spean

See also: Spean

English

Alternative forms

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /spiːn/
  • Rhymes: -iːn

Etymology 1

From Middle English *spene, *spane, from Old English spane, spanu (teat), from Proto-West Germanic *spanu, *spenu, from Proto-Germanic *spenô (nipple), from Proto-Indo-European *pstḗn (breast; teat). Cognate with West Frisian spien (nipple), Dutch speen (nipple), Danish spene (teat), Swedish spene (teat, nipple, dug), Icelandic speni (teat).

Alternatively a borrowing from Dutch speen (nipple, teat), from the same Proto-Germanic origin as above.

Noun

spean (plural speans)

  1. (archaic or dialectal) A teat or nipple of a cow.
    • [1780?], Nicholas Coxe, The Huntſman. Containing the Best Methods of Sport, for Courſing with Greyhounds, and Hunting All Kinds of Chases in England, [] , London: J. Dixwell, page 50:
      The Genital part is all nervy; the Tail ſmall; and the Hind hath Udders betwixt her Thighs, with four Speans or Tets, like a Cow.

Etymology 2

From Middle English spanen (to wean), probably a borrowing from Middle Dutch spanen, spenen or Middle Low German spānen, spēnen, spōnen (to wean), ultimately from Proto-Germanic *spanjaną, *spanōną, from Proto-Germanic *spenô (nipple), from Proto-Indo-European *pstḗn (breast; teat). Cognate with Dutch spenen (to wean), German spänen (to wean), Old French espanir (to wean) (< Germanic).

Verb

spean (third-person singular simple present speans, present participle speaning, simple past and past participle speaned)

  1. (archaic) to wean

Anagrams

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.