parceneryoudaoicibaDictYouDict[parcener 词源字典]
"A person who shares with others in the inheritance of an undivided estate or in the rights to it", Middle English: via Anglo-Norman French from Latin partitio(n-) 'partition' + -er1: compare with partner.[parcener etymology, parcener origin, 英语词源]
hue and cryyoudaoicibaDictYouDict
"A loud clamour or public outcry", Late Middle English: from the Anglo-Norman French legal phrase hu e cri, literally 'outcry and cry', from Old French hu 'outcry' (from huer 'to shout'). More In early times any person witnessing or surprising a criminal committing a crime could raise a hue and cry, calling for others to join in their pursuit and capture. In law the cry had to be raised by the inhabitants of the district in which the crime was committed, or otherwise the pursuers were liable for any damages suffered by the victim. The origin of the expression is in legal French hu e cri ‘outcry and cry’. The first element has no connection with hue ‘colour’, which is a native English word related to Swedish hy ‘skin, complexion’, and originally meant ‘form, appearance’, only developing the colour sense in the mid 19th century.
sullageyoudaoicibaDictYouDict
"Waste water from household sinks, showers, and baths, but not waste liquid or excreta from toilets", Mid 16th century: perhaps from Anglo-Norman French suillage, from suiller 'to soil'.