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单词 changeling
释义

changelingn.adj.

Brit. /ˈtʃeɪn(d)ʒlɪŋ/, U.S. /ˈtʃeɪndʒlɪŋ/
Forms: see change v. and -ling suffix1.
Origin: Formed within English, by derivation. Etymons: change v., -ling suffix1.
Etymology: < change v. + -ling suffix1.
A. n.
I. Someone or something that has been substituted for another.
1.
a. A child secretly substituted for another in infancy; a child supposedly left by fairies in exchange for one stolen.Often used to refer to a child who is considered undesirable, or who does not resemble his or her family.In quot. 1600: a child stolen by fairies.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > supernatural being > fairy or elf > [noun] > changeling
changeling1584
ouphea1616
aufe1621
oaf1638
killcrop1652
1534 N. Udall Floures for Latine Spekynge gathered oute of Terence f. 196v Subditum se suspicatur. He mystrusteth hym selfe that he was some chaungelynge. Subditum .i. subdititium uel suppositum. Suppositus, ta, tum, a chaungelynge, or a chylde, that was chaunged in the cradle, and layde there for the very trewe chylde.
1584 R. Scot Discouerie Witchcraft vii. xv. 153 They haue so fraied vs with..elues, hags,..changlings, Incubus, Robin good fellowe..and such other bugs, that we are afraid of our owne shadowes.
1600 W. Shakespeare Midsummer Night's Dream ii. i. 23 She, as her attendant, hath..so sweete a changeling . View more context for this quotation
1664 H. More Modest Enq. Myst. Iniquity viii. 24 To steal a Prince out of his cradle, and leave a Changeling in the room.
1727 J. Gay Fables I. iii. 10 Your precious babe is hence convey'd, And in the place a changeling laid.
1763 M. Minifie & S. Gunning Hist. Lady Frances & Lady Caroline III. 198 Such a mother as yourself, who had never seen your own, but once from its birth, would not discern the changling.
1840 W. H. Ainsworth Tower of London 370 Yes! I am a changeling.
1861 H. B. Stowe Pearl of Orr's Island (1862) xx. 202 The temperaments of children are often as oddly unsuited to parents as if capricious fairies had been filling cradles with changelings.
1938 E. Goudge Towers in Mist (1998) ii. 33 So naughty was Diccon that the frightful idea had been expressed by Great-Aunt that he was in reality no child of theirs but a changeling.
2005 N. Brooks My Name is Denise Forrester 135 Picking this changeling up, touching it, maybe having it clamp onto her sore, leaky tits made her want to spew.
b. figurative and in figurative contexts.
ΚΠ
1587 J. Polemon 2nd Pt. Bk. Battailes Pref. sig. A.ij I..forsware mine owne child, bidding the Printer take it to himselfe, and father it on whom hee list, so he gaue it not mine name, for I would neuer acknowledge it for mine owne, but account it a changeling.
1659 J. Rogers Διαπολιτεία 36 He and others are labouring as for life to lay a Changeling (of the Jesuites begetting indeed) in the room of our present Commonwealth.
?1705 E. Hickeringill Surv. Earth 37 Fathering the Dirges, Prayers for the Dead, the Common-Prayer-Book..upon the Holy Ghost; whereas it was only the Pope's Brat, and a Changling, with which the Priest's went a begging for God's sake.
1795 T. D. Rees Iver & Hengo ii. 23 I trust he will not flinch, nor prove a changling to his father's blood.
1817 P. B. Shelley Laon & Cythna iv. i. 75 That grey tower..A changeling of man's art, nursed amid Nature's brood.
1855 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. IV. 530 The small pox was always present..turning the babe into a changeling at which the mother shuddered.
1954 Poetry 85 3 Lovers are changelings, never knowing Whose lost blood pulses in their marvelous hearts.
2003 Relig. & Lit. 35 210 I alienated myself irrevocably from country and home, and believed myself a changeling of the Western Imagination.
2. More generally: a person or thing secretly or surreptitiously substituted for another; a replacement, esp. one of inferior worth or value.
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > change > exchange > [noun] > person or thing exchanged
pricea1300
botchmenta1425
changinga1425
exchange1490
tit for tat1546
changeling?1548
some and some1573
tip for tap1573
quid pro quo1816
?1548 A. Gilby Answer Deuillish Detection S. Gardiner Prol. f. viii The popishe Idole, the dombe God, and poetical chaungling, wherby..the true liuinge God is neglected.
