thornback
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Middle English thornbak; equivalent to thorn + back.
Noun
[edit]thornback (plural thornbacks)
- Any animal with a thorny back, especially marine animals, such as:
- The thornback guitarfish (Platyrhinoidis triseriata), a species of ray in the north-eastern Pacific Ocean.
- The thornback ray or thornback skate (Raja clavata), a species of ray in the Atlantic Ocean.
- The thornback skate (Dentiraja lemprieri), a fish endemic to Australia.
- (archaic) A woman over a certain age (variously 26 or 30) who has never married, older than a spinster.
- 1710, Isaac Bickerstaff (pseudonym), A Good husband for five shillings, or Esquire Bickerstaff's Lottery, quoted in 2016, Amy M. Froide, Silent Partners: Women As Public Investors During Britain's Financial Revolution, 1690-1750, Oxford University Press (→ISBN), page 46:
- [A] society of honest gentlemen [is holding a lottery] for the benefit of all single ladies, widows, maids, or thornbacks […]
- 1920, Anna Mary Galbraith, The Family and the New Democracy: A Study in Social Hygiene, page 184:
- Spinsters. — In a society where marriages were formed very early, girls often wedding at sixteen or under, […] At the age of thirty a spinster was called a "thornback ,” but bachelors and thornbacks were not the only people who […]
- 2009, Suzy Witten, The Afflicted Girls, →ISBN, page 131:
- "And I'll be a thornback spinster! Oh, I'd rather die of the pox than that!" She bolted away to spill her bitter tears out of doors in a place where no one could observe her. Her bold adventure had suddenly turned against her.
- 1710, Isaac Bickerstaff (pseudonym), A Good husband for five shillings, or Esquire Bickerstaff's Lottery, quoted in 2016, Amy M. Froide, Silent Partners: Women As Public Investors During Britain's Financial Revolution, 1690-1750, Oxford University Press (→ISBN), page 46:
References
[edit]- thornback on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- Platyrhinoidis triseriata on Wikispecies.Wikispecies
- Raja clavata on Wikispecies.Wikispecies
- Rajidae on Wikispecies.Wikispecies