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[poliseur] (s.xiv1/3)

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The form pollichier is a cross reference to the following entry:

[poliseur] (s.xiv1/3)

pollichier,  polysshere  
  FEW:  polire 9,127a Gdf: GdfC:  polisseur 10,372a TL: polisseur 7,1379 DEAF:  polir (polisseor)  DMF:  polisseur  TLF:  polisseur  OED:  polisher n.  MED: DMLBS:  polisor 2332b / politor 2333a

The citation from Building (accounts for St. Stephen’s Chapel at Westminster) may also be interpreted as Middle English, but provides an attestation (1331) which predates the earliest English use by two centuries (1532).

The sense ‘thumb’ is not attested elsewhere, but a metonymic interpretation of the thumb as a ‘polisher’ does not seem out of the question. Alternatively, the word may be a corruption of the Latin etymon for thumb, pollex.

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s.

1occupationpolisher, person who smoothens or burnishes stone
( 1331 )  John Colyn, polysshere (who is paid for cleaning up marble)  Build salz 71
2anat.thumb
( MS: 1272-82 )  de ceo si versez al bek de voustre oysel de une quilere nent plus le lé de voustre pouz (var. (A: s.xiv1/3) pollichier; (C: s.xiiiex) pucir)  A-N Falconry 115.43 (var.)

[gdw]

See also:

polir1  poliser 
This is an AND2 Phase 4 (N-O/U-P-Q) entry. © 2013-17 The Anglo-Norman Dictionary. All rights reserved. Funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council of the United Kingdom.
pollichier