bantling
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Uncertain. Perhaps from band(s) (“swaddling clothes”) + -ling, or a modification of German Bänkling (“bastard-child”), equivalent to bench + -ling.
Noun
[edit]bantling (plural bantlings)
- (archaic, UK dialectal) An infant or young child.
- 1809, Washington Irving (as Dietrich Knickerbocker), A History of New-York from the Beginning of the World to the End of the Dutch Dynasty[1]:
- And I even question whether any tender virgin, who was accidentally and unaccountably enriched with a bantling, would save her character at parlour fire-sides and evening tea-parties, by ascribing the phenomenon to a swan, a shower of gold, or a river god.
- 1841, James Fenimore Cooper, The Deerslayer[2]:
- "You!--half-grown, venison-hunting bantling!..."
- 1999, The Wedding Gamble[3], page 104:
- "As if he'd let a cow-handed bantling like you handle them," Cecily muttered.
"Children!" Meredyth protested, her face flushing. "What must Lord Englemere think, to hear you brangle so?"
- (archaic) A bastard-child.
- (archaic, derogatory) A brat.