the recorded history of butt dialing. butt-naked adj. colloquial (originally and chiefly North American) completely naked, stark naked. ΚΠ 1959 A. M. Stein Never need Enemy vii. 90 Leaping out to confront her bare-butt naked might lead to misunderstandings.] 1968 M. Van Peebles Bear for FBI vi. 66 You read a National Geographic and there is some far off native girl standing butt-naked for the cameraman. 1976 Baytown (Texas) Sun 3 Nov. 13 a/2 Even if he's butt naked, he's still a police officer. 2011 M. Roffey With Kisses of his Mouth 164 One man, an ex-actor, decided to moonwalk backwards across the circle, butt-naked. butt pirate n. slang (originally and chiefly North American) (derogatory and offensive) a homosexual man; cf. bum bandit n. at bum n.1 and int.2 Compounds 2. ΚΠ 1989 P. Munro U.C.L.A. Slang 27 Butt pirate, homosexual male. 2002 Out Mar. 102/1 The same people who one week would call me a ‘fag’ or ‘butt pirate’ would the next week be shoving me into lockers. 2010 M. Sloan High before Homeroom 245 Spent it on drugs, that little butt pirate. Not that I have a problem with gay guys. butt-ugly adj. colloquial and derogatory (originally and chiefly North American) very ugly; extremely unattractive. ΚΠ 1981 T. Shadyac Anti-Prep Man. v. 86 What the hell am I doing in these butt-ugly pants? 1987 Musician Jan. 11/1 Their long, frizzy hair and straining faces look butt-ugly under the spotlights. 2002 J. Thompson Wide Blue Yonder ii. 150 Every so often there would be some butt-ugly little town strung out along the highway. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2018; most recently modified version published online March 2022). buttn.7 1. The place or part where something terminates; a limit, a boundary; an end point. Now only in butts and bounds at Phrases.In quot. c1450: a marker indicating where a throw has reached in a stone-throwing contest. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > edge, border, or margin > boundary > [noun] > boundary point buttc1425 limit1598 period1605 c1425 Bk. Found. St. Bartholomew's (1923) 39 We be come for oure synnys to the butte and terme or marke of vniuersall kynde of man. c1450 (a1375) Octavian (Calig.) (1979) l. 899 Þer nas noþer..Þat myȝt þe ston to hys but bryng. 1572 R. Harrison tr. L. Lavater Of Ghostes i. xix. 91 The boundes of countries, & buts of lands. 1606 W. Arthur & H. Charteris Rollock's Lect. 1st & 2nd Epist. Paul to Thessalonians (1 Thess.) xxvii. 340 Thou cannot go forward in the rinke without prayer, and so thou shalt neuer come to the butt. a1616 W. Shakespeare Othello (1623) v. ii. 274 Heere is my iournies end, heere is my butt. 2. a. A mound or other structure on which a target is placed for archery practice, typically one of a pair placed at the two ends of a range; (also) the target itself. Hence in later use: a mound or embankment in front of which the targets are placed for artillery, musketry, or rifle practice. Also in † at butts: at archery (obsolete).In archery often contrasted with prick n. 19a and rover n.2 1a(a).stop-butt: see the first element. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > competitive shooting > archery > [noun] > archery target bercelc1440 butt1440 shell1497 rover1511 standing pricka1525 round1531 popinjay1548 prick-mark1553 Turk1569 twelve (also twenty-four) score prick1569 garden butt1572 parrot1578 clout1584 hoyle1614 shaw-fowl1621 prick wanda1650 goal1662 Promptorium Parvulorum (Harl. 221) 56 But, or bertel, or bysselle, meta. 1458 in Rec. Parl. Scotl. to 1707 (2007) 1458/3/7 Ande gif the parrochin be mekill, that thar be iij or iiij payre of buttis in sik placis as best accordis tharfor. 1477 Earl Rivers tr. Dictes or Sayengis Philosophhres (Caxton) (1877) lf. 45 An archier to faile of the butte is no wonder, but to hytte the prike is agreet maistrie. 1492–3 in M. Bateson Rec. Borough Leicester (1901) II. 337 The comons of the towne of Leycestre holdith a pece of grounde vpone the wiche they have 2 pare of buttes. a1529 J. Skelton Magnyfycence (?1530) sig. Ciiiiv Ye wante but a wylde flyeng bolte to shote at ye butt. 1542 A. Borde Compend. Regyment Helth iv. sig. C.iii A payre of buttes is a decent thynge aboute a mansyon, & other whyle for a great man necessary it is for to passe his tyme with bowles in an aly. 1598 J. Stow Suruay of London 128 An Artillerie yarde wherevnto the Gunners of the Tower doe weekely repaire..and there leuelling certaine Brasse peeces of great Artillerie against a butte of earth, made for that purpose, they discharge them for their exercise. 1642 E. Reynolds Israels Petition 13 The arrow sticks in the Butt unto which the marke is fastned. 1675 C. Cotton Burlesque upon Burlesque 50 But have a care, the little Guts Will be too hard for thee at Butts. 1697 J. Dryden tr. Virgil Georgics ii, in tr. Virgil Wks. 94 The Groom his Fellow Groom at Buts defies. View more context for this quotation 1750 R. Heath Nat. & Hist. Acct. Scilly 433 Buts, and Roving made them perfect in near, and well-aimed shooting. 1789 J. Byng Diary 28 June in Torrington Diaries (1935) II. 106 Low stone pillars, which are the roving butts that Lord A: shoots his arrows at. 1801 T. Roberts Eng. Bowman 293 To shoot down the butts, to begin at the furthest, and end at the shortest butt. 1867 Leisure Hour July 477 We..see..solid mounds of earth..These are the butts for the rifleman's practice. 1873 Act 36 & 37 Victoria lxxvii. §29 Any butt or target belonging to..any naval artillery volunteer corps. 1915 ‘I. Hay’ First Hundred Thousand vi. 67 Telephonic communication between firingpoint and butts is now established. That is to say, whenever Mr Cockerell rings the bell some one in the butts courteously rings back. 2011 Africa News (Nexis) 15 Sept. Two football fields with 60 butts were used during competition while the practice butts were on another field on the same premises. 2014 Canberra Times (Nexis) 28 Oct. a8 We are standing at the butts of a firing range in the Middle East, it is 35 degrees outside, and the soldier, who is scheduled to go to Iraq, is blunt. b. In figurative contexts. Cf. sense 5. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the mind > will > intention > [noun] > intention or purpose > end, purpose, or object > goal or target markc1275 lodestarc1374 aimc1400 mete1402 pricka1450 butta1522 level1525 white marka1533 goal1540 Jack-a-Lent1553 blankc1557 scope1562 period1590 upshot1591 bird1592 golden goal1597 nick1602 quarry1615 North Star1639 huba1657 fair game1690 endgame1938 target1942 cockshot1995 a1522 G. Douglas in tr. Virgil Æneid (1960) xiii. Transl. to Rdr. l. 24 Say thai nocht, I..at my self to schute a but hes maid? a1535 T. More Dialoge of Comfort (1553) ii. xvii. sig. L.iiv The proude man..hath no..butte or pricke, vpon the heartes, wherat he determineth to shoote. 1595 W. Shakespeare Henry VI, Pt. 3 i. iv. 30 Come bloudie Clifford..this is the But, and this abides your shot. 1628 J. Earle Micro-cosmogr. iii. sig. B6 Hee shoots all his meditations at one Butt. 1679 Established Test 26 The Crown..and..the Church, the two butts against which he levels all the arrows of his poisoned quiver. 1815 J. B. Gilchrist Parl. Reform 186 We are bound..to consider your Luniform Worship as the best Butt, or fair Target, for a Reforming Archer. 1871 C. H. Spurgeon Treasury of David II. Ps. xliv. 14 They were the common butts of every fool's arrow. 1971 Amer. Sociologist 6 13/1 Throughout its history, sociology has been the butt of slings and arrows from both academicians and the lay public. 3. In plural. A place designed for archery practice; an archery ground. Now historical. ΚΠ 1449 in J. A. Kingdon Arch. Worshipful Company of Grocers (1886) I. 124 They shalle nat suffre noo butts to be maade wtinne sayd place covurt or Gardyne vp on payne of x li sterlyng. 1464 in Manners & Househ. Expenses Eng. (1841) l. 269 For my masterys lossys att the prykkys, viij d. Item, at the buttys, viij..for bred and ale at the sayd buttys, iiij d. a1500 (a1471) G. Ashby Active Policy Prince l. 572 in Poems (1899) 31 Euery man shold be compellede To vse the bowe and shetyng for disport..And iche towne to haue Buttes for resort. 1585 A. Munday tr. L. Pasqualigo Fedele & Fortunio sig. G.ivv What maister Crack-stone, and mistresse Attilia, you are welcome to the buttes. 1620 J. Wilkinson Treat. Statutes conc. Coroners & Sherifes (new ed.) 117 There ought to be buts made in every Tything, Village, and Hamlet. 1687 A. Lovell tr. J. de Thévenot Trav. into Levant i. 35 In the City there are several Butts, where (for a little money) they shoot. a1749 G. C. Deering Nottinghamia (1751) 3 Some neighbouring Butts where the Townsmen used to exercise themselves, in shooting at a Mark with Bows and Arrows. 1843 Monthly Serial Suppl. to New World June 40/2 Elizabeth often hunted in the parks, and exhibited her skill in archery, which was by no means inconsiderable, at the butts. 1857 C. Kingsley Great Cities in Misc. (1860) II. 324 There were the butts..where..lads ran and wrestled, and pitched the bar..and practised with the long-bow. 1955 T. Maynard Bloody Mary ii. 12 He could outshoot any of the royal guard at the butts. 1995 G. Walls tr. N. Würzbach & S. M. Salz Motif Index of Child Corpus iii. 143 The archers of the King and Queen go to the butts with the yeoman. 4. The distance between the butts at the two ends of an archery range, esp. used as a measure. Chiefly in pair of butts in same sense. Cf. butt-length n., butt's length n. Now historical and rare.The distance has been estimated at about 120 yards (see James Fergusson ‘A Pair of Butts’ in Sc. Hist. Rev. 34 (1955) pp. 19–25). ΘΚΠ the world > space > distance > [noun] > a short distance wurpc950 stepc1000 footc1300 furlong wayc1384 stone-casta1387 straw brede14.. tinec1420 weec1420 field-breadth1535 field-broad1535 pair of butts1545 straw-breadth1577 stone's throw1581 way-bit?1589 space1609 piece1612 littlea1616 spirt1670 a spit and a stride1676 hair's breadth1706 rope's length1777 biscuit throw1796 a whoop and a holler1815 biscuit toss1836 biscuit cast1843 stone-shot1847 pieceway1886 stone-put1896 pitch-and-putt1925 pieceways1932 society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > competitive shooting > archery > [noun] > distance to target > measure of distance butt1545 1545 R. Ascham Toxophilus ii. f. 15v At a short but..ye Pecock fether doth seldome kepe vp ye shaft. 