1576 W. Lambarde Perambulation of Kent 105 King Canutus gaue..to Christes church in Canterbury, Sainct Bartholmews arme (if happely it were not a chaungeling: for Kings & great men were oftentymes after that sort deluded).
1640 Bp. J. Hall Episcopacie ii. xx. 204 It is not St. Ambrose..but a changling in his clothes.
1678 R. Cudworth True Intellect. Syst. Universe i. 54 The undermining and subversion of all Morality, by substituting something like it in the Room of it, that is a mere Counterfeit and Changeling.
1830 W. Scott Lett. Demonol. & Witchcraft vi. 175 Who live as changelings ever since, For love of your domains.
1895 Philatelic Jrnl. Amer. Jan. 22/2 Will those who say it is impossible for the American Bank Note Company to have made errors of color, claim these are changelings or trial sheets?
1937 Musical Times 78 1068/2 It may be that with greater familiarity this end will grow more convincing, but on a first hearing it seemed to be a changeling, not the real end for this beautiful work.
2001 T. Courtenay Dear Tom 70 I must have gloried in my mac too much that morning, and some jealous child had done a swap. I immediately took the changeling to Miss Davis and explained that it had been hung in place of my new one.
3. An extremely stupid or foolish person; an idiot, an imbecile. Now historical.Probably with reference to the idea that children with undesirable physical or mental characteristics were changelings in sense A. 1a.In quot. 1577: a person maddened or made foolish with rage.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > mental health > mental illness > mental deficiency > [noun] > person
congeonc1285
idiota1400
foola1425
natural foolc1450
natural idiot1497
natural1533
changeling1577
weakling1577
mooncalf1586
slimslack1600
aufe1621
oaf1638
weak-wit1656
underwit1682
imbecile1830
ament1871
unfortunate1881
balmy1903
subnormal1905
deficient1906
retard1909
retardate1912
retarded1912
mopoke1946
retardee1956
mong1980
1577 R. Stanyhurst Treat. Descr. Irelande iii. f. 14/1, in R. Holinshed Chron. I Some other woulde enkendle the like fire a freshe, and so consequently dishonest their wyfes, and make their husbands to become changelinges, as being turnde from sober moode to be hornewood.
1612 W. Attersoll Comm. Epist. to Philemon 127 If they [sc. children] do not prosper and proceede, we commonly call them and account them Vrchins and Changelings.
1622 J. Rawlins Famous Recoverie Ship of Bristoll sig. C2 They also obserue Lunaticks and changelings, and the Coniurer writeth downe their sayings in a booke.
1667 S. Pepys Diary 28 Dec. (1974) VIII. 594 To think how ill she doth any serious part..just like a fool or changeling.
1784 New Spectator No. 22. 1/1 Those only are changelings or naturals, who have no innate ideas.
1810 G. Crabbe Borough xviii. 228 A harmless idiot we behold, Who hoards up silver shells..To buy a seat, and reign the Borough's mayor: Alas!—who could th' ambitious changeling tell, That what he sought our rulers dar'd to sell?
1845 in H. Rogers Ess. (1850) I. 111 The giant becomes a dwarf—the genius a helpless changeling.
1911 J. W. McSpadden Opera Synopses 203 Nial, the half-witted changeling, and Enya, watch the battle with the Romans at the walls of the town.
2008 P. McDonagh Idiocy iii. 59 For Locke, idiots or changelings pose problems because they are apparently human yet are also without the rational faculties that he uses to define humanity.
4. A figure of speech in which two elements of a proposition are reversed or given in a contradictory order; = hypallage n. Obsolete. rare.Apparently only attested in G. Puttenham.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > style of language or writing > figure of speech > figures of structure or thought > [noun] > inversion > transposition of functions in sentence
changeling1589
hypallage1589
underchange1589
1589 G. Puttenham Arte Eng. Poesie iii. xv. 143 Hipallage, or the Changeling..as, he that should say, for tell me troth and lie not, lie me troth and tell not.
