释义 |
lidded, ppl. a.|ˈlɪdɪd| Also 1 ᵹehlidad, -od, ᵹehleodad, ilided. [OE. *ᵹehlidod as if pa. pple. of a vb. *hlidian or *ᵹehlidian, f. hlid (ᵹehlid) lid n. In mod. use a new formation on lid n. and v. + -ed.] 1. Having a lid; covered with or as with a lid.
c900Bæda's Hist. iv. xxi. [xix.] (1890) 320 Seo [sc. þruh] wæs swilce eac ᵹerisenlice ᵹehleodad [v.r. ᵹehlidod, -ad] mid ᵹelice stane. a1225Ancr. R. 58 Þes put he hat þat heo beo euer ilided & iwrien. 1675Evelyn Terra (1676) 146 Woodden-Cases made like Coffins (but not contracted at the extreams nor lidded). 1821Coleridge Lett., Convers. &c. II. 21 The tropical trees..produce their own lidded vessels full of water from air and dew. 1890J. Service Thir Notandums xi. 78 Maist o' the gentlemen wore dark blue..coats.., their waistcoats deep in the lidded pooch. b. Mining. (Cf. lid n. 5.)
1747Hooson Miner's Dict. L iv b, Though we may in some Parts of this Work seem to assert that Veins are not Lidded, yet..they may be so, but more especially on their Dip. 1847Halliwell s.v., The top of the bearing part of a pipe is said to be lidded when its usual space is contracted to a small compass or width. A mining term. c. Bot. and Zool. (Cf. lid n. 4.)
1776–96Withering Brit. Plants (ed. 3) I. 357 Capsule..lidded, and opening transversely. 1899J. Cagney Jaksch's Clin. Diagn. vi. (ed. 4) 224 The eggs [of Distoma sinense] are oval, lidded, and spiked at the opposite end. 2. Of the eyes: Having lids, covered with lids. Chiefly with adj. or adv. prefixed, as half-lidded, heavy-lidded, high-lidded.
1818Keats Lines written in Highlands 21 But the forgotten eye is still fast lidded to the ground. 1820― Cap & Bells xx. Poems (1889) 527 One minute's while his eyes remain'd Half lidded, piteous, languid, innocent. 1879G. Macdonald Sir Gibbie III. ix. 151 Duff gave him a high-lidded glance, vouchsafing no reply. 1886J. W. Graham Neæra (1887) II. iii. 146 [Eyes] somewhat heavy lidded and slow moving. |