1555 J. Heywood Two Hundred Epigrammes with Thyrde sig. B.vv Thy brayne lacketh strength: To beare a pynte of wyne, a payre of buttes length. 1569 in J. H. Burton Reg. Privy Council Scotl. (1878) 1st Ser. II. 38 To quhome or thai approcheit be the space of ane pair of buttis, the said Andro with his complices..maid schot. 1628 in W. Cramond Ann. Banff (1891) I. 39 They..pursued..the said James..be the space of tua buttis and mair. 1683 in New Jersey Arch. (1880) I. 431 Be sure that..no Street be laid close to the back of another without an Intervale of at least a pair of Butts. 1696 Let. in J. Aubrey Misc. (1721) 209 E're we were two pair of Butts past the House. 1724 in W. Macfarlane et al. Geogr. Coll. Scotl. (1906) I. 8 The church stands a pair of butts from..the toun of Inverurie. 1843 J. Nicholson Hist. & Tradit. Tales 21 The sheep-house, which is three or four pair of butts distant. 1955 Sc. Hist. Rev. 34 24 It is quite possible that the statutory pair of butts, though intended to be ‘precise’, was not always so. 5. figurative. Cf. sense 2b. ΘΚΠ the mind > will > intention > [noun] > intention or purpose > end, purpose, or object willeOE errand?c1225 purposec1300 endc1305 emprisec1330 intentc1340 use1340 conclusionc1374 studya1382 pointc1385 causec1386 gamea1393 term?c1400 businessc1405 finec1405 intentionc1410 object?a1425 obtent?a1475 drift1526 intend1526 respect1528 flight1530 finality?1541 stop1551 scope1559 butt?1571 bent1579 aiming point1587 pursuitc1592 aim1595 devotion1597 meaning1605 maina1610 attempt1610 design1615 purport1616 terminusa1617 intendment1635 pretence1649 ettle1790 big (also great) idea1846 objective1878 objective1882 the name of the game1910 the object of the exercise1958 thrust1968 ?1571 tr. G. Buchanan Detectioun Marie Quene of Scottes sig. S.i My hart beyng ouerset wyth extreme feare Seing absent the butte of my desire. ?1572 R. Sempill Premonitioun Barnis of Leith (single sheet) Sen baith in France and heir Thay haue one butt as dois appeir That is to cut all doun. 1595 W. Allen et al. Conf. Next Succession Crowne of Ingland i. iv. 66 For enioying of Iustice were Kings appointed..but if they be bound to no iustice at al..then is this end and butte of..al royal authority, vtterly frustrat. a1616 W. Shakespeare Henry V (1623) i. ii. 186 To which is fixed as an ayme or butt, Obedience. View more context for this quotation 1624 Briefe Information Affaires Palatinate 29 His principall Butt and Marke was..to reuenge himselfe. 1710 J. Norris Treat. Christian Prudence iii. 114 Which he makes the great scope and butt of his Life. 1869 E. M. Goulburn Pursuit of Holiness vi. 46 Love is represented..as the mark or butt to which every precept is directed. b. An object of derision, abuse, or (esp.) ridicule. Now usually in the butt of a (also the) joke. Frequently with reference to a person.Now the usual sense. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > derision, ridicule, or mockery > fact or condition of being mocked or ridiculed > [noun] > object of ridicule hethinga1340 japing-stickc1380 laughing stock?1518 mocking-stock1526 laughing game1530 jesting-stock1535 mockage1535 derision1539 sporting stocka1556 game1562 May game1569 scoffing-stock1571 playing stock1579 make-play1592 flouting-stock1593 sport1598 bauchle1600 jest1606 butt1607 make-sport1611 mocking1611 mirtha1616 laughing stakea1630 scoff1640 gaud1650 blota1657 make-mirth1656 ridicule1678 flout1708 sturgeon1708 laugh1710 ludibry1722 jestee1760 make-game1762 joke1791 laughee1808 laughing post1810 target1842 jest-word1843 Aunt Sally1859 monument1866 punchline1978 1607 W. Alexander Alexandraean Trag. iii. ii, in Monarchicke Trag. (rev. ed.) sig. I4v Throwne downe in th'Ocean of disgrace, A prey t'a womans pride, the butt of scorne. 1628 G. Wither Britain's Remembrancer i. 1443 Oh; make them not the Butt of thy displeasure. a1640 J. Fletcher & P. Massinger Custome of Countrey v. iv, in F. Beaumont & J. Fletcher Comedies & Trag. (1647) sig. Cc3v/1 Let me stand the butt, of thy fell malice. 1711 J. Addison Spectator No. 47. ¶10 A Man is not qualified for a Butt, who has not a good deal of Wit and Vivacity... A stupid Butt is only fit for the Conversation of ordinary People. 1765 T. Mortimer New Hist. Eng. II. xi. 604/1 The austere and gloomy sectarists..were now the butts of raillery to the gay and licentious courtiers. 1796 Sun 9 Sept. The Lord Mayor and Court of Aldermen have been the constant butt of the jokes of Writers of the Stage. 1833 S. T. Coleridge Table-talk 16 Aug. He could not make a fool of me, as he did of Godwin and some other of his butts. 1852 W. E. Gladstone Exam. Reply Neapolitan Govt. 45 He was the butt and byeword of liberalism. 1862 Evening Bull. (San Francisco) 25 Mar. Mr. Williamson being the butt of the joke acknowledged that he could not see its point. 1880 L. Stephen Alexander Pope v. 114 A taste for fossils..was at that time regarded as a fair butt for unsparing ridicule. 1901 K. P. Wormeley tr. R. L. de V. de P. d'Argenson Jrnl. & Mem. II. vi. 159 It is thought that M. de Machault is tired of..being the butt of public opprobrium. 1924 Proc. State Board Equalization Michigan 17 A few years ago he was made the butt by comparisons made of the cost of his own department with that of similar departments of other states. 1976 F. A. Hoffmann in V. Randolph Pissing in Snow ix. 18 (note) Everyone harbors the wish that he can be ready with an appropriate rejoinder when someone attempts to pull his leg or make him the butt of a joke. 1990 Time 26 Feb. 52/1 During the heyday of takeover lending and junk-bond financing, the patrician investment firm Morgan Stanley was often the butt of ridicule. 2007 Independent 21 Nov. (Property section) 5/3 Despite being the butt of a thousand jokes, Milton Keynes is about to have its moment in the sun. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > relationship > imitation > prototype > [noun] > model, pattern, or example byseningc1175 mirrora1300 samplera1300 formc1384 calendarc1385 patternc1425 exemplar?a1439 lighta1450 projectc1450 moul1565 platform1574 module1608 paradigma1623 specimen1642 butt1654 paradigm1669 type1847 fore-mark1863 model1926 1654 E. Gayton Pleasant Notes Don Quixot iii. vii. 115 A Fashion to be whistled into a Tailors head without Butts or Patternes. 6. A concealed stand for grouse-shooting, screened by a low wall of turf or stone.See also grouse-butt n. at grouse n.1 Compounds 1a. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > shooting > [noun] > place to shoot from standa1425 standinga1425 batterya1841 shooting-hole1850 butt1880 box1884 1880 Notts. Guardian 29 Oct. Shall he shoot at the bird long before it reaches the butt, or shall he wait till it is close upon him, or even past him? 1885 W. S. Stanhope Let. 28 Nov. in Ld. Walsingham & R. Payne-Gallwey Shooting (Badminton Libr. of Sports & Pastimes) (1886) II. i. 11 I began to shoot grouse in 1841; we had our regular drives then, but without butts. 1904 Westm. Gaz. 26 Aug. 3/1 The depth of the butt will be such that a man of moderate height may fire comfortably over the heather topping the wall. 1971 Country Life 11 Mar. 533/3 I lay down on an oilskin, built a low butt of reeds and waited. 2011 Times 13 Aug. 26 The silhouettes of nine shooters and the nine loaders who hand them their guns are spread along the line of butts. Phrases butts and bounds: the limits of a piece of land; the boundaries of a property. Also figurative. Cf. metes and bounds at mete n.1 2. Now rare.Cf. quot. 1592 at butt v.2 5a which suggests that butt refers to the end of a piece of land and bound to the side. ΚΠ a1563 V. Leigh Moste Profitable Sci. Surueying (1577) iv. sig. I.i The Surueiour in takyng his Suruey, should well remember that he ought, moste diligently and vigilauntly to vewe and suruey the Buttes, and Boundes of the whole Mannour, and then the Buttes and Boundes, of euery perticuler Tenaunts landes. 1665 R. Head Eng. Rogue I. xlii. 312 The Carpenter took an exact account of the Butts and Bounds of the House. 1690–1700 Order of Hospitalls sig. Fviiiv A Booke of all the Lands and Tenements..of their Buts and boundes. 1726 D. Defoe Polit. Hist. Devil i. v. 69 The Buts and Bounds of Parnassus are not yet ascertain'd. 1768 Gazetteer & New Daily Advertiser 5 Apr. We desire you to assign the butts and bounds of each of us, and that for the future we may both enjoy our own. 1816 B. Waterhouse Jrnl. in Mag. Hist. (1911) 18 257 But the butts and bounds of their jurisdiction I never knew. 1838 W. Holloway Gen. Dict. Provincialisms 23 Butts and Bounds, the borders of a person's estate. E. Sussex. 1841 Jonesborough (Tennessee) Whig 29 Dec. The butts and bounds of said tracts of land are specified in said Deed of Trust. 1903 A. D. McFaul Ike Glidden in Maine vii. 44 Have you any documents for reference in order to fix the butts and bounds? 1911 Daily Gleaner (Kingston, Jamaica) 12 Oct. 13/1 You passed as a man on the street, and you saw what you heard called Slipe Pen?—Yes. You knew nothing of the butts and bounds?—No. 1971 M. P. Hogan Wistow (Ph.D. thesis, Univ. of Toronto) Notes iii. no. 10 He holds them to be the final authority on the existence of footpaths, bridle-ways, rights of way, courses and breadths of surface drains, hedges and other boundaries, as well as of the land's butts and bounds. Compounds C1. With the first element in the form butt. a. General attributive, as butt bow, butt field, butt mark, butt practice, butt shooting, etc. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > competitive shooting > archery > [noun] > type of bow butt bow1693 1601 B. Jonson Fountaine of Selfe-love v. v. sig. Lv Mer. Those Nymphes would be tam'd a little indeed, but I feare thou hast not Arrowes for the purpose. Cup. O yes, here be of all sorts, Flightes, Rouers, and Butshafts. 1632 R. Harris Way to True Happinesse xxii. 125 He was no way to be taxed as indiscreet, rash, sinfull, & yet he was set as a Butt-marke for every one to aym at. 1653 T. Urquhart tr. F. Rabelais 1st Bk. Wks. xxiii. 107 He..shot at but-marks [Fr. tiroit à la butte]. 