单词 | clean |
释义 | cleann. An act of cleaning: chiefly in combination, as clean-up n., clean-out, etc. ΘΠ the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > cleaning > [noun] > an act of cleaning cleanse1760 toilet1862 clean-up1876 cleana1889 spruce-up1918 a1889 Mod. colloq. Give it a clean before returning it. Draft additions 1997 2. Weightlifting. The action of lifting a bar-bell from the floor to shoulder height in a single movement: usually the first part of an overhead lift, followed by a jerk or press. Frequently in phrases clean and jerk, clean and press. Cf. jerk n.1 5, press n.1 11d. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > athletics > [noun] > weight-lifting > types of lift dead lift1828 jerk1894 press1906 clean1913 snatch1928 cleaning1949 1913 Health & Strength 6 Dec. 632/2 L.h. clean and jerk. 1928 Health & Strength Ann. 77 ‘Two Hands Clean and Military Press with Barbell’..and the ‘Two Hands Clean and Jerk with Barbell’. 1947 Brit. Amateur Weight-Lifter Jan. 12/2 He also set up a new American Clean and Jerk record. 1961 Muscle Power Nov. 18 If you had only one exercise to do, what would it be? I asked this question of a number of prominent bodybuilders. About 60% of them agreed that they would favor the Two-hands Clean and Press. 1961 Muscle Power Nov. 18 The Clean to chest requires great leg and lower back strength. 1975 Oxf. Compan. Sports & Games 1099/1 At the 1924 Olympic Games the lifts were one hand snatch, opposite one hand jerk, two hands clean and press, two hands snatch, and two hands clean and jerk. 1991 Longevity Jan. 60/2 The riskiest moves for your back are the clean-and-jerk, the snatch, the squat and the dead-lift. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1889; most recently modified version published online March 2019). cleanadj. I. That is clear in quality; free of encumbrance. 1. Clear. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > light > transparency or translucence > [adjective] shireOE brightOE through-shineOE cleanc1040 cleara1400 transparent1413 crystalc1425 crystallinec1425 crystal-clear?a1439 pure1481 perspicuatea1500 beryl1508 through-shining1526 diaphane1561 thorough-seeable1562 pellucid1563 sheer1565 translucent1568 liquid1590 tralucent?1592 perspicuous1599 thorough light1601 diaphanic1614 diaphanous1614 perspicable1615 translucid1615 diaphanal1616 lucid1620 diaphaned1626 transpicuous1638 perlucid1647 dioptrical1760 dioptric1801 unconcealing1804 see-through1851 pellucent1886 pool-clear1924 c1040 in Sax. Leechd. II. 296 Þæt eal se lichoma sy clanes hiwes. a1123 Anglo-Saxon Chron. anno 1110 Ealle þa niht wæs seo lyft swiðe clene. a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add. 27944) (1975) II. xvi. xcix. 880 Glas is clene and pure and specialliche bright and clere. 1590 E. Spenser Faerie Queene i. vii. sig. G3 All of Diamond perfect pure and cleene. 1670 C. Cotton tr. G. Girard Hist. Life Duke of Espernon ii. viii. 366 A Diamond..reputed one of the finest and cleanest for its size in France. 1708 London Gaz. No. 4499/4 One other rough Stone..Christaline, White and Clean. ΚΠ c1000 Ags. Ps. lxii. 9 [lxiii. 11] Kynincg sceal on Drihtne clæne blisse, hluttre habban. ΚΠ OE Cynewulf Elene 749 Þas word cweðaþ clænum stefnum, (þam is ceraphin nama). ΚΠ a1300 Charter of Eadweard dated 1067 in Cod. Dipl. IV. 199 Ælfrid hauet yseld Gise biscop his land..sacleas and clæne. e. Of a vessel: clear of advance commission, dispatch money, and other charges, which may constitute deductions from the freight. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > trading vessel > cargo vessel > [adjective] > clear of charges deductible from freight clean1890 1890 Whitby Gaz. 17 Jan. 2/7 Thomas Turnbull, Cardiff to Cape Verde, 9s. 6d., clean. 1891 Whitby Gaz. 18 Sept. 3/2 Stakesby, Cardiff to Gibraltar, 6s. 6d., clean and nett. II. Pure, undefiled, unsullied. 2. a. Free from any defiling or deteriorating ingredient; unmixed with foreign matter, pure, unadulterated. Now commonly expressed by pure, except when the contaminating ingredient is ‘dirt’; as in ‘pure’ or ‘clean water’; clean air, unpolluted atmosphere (frequently attributive). As applied to metals, there may originally have been connection with the preceding notion of ‘clear’, ‘undimmed’. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > wholeness > state or quality of being simple, unmixed, or uncompounded > [adjective] > unadulterated or undiluted clean883 purea1393 uncorrumpeda1400 uncorrupted1541 sincere1557 stark naked?1594 undelayed1600 unsophisticated1630 entire1640 inadulterate1648 dephlegmated1651 neat1651 unalloyeda1672 intaminateda1695 undrossy1708 net1713 unadulterate1716 unsophistical1736 uncauponateda1752 undiluted1756 absolute1810 undefecated1812 unadulterated1823 undilute1876 undoctored1882 uncut1967 the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > freedom from impurities > removal of impurities > ventilation and air-conditioning > [adjective] > clean (air) live1830 clean air1927 883 Cod. Dipl. II. 111 Ðæt land ic selle Cynulfe for syxtigum mancesa clænes goldes. a1000 Canons of Edgar §39 in B. Thorpe Anc. Laws Eng. (1840) II. 252 Clæne oflete, and clæne win, and clæne wæter. 1297 R. Gloucester's Chron. (1724) 435 Hyr maydenes brouȝte hyre clene water. 1362 W. Langland Piers Plowman A. vii. 292 Bred..of clene whete. 1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) Rev. xxi. 18 The citee it silf was of cleene gold, lijk to cleene glas. c1440 Gesta Romanorum (Harl.) lxiv. 276 I am an infant at þe pappis, and live with clene melke. 1463 in S. Tymms Wills & Inventories Bury St. Edmunds (1850) 17 A torche of clene vexe [wax]. 1519 W. Horman Vulgaria i. f. 16v He gave a senser, and a shyp of clene syluer [L. argento puro]. 1584 Partridge's Treasurie (rev. ed.) lxxx. sig. E6 A little cleane wine. 1630 R. Norton tr. W. Camden Hist. Princesse Elizabeth i. 48 Good money of cleane siluer. 1794 D. Steel Elements & Pract. Rigging & Seamanship I. 59 Half-clean hemp is very foul, and full of shivers. 1872 R. B. Smyth Mining Statist. 26 A seam of good clean coal. 1883 Cassell's Family Mag. Aug. 528/1 The beans [are] then put through a winnower..and it is then called ‘clean coffee’. 1927 Lancet 26 Mar. 685/1 Smethwick in Staffordshire held a ‘Clean Air Week’ from March 14th to 19th, during which period an effort was made to keep the atmosphere free from smoke. 1957 Ann. Reg. 1956 iv. 348 The passage of a Clean Air Act..was welcomed by smoke abatement enthusiasts and by all concerned with public health. 1958 Times 2 June p. xii/4 The problem of securing clean air, that is to say an atmosphere throughout the whole country relatively free from pollution and contamination. Categories » b. Of arable land: free from weeds, creeping roots, and the like, prejudicial to husbandry. c. With reference to sensations of taste, smell, etc.: sharp, fresh, distinctive. ΚΠ 1917 Harrods Gen. Catal. 1289/2 Chablis, very delicate, clean, dry wine, free from acidity. 1925 F. S. Fitzgerald Great Gatsby iii. 61 Clean, crisp mornings. 1932 W. Faulkner Light in August v. 102 He emerged into the gray and yellow of dawn, the clean chill, breathing it deep. 1933 W. Faulkner Green Bough 27 The clean smell of its strength upon him blown. 1966 ‘J. Rhys’ Wide Sargasso Sea ii. 77 The strong taste of punch, the cleaner taste of champagne. 1980 M. Broadbent Great Vintage Wine Bk. 275 1961..Chablis, Beugnons..Attractive: pale, clean and dry when first tasted in 1965. d. Of a second-hand motor car: in good condition. (Commercial usage.) ΘΚΠ society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > powered vehicle > motor car > [adjective] > in good condition clean1968 1968 Oxf. Times 5 Jan. 21/3 (advt.) Clean motor cars bought for cash. 1968 Observer 24 Mar. 6/4 The increase in purchase tax..has put about £30 on the price of even a small new car. ‘That means’, says Mr Bluston, of Sand B Motors in Warren Street, the centre of the London used-car trade, ‘that a late, clean, used car is a buying proposition.’ 1976 Billings (Montana) Gaz. 17 June 8- f/1 (advt.) We pay cash for clean used cars! 3. a. Free from dirt or filth; unsoiled or unstained: the usual opposite of dirty or foul. Now the ordinary sense. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > [adjective] cleanc897 fair?c1225 netc1330 cleanly1340 unspotted1382 blotless?a1400 unwemmeda1400 spotlessc1400 neat1494 unblotted1548 unstained1555 stainlessa1586 exempt1586 unsoiledc1592 undefiled1596 unsullied1598 dirtlessa1618 immaculatea1631 innocent1645 unsmeared1648 unsmutched1809 speckless1827 spandy-clean1838 unblackened1864 soilless1868 smudgeless1924 clinical1932 squeaky clean1975 c897 K. Ælfred tr. Gregory Pastoral Care xxxix. 283 Ðonne bið ðæt hus clæne. 1297 R. Gloucester's Chron. (1724) 435 And wesse her fet al clene. c1394 P. Pl. Crede 689 Þei ben cloþed in cloþ þat clennest scheweþ. 1568 Christis Kirk on Grene in W. T. Ritchie Bannatyne MS (1928) II. 262 Thair come our kitteis weschin clene. 1569 R. Grafton Chron. II. 378 Their harnesse was so cleane and bright. 1600 W. Shakespeare Midsummer Night's Dream iv. ii. 35 Let Thisby haue cleane linnen. View more context for this quotation 1611 Bible (King James) Job ix. 30 If I..make my handes neuer so cleane . View more context for this quotation a1616 W. Shakespeare Coriolanus (1623) ii. iii. 62 Bid them wash their Faces, And keepe their teeth cleane . View more context for this quotation 1719 D. Defoe Life Robinson Crusoe 325 Six clean..Shirts. 1832 F. Marryat Newton Forster II. xviii. 270 What sailors call ‘clean shirt days’, viz. Sundays and Thursdays. 1856 R. W. Emerson Eng. Traits vi. 111 A Frenchman may possibly be clean; an Englishman is conscientiously clean. 1887 ‘M. Wetheral’ Two North-country Maids xxv. 174 Her pretty buff cotton gown..was clean on that morning. 1888 Times 10 Oct. 5/5 [A bloodhound] trained from a puppy to hunt ‘the clean shoe’, that is to say, follow the trail of a man whose shoes have not been prepared by the application of blood or aniseed. b. in various specific senses; Of ships: Having the bottom free from barnacles, etc. Of whaling or fishing vessels: With no fish or oil aboard, empty; also said colloquially of an angler's basket. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > vessel with reference to qualities or attributes > [adjective] > having clean or dirty bottom foul1591 clean1666 society > occupation and work > industry > whaling and seal-hunting > whaling > whaling equipment > [adjective] > of whaling vessel clean1820 1666 London Gaz. No. 58/3 In their return they gave Chace to a Caper..but the Caper being clean, escaped them. 1690 N. Luttrell Diary in Brief Hist. Relation State Affairs (1857) II. 63 Their ships being cleaner then his, so outsail'd him. 1720 D. Defoe Life Capt. Singleton 191 As we were a clean Ship we gained upon her. 1820 W. Scoresby Acct. Arctic Regions II. 298 No other opportunity of procuring a whale occurred..The ship returned home clean. 1840 F. Marryat Poor Jack vi. 28 We had a clean hold..for we had but just come to our fishing-ground. c. Of paper: not written on, blank. Of printers' proofs: free from corrections or alterations. Of a copy of writing, etc.: free from corrections, fair. Of a document, report or the like: bearing no adverse point or remark; listing no offence; esp. in phr. clean sheet (see as main entry). ΘΚΠ society > communication > writing > writing materials > material to write on > paper > [adjective] > blank paper, not written upon white1466 void1551 blanka1555 empty1579 fair1606 uninked1637 clean1704 society > communication > printing > printed matter > [adjective] > proof free from faults clean1858 society > communication > writing > written text > [adjective] > of copy or writing, fair or free of corrections fair1548 cleana1889 society > law > rule of law > [adjective] > law-abiding > with no listed offence clean1965 1704 Clarendon's Hist. Rebellion III. xiv. 439 A clean piece of Paper, sealed with three impressions of an Antick head. 1858 P. L. Simmonds Dict. Trade Products Clean Proof, a slip or sheet of printed matter sent to an author from a printer. a1889 Mod. Make a clean copy of this sheet. The proofs as returned to press were almost clean. 1932 Discovery May 153/1 The original field maps and ‘clean copies’ of them are preserved at the office. 1965 L. Sands Something to Hide v. 75 Her licence had been clean..she herself had never put through an insurance claim before. d. Of deer or their horns: that have shed their velvet. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > mammals > group Ungulata (hoofed) > group Ruminantia (sheep, goats, cows, etc.) > male > [adjective] > having antlers > covered with skin > that have shed skin burnisheda1657 clean1838 1838 W. Scrope Art Deer-stalking i. 6 When they have shaken off this skin, which is called the velvet, and which disappears in the months of August and September, they are said to have clean horns. 1897 J. G. Millais Brit. Deer 95 Park stags are clean sometimes as early as 20th July. 1926 T. Hannan Beautiful Isle of Mull 173 The stags were not ‘clean’ any earlier than usual. e. Of a nuclear device or weapon: producing relatively little radioactivity or fall-out. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > [adjective] > nuclear > qualities of clean1956 low-yield1957 strategic1957 tactical1957 small-yield1959 theatre1977 INF1981 1956 in Amer. Speech (1957) 32 136 A ‘clean bomb’ —a bomb with little or no radioactive side effects. 1957 Observer 1 Sept. 3/2 If there really is a ‘clean’ bomb..then the whole deterrent power of nuclear weapons has been tragically graded down. 1959 Listener 12 Mar. 444/2 Smaller, clean, measurable nuclear effects which will revolutionize bombing and missile strategy. f. Containing no incriminating material; not bugged. slang. ΘΚΠ society > law > rule of law > [adjective] > law-abiding > containing nothing incriminating clean1926 1926 J. Black You can't Win xii. 155 I..thought of my room and was thankful that it was ‘clean’. 1959 J. Boland Operation Red Carpet i. 8 The high-ceilinged room in which he spoke was supposed to be ‘clean’, but there was no guarantee that even here the Ministry of Internal Security, the M.V.D., might not have..planted a microphone and tape recorder. g. Phrases (figurative): clean bill of health: see bill of health n. at bill n.3 Compounds 1; to have clean hands, to keep the hands clean: to be innocent of wrongdoing; to keep a clean tongue: to abstain from offensive or foul talk; to make a clean breast: see Phrases; to show a clean pair of heels: see show v. Phrases 1a; to make a clean job (of it): to do (something) thoroughly (colloquial); to come clean (originally U.S.): to confess, to make a clean breast of it (colloquial). ΘΚΠ society > morality > virtue > purity > innocence > be innocent [verb (intransitive)] > be innocent of wrongdoing to keep the hands clean1600 to have clean hands1876 society > morality > virtue > purity > chastity > modesty or decency > be modest [verb (intransitive)] > abstain from foul talk to keep a clean tongue1830 the world > health and disease > [noun] > good health > certificate or declaration of patent1609 clean bill of health1854 the world > action or operation > manner of action > care, carefulness, or attention > take care about [verb (transitive)] > do thoroughly to make a clean job (of it)1892 society > communication > manifestation > disclosure or revelation > disclose or make revelations [verb (intransitive)] > reveal one's true character > confess subscribea1616 confess to1771 own1772 admit1830 to make a clean breast of1838 fess1840 to own up1844 to spit it out1855 to make a clean breast of it1878 cough1901 to come clean1919 to spill one's guts (out)1927 tell papa1929 1600 Abp. G. Abbot Expos. Prophet Ionah 388 From which I would that our countrymen..would keepe their hands cleane. 1828 W. Scott Fair Maid of Perth iv, in Chron. Canongate 2nd Ser. I. 108 Harry Smith had best show a clean pair of heels for it. 1830 T. P. Thompson in Westm. Rev. Oct. 521 Let them keep a clean tongue on the subject of republicanism. 1854 G. B. Richardson Univ. Code v. 963 Have you a clean bill of health? 1876 J. R. Green Short Hist. Eng. People x. §2. 766 It was true that the hands of the Governor-General were clean. 1881 W. Besant & J. Rice Chaplain of Fleet I. xii. 256 Your husband..will show them a clean pair of heels off the Nore. 1884 T. H. Gore in Law Times 8 Nov. 29/1 He did not go into court with clean hands. 1892 ‘F. Anstey’ Voces Populi II. 50 That may be Mithras's notion of making a clean job of it, but it ain't mine! 1915 A. Conan Doyle Valley of Fear ii. iii. 203 And looked with the deepest respect at the man who had the reputation for making what they called a ‘clean job’. 1919 C. H. Darling Jargon Bk. 8 Come clean, to confess everything. 