chavel-bone
Appearance
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Middle English chavylbone, chavyl bon (also as Middle English chawylbon, chawlbone, jawe bone > Early Modern English chawe bone, chaw-bone, jaw-bone > English jawbone), equivalent to chavel + bone. Doublet of jawbone.
Noun
[edit]chavel-bone (plural chavel-bones)
- (anatomy, archaic or obsolete) Jawbone.
- 1991, Colette Rausch, Leigh A. Payne, Medieval Drama, page 39:
- Cain kills Abel with a 'chavel-bone' (jaw bone), as according to apocryphal legend, and then hides his body under a pile of grass or hay.
- 1992, Joan DeVee Dixon, George Rochberg: A Bio-bibliographic Guide to His Life and Works, page 325:
- It is the cry of Electra […] of Antigone for the father, for the brother struck down by the chavel-bone of Cain, death's storm-trooper, the man of ten-thousand names and ten-thousand faces […]
- 2005, John Passfield, Water Lane: The Pilgrimage of Christopher Marlowe, page 120:
- "With this chavel-bone I shall slay thee!"
Categories:
- English terms inherited from Middle English
- English terms derived from Middle English
- English compound terms
- English doublets
- English lemmas
- English nouns
- English countable nouns
- English multiword terms
- en:Anatomy
- English terms with archaic senses
- English terms with obsolete senses
- English terms with quotations