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SAMPA pronunciation
Latest comment: 16 years ago1 comment1 person in discussion
Shouldn't be there /"kUSn=/ or /"kUS@n/ instead of /"kUS=@n/? In this word "n" is a syllabic consonant, not "S"... Maro20:59, 9 January 2009 (UTC)Reply
circular...
Latest comment: 14 years ago2 comments2 people in discussion
It's not circular. The use of "cushion" refers to an earlier definition, not to itself. It would be circular if the sense of the word used was the very sense being defined, or if the definition of term A uses a term B whose definition includes term A. —Internoob (Disc•Cont) 17:29, 27 July 2010 (UTC)Reply
Additional Meaning
Latest comment: 9 years ago1 comment1 person in discussion
In a translating dictionary I came across the entry,"noix pâtissière...cushion of veal" and I can't find a usable definition of either the English or the French phrase, although from the context it's a culinary usage.
I can only find "cushion dance" or "cushion-dance". Nares quotes two 17th-century texts that call it the "cushi(o)n dance". Halliwell (Webster's source) has:
A riotous kind of dance, formerly very common at weddings, generally accompanied with kissing. See Brit. Bibl. ii. 270.
1877, John Brand, Henry Ellis, Observations on Popular Antiquities, page 394:
In reference to a nuptial feast, the cushion dance at weddings is thus mentioned in the Apophthegms of King James , the Earl of Worcester and others ( 1658 ) : “ At last when the Masque was ended and Time had brought in the Supper, the Cushion led the Dance out of the Parlour into the Hall;"