coigne
English
Etymology
A variant of coign.
Noun
coigne (plural coignes)
- Alternative form of coign: a keystone; a wedge; (obsolete) a corner or angle, especially of a building.
- 1843 Robert Henry Horne, Orion: an epic poem
- Great figures started from the roof
- And lofty coignes.
- 1884, Robert Kennaway Douglas, Encyclopaedia Britannica, 9th ed., s.v. "Nanking":
- From the eaves of the several stories there hung one hundred and fifty-two bells, and countless lanterns adorned the same coignes of vantage.
- 1843 Robert Henry Horne, Orion: an epic poem
Derived terms
Anagrams
Middle English
Etymology 1
Noun
coigne
- Alternative form of coyn (“coin, quoin”)
Etymology 2
Noun
coigne
- Alternative form of coyn (“quince”)
Etymology 3
Verb
coigne
- Alternative form of coynen