† ˈspather Obs. rare.
[Irregularly f. L. spatha, or alteration of spatter n.1]
A spattle or spatula.
| 1597 Gerarde Herbal iii. xxxix. 1178 Of this there is made a profitable spather or slice to be vsed in making of compounde plaisters and pessaries. 1657 Physical Dict. B iv, Albation, is the abstraction of Dust..with a Hares foot, feather, spather, or such like. |
So † ˈspathern. Obs. rare.
| 1634 T. Johnson Parey's Chirurg. iii. xxix. 121, I have sometimes seen such passages so open, that they would receive the head of a Spathern [F. espatule]. Ibid. xv. vi. 567 That bone which is deprest must be lifted up with a spatherne, or little sticke. |