hobnail

English

Etymology

From hob +‎ nail. The oldest attestation is in William Shakespeare, but he likely did not coin the term.[1]

Noun

hobnail (plural hobnails)

  1. A short nail with a thick head, typically used in boot soles.
  2. (obsolete) A yokel; a rustic.

Coordinate terms

Derived terms

Translations

Verb

hobnail (third-person singular simple present hobnails, present participle hobnailing, simple past and past participle hobnailed)

  1. To fit with hobnails.
    a machine for the hobnailing of shoes
  2. (transitive, archaic) To tread down roughly, as with hobnailed shoes.
    • 1875, Tennyson, Queen Mary:
      Your rights and charters hobnailed into slush.

References

  1. ^ Culpeper, Jonathan, Gillings, Mathew (31 August 2022) “Five myths about Shakespeare’s contribution to the English language”, in Arts + Culture, The Conversation, retrieved 16 October 2022

Further reading