fescue

English

Etymology

From Old French festu (modern fétu), from Proto-Romance festu, from Latin festūca (stalk, stem, straw).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈfɛskjuː/

Noun

fescue (plural fescues)

  1. A straw, wire, stick, etc., used chiefly to point out letters to children when learning to read.
    • Milton
      to come under the fescue of an imprimatur
    • 1997, Thomas Pynchon, Mason & Dixon
      ‘Now then,’ Mason rapping upon the Table’s Edge with a sinister-looking Fescue of Ebony, whose List of Uses simple Indication does not quite exhaust, whilst the Girls squirm pleasingly
  2. A hardy grass commonly used to border golf fairways in temperate climates. Any member of the genus Festuca.
  3. An instrument for playing on the harp; a plectrum.
    (Can we find and add a quotation of Chapman to this entry?)
  4. The style of a sundial.

Translations

Verb

fescue (third-person singular simple present fescues, present participle fescuing, simple past and past participle fescued)

  1. To use a fescue, or teach with a fescue.
    • 1641, John Milton, Animadversions upon The Remonstrants Defence Against Smectymnuus.
      A minister that cannot be trusted to pray in his own words without being chewed to, and fescued to a formal injunction of his rote lesson, should as little be trusted to preach, besides the vain babble of praying over the same things immediately again ; for there is a large difference in the repetition of some pathetical ejaculation raised out of the sudden earnestness and vigour of the inflamed soul, (such as was that of Christ in the garden,) from the continual rehearsal of our daily orisons;
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