swingle-in comb.: swingle-bar= swingletree 2; † swingle-foot, = swingle n.1 1; also attrib.; † swingle foot hards(seequot.); † swingle-head (?), -staff= swingle n.1 1; swingle-stick, -stock=swing-stock (swing- 2 b); swingle-tail, name for a species of shark, = thrasher1 2; swingle-wand= swingle n.1 1.1849De Quincey Eng. Mail-Coach ii. Wks. 1854 IV. 343 Either with the *swingle-bar, or with the haunch of our near leader, we had struck the off-wheel of the little gig.1907‘Q’ (Quiller-Couch) Poison Isl. i. 8 The Royal Mail pulled up before Minden Cottage with a merry clash of bits and swingle-bars.1500Ortus Vocab., Excussorium, a *swyngelfote.1611Cotgr., Farasse..the coursest of Hempe, Swingle foot herds, course towe.1688R. Holme Armoury iii. iii. 106/1 A Swingle Foot. A Swingle Hand, corruptly a Swingow Hond: a thing like a Wooden Fauchion with a square hole or handle.1677Coles, Excudia and -ium, a *swingel-head.1664Gouldman Lat.Eng.Dict., A *swingle-staff or bat to beat flax, scutula.1883Harper's Mag. Aug. 390/1 The women stood about the fire, each beside her swingle-staff. This instrument is like a wooden pocket⁓knife, about two feet long, with legs supporting it at the height of a table.c1325Gloss. W. de Bibbesw. in Wright Voc. 156 Vostre pessel, a *swinglestyk.c1340Nominale (Skeat) 545 *Swangulstoke riplingcombe swyngilwande.14..Voc. in Wr.-Wülcker 581/29 Excudia, a swyngylstok.c1475Pict.Voc. in Wr.-Wülcker 795/11 Hec excudia, a sungyllestok.1483Cath.Angl. 374/2 A Swyngilstoke, excudia, excudium.1839Storer in Boston Jrnl.Nat.Hist. II. 529 Carcharias vulpes. Lin... This species..is called by the fishermen ‘Thresher’, and ‘*Swingle tail’.c1340*Swyngilwande [see swingle-stock].1808Jamieson, Swingle-wand, the instrument with which flax is swingled.