pecker mill
English
Noun
pecker mill (plural pecker mills)
- (US dialectal, historical) A kind of rice mill.
- 1802, J. Drayton, A view of South Carolina, as respects her natural and civil concerns, section 121:
- Rice mills, called pecker, cog, and water mills... The first... so called, from the pestle's striking... in the manner of a wood pecker.
- 1851, James Dunwoody Brownson De Bow, Robert Gibbes Barnwell, Edwin Bell, De Bow's New Orleans Monthly Review, volume 11, page 307:
- The rice was then cut with the sickle and carried in on the head, then threshed with the flail, then milled and dressed, in some cases wholly by human labor, and in others by a rude machine, called a pecker mill.
- 2001, Judith Ann Carney, Black Rice: The African Origins of Rice Cultivation in the ..., page 128:
- The first mechanical mills were harnessed to animals: the so-called pecker mill (named for the resemblance of the pestle when in action to the bill of a woodpecker) and the cog mill, a large horizontal cogwheel turned by oxen or horses.
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