Definify.com
Webster 1913 Edition
Chine
Chine
,Chine
,Chine
,Webster 1828 Edition
Chine
CHINE
, n.CHINE
,Definition 2024
Chine
chine
chine
English
Noun
chine (plural chines)
- The top of a ridge.
- The spine of an animal.
- Dryden
- And chine with rising bristles roughly spread.
- 1883: Robert Louis Stevenson, Treasure Island
- […] the captain aimed at the fugitive one last tremendous cut, which would certainly have split him to the chine had it not been intercepted by our big signboard […]
- Dryden
- A piece of the backbone of an animal, with the adjoining parts, cut for cooking.
- (nautical) A sharp angle in the cross section of a hull.
- The edge or rim of a cask, etc., formed by the projecting ends of the staves; the chamfered end of a stave.
Translations
Verb
chine (third-person singular simple present chines, present participle chining, simple past and past participle chined)
- (transitive) To cut through the backbone of; to cut into chine pieces.
- To chamfer the ends of a stave and form the chine.
Etymology 2
Middle English chin (“crack, fissure, chasm”), from Old English cine, cinu. The Old English term is cognate to Old Saxon kena, and is related to the Old English verb cīnan ("to grow in size, crack, split, gape"), from Proto-Germanic *kīnaną ("to sprout, germinate, split open"), from Proto-Indo-European *geie ("to split open, to sprout").
Noun
chine (plural chines)
- (Southern England) A steep-sided ravine leading from the top of a cliff down to the sea.
- J. Ingelow
- The cottage in a chine.
- 1988, Alan Hollinghurst, The Swimming Pool Library, Penguin Books (1988), page 169
- In the odorous stillness of the day I thought of the tracks that threaded Egdon Heath, and of benign, elderly Sandbourne, with its chines and sheltered beach-huts.
- J. Ingelow
Etymology 3
From Middle English chīnen (“to crack, fissure, split”), from Old English ċīnan (“to break into pieces, burst, crack”), from Proto-Germanic *kīnaną (“to split; crack; germinate; sprout”). See also cheep (“to break forth from a shell or calix; to hatch from an egg; to sprout or put out shoots”) and tochine.
Verb
chine (third-person singular simple present chines, present participle chining, simple past chined or chone or chane, past participle chined)
- (obsolete) To crack, split, fissure, break. [9th-16th c.]
- The wayward son did chine his father's heart.
- A drought had caused the earth to chine and cranny.
- Fisher (1503)
- After the erth be brent, chyned and chypped by the hete of the sonne.