释义 |
▪ I. † ˈsembling, ppl. a. Obs. [f. semble v.2 + -ing2.] 1. That feigns or simulates.
1557–8Jacob & Esau v. iv. (1568) F iv b, Ah hypocrite, ah hedgecreeper, ah sembling wretche. 1583Leg. Bp. St. Androis 916 in Satir. Poems Reform. xlv, They knew him for a sembling baird. 1612T. Taylor Comm. Titus i. 16 Counterfeit and sembling professors. 1642S. W. Parl. Vind. Answ. Rupert 3 In this not sembling but suffering age. 2. That depicts or represents.
1706Prior Ode to Queen xxviii, Where sembling Art may carve the fair Effect. ▪ II. sembling, vbl. n.2|ˈsɛmblɪŋ| Also symbolling. [See semble v.1] The action of the verb. 1. gen.
a1300Havelok 1018 Þere was sembling i-now! a1400–50Wars Alex. 769 Þe same day at was sett þe sembling of bathe. c1420Anturs of Arth. 661 With owttene more lettynge, Was dighte there thiere semblynge. c1440Promp. Parv. 452/2 Semlynge, or metynge to-geder, concursus. 2. Ent. The coming together of a male and a female moth; spec. a method of trapping male moths by using a captive female to attract them.
1748J. Dutfield New Nat. Hist. Engl. Moths & Butterflies s.v. Emperor Moth. What is called Symbolling, or, the Coming together, is particularly observable of this Species. 1894Science 23 Mar. 156/2 The sembling of a large native moth. 1924Contemp. Rev. Sept. 364 Collectors of lepidoptera have long known the trick of ‘sembling’ to obtain a large series of males of certain moths. |