lardener
Middle English edit
Alternative forms edit
Etymology edit
Borrowed from Anglo-Norman lardiner, apparently an alteration of larder (“larder”) after gardiner (“gardener”).
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
lardener (rare)
- lardiner (overseer of a larder)
- (rare) larder (meat storehouse)
- c. 1375, “Book V”, in Iohne Barbour, De geſtis bellis et uirtutibus domini Roberti de Brwyß […] (The Brus, Advocates MS. 19.2.2)[1], Ouchtirmunſye: Iohannes Ramſay, published 1489, folio 17, verso, lines 408-410; republished at Edinburgh: National Library of Scotland, c. 2010:
- Þ[ar]for þe men off þat countꝛe / ffor ſwa fele þar mellit wer / Callit it þe Dowglas laꝛdner
- So people from that region, / because so many [corpses] were jumbled there, / called it "the Douglas larder".
Descendants edit
References edit
- “lardiner, n.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007.