資料來源 : Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Scratch \Scratch\, n.
1. A break in the surface of a thing made by scratching, or
by rubbing with anything pointed or rough; a slight wound,
mark, furrow, or incision.
The coarse file . . . makes deep scratches in the
work. --Moxon.
These nails with scratches deform my breast.
--Prior.
God forbid a shallow scratch should drive The prince
of Wales from such a field as this. --Shak.
2. (Pugilistic Matches) A line across the prize ring; up to
which boxers are brought when they join fight; hence,
test, trial, or proof of courage; as, to bring to the
scratch; to come up to the scratch. [Cant] --Grose.
3. pl. (Far.) Minute, but tender and troublesome,
excoriations, covered with scabs, upon the heels of horses
which have been used where it is very wet or muddy. --Law
(Farmer's Veter. Adviser).
4. A kind of wig covering only a portion of the head.
5. (Billiards) A shot which scores by chance and not as
intended by the player; a fluke. [Cant, U. S.]
{Scratch cradle}. See {Cratch cradle}, under {Cratch}.
{Scratch grass} (Bot.), a climbing knotweed ({Polygonum
sagittatum}) with a square stem beset with fine recurved
prickles along the angles.
{Scratch wig}. Same as {Scratch}, 4, above. --Thackeray.