barleycorn
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]barleycorn (plural barleycorns)
- (agriculture) A grain of barley.
- 1912, V.S. Vernon Jones, Aesop's Fables[1]:
- The Town Mouse came, and they sat down to a dinner of barleycorns and roots, the latter of which had a distinctly earthy flavour.
- (obsolete) The length of such a grain; a unit of length of approximately one third (or sometimes one quarter) of an inch or eight millimetres, still used as a basis for shoe sizes.
- 1879, Geo. Alfred Townsend, Bohemian Days[2]:
- This trip to Italy has actually enlarged the diameter of my head thirteen barleycorns!
- 1907, Various, The Wit and Humor of America, Volume IV. (of X.)[3]:
- Then shewed the devil the booke unto the friar, and the friar saw it was an uncut unique of incalculable value; the height of it was half a cubit and the breadth of it the fourth part of a cubit and the thickness of it five barleycorns lacking the space of three horsehairs.
- (architecture, woodworking) A small groove between two moldings.
Derived terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]grain of barley
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unit of ⅓ inch (8 mm)
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small groove between two mouldings