1693 T. Urquhart & P. A. Motteux tr. F. Rabelais 3rd Bk. Wks. li. 415 The Butt and Rover-bows [Fr. les arcs]. 1840 L. S. Costello Summer amongst Bocages & Vines II. xiii. 261 He..left..pierced to the heart with the blind bow-boy's butt-shaft. 1874 T. Mooney Fifteen Cardinal Princ. Democracy 29 To perfect themselves in military knowledge, by butt practice with the best rifle, artillery practice in the field, and with explosives. 1878 M. Thompson Witchery of Archery xi. 140 The great butt-fields made for public shooting were gradually abandoned and dismantled. 1939 P. Gordon New Archery ii. v. 48 The essential difference between short-range target shooting..and butt shooting is that in the latter form the mark is a small central disc, called the ‘prick’. 2000 Jrnl. Soc. Archer-Antiquaries 43 73/2 Two pairs of targets were erected for point blank butt shooting, two pairs at one hundred yards distance and one as an elevated target. b. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > competitive shooting > archery > [noun] > target arrow mark arrow1394 flight1464 buttbolt1467 prick-shaft1538 forehand (shaft)1545 prick-arrow1547 rover1601 flight-shaft1609 flight-arrow1801 1467 in Manners & Househ. Expenses Eng. (1841) 427 My mastyr paid to Fraykok for iij. flytes, ij. bottebolts and ij. byres, xvij.d. ΚΠ 1810 C. T. Watkins Portable Cycl. at Archery Mounds of earth were ordered to be made in every township for the inhabitants to practise archery. These were called butts, or butt-gardens. 1855 C. Kingsley Westward Ho! II. ii. 62 What could he do but lounge down to the butt-gardens to show off his fine black coat? 1901 C. E. H. Chadwyck-Healey Hist. Part W. Somerset 297 When the men of the town went to the Butt garden for their archery their proceedings could be seen from the windows of the house. butt-length n. now historical and rare the distance between the butts at the two ends of an archery range, esp. used as a measure; also in a pair of butt-lengths in same sense. ΚΠ a1500 (?c1450) Merlin xxxi. 628 Than rode eche of hem from other more than two but lengthe [Fr. plus dun arpent de terre]. 1536 in Protocol Bk. Sir J. Cristisone (1928) 50 [Each should have pasture..to the space of] ane payr of butlynthis except corne land. 1580 T. Twyne Short & Pithie Disc. Earthquakes sig. A.iijv Beeing not much past a payre of Butte lengthes without the libertie barres of the Citie of London, walking with honest godlye companye. ?a1643 R. Carew Excellent Helps (1652) 6 When he was gone two or three But-lengths from his house. c1655 Copy Let. A. Thacher in MS Sloane 922 f. 113v I saw my wife about a but length from mee geeting her selfe forth from amongst the timber of the broken barke. 1955 Sc. Hist. Rev. 34 24 I believe the statutory butt-length in Scotland to have been 120 yards. ΚΠ 1600 in R. Pitcairn Criminal Trials Scotl. (1833) II. 172 Within tua pair of butelangis to the towne of Perth. 1600 in R. Pitcairn Criminal Trials Scotl. (1833) II. 181 Quha incontinent ran the space of half ane pair of butlandis frome thame, towardis Glenvrquhis house. ΚΠ c1500 in J. Harley et al. Rep. MSS R. R. Hastings (1928) I. 425 (MED) Put a quantite of alam ther to and let it boile the space of a but schote. a1552 J. Leland Itinerary (1710) I. 80 Another feld a good But shot of. 1622 R. Hawkins Observ. Voiage South Sea xxiv. 56 A standing water..neare a Butt-shot from the Sea shore. C2. With the first element in the genitive (butt's). butt's length n. now historical and rare the distance between the butts at the two ends of an archery range used as a measure; = butt-length n. at Compounds 1b. ΚΠ 1614 W. Raleigh Hist. World v. 313 When two Armies are within a distance of a Butts length. 1628 J. Clavell Recantation of Ill Led Life 36 But aboue all which way so e're you ride, A Butts length distance at the least diuide Your selues from one another. 1823 W. Scott Peveril I. ix. 251 Why here has a new plot broken out among the Round-heads, worse than Venner's by a butt's length. 1946 Irish Hist. Stud. 5 51 The rear division, where the attack was particularly hot, was unable to advance a butt's length in three-quarters of an hour. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2018; most recently modified version published online March 2022). buttn.8 1. A bundle, esp. of cloth, wool, or hay; a bale; a pack, a bag. Now Australian, U.S. regional, and Irish English. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > arrangement or fact of being arranged > state of being gathered together > an assemblage or collection > [noun] > pack or parcel pack1228 fardel1388 trussellc1440 pauchlea1450 butt1470 fardellage1489 trusser1519 parcel1692 package1757 packet1803 wrappage1883 compactum1907 bindle1916 1470 in C. L. Kingsford Stonor Lett. & Papers (1919) I. 106 For ij bottys of Sak clothe. 1545 Rates Custome House sig. vij Lyons threde the butte, xii. d. 1689 in R. Machin Probate Inventories Chetnole, Leigh & Yetminster (1976) 91 A Butt of olde Hay. 1705 London Gaz. No. 4109/4 A But, cont. 75 Pieces of English Dyed Linen, making 1500 Yards. 1874 Manaro (New S. Wales) Mercury 3 Sept. There is also, in the hands of the same firm, one butt of wool, which has been sold, but for which I have not received the money. 1885 Evening Bull. (San Francisco) 17 Apr. 3/4 179 bls 3 butts wool, 82 bxs dried fruit. 1887 Maitland (New S. Wales) Mercury 10 Feb. I offered 727 bales, butts, and bags of wool on Tuesday, selling 508 bales. a1918 J. Bratt Trails of Yesterday (1921) xxviii. 235 [He] argued that the hay bottoms would all be ruined on account of the butts of hay left on the meadows. 1928 C. E. Cowley Classing Clip 166 Those sections of the catalogue set apart for oddments, known as butts and bags. The former consist of packages of wool contained in the recognized woolpack, but under the acknowledged weight. 1973 V. Serventy Desert Walkabout 25 Two butts of euros were carried back to the camp to feed the rest of the group. 1978 I. Doig This House of Sky (1980) 152 Mowing and raking and bucking and stacking of 150 butts of hay, some 1400 tons of it. 1998 T. P. Dolan Dict. Hiberno-Eng. (1999) 46/1 ‘A butt of potatoes’, a small bag of potatoes, or an ordinary-sized bag partly full of potatoes. 2016 Southern Weekly (New S. Wales) (Nexis) 10 Oct. 8 Growers have generally been donating a butt or two with their wool clips. ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > a building > furniture and fittings > support or rest > [noun] > kneeler hassock1582 butt1823 kneeler1848 1823 Further Rep. Commissioners Two Acts Parl. conc. Charities 169 in Parl. Papers (H.C. 258) IX. 1 Edward Hall, who died 16th July 1706..also gave 3s. 4d. per annum..to buy butts, or other conveniences, for the people to kneel upon at their prayers in church. 1846 J. O. Halliwell Dict. Archaic & Provinc. Words I But, a hassock. Devon. 1892 S. Hewett Peasant Speech Devon (ed. 2) 57 In many churches a woman is employed to keep the interior of the edifice clean, to show strangers into pews, wash the surplices, and beat the butts (hence buttwoman). This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2018; most recently modified version published online June 2022). buttn.9 Chiefly English regional (south-western). A man-made receptacle used as a home for a colony of bees; a beehive; a hiveful of bees. Now only in bee-butt. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > farming > animal husbandry > bee-keeping > [noun] > beehive hivec725 beehivec1325 ruche1494 skep1494 stall1505 butt1532 pyche1570 bee-stall1572 hive-cot1582 alveary1623 bee-skepa1634 bee-house1675 staller1712 stand1740 bee-gum1817 bink1824 bee-palace1845 1532 in J. E. Binney Accts. of Wardens of Morebath 1520–73 (1904) 48 Sche dyde be quesse a butt of beys. 1571 T. Fortescue tr. P. Mexia Foreste ii. xx. f. 108 A certaine multitude of Bees, chaste out of a greate citie, all the inhabitantes thereof, vsyng their houses, in steede of Buttes, or Hiues. 1655 W. Mewe in S. Hartlib Reformed Common-wealth Bees 48 If there were a Statute for Parish Bees, as well as Parish Butts, and Parochial Appiaries design'd for those places, where observed best to thrive. 1772 Middlesex Jrnl. 3 Apr. He had..six butts of bees, which produced honey and wax to the amount of six pounds. 1787 F. Grose Provinc. Gloss. Butt, a bee-butt or hive. Exmore. 1849 Bristol Mercury 8 Sept. 8/4 Early on Saturday morning some thieves burned three butts of bees and carried away the produce. 1864 Royal Cornwall Gaz. 14 Oct. 6/6 In the month of May last he had six hives of bees, one of which ‘swarmed’, the swarm being secured in a butt. 1911 W. Crossing Folk Rhymes Devon 63 A butt of bees in May, Is worth a guinea any day; A butt of bees in June, Is worth a silver spoon; A butt of bees in July, Isn't worth a fly. 1944 H. Best Young'un xvii. 193 Not a bee was a-wing, not one. But when she drew near to the line of bee-butts Taverner stood up from behind one. 1996 M. Youmans Catherwood 146 The muddy houses, a brindled cow scraping her backside against a rocking fence. A barton. Straw bee-butts. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2018; most recently modified version published online December 2021). buttn.10 Chiefly English regional (south-western) in later use. A funnel-shaped wicker basket for catching salmon or eels, used esp. on the rivers Wye and Severn. Also: the middle part of such a basket, attached to a larger kype at one end and a detachable forewheel at the other. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > fishing > fishing-tackle > net > [noun] > other nets Peter netc1280 flue1388 wade1388 stalker1389 shove-net1418 trod-net1523 butt1533 web1533 fagnet1558 seur1558 trimnet1558 trollnet1558 pot-net1584 treat net1584 weir-net1585 hagan1630 henbilt1630 rugnet1630 basket-net1652 landing-net1653 stream-net1662 wolf1725 ram's horn1792 gill net1795 wolf-net1819 trap-net1856 forewheel1861 stow-net1871 lave net1875 kettle-bail1881 beating-net1883 keeve-net1883 net basin1883 wing-neta1884 trap-seine1891 lead-net1910 ghost net1959 the world > food and drink > hunting > fishing > fishing-tackle > fish-trap > [noun] > basket bow-neta1000 leapc1000 weel1256 willow1385 pichea1398 cruive14.. creel1457 coop1469 butt1533 hive1533 wilger1542 fish-pota1555 pota1555 loup1581 leap weel1601 willy1602 putt1610 leap-head1611 weir1611 putcher1781 fish-coop1803 fishing box1861 crib1873 1533–4 Act 25 Henry VIII c. 7 in Statutes of Realm (1963) III. 442 No..persone..shall..take..in or by meanes of any wele butte nett..the yonge frye..of any kynde of Salmon. 