II. A changeable person.
5. A person likely to change attitude or allegiance; a fickle or inconstant person; a turncoat. Also figurative. Now somewhat archaic.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > will > decision > irresolution or vacillation > inconstancy > [noun] > inconstant person or thing > inconstant person
starter1519
changeling1539
flirt1577
Protean1598
weathercock1598
changerc1600
mooncalf1607
minute jacka1616
a nose of wax1821
sugar stick1825
wax-nosea1843
in-and-outer1905
brainstormer1907
the mind > will > decision > irresolution or vacillation > reversal of or forsaking one's will or purpose > [noun] > desertion of one's party or principles > one who
renay1340
apostate1362
renegatec1450
starter1519
reniant1532
changeling1539
rannigala1560
recreant1570
turncoat1570
renegado1573
start-away1574
off-faller?1575
start-back1579
departer1586
reneger1597
retrospicientc1600
runagadea1604
renegade1611
turn-tail1621
runagado1623
trip-coata1625
retrogredient1650
retrograde1651
tergiversator1716
rat1755
ratter1819
tergiversant1833
blackleg1844
strike-breaker1904
faller-out1964
1539 R. Morison Exhort. to styrre All Eng. Men (new ed.) sig. Dii We become chaungelynges, and for a tryfle leaue that we haue hitherto godly folowed.
1563 J. Foxe Actes & Monuments 1157/1 I am no chaungeling, neither none wyll be.
1598 W. Shakespeare Henry IV, Pt. 1 v. i. 76 Fickle changlings and poore discontents. View more context for this quotation
1651 J. Howell S.P.Q.V. 45 Which have their being under that changeling the Moon.
1682 J. Bunyan Holy War 42 They would never be Changlings, nor forsake their Old Lord for a New. View more context for this quotation
1759 W. Robertson Hist. Scotl. I. vi. 459 Darnley was such a changeling.
1797 A. M. Bennett Beggar Girl IV. iv. 151 She thought the unhappy creature was quite reformed, but poor Rose Wilkins was no changeling.
1807 R. Wilson Jrnl. 28 June in Life Gen. Sir R. Wilson (1862) II. 286 England has nought to fear from such changelings.
1844 in J. Davis Papers (1974) II. 176 This renowned political changeling poured forth a torrent of abuse on Mr. Clay.
1910 J. H. Clifford Standard Musical Encycl. II. 434/2 This scandal to the cloth was reproached for his versatility of religious creeds, and taxed for being..an inveterate changeling.
1999 USA Today (Nexis) 9 Feb. 17 a Great works of literature are changelings, somehow altering themselves to speak anew to each generation.
B. adj.
Changeable, varying; inconstant, fickle. Now somewhat archaic and rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > change > changeableness > [adjective]
slidinga900
wankleeOE
windyc1000
unsteadfastc1200
fleeting?c1225
loose?c1225
brotelc1315
unstablec1340
varyingc1340
variantc1374
motleyc1380
ungroundedc1380
muablea1393
passiblea1393
remuablea1393
changeablea1398
movablea1398
variablec1397
slidderya1400
ticklec1400
variantc1412
flitting1413
mutable?a1425
movingc1425
flaskisable1430
flickering1430
transmutablec1430
vertible1447
brittlea1450
ficklea1450
permutablec1450
unfirmc1450
uncertain1477
turnable1483
unsteadfast1483
vagrantc1522
inconstant1526
alterable?1531
stirringc1540
slippery1548
various1552
slid?1553
mutala1561
rolling1561
weathery1563
unconstant1568
interchangeable1574
fluctuant1575
stayless1575
transitive1575
voluble1575
changeling1577
queasy1579
desultory1581
huff-puff1582
unstaid1586
vagrant1586
changeful1590
floating1594
Protean1594
unstayed1594
swimming1596
anchorless1597
mobilec1600
ticklish1601
catching1603
labile1603
unrooted1604
quicksilvered1605
versatile1605
insubstantial1607
uncertain1609
brandling1611
rootless1611
squeasy1611
wind-changinga1616
insolid1618
ambulatory1625
versatilous1629
plastic1633
desultorious1637
unbottomed1641
fluid1642
fluent1648
yea-and-nay1648
versipellous1650
flexile1651
uncentred1652
variating1653
chequered1656
slideable1662
transchangeative1662
weathercock-like1663
flicketing1674
fluxa1677
lapsable1678
wanton1681
veering1684
upon the weathercock1702
contingent1703
unsettled?1726
fermentable1731
afloat1757
brickle1768
wavy1795
vagarious1798
unsettled1803
fitful1810
metamorphosical1811
undulating1815
tittupya1817
titubant1817
mutative1818
papier mâché1818
teetotum1819
vacillating1822
capricious1823
sensitive1828
quicksilvery1829
unengrafted1829
fluxionala1834
proteiform1833
liquid1835
