confiner

English

Etymology

confine + -er

Noun

confiner (plural confiners)

  1. One who, or that which, limits or restrains.
    • 1794, Jonathan Scott (translator), Ferishta’s History of Dekkan from the First Mahummedan Conquests, Shrewsbury, Volume I, p. 311,
      [] as he attended him through the streets, the common people, and even women, uttered loud exclamations of abuse against him, calling him the murderer of syeds, and confiner of Chaund Sultana.
    • 1816, Barbara Hofland, The Affectionate Brothers, London: A.K. Newman, Volume 2, Chapter 2, pp. 40-41,
      [] I hope to gain a friend in you, and that will surely repay, a thousand times, the exertions I have at length happily made to terminate your captivity, which has, I know, been continued, rather from the obstinacy and idleness of your confiners, than any remaining malice against your country, or suspicions of yourself.
    • 1876, C. Henri Leonard, A Manual of Bandaging Adapted for Self-Instruction, Detroit: Daily Post, Chapter 11, p. 122,
      The narrow adhesive strips [] are then applied spirally about the leg, as confiners.
    • 2016, “Last Chance for Animals’ Investigation Leads to Animal Cruelty Charges for Marineland Canada,” Press Release dated 4 December, 2016,
      The undercover investigation exposed inadequate treatment, housing, and care of marine mammals at Marineland, the world’s largest confiner of beluga whales.
  2. (obsolete) A person who lives on the confines, boundary or edge; a neighbour.
    • 1599, Samuel Daniel, The Civil Wars of England, Book 1, Stanza 18, in Poeticall Essayes, London: Simon Waterson, p. 4,
      So did the worldes proud Mistres Rome at first
      Striue with a hard beginning, warr’d with need;
      Forcing her strong Confiners to the worst,
      And in her bloud her greatnes first did breed:
    • 1624, Henry Wotton (editor), The Elements of Architecture, collected by Henry Wotton Knight, from the Best Authors and Examples, London, Part 2, p. 88,
      [] though Gladnesse, and Griefe, be opposites in Nature; yet they are such Neighbours and Confiners in Arte, that the least touch of a Pensill, will translate a Crying, into a Laughing Face []
    • 1629, Thomas Hobbes (translator), Eight Bookes of the Peloponnesian Warre written by Thucydides the Sonne of Olorus, London: Henry Seile, Book 3, p. 197,
      For being Confiners on the Aetolians, and vsing the same manner of arming, it was thought it would bee a matter of great vtility in the Warre, to haue them in their Armie; for that they knew their manner of fight, and were acquainted with the Country.
    • 1683, Thomas Browne, Certain Miscellany Tracts, London: Charles Mearn, Tract 12, p. 187,
      [] he would soon endeavour to have Ports upon that Sea, as not wanting Materials for Shipping. And [] may be a terrour unto the confiners on that Sea, and to Nations which now conceive themselves safe from such an Enemy.
    • 1697, Thomas d’Urfey, The Intrigues of Versailles, London: F. Saunders et al., Act IV, Scene 2, p. ,
      [] darkness is naturally a confiner of fancy; and my Muse has taught me just as people do Starlings: I sing always best when I’ve least light []
  3. (obsolete) A person who lives within the confines; an inhabitant.
    • c. 1609, William Shakespeare, Cymbeline, Act IV, Scene 2,
      The senate hath stirr’d up the confiners
      And gentlemen of Italy, most willing spirits,
      That promise noble service []
  4. (obsolete) A prisoner incarcerated for a set term.
    • 1819, Joseph John Gurney, Notes on a Visit Made to Some of the Prisons in Scotland and the North of England in Company with Elizabeth Fry, London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme & Brown, p. 64,
      Lancaster Castle [] contains two classes of prisoners; first, the untried, and those sentenced to death or transportation; and secondly, confiners,—persons sent hither for terms of imprisonment and labour.

French

Verb

confiner

  1. to confine (to have a common boundary)

Conjugation

Further reading

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