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单词 cousin
释义 I. cousin, n.|ˈkʌz(ə)n|
Forms: 3–6 cosine, -yn(e, 3–7 cosin, (4 kosin, -yn, cozyn, cossen, pl. kosnis, cosignis), 4–5 cusin, -yn, -ing, -yng, 4–6 cosyng, cousyn, -ing, -yng, 4–7 cosen (5 kosen, kussin, cosinne, -ynne), 5–6 cossin(e, coosen, -in, -yn, coussin, 6–7 cousen, couzen, (7 cozen, -in, cuzen), 6– cousin.
[a. F. cousin, in OF. also cusin, cosin = Pr. cosin, cozin, Cat. cosí, It. cugino, Rumansch cusrin, cusdrin:—L. consobrīnus cousin by the mother's side. Med.L. forms were cossofrēnus and cosīnus (St. Gall. Vocab. 7th c.). In mediæval use, the word seems to have been often taken to represent L. consanguineus: see 1 b, 9.]
1. A collateral relative more distant than a brother or sister; a kinsman or kinswoman, a relative; formerly very frequently applied to a nephew or niece. Obs.
a1300Cursor M. 24312 (Cott.) Þir martirs tuin [St. Mary and St. John]..Cosins bath and martirs clene.c1320Sir Beues 2578 Men tolde, þe bischop was is em..Þe beschop..seide: ‘Wolkome, leue cosin!’c1330R. Brunne Chron. (1810) 189 Þi sister sonne am I, þou eam & I cosyn.1340Ayenb. 89 [Jesus] ansuerede, ‘huo ys my moder, and huo byeþ myne cosynes?’1382Wyclif Dan. xiii. 29 She came with fadir, and modir, and sonnys, and alle hir cosyns [1388 alle kynesmen].c1440Gesta Rom. lxi. 261 (Harl. MS.) A! Lorde god..have mercy of my swete sone, husbonde, and cosyn..that he may be clene of his synnys.1483Cath. Angl. 77 A Coysn, cognatus.1483Caxton Cato A iv, There be thre manere of cosyns. The fyrst is spirituel as ben godfaders and godmoders.1526Tindale Rom. xvi. 7 Salute Andronicus, and Junia my cosyns [1611 kinsmen].1574tr. Littleton's Tenures 23 b, Si parentes inter se lamentantur, which is as muche to saye that yf the cosins of such a chylde have cause to make lamentacion.1599Shakes. Much Ado i. ii. 2 How now brother, where is my cosen your son?1668Mrs. Evelyn To her brother-in-law in Evelyn's Mem. (1857) IV. 13 Though your eye be continually over my cousin your son.1748Richardson Clarissa I. vi. 36 ‘Cousin Harlowe’ said my aunt Hervey, ‘allow me to say,’ etc.
b. In legal language formerly often applied to the next of kin, or the person to whom one is next of kin, including direct ancestors and descendants more remote than parents and children. (Here taken as = L. consanguineus.)
a1400Arthur 215 [The ‘Emperor’ Lucius to Arthur] Oure cosyn Iulius cesar Somme tyme conquered þar.1491Act 7 Hen. VII, c. 15 §5 Anne his Wyf, in hir right as cosyn and heire unto the seid Thomas Lord Dispenser that is to sey, Doughter to Isabell doughter to the same Thomas.1495Act 11 Hen. VII, c. 63 §4 Any of the premysses, that..reverte from any Auncestour or Cosyn of the seid Fraunces.1503Act 19 Hen. VII, c. 35 §1 Robert Brews Squyer Cosyn and heire unto Sir Gilbert Debenham..that is to say, sone of Elizabeth Brews Sister to the seid Sir Gilbert.1574tr. Littleton's Tenures 2 a, Everye one that is his next cosyn collaterall of the whole bloude.1613Sir H. Finch Law (1636) 267 After the death of his great great grandfather or grandmother, or any other collaterall Cosin, as the great great grandfathers brother.1642Perkins Prof. Bk. viii. §506 One P.D and A his wife enter into the same land as in the right of A his wife as coosen and heire to the donor.
c. Applied to people of kindred races or nations (e.g. British and Americans).
1837W. Irving Capt. Bonneville II. 252 He had received such good accounts from the Upper Nez Percés of their cousins, the Lower Nez Percés.1860J. C. Jeaffreson Bk. about Doctors II. 158 The example..was not lost upon the physicians of our American cousins.1892Times (Weekly Ed.) 12 Aug. 7/1 The toast of ‘Our American Cousins’ was proposed by Mr. Harry Furniss.