1558–9 Act 1 Elizabeth I xvii. §1 in Statutes of Realm (1963) IV. i. 378 Any..Net Weele Butt Tayning Kepper. 1825 J. Jennings Observ. Dial. W. Eng. 140 A knaw'd well how ta make buts. 1883 F. Seebohm Eng. Village Community 152 These baskets are called putts or butts or kypes, and are made of long rods wattled together by smaller ones, with a wide mouth, and gradually tapering almost to a point at the smaller or butt end. 1906 North Sea Fishery Investig.: Rep. Meetings Internat. Council Explor. Sea 1903–5 164 in Parl. Papers (Cmnd. 2966) XVIII. 1 On the Coast of Funen..one place will be left dark, and here a large eel-butt will be placed. 1969 Mariner's Mirror 55 414 They [sc. Somerset flatliners] attend a bank of salmon butts. 1983 Country Life 3 Mar. 538 To the big, bell-shaped hazel kype, with a mouth diameter of 8ft, is joined the 4ft osier butt, a secondary basket of finer weave. 2015 M. Smylie Perilous Catch i. 19 Putts are altogether much bigger and are made up of three integral parts—the kype, butt and forewheel. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2018; most recently modified version published online December 2021). buttn.11 1. The thicker or hinder part of a hide or skin, esp. the hide of the back and flanks of an ox or cow reduced to a rough rectangle by rounding; the thick leather made from this part, used esp. for the soles of shoes, belts, etc.; = butt leather n. at Compounds. See also bend n.2 4.kip-butt, shoe-butt, strap-butt: see the first element. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > materials > raw material > skin or hide > [noun] > parts of hide womb1400 rim-side1474 neck1552 butt1568 bend1599 shoulder1858 flank1874 belly1880 flesh-split1897 1568 in W. T. Ritchie Bannatyne MS (1928) III. 389 Ane trene truncheour, ane ramehorne spone, Twa buttis of barkit blasnit ledder. 1583 in J. M. Bestall & D. V. Fowkes Chesterfield Wills & Inventories 1521–1603 (1977) 169 2 dicker of lether..lyckerd buttes..4 other buttes. 1603–4 Act 1 James I c. 22 §35 in Statutes of Realm (1963) IV. ii. 1045 The Neckes Wombes and Dibbins, or other Peeces of Offall cut of from the saide Backes or Buts of Leather. 1662 Act 14 Charles II c. 7 §7 in Statutes of Realm (1963) V. 379 Whereas divers Tanners do shave cut and rake..the necks of their backs, and butts to the great impairing thereof. 1686 London Gaz. No. 2124/4 Stolen..about 350 of the best Kids..writ in the Butt of the Skins. 1745 Matter of Petition for Several Persons being Workers of Leather (1762) (single sheet) The Searching, Sealing, and Registering of every Ten Hides, Backs, or Butts of Leather. 1776 Excise-book in Dorset County Chron. (1881) 2 June [Kinds of hides] sheep and lamb, butts and backs, calves and kips. 1822 T. Webster Imison's Elem. Sci. & Art (new ed.) II. 202 Butts are generally made from the stoutest and heaviest ox hides. 1886 Leeds Mercury 4 Mar. English butts and bends have been quietly dealt in. 1922 Shoe & Leather Reporter 9 Feb. 120/3 (advt.) Situation wanted as manager or superintendent of belting butt or sole leather tannery. 1946 J. W. Waterer Leather ii. ii. 147 The butts are piled up to drain... They are ‘set out’ to remove wrinkles and smooth the grain. 1960 Archery (‘Know the Game’ Ser.) 9/1 A piece of flat leather, preferably horse-butt, shaped to suit the user's hand. 2009 C. Taylor Leatherwork ii. 43/1 There is no point in buying a top quality butt just for practice, but bear in mind that working poor quality leather is sometimes more difficult than working better quality leather. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > tailoring or making clothes > making footwear > [noun] > equipment or materials for > equipment > knife shaping knifec1340 trenketc1440 shaving-iron1541 butt1846 tranchet1858 shoe-knife1859 1846 J. O. Halliwell Dict. Archaic & Provinc. Words I But, a shoemaker's knife. North. Compounds butt knife n. a knife used by shoemakers for cutting sole leather. ΚΠ 1905 Daily Chron. 7 Feb. 3/1 Butt-knives..of French and Swedish makes. 1963 M. Michael tr. A. Mykle Hotel Room 89 Cutting soft leather with a butt knife. 2007 www.thehcc.org 6 July (forum post, accessed 14 Nov. 2017) I have a Barnsley butt knife..it is significantly different from a lino knife in that it has a green handle. butt leather n. thick leather made from the hide of the back or flanks of an ox or cow. ΚΠ 1738 Proc. Session of Peace London & Middlesex 6–9 Dec. 116/1 Archibald Murrey was indicted for stealing five Pieces of Butt-leather, cut out for Shoe-Soles. 1902 H. C. Standage Sealing-waxes, Wafers, & other Adhesives vii. 81 Leather machinery belting is made by tanning butt leather in oak bark. 2001 G. E. Wickens Econ. Bot. xv. 289 The shoulder and belly leathers are then trimmed, leaving the thicker and more valuable butt leather from the back and sides. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2018; most recently modified version published online December 2021). buttn.12 A headland, a promontory.rare except in the place name Butt of Lewis, the northernmost part of Lewis in the Outer Hebrides. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > land > land mass > shore or bank > promontory, headland, or cape > [noun] starteOE nessOE snookc1236 head1315 bill1382 foreland?a1400 capec1405 nook?a1425 mull1429 headland?c1475 point?c1475 nese1497 peak1548 promontory1548 arma1552 reach1562 butt1598 promontorea1600 horn1601 naze1605 promonta1607 bay1611 abutment1613 promontorium1621 noup1701 lingula1753 scaw1821 tang1822 odd1869 1598 J. Florio Worlde of Wordes Capo..a cape or but of any lands end. 1934 J. Buchan in Chambers's Jrnl. Jan. 4/2 One man had sailed round the butt of Norway to Archangel. 1943 S. H. Bell Summer Loanen 30 Walking behind him on his last journey were men from the butt of Louth, men from Tyrone, men from as far as Carlnough on the coast road. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2018; most recently modified version published online December 2021). buttn.13 English regional (south-western) in later use. A hillock, a mound. Now only in emmet-butt n. at emmet n. Compounds 2. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > land > landscape > high land > rising ground or eminence > [noun] > hillock barrowc885 burrowc885 berryc1000 knapc1000 knollc1000 ball1166 howa1340 toft1362 hillocka1382 tertre1480 knowec1505 hilleta1552 hummock1555 mountainettea1586 tump1589 butt1600 mountlet1610 mounture1614 colline1641 tuft1651 knock?17.. tummock1789 mound1791 tomhan1811 koppie1848 tuffet1877 1600 R. Surflet tr. C. Estienne & J. Liébault Maison Rustique vii. xlvi. 880 Some of them [sc. nightingales] doe make their nests vpon the ground..in a place somewhat raised, as vpon some greene and thicke grasse growne clod of earth or butte [Fr. sur quelque motte verde & toussue]. 1693 J. Evelyn tr. J. de La Quintinie Compl. Gard'ner i. i. iii. 7 It will not be improper to make a little But or Hillock [Fr. bute] over those Roots. 1785 tr. F. de Tott Mem. II. 342 This fortress..is built on a butt [Fr. butte], or hillock, which appears to have been formed by the hand of man. 1859 W. Barnes Hwomely Rhymes 197 [He] broke The nut o' the wheel at a butt. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2018; most recently modified version published online June 2022). buttn.14 English regional (south-western), Welsh English (Gower), and Irish English (southern). A type of small cart. Cf. putt n.1 ΘΚΠ society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > cart, carriage, or wagon > cart or wagon for conveying goods > [noun] > types of > cart (usually two-wheeled) > small or light putt1313 butt1663 currya1682 dog cart1799 Whitechapel cart1839 Whitechapel1842 tum-tum1863 1663–4 in Rep. & Trans. Devonshire Assoc. Advancem. Sci., Lit., & Art (1892) 24 309 Itm to John batstone & horse and butt to Draw earth for the Charch ard banke 2 dayes..00 03 08. 1796 W. Marshall Provincialisms W. Devonshire in Rural Econ. W. Eng. I. 324 Butt, a close-bodied cart; as dung-butt,..gurry-butt,..ox-butt; etc. Butt load, about six seams. 1808 C. Vancouver Gen. View Agric. Devon v. 125 One-horse carts, or butts, are also generally made use of. 1864 R. D. Blackmore Clara Vaughan I. i. xiii. 109 A vehicle called a ‘butt’..a short and rudely made cart. 1880 M. A. Courtney W. Cornwall Words in M. A. Courtney & T. Q. Couch Gloss. Words Cornwall 8/2 Butt, a heavy, two-wheeled cart, with timber and yoked oxen. a1955 H. M. Tucker My Gower (1957) 69 The stone was brought to the Quay in cumbersome horse-drawn butts. 1963 Times 26 Apr. 16/7 An archaic conveyance, a three-wheeled butt, something like a large wheelbarrow. 1966 S. Murphy Stone Mad (rev. ed.) xxii. 155 'Tis few horses could leave this yard with two ton in the butt. 2008 M. J. Darracott Proper Cornish Childhood i. 4 The two wheeled butt, I was in shook to the point, where I thought it may well fall apart. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2018; most recently modified version published online June 2022). buttv.1 I. Senses relating to pushing or shoving. 1. a. intransitive. To thrust, push, or shove at something, esp. with the head, horns, or other body part. Frequently with at, against. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > impact > striking > striking in specific manner > strike in specific manner [verb (intransitive)] > strike with pushing action > give a push > (as) with the head buttc1175 jur1600 the world > animals > by habits or actions > habits and actions > [verb (intransitive)] > thrust or strike with head or horns push1533 note1555 butt1579 the world > movement > impact > striking > striking with specific thing > strike with specific thing [verb (intransitive)] > with the head put1513 butt1579 c1175 Ormulum (Burchfield transcript) l. 2810 Min child tatt i min wambe liþ..bigann forrþrihht anan To stirenn. & to buttenn. c1300 Havelok (Laud) (1868) l. 2322 Buttinge with sharpe speres..Wrastling with laddes, putting of ston. 1566 W. Painter tr. O. Landi Delectable Demaundes 12 When be louers most vexed and offended with themselues? When by a certein default of nature they cannot make the ramme to butt. 1579 E. Spenser Shepheardes Cal. Sept. 125 That with theyr hornes butten. 