释义 |
peel·er I. \ˈpēlə(r)\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English peler pillager, plunderer, from pelen to rob, peel + -er — more at peel 1. : one that peels : parer, stripper: as a. : one whose work it is to peel a specified thing < potato peeler in a restaurant > b. : a worker who peels bark from felled trees or logs — called also rosser, spudder c. : an instrument or machine that performs an operation of peeling, paring, or stripping < the swivel-blade peeler … for fruit and vegetable paring — Tools for Food Preparation & Dishwashing > < electric paint peeler > d. : stripteaser 2. : a crab that has begun to shed its shell 3. : a log of softwood (as Douglas fir) having a diameter of 24 or more inches and suitable for cutting into veneer that is peeled cylindrically from the log by a lathe 4. a. : long-staple cotton originally from the Delta region of northwestern Mississippi b. : yarn spun from such cotton 5. : an energetic industrious person : hustler < a real peeler for work — Esther Forbes > 6. : a cowhand who specializes in breaking horses II. noun (-s) Etymology: origin unknown dialect England : an iron bar used to make holes in the ground especially for hop poles III. noun (-s) Etymology: Sir Robert Peel died 1850 English statesman who instituted the Irish constabulary + English -er Britain : police officer; specifically : a policeman of the lowest rank < an officious peeler arrested him as a vagabond — W.B.Yeats > |