tuel
Appearance
See also: Tuel
English
[edit]Noun
[edit]tuel (plural tuels)
- Alternative spelling of tewel
- 1610, Gervase Markham, Markham’s Masterpiece, London, Lib. 1, Cap. 100:
- When you do administer a Glister, you shall set the Horses hinder parts somewhat higher then the foreparts, and then you shall put the Glister-pipe in at his Tuel into his Fundament up to the head, and having the confection within the Bladder, wring it with a very good strength into his body. A Glister would be administred to a Horse when he is rather empty than full paunched, whether it be in the fore-noon or after-noon. Now for the retaining or holding of the Glister in the Horses body, three quarters of an hour is sufficient, of what quality soever it be. Now you are to note by the way, that as soon as the Glister is administred unto the Horses body, you must draw out the Pipe with all the gentleness that may be, and suddenly clap his tayl to his Tuel, and so hold it with your hand, without any moving or stirring of the Horse, till the Medicine hath his full time of working.
- 1614, Gervase Markham, Cheap and good husbandry, London, Lib. 1, Of Goats, Cap. 9:
- Goats when they are sucking on their dams or when they are new Kidded, will commonly have a great lax or squirt so that the ordure which cometh from them, if it be not well cleansed and taken from them, it will with their own naturalheat so bake and dry, that it will stop the Tuels, so that they cannot dung, which if it be not holpen, the Kid will dye. The cure is to cleanse the place, and open the Tuel, and then put into it an Inch or thereabout of small Candles end dipt in hony, and then anoint all the Tuel with Capons grease.
- 1863, Edward William Lane, “tuel”, in Arabic-English Lexicon[1] (in Arabic and English), London: Williams & Norgate, page 1177b:
- مَرَاثٌ and ↓مَرْوَثٌ (M., Ḳ) The part whence the رَوْث (or dung) issues; (M;) the خَوْرَان [i.e. rectum, or the tuel,] of a horse. (Ḳ.)
Anagrams
[edit]Middle French
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Old French tuel.
Noun
[edit]tuel m (plural tuiaulx)
Descendants
[edit]- French: tuyau
References
[edit]- tuyau on Dictionnaire du Moyen Français (1330–1500) (in French)
Old French
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Vulgar Latin *tūtellum m, of Frankish origin.
Noun
[edit]tuel oblique singular, m (oblique plural tueaus, nominative singular tueaus, nominative plural tuel)
Descendants
[edit]References
[edit]- Godefroy, Frédéric, Dictionnaire de l’ancienne langue française et de tous ses dialectes du IXe au XVe siècle (1881) (tuiel, supplement)
Categories:
- English lemmas
- English nouns
- English countable nouns
- English terms with quotations
- en:Animal body parts
- Middle French terms inherited from Old French
- Middle French terms derived from Old French
- Middle French lemmas
- Middle French nouns
- Middle French masculine nouns
- Middle French countable nouns
- Middle French terms with quotations
- Old French terms inherited from Vulgar Latin
- Old French terms derived from Vulgar Latin
- Old French terms derived from Frankish
- Old French lemmas
- Old French nouns
- Old French masculine nouns