请输入您要查询的英文单词:

 

单词 pique
释义 I. pique, n.1|piːk|
Forms: 6 pyke, peake, 6–7 picke, pike, 7 pieque, 7–8 picque, 7–8 (9 dial.) pick, peek, 7–9 peak, 8 pyck, 7– pique.
[a. F. pique, n. of action f. piquer to prick, pierce, sting: see pique v.1]
A. Illustration of Forms.
1532Pyke [see B. 1].1543St. Papers Hen. VIII, IX. 339 Wherby occasion of sum picke might be taken awaye.1592Peake [see B. 2].1596in A. Collins Lett. & Mem. State (1746) II. 21 They are in Picke against these.1597Carew MSS. (1869) 272 [These two Scottish septs are] at pike [one with the other].1609Skene Reg. Maj. ii. 131 It is treason to moue any pick, grudge, or querrell.1663Flagellum or O. Cromwell (1672) 29 The like picques and quarrelling pretences of the Parliament.1663Butler Hud. i. ii. 1082 If any Member there dislike His Face, or to his Beard have Pike.1664Ibid. ii. i. 545 'Tis no Fantastick pique I have to love, nor coy dislike.1667Temple Let. to Sir J. Temple Wks. 1731 II. 43 The Duke of Albemarle had long had a Peek to their Country.a1670Hacket Abp. Williams i. (1692) 104 Another Pick in which they agreed not.1675Cotton Scoffer Scofft Wks. (1725) 146 You must not take a Picque, If he..speak plain and gleek.1691Wood Ath. Oxon. II. 318 Out of a puritanical peak.1706Phillips s.v., There is a Peek between them.a1713T. Ellwood Autobiog. Suppl. (1714) 431 Upon a Pick he took against the People called Quakers.1757E. Griffith Lett. Henry & Frances (1767) I. 61 That we should behave well to our friends out of love, and to our enemies out of picque.1894Crockett Raiders (ed. 3) 83, I did not learn what was the pick that the Black Smugglers had taken at the Maxwells.
B. Signification.
1. A personal quarrel or fit of ill-feeling between two or more persons; ill-feeling, animosity, enmity.
1532Cromwell in Merriman Life & Lett. (1902) I. 349 Which Edmond Knightley hathe..trauayled..to sett pyke betwene the sayd ladye and the executors.1540St. Papers Hen. VIII, VIII. 464 There were some that wolde be right gladde to here Your Majestie and He were in picke togythers.1661Feltham Resolves ii. xliii. (ed. 8), Between entirest friends,..sometimes little peeks of coldness may appear.1691Wood Ath. Oxon. II. 92 Because of a Pique that had been between the Abbots and Bishop Laud.a1774Goldsm. Elegy Mad Dog v, This dog and man at first were friends; But when a pique began, The dog..Went mad, and bit the man.
2. A feeling of anger, resentment, or ill-will, resulting from some slight or injury, esp. such as wounds one's pride or vanity; offence taken.
1592Nashe Four Lett. Conf. Wks. (Grosart) II. 215 You take the graue peake vppon you too much.1653Holcroft Procopius, Goth. Wars i. 15 This Optaris had a pique against Theodatus.1663Dryden Wild Gallant ii. i, Pray, my Lord, take no picque at it.1663–67Pique to [see A.].1676Marvell Mr. Smirke H iv b, He..bore a great pique at Alexander, for having been preferr'd before him to the See of Alexandria.1766[C. Anstey] Bath Guide xi. 181 Poor Stephen went suddenly forth in a Pique, And push'd off his Boat for the Stygian Creek.1832J. W. Croker Diary 12 May, He acquiesced..with an air of pique and disappointment.1877Freeman Norm. Conq. II. ix. 414 note, A Bishop who had turned monk in a momentary fit of pique.
3. pique of honour, a point in which honour is pricked or affected. Obs.
1678R. L'Estrange Seneca's Mor. (1702) 522 There can be no Interfering upon a Pique of Honour.1687Dryden Hind & P. iii. 401 Add long prescription of established laws, And picque of honour to maintain a cause.
II. pique, n.2|piːk|
Also 7 picq(ue, pickque.
[a. F. pic, in same sense, of uncertain origin. (Taken by Hatz.-Darm. as a sense of pic, pick, pike, (mountain) peak; Littré takes it as a distinct word.)]
In Piquet, The winning of thirty points on cards and play, before one's opponent begins to count, entitling the player to begin his score at sixty. Cf. repique.
1668Temple Let. to Ld. Arlington Wks. 1731 II. 93 In their Audiences..the Cards commonly run high, and all is Picque and Repicque between them.1674Cotton Compl. Gamester vi. 81 The youngers Blank shall bar the former and hinder his Picq and Repicq [printed Picy and Repicy].1688R. Holme Armoury iii. xvi. (Roxb.) 73/2 A Picy in the game of Picket.1727–41Chambers Cycl. s.v. Piquet, If he can make up thirty, part in hand, and part play, ere the other has told any thing, he reckons for them sixty.—And this is called a pique. Whence the name of the game.1861Macm. Mag. Dec. 137.
III. pique, n.3 Obs.
[a. F. or quasi-F., ad. L. pica.]
= pica2, depraved appetite.
1678Butler Hud. iii. ii. 809 Though it have the Pique, and long, 'Tis still for something in the wrong; As Women long.
IV. pique, n.4|ˈpiːkeɪ, piːk|
Also 7 pico.
[a. Sp. Amer. pique, ad. Quichua piqui (Gonzalez Holguin 1608), piki (Tschudi) flea, chigoe.]
1. = chigoe.