2. spec. The son or daughter of (one's) uncle or aunt: = own, first, or full cousin, cousin-german. (The strict modern sense.)
c1290S. Eng. Leg. I. 365/24 Huy weren ore louerdes cosines.c1380Wyclif Serm. Sel. Wks. I. 86 Joon Evangelist..Crist was his cosyn, and Cristis modir was his aunte.c1440Promp. Parv. 94 Coosyn or emys sone, cognatus.1530Palsgr. 209/1 Cosyn, brothers children, cousin germain.1593Shakes. Rich. II, i. iv. 1–10 Cosene Aumerle, How far brought you high Herford on his way?.. What said our Cosin when you parted with him?Ibid. iv. i. 181 Giue me the Crown. Here Cousin, seize y⊇ Crown: Here Cousin, on this side my Hand, on that side thine.1598B. Jonson Ev. Man in Hum. iii. i. 1, I am this gentleman's own cousin, sir; his father is mine uncle, sir.1655–60Stanley Hist. Philos. III. ii. 120 The children of uncles, or of cosens.1841Lane Arab. Nts. I. 62 A Cousin is often chosen as a wife, on account of the tie of blood.1875Jowett Plato (ed. 2) I. 10 He is my cousin, and the son of my uncle Glaucon.
b. cousin-in-law: a cousin's wife or husband. [after brother-in-law, etc.]
1874L. Tollemache in Fortn. Rev. Feb. 242 The rich cousin-in-law [in ‘Locksley Hall’].1890Dunckley Ld. Melbourne 78 The lady suggested was Lady Caroline's cousin-in-law.
3. first cousin, second cousin, etc.: expressing the relationship of persons descended the same number of steps in distinct lines from a common ancestor.
Thus the children of brothers or sisters are first cousins to each other; the children of first cousins are second cousins to each other; and so on. The term second cousin, is also loosely applied to the son or daughter of a first cousin, more exactly called a (first) cousin once removed.
1660Jer. Taylor Duct. Dubit. (1671) 242, I never knew the marriage of second cosens forbidden, but by them who at the same time forbad the marriage of the first.1661Merry Drollery ii. (1691) 346 Who thus confineth all his pleasure To th' arms of his first Couzen.1688Miege Fr. Dict. s.v. Cousin, A second Cousin, a Cousin once removed, Cousin issu de germain.1712Steele Spect. No. 496 ⁋3 No man swung any woman who was not second cousin at farthest.1752W. Stewart in Scots Mag. (1753) Sept. 446/1 The deponent is first cousin to the pannel.1834H. Martineau Farrers iii. 43 Morgan believed herself to be the fiftieth cousin of the family.1883L. Oliphant Altiora Peto I. 27 Full second cousin of, etc.
4. fig. A person or thing having affinity of nature to another. to have no cousin: to have no fellow or equal (obs.).
1386[see 9].1538Bale Thre Lawes 271 Now wyll I proue ye a lyar Next cosyne to a friar.1542Udall Erasm. Apoph. 220 b, If he had had the feacte to hold and kepe an empire, as well as he could achiue and winne it, he had had no cousin.1586Cogan Haven Health 279 Other diseases neere Cosins to the plague.1607Topsell Four-f. Beasts (1673) 300 The evill habit of the body is next cousen to the dropsie.1629Chapman Juvenal v. 193 Glad to take An eel, near cousin to a hideous snake.1875Jowett Plato (ed. 2) IV. 380 The Sophist is the cousin of the parasite and flatterer.1883G. Lloyd Ebb & Flow I. 23 Hawthorn Hall was not first cousin to The Aspens, having nothing of the villa about it.
5. As a term of intimacy, friendship, or familiarity.
a. Used by a sovereign in addressing or formally naming another sovereign, or a nobleman of the same country.
In England applied in royal writs and commissions to earls and peers of higher rank. (See quotation 1765, and cf.c1460Fortescue Absol. & Lim. Mon. x. 134 And by discente þer is not like to ffalle gretter heritage to any man than to þe kyng. For to hym bith cosens þe most, and grettest lordes off the reaume.)
1418Hen. V. in Ellis Orig. Lett. i. i. I. 1 With my cosin of Northumberlond and my cosin of Westmerlond.1477Edw. IV. ibid. ix. 16 Where as our brother and cousin the King of Scotts desireth a marriage to be had, etc.1513Jas IV to Hen. VIII ibid. xxvii. 78 To the richt excellennt, richt hie, and michty Prince oure Derrest Brothir and Cousing the King of Ingland.1593Shakes. 2 Hen. VI, iv. viii. 34 Cousin of Exeter, what thinkes your Lordship?1601All's Well i. ii. 5 A certaintie vouch'd from our Cosin Austria.Ibid. iii. i. 7. 1673 Chas. II in Essex Papers (Camden) I. 112 Right Trusty and Right Welbeloved Cousin & Counsellor, Wee greet you well.1765Blackstone Comm. I. 386 In all writs, and commissions..the king, when he mentions any peer of the degree of an earl, always stiles him ‘trusty and well beloved cousin’: an appellation as antient as the reign of Henry IV; who being either by his wife, his mother, or his sisters actually related or allied to every earl in the kingdom, artfully..acknowledged that connexion in all his letters.1843Prescott Mexico (1850) I. 126 The title..of primo, or ‘cousin’, by which a grandee of Spain is saluted by his sovereign.1850R. Commission Gt. Exhib. in Lond. Gaz. 4 Jan., Victoria, by the grace of God..to..Our right trusty and right entirely-beloved Cousin and Councillor Walter Francis Duke of Buccleuch and Queensbury.
