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)
- (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”); see spane.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /spiːn/
Verb
spean (third-person singular simple present speans, present participle speaning, simple past and past participle speaned)
- Archaic form of spane.
- 1899, Colville, Vernacular, page 15,
- Beginning life as a grice, the pig when speaned became a shot.
- 1899, Colville, Vernacular, page 15,