释义 |
▪ I. ˈskelet Obs. exc. dial. Also 6 skelette, 7 scelet. [ad. older F. (16th cent.) sc-, sk-, squelete (also sch-, squelet, etc.; mod.F. squelette), or Gr. σκελετ-ός, -όν: see skeleton n.] 1. A skeleton. Also fig.
1565Cooper Thesaurus, Forma ossea,..a skelette. 1603Holland Plutarch's Mor. Explan. Words, Scelet..is taken also for a dead carcasse of man or woman, represented with the bones onely, and ligaments. 1621S. Ward Life of Faith 24 For what should I cast away speech vpon scelets and skulles, carnall men I meane. 1707Sir J. Lauder Decis. Suppl. (1826) IV. 673 The Lords thought this decreet had not so much as the visage and scelet of a decreet. 1720Pennecuik Helicon (ed. 2) 146 The Skelet now hath got his Breast-Plate on. a1904in Eng. Dial. Dict. (Cornwall), She's nothing but a walking skelet. †2. A mummy. Obs. rare.
1603Holland Plutarch's Mor. 328 To bring in place..at their feasts a Scelet, that is to say, a drie and withered anatomie of a dead man. ▪ II. skelet obs. form of skillet1. |