b. As a friendly or familiar term of address or designation. Now esp. in Cornwall; hence Cousin Jan, Cousin Jacky, nicknames for a Cornishman.
c1430Lydg. Bochas i. i. (1544) 1 Our fader Adam..sayde ‘Cosine Bochas’.1859W. B. Forfar (title), Cousin Jan's Courtship and Marriage.1880W. Cornwall Gloss., Cousin, a familiar epithet. All Cornish gentlemen are cousins. Cousin Jan, a Cornishman.E. Cornw. Words 71 To imitate the talk of Cousin Jacky from Redruth or St. Just.
6. Cant. A strumpet, trull. Obs. (Cf. aunt 3.) So Cousin Betty; also, a half-wit.
a1700B. E. Dict. Cant. Crew, One of my Cosens, a Wench.1708Motteux Rabelais (1737) V. 217 Cousins, Cullies, Stallions and Belli-bumpers.1749Goadby Bampfylde M. Carew xv, One of the sisters of that order of mendicants commonly called Cousin Betties.Ibid. xix, A gay bachelor, who..was a great admirer of that order of Female Travellers called Cousin Betties.1847–78Halliwell s.v., Cousin Betty, or Cousin Tom, a bedlamite beggar; now applied to a mad woman or man.1863Mrs. Gaskell Sylvia's L. xiv. (D.), [No one] can say Foster's wronged him of a penny, or gave short measure to a child or a Cousin Betty.
7. Phrases. to call cousins: to claim kinship (with); see call v. 17 b. Similarly to call the king one's cousin, etc. (mostly with negative). my dirty cousin, or my cousin the weaver: formerly used as a contemptuous form of address. cousin kiss-them-all: a colloquialism for ‘wheedler’ (Suffolk).
1362Langl. P. Pl. A. ii. 102 A Mayden ful gent; Heo mihte cusse þe kyng for cosyn ȝif heo schulde.1623, etc. [see call v. 17 b].c1706Swift Pol. Conv. ii. (D.), A kiss! marry come up, my dirty cousin.1749Fielding Tom Jones iv. xiv. (D.), Marry come up! I assure you, my dirty cousin, thof his skin be so white..I am a Christian as well as he.1793L. Williams Children's Friend I. 175 He talks and acts as if the King were his cousin, and he has not a farthing all the while.1836Marryat Three Cutters ii, I only wish I had..I wouldn't call the king my Cousin.1882Pall Mall G. 9 June 4/4 A person who apparently calls cousins with some of the ‘best’ people in England.
8. to make a cousin of: ? to beguile, deceive, mislead, impose upon, gull, hoax. Obs.[App. connected with cozen v., either as the phrase from which that vb. arose, or as a play upon the two words. For the latter, cf. also to prove a cousin to in quot. 1600.] 1580Lyly Euphues (Arb.) 235 Cassander..determined with him selfe to make a Cosinne of his young Neuew [app. by keeping him in the dark as to facts] untill he had bought witte with the price of his woe.1600Rowlands Let. Humours Blood vii. 83 And while his eares with Brothers tearmes he feedes He prooueth but a Coosen in his deedes.1655Fuller Hist. Camb. (1840) 117 The said Sir Henry Savill..at an Oxford Act..in mere merriment, (to try whether he could make cousens of his aunt's children therein,) devised the story, far from any..mischievous intent to deceive posterity, but only for present delight.
9. In its use predicatively, as in to be cousin to, and in apposition, as in cousin brutes (cf. brother men), the word sometimes approaches the character of an adj. = kindred, akin, related. (Cf. L. consanguineus.)
c1386Chaucer Prol. 742 The wordes moote be cosyn to the dede.1525Ld. Berners Froiss. ii. xci. [lxxxvii.] 271 That ye shal be frendes and cosyn to the kynge, as by reason ye ought to be.1590Spenser F.Q. iii. iv. 12 Her former sorrow into suddein wrath (Both coosen passions of distroubled spright), Conuerting.1606Sylvester Du Bartas ii. iii. iv. 138 All the Campe with head-les dead is sowne, Cut-off by Cozen-swords, kill'd by their own.1852H. Rogers Ess. I. vii. 407 A family resemblance to his cousin brutes.
II. ˈcousin, v. Obs. rare.
[f. prec. n.: cf. to father.]
trans. To call cousin, claim kinship with.
a1658Cleveland Publ. Faith 52 The Publick Faith? Why 'tis a word of kin, A Nephew that dares Cousin any sin.
III. cousin, -age
obs. ff. cozen, -age.
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