1601 P. Holland tr. Pliny Hist. World I. ix. xxxi. 253 Crabs..will fight one with another, and then yee shall see them jurre and butt with their hornes like rammes. 1689 N. Lee Princess of Cleve v. i. 61 Butting at me like a little Goat, while I butted at her agen. a1774 O. Goldsmith tr. P. Scarron Comic Romance (1775) II. xx. 190 There happened to be a ram in this inn, which the ostlers and rabble..had taught to butt, by bending their head towards him, with their hands before it. 1853 E. K. Kane U.S. Grinnell Exped. xliv. 406 We have butted several times rudely against projecting floes. 1858 J. Doran Hist. Court Fools 72 Amused by..a couple of rams butting at each other. 1900 N.Z. Illustr. Mag. 3 237 The player with the leather crouches himself while going at full speed, and butts with all his force (using hip or shoulder) at the opponent who is essaying to tackle. 1992 W. Christie Warriors of God ii. 21 ‘Gangway, gangway, serious casualty here. Make way, make way’, he yelled, butting at the bodies in front of him. 2000 A. Ghosh Glass Palace (2001) vi. 69 Teams of elephants would go to work..butting, prodding, levering with their trunks. b. intransitive. figurative. Without reference to physical motion: to offer resistance or opposition to a person or thing in a stubborn or persistent manner; to attack. Frequently with at, against. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > difficulty > opposition > oppose [verb (intransitive)] > strive against something witherc1000 wrag?c1225 wrest?c1225 strivec1300 repugna1382 strugglec1412 pressc1480 butt1566 wring?1570 gainstrive1596 wage1608 1566 J. Rastell Treat.: Beware of M. Iewel ii. f.125 Consider, how M. Iewell hath ordered D. Harding..In Wranglinge with him, In Dissimbling and butting with him, [etc.]. 1659 tr. J. Nouet Answer Provinciall Lett. published by Jansenists 265 If you had not had a minde to butt against some Jesuite, you might have made a better Syllogisme out of the Definition of Simony. 1747 S. Richardson Clarissa II. xxi. 131 Whenever he has the power, depend upon it, he will butt at one as valiantly as the other. 1832 Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. 31 117 It [sc. the Reform Bill] will butt forcefully against the ramparts of aristocracy. 1859 Ld. Tennyson Enid in Idylls of King 85 Amazed am I, Beholding how you butt against my wish. 1921 Black Fox Mag. July 18/3 They are always butting away at old ideas, and they keep right at it; all the argument and advice in the world is lost on them. 2007 James Joyce Q. 44 310 Richard..destroys the value system that makes return possible, thus butting against the paradox of potlatch. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > downward motion > move downwards [verb (intransitive)] > plunge > plunge head first buttc1330 nosedive1920 c1330 (?a1300) Arthour & Merlin (Auch.) (1973) l. 5165 (MED) Þe kniȝt donward gan butten Amidward þe hors gutten. 1884 J. Colborne With Hicks Pasha in Soudan 160 As they came within our zone of fire, they butted forward, hit to death. 3. a. transitive. Esp. of an animal: to thrust, push, or strike (a person or thing) with the head, horns, or other body part; (with adverb or prepositional phrase) to push or shove (a person or thing) in a specified direction with the head, horns, or other body part. Also in extended use. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > by habits or actions > habits and actions > [verb (transitive)] > thrust or gore with horn putc1450 gore?1530 burt?1567 butt1590 horn1599 push1611 hipe1669 engage1694 sticka1896 the world > movement > impact > striking > striking with specific thing > strike with specific thing [verb (transitive)] > with the head busha1387 butt1590 head1784 browbeat1830 puck1861 headbutt1934 nut1937 headbang1984 1590 R. Greene Neuer too Late ii. sig. H The eaw was coy, and butted him. a1616 W. Shakespeare Coriolanus (1623) iv. i. 2 The beast With many heads butts me away. View more context for this quotation 1630 M. Drayton Muses Elizium ii. 12 I haue a Lambe..Into laughter it will put you, To see how prettily 'twill But you. 1732 W. Ellis Pract. Farmer 102 The Calf will be apt to butt the Bag, and so cause it to be snarl'd and hard. 1749 Merlinus Liberatus sig. C5 He is Butted by Rams, and kick'd at by Asses. 1826 W. Scott Woodstock I. iv. 102 The very deer there will butt a sick or wounded buck from the herd. 1853 E. K. Kane U.S. Grinnell Exped. x. 73 It is easy enough..to warp up a quiet river, butting aside the lazy vessels as they swing at anchor. 1893 Austral. Jrnl. Feb. 342/1 Once more I butted the door, and, presto! I was at liberty to walk out. 1932 Jrnl. Health & Physical Educ. May 48/2 A tightly blown rubber ball the size of a basketball is kicked, punched with the fist, or butted with the head as in soccer. 1947 Time 3 Feb. 20/3 Each tried to butt the other out of the feedbox. 2003 Guelph (Ont.) Mercury (Nexis) 2 Apr. a8 One of the useless..square-pupiled goats butted me squarely in the butt. b. transitive. To thrust, push, or strike (the head, horns, etc.) against someone or something. Frequently with against. Also figurative: cf. to bang (also run, bash, etc.) one's head against a brick wall at brick wall n.1 Phrases 1.See also to butt heads at Phrases. ΚΠ 1632 T. Hawkins tr. P. Matthieu Vnhappy Prosperitie ii. 289 (margin) Cratis fell in love with a goat, the male goat for jealousie butted his head against Cratis, and slew him. 1665 J. B. tr. P. Scarron Comical Romance i. xx. 197 He retreated three or four paces backward like one that is going to take a great leap; and rushing forwards like a race horse, butted his head, armed with horns, most fiercely against poor Ragotin. 1732 tr. A. F. Prévost d'Exiles Life Mr. Cleveland (new ed.) II. 180 When butting his head against the door, in order to break it open, he cry'd out, To arms! 1832 Amer. Turf Reg. & Sporting Mag. July 559 As soon as he saw the horsemen..he [sc. a bull] butted his horns beneath the horse's tail, and overthrew both horse and riders. 1895 H. James Next Time in Yellow Bk. July 35 ‘I have been butting my head against a wall,’ he had said in those hours of confidence. 1916 W. H. Young Merry Banker in Far East vi. 97 The two picadores had so successfully scratched the ‘Parson's Nose’ of Number One buffalo that he, to escape from his tormentors, butted his skull into the door. 1979 B. Broder Sacred Hoop viii. 129 Luc played the fool, strutting, complaining about the stiffness of his limbs, butting his helmet against the oak. 2015 K. Rock Raising Stakes vi. 114 Button rose to her feet and butted her head into Vivie's calves. 4. intransitive (chiefly with on, against, etc.). Watchmaking and Clockmaking. Of a tooth on a cogwheel: to come into contact with another tooth, catch, etc., so as to come to a stop. Also transitive with the tooth, catch, etc., as object. ΘΚΠ the world > time > instruments for measuring time > clock > [verb (transitive)] > come into contact with (of parts) butt1826 1826 T. Reid Treat. Clock & Watch Making 8 The face of the ratchet teeth strike or butt on the end of the click c. 1874 F. G. D. Bedford Sailor's Pocket Bk. v. 148 In winding up chronometers, the turns of the key should..be counted, and the last turn made gently..until it is felt to butt. 1884 F. J. Britten Watch & Clockmakers' Handbk. (new ed.) 37 The tendency of pinion leaves to butt the wheel teeth. 1925 G. F. C. Gordon Clockmaking Past & Present 32 The oncoming tooth butts into the end of its pinion leaf, and further motion is impossible. 2016 S. Jeffery Introd. Guide repairing Mech. Clocks 41/2 The finger piece turns the star piece in the opposite direction by a predefined number of turns until the star piece butts on the opposite shoulder. 5. intransitive. Chiefly North American. To take a place in a queue in front of people who are already there. Only with complement, as to butt in front of, to butt ahead of, etc. See also to butt in 2 at Phrasal verbs 1. ΚΠ 1850 Athenæum 21 Dec. 1338/3 It is..no agreeable spectacle to see any illustrious figure making its way for a while through the rabble of some Vanity Fair; with Dulness butting in front, Pretension snapping at its heels, and Frivolity, under the showman's booth, making faces at the usual appearance. 1918 Lowell (Mass.) Sun 14 May 6/4 When the gent stepped Away from the window The kid butted in Front of us, and We took in a breath To snarl at the kid. 1933 Centralia (Washington) Daily Chron. 25 Sept. 2/4 She butted ahead of the line at a ticket window. 1979 Daily Intelligencer (Doylestown, Pa.) 25 June 1/1 I'm sorry lady, but you can't butt in line like that. We'll have a riot on our hands. 2014 C. Kadohata Half World Away 158 They stood in back of what might have been the end of the line. But people kept butting in front of them. 6. intransitive with along, through. Of a ship or boat: to make (esp. slow or difficult) progress by pushing through water, waves, etc. ΚΠ 1900 Milton College Rev. Oct. 6/1 On one side a blunt-nosed, old coal barge was butting along after its tow; one another side, a long, slender, white yacht, with its keen prow, cut the water like a knife. 1903 J. Masefield Ballads 19 Dirty British coaster with a salt-caked smoke stack, Butting through the Channel in the mad March days. 1951 N. Monsarrat Cruel Sea (U.S. ed.) iii. iii. 156 Compass Rose was nine hundred miles west of the Irish Channel, butting along as stern escort to a slow convoy. 2010 P. Bishop Battle of Britain (rev. ed.) iv. 74 That morning there were eight convoys at sea, slowly butting through the choppy waters. 7. transitive. To extinguish (a cigarette, etc.) by pressing the lighted end against something. See also to butt out 2 at Phrasal verbs 1. [The development of this sense was clearly influenced by butt n.6 3b(a); it may perhaps have been derived directly from it, independently of other uses of this verb] . ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > use of drugs and poison > tobacco > smoking > use as material for smoking [verb (transitive)] > extinguish cigarette stump1922 butt1924 stub1927 to butt out1950 1924 Goblin (Toronto) Sept. 21/1 There came a knock at the door of the room. Lazily he got up, butted his cigarette and went to open it. 1984 Rod Serling's Twilight Zone Mag. Dec. 75/2 Steve languidly exhaled smoke while butting his cigar. 2016 R. K. MacDonald Only Way Out vi. 99 Percy shrugged and butted his cigarette in the ashtray on the table. II. Senses relating to jutting or projecting. 8. intransitive. With adverb or preposition. To extend in a particular direction; to jut out; to project. Also transitive (reflexive). ΘΚΠ the world > space > shape > unevenness > projection or prominence > project or be prominent [verb (intransitive)] tootc897 shootc1000 to come outOE abuta1250 to stand outc1330 steek?c1335 risea1398 jutty14.. proferc1400 strutc1405 to stick upa1500 issuec1515 butt1523 to stick outc1540 jut1565 to run out1565 jet1593 gag1599 poke1599 proke1600 boke1601 prosiliate1601 relish1611 shoulder1611 to stand offa1616 protrude1704 push1710 projecta1712 protend1726 outstand1755 shove1850 outjut1851 extrude1852 bracket1855 to corbel out1861 to set out1892 pier1951 1523 J. Fitzherbert Bk. Surueyeng xxii. f. 40v The long dolez yt butte fro the said northe felde to the said broke. 1535 Bible (Coverdale) Jer. xlviii. 32 The braunches off Iazer but vnto the see. 1598 J. Florio Worlde of Wordes Pórgere..to iut, to iettie, or butte foorth as some parts of building do further then the rest. 1611 T. Coryate Crudities sig. P5v A little square gallery butting out from the Tower. 1627 G. Hakewill Apologie i. iii. 28 The Promontories and necklands which butt into the Sea, what are they but solide creekes. 1644 K. Digby Two Treat. i. xx. 183 The nose of a weathercocke butteth it selfe into the wind. 1664 H. Power Exper. Philos. i. 40 The Cone, or obtuse Tip of this Capsula butts or shoots itself into the basis of the Liver. 1715 J. T. Desaguliers tr. N. Gauger Fires Improv'd 118 Leave a small part butting forward into the opening. 1755 A. Berthelson tr. E. Pontoppidan Nat. Hist. Norway ii. iv. 100 It has a long yellow beak butting out towards the end. 1811 Retrospect Philos., Mech., Chem. & Agric. Discov. 7 298 The plant is described as butting above the ground, with a leaf not unlike beet; and it is found to stand the severest frosts. 1841 E. Rigby Resid. Shores Baltic I. 158 Here a line of grey rocks butting through the snow, and there a dashing cascade. 1916 G. Taylor With Scott 141 It [sc. the snout of the tributary] opposed a face of ice forty feet high; but just where it butted into the steep south slope of the defile, there was a narrow gap where thaw-ice had filled in the interspaces. 1999 Age (Melbourne) (Nexis) 6 Nov. (Travel section) 16 Low, rugged groups of mountain escarpments butting sharply out of the desert. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > opposite position > be opposite [verb (intransitive)] > face butt?c1550 face1638 ?c1550 tr. P. Vergil Eng. Hist. (1846) I. i. 1 Britaine..beinge an Ilonde in the ocean sea buttinge over agaynste the Frenche shore. c1571 E. Campion Two Bks. Hist. Ireland (1963) i. i. 9 Leinster butteth upon England. 1624 T. Heywood Γυναικεῖον ii. 92 That part [of the tomb]..which butted upon the west. 1647 W. Lilly Christian Astrol. xxv. 154 A Ground..butting or lying to that quarter of Heaven, as is formerly directed. Phrases to butt heads. Cf. to lock horns at lock v.1 Phrases 1. a. Of two or more people or groups: to engage with each other in conflict, dispute, or competition. Of one person or group: to engage in conflict or competition with another; to clash with. ΚΠ 1714 Shakespeare's Taming of Shrew v. x, in N. Rowe Wks. Shakespear II. 358 Bap. How likes Gremio these quick-witted folks? Gre. Believe me, Sir, they butt Heads together [1623 But together] well. 1899 Scribner's Mag. July 38/1 Me an' him hain't never butted heads yit, an' it's gittin' high time. Ef he comes out, you fellers jest go ahead with your ratkillin'. I'll 'ten' to him. 1913 Union Alumni Monthly Feb. 116 Basketball... Union butted heads with Colgate in the gymnasium... The score was 20 to 7 in Union's favor at the end of the first half. 1997 Sun (Baltimore) 6 July b2/6 After butting heads for nearly six years, there is a tentative agreement over where to locate a crabbing pier, gazebo and path for the residents that won't disturb historic sites. 2005 Courier-Mail (Brisbane) 29 Aug. 11/1 Rival mobile phone retailers Crazy Ron's and Crazy John's..butted heads in court over their similar-sounding names. b. Of two (esp. male) animals (also occasionally of people): to clash heads, esp. in head-to-head combat. Of one person or animal: to clash heads with another. ΚΠ 1799 Newport (Rhode Island) Mercury 10 Sept. 1/4 I..get along the narrows and round the corners, without butting heads or breaking shins with any of my fellow travellers. 1887 St. Louis (Missouri) Globe-Democrat 13 Nov. 19/6 The rams were furious and locked horns at once... They at once set to work butting heads. 1892 R. Blatchford Fantasias 43 The two earwigs..butted heads for some time. 1920 Fur News Nov. 7/3 I called two bull moose out of the swamp and got 'em together... They both fought hard and butted heads loud as blows of an ax. 1940 R. Cannon Lee on Levee i. 31 I guess you heard about the man who got his brains battered out butting heads with a goat. 2013 D. J. Fairbairn Odd Couples xi. 174 In species where males butt heads or use horns or antlers in contests with other males, they often have proportionally larger heads..than females of the same body size. Phrasal verbs PV1. With adverbs in specialized senses. to butt in colloquial (originally U.S.). to butt out 1. intransitive. To insert oneself into a situation, affair, discussion, etc., uninvited, esp. when one's presence is unwelcome; to interrupt or intrude on a conversation or activity. Also with on. Cf. butt-in n. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > going or coming in > go or come in [verb (intransitive)] > in unwelcome or unwarranted manner pressc1390 poach?1536 shovel1540 encroach1555 intrude1573 obtrude1579 wedge1631 interlope1775 to butt in1899 to wade in1905 horn1912 muscle1928 chisel1936 the world > action or operation > doing > activity or occupation > acting in another's business or intervention > act in another's business or intervene [verb (intransitive)] > intrude or interfere chop1535 shovel1540 to put (also stick, shove, etc.) one's oar in1542 intrude1573 to put in one's spoke1580 to put forward1816 neb1889 to butt in1899 to butt into ——1900 horn1912 muscle1928 chisel1936 1899 Evening News (Jeffersonville, Indiana) 3 Feb. 1/6 While the Elks proper received distinguished consideration ‘Col. Goat’ from Jeffersonville ‘butted in’ and was one of the warmest members. 1899 Newark (Ohio) Daily Advocate 28 Dec. 5/2 To get out and hustle for the election seems to me, to use a slang phrase, like ‘butting in’ and I would be the last man to do that. 1904 Philadelphia Evening Tel. 8 June 8 To the victors belong the spoils, and not to those who butted in when the smoke of the battle had cleared away. 1920 R. Macaulay Potterism iv. i. §2 I've not gone there or written, or anything yet, because I didn't want to butt in. 1957 E. Eager Magic by Lake 65 ‘I'm sorry,’ he said, ‘butting in like this, but I've got to tell you something.’ 2013 M. Zailckas Mother, Mother (2014) 268 It was his mom's rule that children didn't butt in on adult conversation. 2. intransitive. To take a place in a queue in front of people who are already there. Cf. sense 5. ΚΠ 1914 Lit. Digest 21 Feb. 397/2 From all over the room came cries of ‘Me!’ ‘Next!’ ‘Git out-a me way!’ and ‘I'll punch yer if yer butt in ahead o' me.’ 1921 Daily Tel. (Bluefield, W. Virginia) 16 Aug. 6/4 A man ‘butted in’ at a waiting line before the railroad ticket window at New York, and the men who were in a hurry glowered. 1972 D. Wiltse Suggs i. 30 Yeah, shit, I'll let her stay in front of me. I hate people who butt in. 2011 K. West et al. 50 Things every Young Lady should Know iii. 9 People waiting in line can be very protective of their spots but will be happy to step back if they know your intention is not to butt in. colloquial (originally U.S.). 1. intransitive. To stop intruding on or interfering in something; to stop butting in; (also) to refrain from intruding on or interfering in something. Frequently in imperative. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > absence of movement > [verb (intransitive)] > cease participation to butt out1906 1906 T. Beyer Amer. Battleship in Commission vi. 209 Don't butt in wher' yer have ter butt out. 1930 J. Dos Passos 42nd Parallel 400 He said it was about time for him to but out, and picked up his hat and coat and left. 1967 P. Welles Babyhip (1968) xix. 126 ‘Drop dead’, they said, ‘butt out.’ 1976 Ottawa Citizen 10 Dec. 6/3 If you do not read the Bible and are not a believer, then butt out—this is an Anglican family quarrel. 1988 R. Rayner Los Angeles without Map 132 Barbara gave him a cool stare... ‘Butt out, pal.’ 2014 ‘R. Galbraith’ Silkworm (2015) xxxi. 348 Of course, his old friend was no longer sharing information, not after the tense warnings to Strike to butt out, to keep away. 2. transitive. To extinguish (a cigarette, etc.) by pressing the lighted end against something. Cf. sense 7 and the etymological note there. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > use of drugs and poison > tobacco > smoking > use as material for smoking [verb (transitive)] > extinguish cigarette stump1922 butt1924 stub1927 to butt out1950 1950 Carillon News (Steinbach, Manitoba) 29 Sept. 10/1 Why not start with that coffee table on which your friends just love to butt out their cigarettes. 1968 Post-Standard (Syracuse, N.Y.) 29 Oct. 12/2 He..butted out his smoke before it was completely finished but in another minute he would light up another. 