Hypertext Webster Gateway: "Distaff"

From Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary (easton)

Distaff
(Heb. pelek, a "circle"), the instrument used for twisting
threads by a whirl (Prov. 31:19).

From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) (web1913)

Distaff \Dis"taff\, n.; pl. {Distaffs}, rarely {Distaves}. [OE.
distaf, dysestafe, AS. distaef; cf. LG. diesse the bunch of
flax on a distaff, and E. dizen. See {Staff}.]
1. The staff for holding a bunch of flax, tow, or wool, from
which the thread is drawn in spinning by hand.

I will the distaff hold; come thou and spin.
--Fairfax.

2. Used as a symbol of the holder of a distaff; hence, a
woman; women, collectively.

His crown usurped, a distaff on the throne.
--Dryden.

Some say the crozier, some say the distaff was too
busy. --Howell.

Note: The plural is regular, but Distaves occurs in Beaumont
& Fletcher.

{Descent by distaff}, descent on the mother's side.

{Distaff Day}, or {Distaff's Day}, the morrow of the
Epiphany, that is, January 7, because working at the
distaff was then resumed, after the Christmas festival; --
called also {Rock Day}, a distaff being called a rock.
--Shipley.

From WordNet (r) 1.7 (wn)

distaff
adj : characteristic of or peculiar to a woman; "female
sensitiveness"; "female suffrage" [syn: {female}]
n 1: the sphere of work by women
2: the staff on which wool or flax is wound before spinning


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