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nutting

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
See also: Nutting

English

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Pronunciation

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Verb

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nutting

  1. present participle and gerund of nut

Noun

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nutting (countable and uncountable, plural nuttings)

  1. (rare) An outing to gather nuts.
    • 1880, Henry Mills Alden, “Mrs. Flint's Married Experience”, in Harper's New Monthly Magazine[1], December edition, volume 62, New York: Harper & Brothers, published 1881, page 89:
      The younger people had their berrying frolics, sleigh-rides, kitchen dances, nuttings, and the like, and their elders their huskings, apple bees, and sewing societies, but against all these the deacon set his hard face.
  2. (rare) Gaining favor or subjugating oneself.
    • 1789, George Parker, chapter 16, in Life's painter of variegated characters in public and private life[2], 2nd edition, published 1800, page 179:
      Now another drop genius is planted upon you, to turn you up, as they call it: He tells you that he is going to receive fifty pounds of an uncle, and if you will go with him he will let you have ten or twenty pounds, and meet the squire at such a house in such a street and play with him, himself and you shall go halves, if you will persuade the squire to come to this place appointed; this is called nutting of you.
  3. (Australia, New Zealand, slang) Thinking very hard or puzzling over something.
    • 1951, Dal Stivens, Jimmy Brockett: portrait of a notable Australian[3], Australasian Book Society, published 1966, page 140:
      After the party had wound up, I did a bit of hard nutting over my plans for trotting.
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