eggling
English
editEtymology 1
editPresumably from *eggle (“to sell eggs”) + -ing. Compare English eggler (“seller of eggs”).
Noun
editeggling (uncountable)
- (archaic) The sale of eggs; the trade of an eggler.
- 1938, Ireland. Oireachtas. Dáil, Parliamentary debates; official report, volume 73, page 734:
- No eggler will allow eggs to be contaminated, because he wants to sell at the best price he can get […] If the House says it is, then in my opinion the majority of those people must get out of eggling […]
- 1945, Flora Thompson, Lark Rise to Candleford:
- The death of Dobbin of old age had put an end to his master's eggling, for he had no capital with which to buy another horse.
Etymology 2
editNoun
editeggling (plural egglings)
- A small, miniature, undersized, or underdeveloped egg.
- "Ode X" in 1834, Charles L. S. Jones, American Lyrics
- One Lovling scarcely's fledg'd. One, yet,
An eggling still remains;
A third, from forth the broken shell,
In chirping notes, complains.
- One Lovling scarcely's fledg'd. One, yet,
- 2007, Robert J. Sawyer, Foreigner:
- But now the little Other eggling was making loud peeping sounds. It was hungry.
- "Ode X" in 1834, Charles L. S. Jones, American Lyrics