spavin
التعريفات والمعاني
== English ==
=== Pronunciation ===
(Received Pronunciation, General American) IPA(key): /ˈspævɪn/
Rhymes: -ævɪn
Hyphenation: spa‧vin
=== Etymology 1 ===
The noun is derived from Middle English spavein, spaveine (“swelling on horse’s leg causing lameness; disease causing lameness in horses”), from Old French espavain, a variant of esparvain, esprevain, esprevin (modern French éparvin, épervin). The further etymology is unknown; one suggestion is that it is from Frankish *sparwan (“sparrow”), though this is seen as quite tenuous.
The verb is derived from the noun.
==== Noun ====
spavin (countable and uncountable, plural spavins)
(farriery, veterinary medicine)
(countable) A bony swelling which develops in a horse's leg where the shank and splint bone meet, caused by inflammation of the cartilage connecting those bones; also, a similar swelling caused by inflammation of the hock bones.
Hypernym: osselet
(uncountable) A disease of horses caused by this bony swelling (etymology 1 sense 1.1).
(by extension, uncountable) A similar disease causing a person's leg to be lame.
===== Derived terms =====
blood spavin
bog spavin
bone spavin
spavie (Scotland)
spavined
===== Related terms =====
spavindy (archaic)
===== Translations =====
==== Verb ====
spavin (third-person singular simple present spavins, present participle spavining, simple past and past participle spavined) (transitive, rare)
(farriery, veterinary medicine) To cause (a horse or its leg) to have spavin (noun etymology 1, noun sense 1.2).
(figurative) To impair or injure (someone or something).
===== Translations =====
=== Etymology 2 ===
Origin unknown.
==== Noun ====
spavin (plural spavins)
(mining) The stratum of earth underneath a coal deposit.
===== Translations =====
=== References ===
=== Further reading ===
spavin (disambiguation) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
“spavin, n.”, in Collins English Dictionary, 2011–present.
=== Anagrams ===
pavins