alfet

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English

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Etymology

From Medieval Latin alfetum, from Old English alfæt (fire-vat), from āl (fire) + fæt (vat).

Noun

alfet (plural alfets)

  1. (historical) A cauldron of boiling water into which an accused person plunged his forearm, used as a form of trial in Medieval England.
    • In Two Volumes, volumes I (A–H), London: James and John Knapton , →OCLC, page 59, column 2:
      ALFET, antiently ſignified the Cauldron in which boiling Water was put, for the Accuſed to plunge his Hand in up to the Elbow, by way of Trial of Purgation.]
    • 1981, Edmund Apffel, The Last Days at St. Saturn's, New York, N.Y.: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, →ISBN, page 40:
      Miss Twig, head bowed at the far end of the table, continued to eat placidly, but Jacko fixed her with a hard look. "His rooms, huh? Eh, Twigs," he said, "'tis the alfet for a ewbrice." ¶ Dimple gurgled, swallowed, and said, "And what, Jacko boy, might an alfet be?" ¶ Jacko grinned. "Yer tub a boilin' water. For duckin' class offenders."

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