tottlish1835
kaleidoscopic1846
versative1846
kaleidoscopical1858
tottery1861
choppy1865
variative1874
variational1879
wimbly-wambly1881
fluctuable1882
shifty1882
giveable1884
shifty1884
tippy1886
mutatory1890
upsettable1890
rocky1897
undulatory1897
streaky1898
tottly1905
tipply1906
up and down1907
inertialess1927
sometimey1946
rise-and-fall1950
switchable1961
the mind > will > decision > irresolution or vacillation > inconstancy > [adjective]
unfastc888
unstathelfasteOE
unsteadfasta1200
fleeting?c1225
changeablea1275
ficklea1275
unstablec1290
waveringc1315
flickerc1325
loose in the haftc1325
motleyc1380
unsadc1384
variablea1387
variantc1386
ticklec1400
inconstant1402
flitting1413
brittle1420
plianta1425
mutablec1425
shittle1440
shittle-witted1448
moonishc1450
unconstant1483
unfirm1483
varying?a1500
pliablea1513
fluctuant1575
changeling1577
shittle-headed1580
cheverel1583
off and on1583
chameleon-like1589
changeful1590
limber1602
unsteady1604
ticklish1606
skittish1609
startling1619
labile1623
uncertaina1625
cheverelized1625
remuant1625
fluctuate1631
fluctuary1632
various1636
contrarious1643
epileptical1646
fluxilea1654
shittle-braineda1655
multivolent1656
totter-headed1662
on and off1668
self-inconsistent1678
weathercocka1680
whifflinga1680
versatile1682
veering1684
fast and loose1697
inconsistent1709
insteadfast1728
unfixing1810
unsteadied1814
chameleonic1821
labefact1874
ballastless1884
weathercocky1886
whiffle-minded1902
1577 M. Hanmer tr. Socrates Scholasticus i, in Aunc. Eccl. Hist. 218 They agayne chaunged them selues like vnto the chaungling & diuerously bespotted beaste Chamæleon.
?1583 R. Robinson tr. Urbanus Regius Homelye sig. C.viv He is an enimy such and so great,..so craftie, so wylie, so changling.
1646 R. Boyle Let. 20 Feb. in T. Birch Life (1744) 69 Some are so studiously changling in that particular, they esteeem an opinion a diurnal, after a day or two scarce worth the keeping.
1691 D. Defoe New Discov. Old Intreague Introd. ii. 4 Crouds of Thoughtless Mob with Changeling Praise.
1702 N. Rowe Tamerlane i. ii. 19 Curse on that Changeling Deity of Fools!
1798 W. Dunlap Andre i. 17 One, whom fickle Fortune, In her changeling mood, hath hurl'd, unpitying, From her topmost height to lowest misery.
1827 Methodist Mag. June 239 The great and the mighty may..listen with delighted ear to the timid and fickle praises of a changeling world.
1873 J. B. L. Warren Searching Net 73 A changeling god unstable as the sand.
1922 E. V. Odle Hist. Alfred Rudd xv. 263 Would she consider herself insulted by so visible a sign of his changeling heart?
1998 S. Strange in Amer. Poetry Rev. Mar. 43/2 In the changeling air of morning They are silhouettes.

Compounds

General attributive and appositive (chiefly in senses A. 1a, A. 3).
ΚΠ
?1548 A. Gilby Answer Deuillish Detection S. Gardiner f. cxxiiiiv Suche a new chaunglynge churche as shal not be founde agayn throughout the worlde.
1552 R. Huloet Abcedarium Anglico Latinum Chaungelyng [printed Chauugelyng] chyldren, Lamiæ, rum, pueri subdititij.
1600 W. Shakespeare Midsummer Night's Dream ii. i. 120 I doe but begge a little Changeling boy, To be my Henchman. View more context for this quotation
1653 J. Bulwer Anthropometamorphosis (rev. ed.) xxiv. 528 Of Changling Infants, needs not much be questioned, for that sometimes some such thing is done, is not by his power, but by the permission of God for the sins of men.
1862 T. C. Croker Fairy Legends & Trad. S. Irel. (new ed.) 38 (note) A strong similarity in the traits of changeling character.
1895 A. Lang in Illustr. London News 25 May 651/1 While in the case of infants the fairies used to leave a changeling brat behind, they did not do so when they stole grown-up people.
1924 San Antonion (Texas) Express 12 Oct. 2 b/1 Black memories of changeling tales rushed into her brain.
1949 Funk's Standard Dict. Folklore I. 253/2 Corrigan..is fond of pretty human children, and usually gets the blame for all changeling substitutions.
2005 M. Cunningham Specimen Days (2006) 35 The changeling child, goblin-faced, with frail heart and mismatched eyes.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2017; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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n.adj.1534
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