释义 |
▪ I. slite, n. Now E. Angl. dial.|slaɪt| Also 9 slight, sleight. [f. slite v., or ad. Du. slijt (cf. G. schleiss), f. slijten (see next).] Impairment through use; wear and tear.
1614T. Gentleman Way to win Wealth 36 But the yearely slite and weare of her tackell and war-ropes and nets will cost some eighty pounds. 1879Norfolk Archaeol. VIII. 173, I have a wonderful sleight for shoes with my children. 1895E. Angl. Gloss. 200, Slite, wear and tear. ▪ II. slite, v. Now rare or Obs. Also 5 slytyn, 5, 9 slyte. pa. tense 6, 8–9 Sc. slate, slait. pa. pple. 5 slytyn. [Representing either OE. slítan (slát, etc.) or ON. slíta (Icel. slíta, Norw. and Sw. slita, Da. slide), corresponding to OFris. slîta (WFris. slite), MDu. slīten (Du. slijten), OS. slîtan (MLG. and LG. slîten), OHG. slîzan (G. schleissen). Common in OE., but rare in the later language; the mod. dial. pa. pple. slitten is now associated with slit v.] 1. trans. To slit or split; to cut or rip up.
c1440Jacob's Well 226 Þe o feend slyteth wyth a swerd my body, & begynneth at myn heued dounwarde. 1536Bellenden Chron. Scot. Proh. (1541) A vij, Duke Hanniball..Brak doun the wallis, and the montanis slait. 1825Jamieson Suppl., To Slite, Slyte, to rip up any thing that is sewed. 1841in R. Chambers Pop. Rhymes Scot. (1870) 156, I sewed a pair o' sheets, and I slate them. 2. To impair by wear; to wear out. Hence ˈsliting vbl. n. (Cf. slite n.)
c1440Promp. Parv. 459/2 Slytyn, or weryn, attero, vetero. Ibid., Slytynge, veteracio, consumpcio. 3. Sc. To whet or sharpen.
17..Gil Morrice xviii. in Percy Reliques iii. i, Now he has drawn his trusty brand, And slaited [read slait it] on the strae. a1800in Child Ballads IV. 491 Johnny drew forth his good braid glaive, And slate it on the plain. 1825Jamieson Suppl. s.v. Slait, Slite is used in this sense [sc. to whet] in Lanarks[hire] and also in Loth[ian]. ▪ III. slite obs. form of sleet n. |