nief
English
WOTD – 30 July 2010
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /niːf/
Audio (Southern England) (file)
- Rhymes: -iːf
Etymology 1
From Old French [Term?], from Latin nativus (“natural”). Doublet of naif and native.
Noun
nief (plural niefs)
Alternative forms
Translations
Etymology 2
From Middle English neve (“the clenched hand, fist”), from Old Norse nefi, hnefi (also knefi) ("hand, fist, handful"), from Proto-Germanic *hnefô, from Proto-Indo-European *knep- (“to scrape, scratch, grind”), from Proto-Indo-European *ken- (“to scratch, scrape”). Cognate with Scots neif (“fist”), Norwegian neve, Danish næve, Swedish näve, Middle High German nevemez (“handful”).
Noun
- (chiefly Scotland, Ireland, Northern England) A fist. [from 14th c.]
- 1934, Lewis Grassic Gibbon, Grey Granite, Polygon, published 2006, A Scots Quair, page 597:
- Ake thought if ever he was walking alone on a dark-like night and Jimmy came on him, he with his bare nieves and Jimmy with a knife, he'd stand as much chance of getting home safe as a celluloid cat that had strayed into hell […] .
- 1989, Anthony Burgess, The Devil's Mode:
- Nestorius exploded at that and hit out. He roared and dismissed the class, hitting out with his old mottled gnarled niefs.
- 2004, Jeff Silverman, The Greatest Boxing Stories Ever Told, page 160:
- "But t' Maister can stop and hit rarely. Happen he'll mak' him joomp when he gets his nief upon him."
Translations
fist — see fist
Middle English
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