different between corbel vs corbie

corbel

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Old French corbel, from Late Latin corbellus, corvellus, diminutive of Latin corvus (raven).

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /?k??b?l/

Noun

corbel (plural corbels)

  1. (architecture) A structural member jutting out of a wall to carry a superincumbent weight.

Translations

Related terms

  • corbelling
  • corbie step
  • corbel arch
  • ledger

Verb

corbel (third-person singular simple present corbels, present participle corbelling or corbeling, simple past and past participle corbelled or corbeled)

  1. (transitive) To furnish with a corbel or corbels; to support by a corbel; to make in the form of a corbel.

Derived terms

  • corbel out

Anagrams

  • Cobler, cobler

Old French

Etymology

Either a diminutive of corp (raven), corf, or from a Late Latin corbellus, corvellus, from Latin corvus (Vulgar Latin variant *corbus).

Noun

corbel m (oblique plural corbeaus or corbeax or corbiaus or corbiax or corbels, nominative singular corbeaus or corbeax or corbiaus or corbiax or corbels, nominative plural corbel)

  1. crow (bird)

Descendants

  • English: corbel
  • Middle French: corbeau
    • French: corbeau

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corbie

English

Alternative forms

  • corby

Etymology

From Middle French corbeau, from Old French corb (from Latin corvus (raven)) or Old French corbel (crow) (from Late Latin corbellus, from Latin corvus). See also Norman corbin.

Noun

corbie (plural corbies)

  1. A raven or crow (typically Corvus corax).
    • 1825, Basil Hall, journal entry quoted in 1837, Walter Scott, J. G. Lockhart (editor), Memoirs of the Life of Sir Walter Scott, Bart., in The Complete Works of Sir Walter Scott, Volume 7, page 417,
      From parrots we got to corbies, or ravens, and he told us with infinite humour a story of a certain tame bird of this description, whose constant delight was to do mischief, and to plague all mankind and beastkind.
    • 1899, John Buchan, The Moor-song, Grey Weather, page 133,
      And with them were some lang-gowned men who kenned the stars and would come out o' nights to talk to the deer and the corbies in their ain tongue.
    • 1963, John Harrington Cox (editor), 6: The Three Ravens (Child, No. 26), Folk-Songs of the South, page 31,
      In the "Twa Corbies" of Child it is the knight that is slain and one corbie is to sit on his "hause-bane" and the other is to pick out his eyes. In the West Virginia variants it is the horse that is slain, whose eyes the crows are going to pluck out.
  2. Either of two moth species of genus Oncopera, whose larvae feed on grasses, especially Oncopera intricata.
    • 2007, J. B. Kirkpatrick, Chapter 5: Sheep and nature on the run country, Jamie Kirkpatrick, Kerry Bridle (editors), People, Sheep and Nature Conservation: The Tasmanian Experience, page 158,
      The eastern quoll (Dasyurus viverrinus), a species believed to be extinct on mainland Australia, is common in the run and front country, where it consumes corbie grubs and cockchafers, among slightly larger prey and carrion.

Derived terms

  • corbie gable
  • corbiestep
  • winter corbie (Oncopera rufobrunnea)

Related terms

  • corbel
  • corbeling
  • corbeau

Anagrams

  • Orebi?

Scots

Etymology

From Middle French corbeau, from Old French corbel, from Late Latin corbellus, from Latin corvus.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?k?rb?/, /?korbi/

Noun

corbie (plural corbies)

  1. raven; (sometimes also) carrion crow, rook

Derived terms

  • corbie messinger

corbie From the web:

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