1748Earthquake of Peru iii. 216 A..little Insect, call'd Pico which gets insensibly into the Feet.1758Adams tr. Ulloa's Voy. in Pinkerton (1808) XIV. 349 The insect..called nigua and in Peru pique, is shaped like a flea.1816Kirby & Sp. Entomol. iv. (1818) I. 103, I am speaking of the celebrated Chigoe or Jiggers, called also..Pique.
2. ‘A name for Argas nigra, a blind tick which sometimes causes sores on men or animals’ (Syd. Soc. Lex. 1895).
V. pique, n.5
Erron. form of peak n.2
1826P. Pounden France & Italy 5 A close-bound cap which dwindles nearly to a pique.1845Browning How they brought the Good News ii, I turned in my saddle and made its girths tight, Then shortened each stirrup, and set the pique right.
VI. pique
obs. form of pike3 and n.5
VII. pique, v.1|piːk|
Also 7–8 picque, (9 peak).
[a. F. piquer to prick, sting, stimulate, irritate, excite; se piquer, to take offence.]
1. trans. To prick the feelings of; to excite to anger, resentment, or enmity; to irritate; to offend by wounding pride or vanity.
1671R. MacWard True Nonconf. 103 You think you picque him wittily, when you say, ‘any thing in Scripture that makes for you, call it ordinary; and what doth not please, is extraordinary’.1673W. Perwich Dispatches (Roy. Hist. Soc.) 264 The gentry..are malcontents..being all piqued against the C. de Monterei.1732Pope Ep. Bathurst 349 The Dev'l was piqu'd, such saintship to behold.1766Fordyce Serm. Yng. Wom. (1767) I. ii. 76 She..piques our pride, and offends our judgment.1796E. Hamilton Lett. Hindoo Rajah (1811) I. 233 A little picqued by the excess of his mirth.1838Prescott Ferd. & Is. (1846) I. iii. 182 Piqued at this opposition to his wishes.1862Goulburn Pers. Relig. viii. iii. (1873) 221 This moment our vanity is piqued.1876Mid-Yorks. Gloss. s.v. Peak, ‘He's peaked about somewhat’.
2. trans. To stimulate or excite to action or activity; to instigate or provoke, esp. by arousing envy, rivalry, jealousy, or other passion; to arouse, awake (curiosity, interest).
b. refl. To excite or arouse oneself, put oneself on one's mettle (obs.).
1698Vanbrugh Prov. Wife i. i, My husband's barbarous usage piques me to revenge.1736Bolingbroke Patriot. (1749) 18 Fortune maintains a kind of rivalship with wisdom, and piques herself often in favour of fools as well as knaves.1786tr. Beckford's Vathek (1868) 67 Her vanity..prompted her to pique the Prince's attention.1793Minstrel I. 192 Taunting messages were reiterated to pique him to come forth.1837Carlyle Fr. Rev. II. iii. iv, Peaking himself into flame of irritancy.1870H. Smart Race for Wife i, You have piqued my woman's curiosity.
3. absol. or intr. To arouse a feeling of pique; to stimulate. Obs.
1664J. Wilson Cheats Epil., If you must lash out, and think you can't Be wits yourselves unless you pique and rant.1710Addison Tatler No. 163 ⁋5 Every Verse hath something in it that piques.
4. intr. to pique at: to strive or vie with (another) through envy or jealousy. Obs. rare.
1668Dryden Evening's Love iv. i, Women of the play⁓house, still piquing at each other, who shall go the best dressed.
5. refl. (rarely intr.). To take pride in, plume oneself on. Const. on, upon; rarely at, in. (= F. se piquer de.)
1705Pope Lett. (1736) V. 10 Men who are thought to pique themselves upon their wit.1773Boswell Tour Hebr. 10 Sept., We..piqued ourselves at not being outdone at the nightly ball by our less active friends.1787Generous Attachment II. 113 Sir Jeffry..piques himself much in the nursery of the young woodlands.1828–40Tytler Hist. Scot. (1864) I. 1 A powerful baron who piqued himself upon his skill in his weapons.1892Pall Mall G. 24 June 1/3 Temperance reformers who are wont to pique on the progress of the cause in the colonies.
Hence ˈpiquing vbl. n. and ppl. a.
1794C. Pigott Female Jockey Club 22 To entice unhappy victims into her net, and then abandon them to all the piquing severity of ridicule.1808Jefferson Writ. (1830) IV. 105 One piquing thing said, draws on another.1854Faber Growth in Holiness iv, A piquing of our self-love.
VIII. pique, v.2
[f. pique n.2]
In Piquet: a. trans. To win a pique from, score a pique against (one's opponent). b. intr. To score a pique.
1659Shuffling, Cutting & Deal. 8, I was Pickquet the last, but am now repickqt.1668[see piquet1].1719D'Urfey Pills V. 278 He piqu'd and repiqu'd so oft.1830‘Eidrah Trebor’ Hoyle Made Fam. 49 It also piques and repiques the adversary.1895J. C. Snaith Dorothy Marvin vi, The mysteries..of piqueing, repiqueing and capotting.
IX. pique, v.3
obs. f. peak v.2, to taper to a peak.
1756M. Calderwood Jrnl. (1884) 307 Above that they had a brow-band, which came piquing down before, betwixt their eye brows.
随便看

 

英语词典包含277258条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

Copyright © 2004-2022 Newdu.com All Rights Reserved
更新时间:2024/9/20 5:40:46