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bodkin
[bod-kin]
noun
a small, pointed instrument for making holes in cloth, leather, etc.
a long pinshaped instrument used by women to fasten up the hair.
a blunt, needlelike instrument for drawing tape, cord, etc., through a loop, hem, or the like.
Obsolete.a small dagger; stiletto.
bodkin
/ ˈɒɪ /
noun
a blunt large-eyed needle used esp for drawing tape through openwork
archaica dagger
printing a pointed steel tool used for extracting characters when correcting metal type
archaica long ornamental hairpin
Word History and Origins
Origin of bodkin1
Word History and Origins
Origin of bodkin1
Example Sentences
Punishment for cursing or disparaging a clergyman was having a bodkin — a large needle — driven through the tongue.
In fact, that “serpent of old Nile” — Shakespeare’s phrase — probably used Egyptian cobra venom, possibly secreted in a hollow bodkin that she carried wound in her hair.
"Whom would fardels bear under such a weary and long life.... when he could his quietus make with a bare bodkin?"
However,we atheists should not relent, but press our advantage, and remain ready at all times to slip the bodkin of reason into the still-beating heart of faith and twist it vigorously.
We are told by Fathers, that Herodias stabbed the head with a bodkin when she got it into her hand, and here are the marks of such an operation visible.
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