See also: Plew

English edit

Etymology 1 edit

From Canadian French, from French poilu (hairy). Doublet of poilu.

Noun edit

plew (plural plews)

  1. (Canada, US) beaver pelt
    • 1967, John Arkas Hawgood, America's Western Frontiers: The Exploration and Settlement, page 96:
      The cured "plew" of the adult beaver weighed about a pound and a half and at best would fetch from four to six dollars a pound at the mountain rendezvous
    • 2001, Armstrong Sperry, Wagons Westward: The Old Trail to Santa Fe, page 7:
      "The days when a good plew fetched six dollars, beaver or kitten, is over," he grumbled. "The beaver trade's rubbed out, Lank.
    • 2005, Ralph Moody, Stanley Galli, Kit Carson And The Wild Frontier, page 46:
      The price for a pint was a beaver plew or an Indian buffalo robe. Coffee and gunpowder were a plew or a robe a pound, blankets fifteen plews apiece,

Etymology 2 edit

Noun edit

plew (plural plews)

  1. (obsolete, dialect) Alternative form of plough

Anagrams edit

Polish edit

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): /plɛf/
  • (file)
  • Rhymes: -ɛf
  • Syllabification: plew

Noun edit

plew f

  1. genitive plural of plewa