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单词 villein
释义

Definition of villein in English:

villein

noun ˈvɪlənˈvɪleɪn
  • (in medieval England) a feudal tenant entirely subject to a lord or manor to whom he paid dues and services in return for land.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • He and his children were in 1353 released by Alan Reyner of nearby Roughton from any claim of being Alan's villeins.
    • The villein, halfslave as he was in some respects, held lands of his own which he tilled on those days of the year when his lord had no claim upon him or his oxen.
    • The court customary was the court for unfree tenants or villeins and was presided over by the lord's steward or bailiff.
    • These ideas raised the imagination of the villeins beyond the harshness of their daily lives, fusing their anger with a utopian vision, creating a revolutionary consciousness, one that was about to burst into life.
    • All villeins and cottars in the Seven Kingdoms gather to celebrate the successful harvests of the summer seasons and to prepare for the coming winter.
    • Beginning in November the status of foreign burgess was granted to various lords who wished to acquire exemption from toll, for themselves and their villeins, on products grown on their estates and on goods bought for personal use.
    • As villeins or servants of a lord they represented the bottom tier of society.
    • The grounds around the manor were permitted for the hunting recreation of the lord and lady alone; no such serf, villein, or peasant could so much as touch a tattered bow and expect to shoot anything with it.
    • They lorded it over us: we serfs and villeins got precisely zilch.
    • Neither a serf nor a villein (a class of serf attached as a bondsman to a specific lord and/or manor) rightfully owned the land upon which he worked.
    • Typically, villeins were required to work on their lord's lands at harvest time and to carry his produce to the market.
    • If the courts decided that a slave was merely a modern-day villein, or serf, then his master might be legally entitled to transport him to Jamaica.
    • It was another victim of the plague: by 1358 permission was given to turn its fields into a park because every villein was dead and the village no longer had any taxpayers.
    • The absolute powerless nature of their position may be summarized: ‘There was no custom, no tradition to which they could refer, as could the villeins or tenants, in the care of an autocratic master.’
    • In 1353 Lynn merchant and jurat Laurence de Reppes negotiated a release from all claim that a Roughton man had on him or his issue as villeins.
    • Moving her body through the crowd of reeking villeins and fat noblemen, she looked up at Will, she being half a foot shorter than he.
    • At the lowest end of the social scale this was self-evidently true of slaves, but it was also true of many other categories of tenant - the English villein, the Scottish neif, the Welsh taeog, and the Irish betagh.
    Synonyms
    countryman, countrywoman, peasant, daughter of the soil, son of the soil, country bumpkin, bumpkin, yokel, country cousin

Origin

Middle English: variant of villain.

Rhymes

Enniskillen, penicillin
 
 

Definition of villein in US English:

villein

noun
  • (in medieval England) a feudal tenant entirely subject to a lord or manor to whom he paid dues and services in return for land.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • These ideas raised the imagination of the villeins beyond the harshness of their daily lives, fusing their anger with a utopian vision, creating a revolutionary consciousness, one that was about to burst into life.
    • As villeins or servants of a lord they represented the bottom tier of society.
    • Typically, villeins were required to work on their lord's lands at harvest time and to carry his produce to the market.
    • The absolute powerless nature of their position may be summarized: ‘There was no custom, no tradition to which they could refer, as could the villeins or tenants, in the care of an autocratic master.’
    • Beginning in November the status of foreign burgess was granted to various lords who wished to acquire exemption from toll, for themselves and their villeins, on products grown on their estates and on goods bought for personal use.
    • Moving her body through the crowd of reeking villeins and fat noblemen, she looked up at Will, she being half a foot shorter than he.
    • At the lowest end of the social scale this was self-evidently true of slaves, but it was also true of many other categories of tenant - the English villein, the Scottish neif, the Welsh taeog, and the Irish betagh.
    • The villein, halfslave as he was in some respects, held lands of his own which he tilled on those days of the year when his lord had no claim upon him or his oxen.
    • He and his children were in 1353 released by Alan Reyner of nearby Roughton from any claim of being Alan's villeins.
    • All villeins and cottars in the Seven Kingdoms gather to celebrate the successful harvests of the summer seasons and to prepare for the coming winter.
    • It was another victim of the plague: by 1358 permission was given to turn its fields into a park because every villein was dead and the village no longer had any taxpayers.
    • The grounds around the manor were permitted for the hunting recreation of the lord and lady alone; no such serf, villein, or peasant could so much as touch a tattered bow and expect to shoot anything with it.
    • Neither a serf nor a villein (a class of serf attached as a bondsman to a specific lord and/or manor) rightfully owned the land upon which he worked.
    • They lorded it over us: we serfs and villeins got precisely zilch.
    • The court customary was the court for unfree tenants or villeins and was presided over by the lord's steward or bailiff.
    • If the courts decided that a slave was merely a modern-day villein, or serf, then his master might be legally entitled to transport him to Jamaica.
    • In 1353 Lynn merchant and jurat Laurence de Reppes negotiated a release from all claim that a Roughton man had on him or his issue as villeins.
    Synonyms
    countryman, countrywoman, peasant, daughter of the soil, son of the soil, country bumpkin, bumpkin, yokel, country cousin

Origin

Middle English: variant of villain.

 
 
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更新时间:2025/1/11 1:12:31