2014 R. Bishop Girl in Bath xxi. 154 Jason, made nervous by the stare, butted his cigarette out on the concrete path and ground it with his shoe. PV2. With prepositions in specialized senses. to butt into —— colloquial (originally U.S.). to butt out of —— intransitive. To insert oneself into (a situation, affair, discussion, etc.) uninvited, esp. when one's presence is unwelcome; to interrupt or intrude on (a conversation or activity). ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > doing > activity or occupation > acting in another's business or intervention > act in another's business or intervene [verb (intransitive)] > intrude or interfere chop1535 shovel1540 to put (also stick, shove, etc.) one's oar in1542 intrude1573 to put in one's spoke1580 to put forward1816 neb1889 to butt in1899 to butt into ——1900 horn1912 muscle1928 chisel1936 1900 G. Ade Fables in Slang 106 One Student..whose people butt into the Society Column with Sickening Regularity. 1908 ‘O. Henry’ in Everybody's Mag. Dec. 792/1 Beg pardon..for butting into what's not my business. 1959 H. Teichmann Miss Lonelyhearts ii. iii. 65 Where does he get off butting into our fights? 2003 N.Y. Times (National ed.) 2 Oct. c7/2 She..butts into conversations between mothers with baby carriages at the local Starbucks. colloquial (originally U.S.). intransitive. To stop intruding on or interfering in (something); to remove oneself from (a place or situation). ΚΠ 1903 San Antonio (Texas) Daily Light 4 Feb. 3/2 He is making a mistake in trying to butt out of the navy and into politics. 1988 S. Paretsky Toxic Shock (1990) xix. 145 Maybe it's time you butted out of South Chicago, Warshawski. 1992 Harper's Mag. Oct. 72 The film will receive a generous ad budget, the studio will butt out of the editing process, and everyone is thrilled. 2003 Marie Claire Dec. 457/1 Butting out of someone else's affairs is the best way to go this month. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2018; most recently modified version published online December 2021). buttv.2 I. To abut and related senses. 1. a. intransitive. With on, upon, against, etc.: (of a piece of land, a property, etc.) to border on, adjoin (adjacent land, a road, etc.); to abut. Also figurative. Now chiefly U.S. and Caribbean.Sometimes paired with bound; cf. sense 5 and butts and bounds at butt n.7 Phrases. ΘΚΠ the world > space > distance > nearness > be near to [verb (transitive)] > be in contact with > border on > at the end butt1315 abut1659 1315 in W. Brown Yorks. Deeds (1909) 27 (MED) [1 1/2 roods] butand on [Suthyll Mylndame, and] two landys [lying on Cafurlang]. 1419 in J. Raine Vol. Eng. Misc. N. Counties Eng. (1890) 13 (MED) That tenement..buttes apon the kynge's strete of Walmegate before, and on the north felde behynd. c1460 in A. Clark Eng. Reg. Oseney Abbey (1907) 207 (MED) j acre at the crosse and at the thorne..vndur the hyȝgh-waye and butteth In-to the hyghwaye. 1521 R. Goodyere Will in B. Cusack Everyday Eng. 1500–1700 (1998) 332 I gif to Alison Johnson a yong whye and a whete land yt buttys of tipplyng hedland at his garth end. 1523 J. Fitzherbert Bk. Surueyeng xxi. f. 38v The southe endes butteth vpon the hall orcharde..& the northe endes but vpon ryhyll. 1567 A. Golding tr. Ovid Metamorphosis (new ed.) xiii. f. 171v Shee gate her too a hill That butted on the Sea. 1682 J. Bunyan Holy War 361 The remote parts of it [sc. their Country]..do both butt and bound upon..Hellgate-hill. View more context for this quotation 1685 H. More Paralipomena Prophetica 127 The expiration of the sixty-nine Weeks of Daniel which butt vpon the Manifestation of the Messias. 1701 in S. Carolina Hist. & Geneal. Mag. (1925) 26 172 [Land] Lying and being in Berkly County in the Said Province of South Carolina upon Medway River & butting & bounding to the Eastward upon the Said Medway River. 1720 J. Strype Stow's Surv. of London (rev. ed.) II. vi. v. 75/1 Burleigh-street butts against Exeter-street. 1798 W. Hutton Life 25 The bedstead, whose head butted against their bedside. 1853 P. P. Kennedy Blackwater Chron. i. 6 A large spur—apparently the Backbone itself—keeps straight to the south, and butts down on the Cheat. 1896 Daily Gleaner (Kingston, Jamaica) 13 July 26 feet on the Southern boundary and butting and bounding North on Prince of Wales Street. 1979 Clearing House May 452/1 The District lies in extreme southern Chester County, butting against the Delaware line. 2008 Sunday Gleaner (Kingston, Jamaica) 20 Jan. d11/7 (advt.) Lot of 4.5 acres Boundbrook. This butts and bounds on the planned new road from the town. b. transitive. To border (a piece of land, a property, etc.); to abut or adjoin (adjacent land, a road, etc.). Also with out. Chiefly in passive and usually paired with bound, esp. (in later use) as part of a standard conveyancing formula (cf. butts and bounds at butt n.7 Phrases). Now chiefly Caribbean. ΚΠ 1612 J. Speed Theatre of Empire of Great Brit. i. xxvii. 53/1 Warwick-shire..is bounded vpon the North with the County of Stafford;..the South part is butted by Oxford and Glocester-shires; and all her West with the County of Worcester. 1688 in Huntington (N.Y.) Town Rec. (1887) I. 530 Any part or parsel of yt land situate and being one Crabmedowe necke as afore sd Butting and bounding the Land of edward bunce one ye west side. 1732 in E. C. Bowler York Deeds (Maine) (1909) XVII. 178 Land being Butted & Bounded as follows Eastwardly by ye Southly Part of the House that was Samuel Smiths. 1755 B. Willis tr. Charters of Incorporation in Hist. & Antiq. Buckingham xvi. 91 The Bounds..stretch forth themselves by and through the whole Borough and Parish of Buckingham, and is butted out by a certain Bridge called Dudley Bridge. 1827 Laws State N.Y.: 50th Session ccxxix. 238 Which piece of land is..butted and bounded northwardly and eastwardly by lands of Richard Jerome. 1896 C. M. Selleck Norwalk 163 Southeast of the southern foot of the Earle's Hill of 1896 is a field butted, as the proprietors would have expressed it, by the sloping upland. 1930 Times of India 13 Sept. 2/2 All those lands..in the province of Behar and butted and bounded on the North by Nathabhai Pareck's leased coal land. 1994 Vincentian 10 June 8/2 All That Lot Piece or parcel of land situate at Belvedere in the Parish of St. George..butted and bounded on the North by a 20ft Road. a. intransitive. With on: to keep alongside, to stick close to. Obsolete. rare. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > movement over, across, through, or past > [verb (transitive)] > move past > closely coastc1400 shore1592 butt1594 banka1616 skirt1735 verge1890 1594 R. Carew tr. T. Tasso Godfrey of Bulloigne i. 41 He euer butting on the salt-sea waue, By wayes directest doth conduct his hoast. b. intransitive. With upon: (of an action, practice, etc.) to be inextricably linked to; to be inseparable from. Obsolete. ΚΠ 1629 A. Leighton Appeal to Parl. 169 It is cleared that all our evills of sinne and judgment are from them, and butte full upon them [sc. the Prelacy.] 1634 J. Canne Necessitie of Separation iii. 153 Their practice butteth full upon the others unreasonable and unsound resoning. 1647 J. Trapp Comm. Evangelists & Acts (Matt. xxiii. 18) 535 All the worldlings plowing, sailing, building, buying, buts upon commodity, he knows no other deity. 3. a. intransitive. Of an object (esp. a part of a structure), as a beam, gable, etc.: to be situated with an end or edge flat against, on, etc. ΘΚΠ the world > space > distance > nearness > be near to [verb (transitive)] > be in contact with > border on > at the end > with one end flat against butta1669 a1669 ( Indenture Fotheringay in Dugdale's Monasticon Anglicanum (1846) VI. 1414/1 Til aither isle shall be a sperware enbattailement..and both the ends enbattailled butting upon the stepill. 1670 C. Cotton tr. G. Girard Hist. Life Duke of Espernon i. iv. 182 A great Beam that butted upon the Chimney of the Chamber. 1719 R. Rawlinson Hist. & Antiq. Cathedral-Church of Salisbury 18 These [bows] would have been of great use to the support of the Tower, if they had butted against a solid Part. 1754 Contract Building Exchange Edinb. 24 The feet of the whole couples shall butt with a heel against a wall-plate, and be spiked down to it. 1820 W. Scoresby Acct. Arctic Regions II. 191 The fore part of the ice-beams, which butt against the hook,..diverge. 1875 ‘Stonehenge’ Man. Brit. Rural Sports (ed. 12) ii. viii. ii. §1. 640 From the handle to a little beyond the rowlock most sculls are square, with an oblong leather button..butting against the inside of the thowle. 1944 J. Millar in R. Greenhalgh Pract. Builder iv. 145/2 Where these rafters butt against a valley rafter and have no foot resting on a wall plate they are called cripple rafters. 1990 A. Burton Cityscapes xvii. 201/1 St Mary Street is an excellent example, with shaped gables butting on to classical pediments. 2007 Compl. Guide Finishing Walls & Ceilings 203/3 Cut a miter on the return piece, then cut it to length with a straight cut so it butts to the wall. b. transitive. To place (an object, esp. part of a structure) with an end or edge flat against something; to join end to end. Also (of an object): to abut or meet with (something). Cf. butt joint n. at butt n.5 Compounds. ΘΚΠ the world > space > distance > nearness > be near to [verb (transitive)] > place near > place in contact > place with end against butt1785 1785 W. Roy in Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 75 460 What may have been lost by constantly butting one rod against the other. 1825 Trans. Amer. Philos. Soc. 2 258 The ends upon the plank were butted by a straight piece of wood. 1888 Railroad Gaz. 18 May 315/1 Butting each other on end, they are there connected by double covers. 1943 Resistance Welding Wrought Aluminium Alloys (Aluminium Federation) (1965) 56 Preheating of the edges before butting is carried out by forming and maintaining an arc for a short period before butting the edges together. 1977 Pop. Mech. Aug. 132/3 Clamp a side and end member into the template with pieces butting each other. 