释义 |
arride, v.|əˈraɪd| [ad. L. arrīdē-re (or It. arridere) to smile upon, to be pleasing to, f. ar- = ad- to, at + rīdē-re to laugh, smile.] †1. To smile at, laugh at, scorn. Obs.
1612Dekker If not good Wks. 1873 III. 294 If your Grace Arride the toyes they bragd of. 1628tr. Owen's Epigrams (N.) What means arrided Rider's book, thus stil'd A library? 1656Blount Gloss., Arride, to smile or look pleasantly upon. 2. To please, gratify, delight. arch.
1599B. Jonson Ev. Man out of Hum. ii. i, Fas. 'Fore Heavens, his humour arrides me exceedingly. Car. Arrides you? Fas. I, pleases me. 1671Shadwell Humourists iii. Wks. 1720 I. 170 It arrides me extreamly, to think how he will be bobb'd. a1757Cibber in New Hist. Eng. Stage (1882) I. 240 A new opera..which infinitely arrided both sexes and pleased the town. 1823Lamb Elia ii. xvii. (1865) 344 That conceit arrided us most..and still tickles our midriff to remember. 1862Temple Bar IV. 468 The malt consumer is mightily consoled and arrided by the notion. 1884Browning Ferishtah x. 87 That verse of thine..much arrides myself. 1905Academy 7 Oct. 1027/1 That which would have the most arrided Elia is the note on the poet's description of Hell. 1937Kipling Something of Myself iv. 92 My normal output seemed to have the gift of arriding per se the very people I most disliked. |