meat safe
English
Alternative forms
Noun
meat safe (plural meat safes)
- A ventilated cupboard used to keep meat away from flies and other pests.[1]
- 1854, Charles Dickens, “(please specify the chapter name)”, in Hard Times. For These Times, London: Bradbury & Evans, […], →OCLC, book the second (Reaping), page 227:
- […] her uncomfortable, not to say, gritty, mittens (they were constructed of a cool fabric like a meat-safe) […]
- 1895–1897, H[erbert] G[eorge] Wells, “Book 2, Chapter 8”, in The War of the Worlds, London: William Heinemann, published 1898, →OCLC, book II (The Earth under the Martians), page 277:
- It was now dusk, and after I had routed out some biscuits and a cheese in the bar—there was a meat-safe, but it contained nothing but maggots—I wandered on through the silent residential squares to Baker Street […]
- 1950, Nevil Shute, A Town Like Alice (The Legacy), London: Heinemann, Secker and Warburg, 1983, Chapter 9, p. 201,
- Masses of cooked meat were stored in a wire-gauze meat safe with nearly as many flies inside it as there were outside.
- 1955, Patrick White, chapter 10, in The Tree of Man, New York: Viking, page 140:
- Under the pepper tree the meat-safe hung, and swung, round and round, slowly, on a wire.
- 1981, G. B. Edwards, The Book of Ebenezer Le Page, New York: Moyer Bell, Part 1, Chapter 10, p. 62,
- She took [the leg of mutton] and put it in the meat safe outside.
- (boxing, slang, obsolete) The stomach.[2]
- 1896, Arthur Conan Doyle, chapter 10, in Rodney Stone,, London: Smith, Elder, page 172:
- “ […] but Bob ’e jumps inside an’ ’e lets ’im ’ave it plumb square on the meat safe as ’ard as ever the Lord would let ’im put it in.”
Derived terms
Translations
ventilated cupboard
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References
- A. F. M. Willich, The Domestic Encyclopædia, First American edition, Philadelphia: Birch and Small, 1803, Volume 3, p. 58, under the entry FLY-BLOWN: “The easiest method of preventing such damage, is that of suspending the joints in a meat-safe, or a wooden frame surrounded by close wires, so that the flies may be completely excluded, and the air still allowed to perflate the whole apparatus.”
- Eric Partridge (1951) A Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English […] , 4th edition, London: Routledge & Kegan Paul Ltd, page 515
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