2002 Fine Woodworking Mar. 77 (caption) Butt the jig against a benchdog to hold it in place. ΘΚΠ the world > space > extension in space > measurable spatial extent > longitudinal extent > extend longitudinally [verb (intransitive)] > cease being prolonged (of a line) stay1563 butt1673 1673 I. Newton Let. 9 Apr. in Corr. (1959) I. 270 Draw AK & BK butting on ye eye-glass at F. 1678 J. Bunyan Pilgrim's Progress 17 There are many ways Butt down upon this; and they are Crooked, and Wide. View more context for this quotation a1874 D. Barker Poems (1876) 154 He dwelt in that old school, 'tis true, Where the old road butts at the avenue. II. To mark out a boundary and related senses. 5. a. transitive. To fix or mark out the (lengthwise) boundaries of (a piece of land). Also with out. Chiefly in passive and usually paired with bound, esp. (in later use) as part of a standard conveyancing formula (cf. butts and bounds at butt n.7 Phrases). Now Caribbean. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > edge, border, or margin > boundary > form continuous boundary [verb (intransitive)] > determine boundary ride1455 to rid (the) marches1466 to redd the marchesa1500 butt1523 to beat the bounds1570 to run the line or lines1639 procession1724 the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > edge, border, or margin > boundary > bound or form boundary of [verb (transitive)] > fix boundary of meteeOE markeOE mereOE bound1393 determinea1398 terminea1398 rede1415 measurea1513 butt1523 space1548 limit1555 determinate1563 to mark out1611 contermine1624 to run out1671 verge1759 demarcate1816 outline1817 define1843 rope1862 delimit1879 delimitate1879 1523 J. Fitzherbert Bk. Surueyeng Prol. sig. B2 It is necessarye to be knowen, howe all these maners..shulde be extended, surueyed, butted, bounded, and valued. 1571 A. Golding tr. J. Calvin Psalmes of Dauid with Comm. (lxxiv. 2) They wer wont to butte out grounds with metepoles as with lynes. 1592 W. West Symbolæogr. (rev. ed.) i. §50. sig. C.jv Butting it at thends and binding it at the sides. 1635 Articles to be enquired of Dioces of London sig. A3v How much doth each parcell conteyne by measure of the 16. foote Poale? How is each parcell Butted, on eury parte? a1643 W. Monson Naval Tracts iv, in A. Churchill & J. Churchill Coll. Voy. (1704) III. 393/1 By the Eastern Discovery the length of Africk is butted out..to the Southward. 1657 J. Howell Londinopolis 342 A handsome new Street butted out, and fairly built by the Company of Goldsmiths. c1688 5th Coll. Papers Pres. Juncture 18 The Scripture supposes..Mens Lands to be already butted and bounded, when it forbids removing the Ancient Land-marks. 1704 2nd Pt. Mod. Conveyancer 44 Part of the said Little Lincoln's Inn-fields, so butted and bounded as aforesaid. 1725 D. Defoe Compl. Eng. Tradesman I. xxii. 382 We have gain'd nothing by war and encroachment; we are Butted and Bounded just where we were in Queen Elizabeth's time. 1816 U. Brown Jrnl. in Maryland Hist. Mag. (1915) 10 361 This [40,000 acres] is butted and bounded and described directly as the grant is from the Commonwealth of Virginia. 1908 Daily Gleaner (Kingston, Jamaica) 7 May 11/5 Land belonging to the United Fruit Co. or however the same may be butted, bounded, known, distinguished or described. 2015 Gleaner (Kingston, Jamaica) 24 Mar. c9/2 Said parcels of land are butted and bounded as appears by the said Plan. b. transitive. figurative. Paired with bound: to establish the limits of (something); to delimit, to demarcate. rare after 17th cent. ΘΚΠ society > authority > subjection > restraint or restraining > restriction or limitation > restrict or limit [verb (transitive)] thringc1250 restrain1384 bound1393 abounda1398 limita1398 pincha1450 pin?a1475 prescribec1485 define1513 coarcta1529 circumscribe1529 restrict1535 conclude1548 limitate1563 stint1567 chamber1568 contract1570 crampern1577 contain1578 finish1587 pound1589 confine1597 terminate1602 noosec1604 border1608 constrain1614 coarctate1624 butta1631 to fasten down1694 crimp1747 bourn1807 to box in1845 the world > relative properties > kind or sort > individual character or quality > quality of being special or restricted in application > quality of being restricted or limited > restrict or limit [verb (transitive)] thringc1250 circumscrivec1374 arta1382 bound1393 limita1398 restrainc1405 pincha1450 restringe1525 coarcta1529 circumscribe1529 restrict1535 conclude1548 narrow?1548 limitate1563 stint1567 chamber1568 contract1570 crampern1577 contain1578 finish1587 conscribe1588 pound1589 confine1597 border1608 circumcise1613 constrain1614 coarctate1624 butta1631 prescribe1688 pin1738 a1631 J. Donne LXXX Serm. (1640) xvii. 164 We begin with the Context; the situation, the prospect; how it stands, how it is butted, how it is bounded. 1659 C. Noble Inexpediency of Exped. 14 The Humble Petition..hath butted and bounded our Interests. 1680 C. Ness Compl. Church-hist. 447 Antichrist and his Auxiliaries..are so Butted and Bounded by the great God. 1694 S. Johnson Notes Pastoral Let. 22 They [sc. the King's powers] are butted and bounded by Law. 1989 Renaissance Q. 42 692 The business of butting and bounding the text, relating it to the entire cultural architecture, is a major function of the commentary made by any sermon. ΚΠ 1523 J. Fitzherbert Bk. Surueyeng xx. f. 38v He must stande in the myddes of the flatte whan he shall butte truely. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2018; most recently modified version published online December 2021). † buttv.3 Obsolete. rare. 1. intransitive. To aim at something. ΘΚΠ the world > space > direction > point or lie in a direction [verb (intransitive)] > aim cast1340 aimc1380 set14.. to lay, bend, take level1548 butt1553 vizyc1600 to level one's aim1667 to make aim1796 sight1842 1553 J. Brooks Serm. Notable Paules Crosse sig. E.iii Hath not our new christians, intendinge at length to shoote at the hyghest marke of al, shote first at other lower markes? yes certenly. for firste butted they at holye water, at holy bread, at asshes, at palme, at tenebringe, at knockynge, at knelinge, and at other like litle ceremonies. 1652 T. Urquhart Εκσκυβαλαυρον 221 The meer scope thereof, and end whereat it buts. 2. transitive. To aim or direct (a thing) on something. ΘΚΠ the world > space > direction > direct [verb (transitive)] > aim at > aim (a blow, weapon, etc.) reachOE seta1300 shapec1400 ettlec1450 charge1509 bend1530 level1530 aimc1565 butt1594 levy1618 to give level to1669 wise1721 intenda1734 train1795 sight1901 to zero in1944 1594 Marlowe & T. Nashe Dido iii. sig. D4v Whose amorous face like Pean sparkles fire, When as he buts his beames on Floras bed, Prometheus hath put on Cupids shape. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2018). buttv.4 1. Chiefly North American. a. transitive. To cut off the rough ends of (a log or board); spec. to cut off the butt end (butt end n.1 3) of (a log). ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > constructing or working with wood > build or construct with wood [verb (transitive)] > other processes makec1450 rough-hew1530 rip1532 stick1573 list1635 frame1663 fur1679 beard1711 cord1762 butt1771 drill1785 joint1815 rend1825 broach1846 ross1853 flitch1875 bore1887 stress-grade1955 1771 A. Burns Geodæsia Improved App. 335 (heading) The common Way of measuring Round Timber Trees, when butted and headed. 1774 M. Patten Diary (1903) 331 I cut of 9 Rail cuts and butted 8. 1850 S. Judd Richard Edney iii. 41 Richard took an axe, and very neatly proceeded to ‘butt’ a log; that is, to cut the end of it square off. 1894 Canad. Patent Office Rec. 31 July 521/1 A machine for butting logs. 1910 Telephony 14 May 625/2 All knots are trimmed smooth, poles topped and butted with a saw. 1935 Veneers & Plywood Feb. 8/1 Many producers cut logs so that the ends are uneven, necessitating butting the logs before they are placed on the lathe. 1971 F. C. Ford-Robertson Terminol. Forest Sci. 35/1 Butt, to cut off the end of a log..so as e.g. to eliminate defects. 1998 Timber Producer July 6/2 You will still need to butt a log due to excessive flair, rot, or shake. b. transitive. To beat (a person) when competing to be the first to cut the end off a log; to take the thicker butt end of a log when competing with (a person) in this way. Now rare. ΚΠ 1839 D. P. Thompson Green Mountain Boys II. 289 Her oldest son having at length been enabled to butt his mother, to use a chopper's phrase, that is, to get off his cut first, in a trial of skill on the same log. 1884 E. Ingersoll Country Cousins i. 14 I had an uncle..who was a famous chopper... When he was past seventy, he had a man working for him..and my uncle offered to ‘butt’ him. 1949 Amer. Speech 24 288 If I undertake to butt you, this means that we are to start at the same moment to chop thru the log, but I will cut at the place nearer the butt... Thus I am giving you odds. 2. transitive. Angling. To turn the butt end of the fishing rod towards (a hooked fish) so as to get a more rigid hold upon the line; = to give (a fish) the butt at butt n.6 Phrases 1. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > fishing > type or method of fishing > [verb (transitive)] > turn bottom of rod to butt1840 1840 New Sporting Mag. Mar. 191 If the line be at an obtuse angle with the imaginary straight rod, the weight and required force will be increased: and if the angle be acute, as in ‘butting’ a fish, it will be diminished. 1867 F. Francis Bk. Angling ix. 293 If it becomes necessary to but a fish. 1936 Field & Stream Sept. 73/1 The connection may open under heavy strain, as when you have to butt a fish. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2018; most recently modified version published online December 2021). † buttadv. Nautical. Obsolete. Squarely, head-on. ΚΠ 1832 M. Scott Tom Cringle's Log in Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. Oct. 474/1 They..ran butt at each other like ram-goats. 1889 Macmillan's Mag. Oct. 404/1 He..in a paroxysm of rage stooped his head and went butt in for the first negro at hand. 1900 F. T. Bullen With Christ at Sea xi. 213 Fifteen seconds more and she..would have run butt into the reef at the rate of six or seven knots an hour. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2018). < n.1c1300n.21304n.3c1330n.41418n.5c1419n.6c1425n.7c1425n.81470n.91532n.101533n.111568n.121598n.131600n.141663v.1c1175v.21315v.31553v.41771adv.1832 |
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