资料来源 : Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Pasquin \Pas"quin\, n. [It. pasquino a mutilated statue at Rome,
set up against the wall of the place of the Orsini; -- so
called from a witty cobbler or tailor, near whose shop the
statue was dug up. On this statue it was customary to paste
satiric papers.]
A lampooner; also, a lampoon. See {Pasquinade}.
The Grecian wits, who satire first began, Were pleasant
pasquins on the life of man. --Dryden.
Pasquin \Pas"quin\, v. t.
To lampoon; to satiraze. [R.]
To see himself pasquined and affronted. --Dryden.