| 释义 | cob I. \ˈkäb\ transitive verb
 (cobbed ; cobbed ; cobbing ; cobs)
 Etymology: Middle English cobben to fight, give blows; akin to Icelandic kubba to chop, Norwegian kubbe log, Middle English cobbe big man, leader — more at cob III
 1.  : strike, thump: as
 a. archaic  : to beat on the buttocks (as with a flat stick)
 b. dialect England  : thresh
 < cob grain >
 2. dialect England  : to toss effortlessly or carelessly
 3.  : to break (ore) into small pieces preliminary to sorting; especially  : to break off waste or low-grade material from (lumps of ore) with hand hammers
 4.  : surpass, excel, beat, outdo
 II. noun
 or cobb \“\
 (-s)
 : a blow or a beating especially upon the buttocks
 III. noun
 (-s)
 Etymology: Middle English cobbe; akin to Old Norse kobbi seal (the animal), Old English cot den, cottage — more at cot
 1. now dialect England  : an eminent person : leader, topman
 2.  : a male swan — compare pen V
 3. dialect England  : a lump or piece (as of coal or stone) or a rounded heap or mass: as
 a.  : cobnut
 b.  : a nut used in the game of cobnut or conker
 c. cobs plural  : testes
 d.  : a small stack of grain or hay
 e.  : a small loaf of bread
 4. obsolete  : the head of a herring
 5.
 a.  : a piece of eight or a Spanish-American dollar — used in Ireland and the British colonies during the period when Spanish-American gold and silver coins were irregularly shaped and crudely struck
 b.  : any crude, irregularly shaped coin of early Spanish-American issue
 < a cob dollar >
 < cob money >
 < cob gold >
 6.
 a.  : corncob 1
 b. chiefly Africa  : an ear of Indian corn
 7.  : a short-legged stocky horse; especially  : one having an artificially high stylish action
 8. Britain  : the seed head of clover
 9.  : a string of crystals of sugar of milk usually cylindrical in shape — compare lactose
 IV. noun
 (-s)
 Etymology: probably from cob (III) (lump)
 Britain  : a mixture that consists of unburned clay usually with straw as a binder and is used for constructing walls of small buildings
 < windows set in cob walls three foot thick — Clemence Dane >
 V. noun
 or cobb \“\
 (-s)
 Etymology: probably from Dutch kobbe, kob sea gull, from Middle Dutch cobbe crested bird or animal; akin to Frisian kobbe sea gull and probably to Icelandic kobbi seal — more at cob III
 : sea gull; especially  : great black-backed gull
 VI. noun
 or cobb \“\
 (-s)
 Etymology: origin unknown
 dialect England  : a wicker basket
 VII. noun
 (-s)
 Etymology: modification of New Latin Kobus
 : a waterbuck of the genus Kobus
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