femble
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English
[edit]Noun
[edit]femble (countable and uncountable, plural fembles)
- Alternative form of fimble (“(male, early-ripening) hemp”) (sometimes said, variously, to be specifically either coarse-fibred hemp or hemp prepared for use).
- 1804, Repertory of arts, manufactures and agriculture, The Repertory of arts and manufactures [afterw.] arts, manufactures and agriculture, page 77:
- ... with nettles and other rubbish, sowed hemp on six acres three roods; he got two last and one half of seed , without taking the advantage of picking the femble hemp; after threshing he stacked it, and in the spring watered and dressed it.
- 1859, Surtees Society, York Minster, James Raine, Publications of the Surtees Society, page 162:
- two linen table clothes, one femble tablecloth, two linen towels, […]
- 1934, The Treatment of Poverty in Cambridgeshire 1597-1834, CUP Archive, page 35:
- The next year 65 stone of "femble" hemp1 were bought" […]
- 1 There were three buyers of cloth and one of tow in 1622.
- 2 "Femble" hemp was the term applied to the fibre as prepared for use. (Vide Oxf. Dict.)
- The next year 65 stone of "femble" hemp1 were bought" […]
- 1954, The Lincolnshire Historian:
- Sometimes also 'femble' sheets were listed. Often in the chests in which the bed linen was kept were towels, napkins, table-cloths and carpets (here a table and not a floor covering). Robert More (d. 1559) added variety by having a salting trough in his parlour, presumably kept under the bed, […]
- 2003, Joan Thirsk, Rural Economy of England, Bloomsbury Publishing (→ISBN), page 155:
- John Parish of Beltoft, who died in 1590, left linen cloth, femble, and harden cloth worth £3 5s. 4d., femble yarn and harden yarn worth ten shillings, heckled line and femble worth two shillings and sixpence, braked hemp worth six shillings and ...
Alternative forms
[edit]Further reading
[edit]- Joseph Wright, editor (1900), “FEMBLE”, in The English Dialect Dictionary: […], volume II (D–G), London: Henry Frowde, […], publisher to the English Dialect Society, […]; New York, N.Y.: G[eorge] P[almer] Putnam’s Sons, →OCLC.
- Eleanor M. Reader (1972) Broomfleet and Faxfleet: two townships through two thousand years: “[…] and 'a woule wheel'; there are lengths in store of 'femble' (a coarse-fibred hemp), 'harden' and 'linen striking'.”