English

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Etymology

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From wain +‎ -ful.

Noun

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wainful (plural wainfuls or wainsful)

  1. A quantity that fills a wain; wagonful.
    • 1879, Routledge's Every Girl's Annual, page 302:
      Farmer John and his comfortable wainful, has the best of my Lord Grateswel, in his uncomfortably aristocratic coach,—for “First come first served,” is the Grasmere Sports' motto.
    • 1896, Twentieth Century - Volume 16, page 9:
      It is a pleasant picture to dwell on ; the farm, a small state. in itself, with the mowers and gleaners singing about the last wainful of corn ;
    • 1972, Alf Evers, The Catskills: From Wilderness to Woodstock, page 542:
      They were guided "by a man in a long smock with girdle and scarf of green," and drew "a wainful of children dressed as woodland gods, tossing daisies and field flowers as they went along."
    • 2008, Catriona McCloud, Straight Up:
      It's not just the English wine, he's doing hay-wain rides around les vignes where exactly the wainful of hay is supposed to have come from on a farm covered in grapevines I can't tell you– pick-and-press days, bottle-your-own sessions, with labels for the kiddies to colour in, Christmas wine clubs, cheese and wine-tasting nights with a band and dancing.