释义 |
▪ I. supervisal, n. Now rare.|s(j)uːpəˈvaɪzəl| [f. med.L. supervīs-, pa. ppl. stem of supervidēre: see prec. and -al1 5.] 1. = supervision 1.
1652Evelyn State France Misc. Writ. (1805) 60 The High Chamberlain of France..hath the supevisall..of all officers of the King's bedchamber. a1716South Serm. (1717) IV. 389 The Regulation and Supervisal of the whole Course of a Man's Life. 1763H. Walpole Let. to G. Montagu 1 July, I do not love to trust a hammer or a brush without my own supervisal. 1826Examiner 488/1 The new buildings are from the designs of different Architects, but subject..to the supervisal of..Mr. Nash. 1839Carlyle Chartism iii. 123 Supervisal by the central government. 2. = supervision 2.
1749H. Walpole Let. to Mann 17 May, The supervisal of it [sc. the Life of the first Duke of Marlborough]. 1751Warburton in Pope's Wks. IV. 42 note, A paper wherein he never had the least hand, direction or supervisal. 1762tr. Busching's Syst. Geog. III. 590 [Congresses] annually held for the supervisal of the accounts of the bailiages. ▪ II. superˈvisal, a. rare—1. [f. med.L. supervīs- (see prec.) + -al1 1.] Supervisory.
1838G. S. Faber Inquiry 559 Ignatius,..like Timothy and Titus and Clement and Polycarp, had received his supervisal authority from the immediate hands of an Apostle. |