Definition of "chive"
chive1
noun
plural chives
(obsolete) The style and stigma of a flower, especially saffron.
Quotations
[…] in the place wher he bled, Saffron was after found to grow, whereupon the people séeyng the color of the chiue as it stoode, (although I doubt not but it grewe there long before) adiudged it to come to the bloude of Crocus, and therefore they gaue it his name.
1577, Raphael Holinshed et al., The Chronicles of England, Scotlande, and Ireland, London: John Hunne, Book 3, Chapter 14, “Of English Saffron,”
[…] to abate, and allay the fulnesse of red, we doe not see white vsed (as a colour too remote) but rather yellow, and that so farre-forth as some doe grinde a Chiue of Saffron with Vermillion, to make it the more pleasant, whereas white in like proportion mixed, would dimne, and decay it […]
1610, Edmund Bolton, chapter 28, in The Elements of Armories, London: George Eld, pages 156–157
The chiues or threds in the middle of the floure are ſometimes of a reddiſh, or of a blackiſh colour.
1633, John Gerarde [i.e., John Gerard], Thomas Johnson, “Of Stitchwort”, in The Herball or Generall Historie of Plantes. […], enlarged edition, London: […] Adam Islip, Joice Norton and Richard Whitakers, book I, page 46
The Saint, to which the most he prayesAnd offers Incense Nights and dayes,The Lady of the Lobster is,Whose foot-pace he doth stroak & kisse;And, humbly, chives of Saffron brings,For his most cheerfull offerings.
1648, Robert Herrick, “The Temple”, in Hesperides, London: John Williams and Francis Eglesfield, pages 104–105
chive2
noun
plural chives
Quotations
None of us know'd then—though the grabbing at Nan Turner's came off that very night—as Polly was the cause o' that 'ere, till it vos blown here at the Gate by some of the coves. Vell, she nammused, as you may guess, but fust poor old Madge Rhodes got a chive in her breather from Black Gil.
1841, Henry Downes Miles, chapter XXXIX, in Dick Turpin, 4th edition, London: William Mark Clark, published 1845, page 267
On the Boxing Day after I came out I got stabbed in the chest by a pal of mine who had done a schooling. We was out with one another all the day getting drunk, so he took a liberty with me, and I landed him one on the conk (nose), so we had a fight, and he put the chive (knife) into me.
1879 October, J[ohn] W[illiam] Horsley, “Autobiography of a Thief in Thieves’ Language”, in Macmillan’s Magazine, volume XL, number 240, London: Macmillan and Co. […], page 503, column 2
I guyed, but the reeler he gave me hot beef, / And a scuff came about me and hollered; / I pulled out a chive but I soon same to grief, / And with screws and a james I was collared.
1888 February 12, “A Plank-Bed Ballad”, in The Referee, reprinted in Farmer, John Stephen, editor, Musa Pedestris, published 1896, page 185
verb
third-person singular simple present chives, present participle chiving, simple past and past participle chived