释义 |
death-throe Forms: α. 4 deþ þrowe, 6 Sc. deitht thrau, 7–9 death-throe; β. Sc. and north. dial. 4 ded thrau, dede þrawe, 6 dede-, deid-thraw, 7 dead-throe, 9 dead-thraw, -throw. [f. death n. + throe; most frequent in the northern form dede-thraw, mod.Sc. deid-thraw.] The agony of death, the death-struggle; also fig.
c1305St. Christopher 192 in E.E.P. (1862) 64 Þat hire deþ þrowes were stronge. 1549Compl. Scot. xiv. 121 Darius vas in the agonya and deitht thrau. 1849Robertson Serm. Ser. i. xii. (1866) 210 The death-throes of Rome were long and terrible. βa1300Cursor M. 26659 (Cott.) Quen ded thraus smites smert. 1535Stewart Cron. Scot. III. 119 Sum in the deid⁓thraw la walterand in swoun. 1597Montgomerie Cherrie & Slae 286 Like to an fische fast in the net, In deid-thraw vndeceist. 1645Rutherford Tryal & Tri. Faith (1845) 279 In the dead-throe. 1815Scott Guy M. ix, Ye maun come hame, sir,—for my lady's in the dead-thraw. 1826E. Irving Babylon I. ii. 144 While it is the dead-throw, the last gasp and termination of life to the Papal Beast. b. fig. (Sc.)
1808Jamieson s.v., Meat is said to be in the deadthraw, when it is neither cold nor hot. 1822Hogg Perils Man III. 116 (Jam.) One of those..winter days..when the weather is what the shepherds call in the dead⁓thraw, that is, in a struggle between frost and thaw. |