1925 P. G. Wodehouse Sam the Sudden xiii. 95 You'd best come clean, Soapy, and have a showdown. 1928 Daily Express 10 Oct. 6 Spill the beans. Come clean on the whole game. 1958 Listener 2 Oct. 514/1 Why not come clean and call ‘graduated unemployment compensation’ the national dividend? 1959 J. Cary Captive & Free 28 I was wasting my time, because you kept dodging. You never come clean. 4. a. Void of spiritual or moral stain or pollution (or what is so considered); pure; undefiled, chaste, innocent. Const. †of, from. ΘΚΠ society > morality > virtue > purity > [adjective] cleanlyc888 unwemmedc950 clean971 lightOE whiteOE unfiledc1200 shire?c1225 sheenc1275 wemlessc1275 undefouled13.. undefoileda1325 purec1330 unbleckedc1380 unfouledc1380 clear1382 impollutec1384 unblemishedc1400 undefiledc1400 unspottedc1400 virginc1400 spotless?a1430 immaculate1441 uncorruptc1450 unpollushed1490 intemeratea1492 incorrupted1529 unmaculate1535 impolluted1548 crystallinec1550 incorrupt1550 uncorrupted1565 undistained1565 unstained1573 entire1587 taintless1590 untainted1590 stainless1599 unsmirched1604 intemerated1608 indepravate1609 chastea1616 uncurseda1628 undishonested1631 untaint1638 Adamical1649 sincere1649 undebaucheda1656 unaccurseda1674 amiantal1674 unsoiled1699 unpolluted1732 971 Blickl. Hom. 13 Eadige beoþ þa clænan heortan, forþon þe hie God geseoð. c1000 Ælfric Deut. xxiii. 22 Þu byst clæne [L. absque peccato eris]. a1240 Ureisun in Cott. Hom. 193 Hore lif cleane urom alle queadschipe. a1240 Ureisun in Cott. Hom. 195 Moder..and meiden cleane of alle laste. c1386 G. Chaucer Wife's T. 88 We wol been holden wise and clene of synne. c1405 (c1385) G. Chaucer Knight's Tale (Hengwrt) (2003) l. 1468 Goddesse of clene chastitee. c1430 Life St. Kath. (1884) 15 An heuenly kynge þe whiche was bore of a clene virgyn. c1540 (?a1400) Destr. Troy 399 Conyng in the clene artis. 1549 Bk. Common Prayer (STC 16267) Svpper of the Lorde f. cxxxv Oure synfull bodyes may bee made cleane by his body. 1611 Bible (King James) Psalms li. 10 Create in mee a cleane heart, O God. View more context for this quotation 1842 Ld. Tennyson St. Simeon Stylites in Poems (new ed.) II. 63 I trust That I am whole, and clean, and meet for Heaven. 1868 E. A. Freeman Hist. Norman Conquest II. vii. 161 A man of good and clean life. ΘΚΠ society > morality > virtue > purity > innocence > [adjective] > free from guilt unguiltyc893 sacklessa1000 freeOE unfakenOE guiltlessc1175 unguiltlessc1330 innocent1382 cleana1400 unsakeda1400 clearc1400 faultlessa1535 unfaulty1548 crimeless1568 untaxablea1610 innoxious1623 a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 4918 Ha ha, traiturs, now wel is sene Queþer þat yee be fule or clene. 1575 J. Rolland Treat. Court Venus ii. f. 29 Gif he was clene, thair schaw his Innocence. 1609 J. Skene tr. Stat. Robert I in Regiam Majestatem 33 Gif he be made quit, and cleane: all his gudes salbe restored to him. c. the clean thing: the honest, straightforward thing. U.S. ΚΠ 1835 D. Crockett Acct. Col. Crockett's Tour 193 I don't like it. It isn't the clean thing. 1855 T. C. Haliburton Nature & Human Nature I. iv. 100 Hang me if he can be the clean thing anyhow he can fix it. 1871 Washington Patriot 3 Apr. (De Vere) It would have been the clean thing to say at once that no debate would be allowed. d. clean ticket n. (see quot. 1859). U.S. ΚΠ 1848 N.Y. Weekly Tribune 10 June 4/5 I go with my friend, Mr. Van Buren, for a clean ticket. 1859 J. R. Bartlett Dict. Americanisms (ed. 2) Clean Ticket, the entire regularly nominated ticket at an election; a ticket without any erasures. ‘He went the clean ticket on the Whig Nominations.’ 1872 M. S. De Vere Americanisms 269 Only when a man adopts the whole list as made up by his party, is it called a clean or straight ticket. e. Of writings, entertainment, etc.: free from obscenity or indelicate treatment of sexual matters; so good, clean fun: enjoyment or entertainment devoid of salacity or obscenity (frequently used ironically). ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > [noun] > source of amusement or entertainment mirtha1250 solacec1290 recreationc1400 esbatement1477 pastime1490 pastancea1500 passe-temps1542 entertainment1561 relief?1578 fancy1590 sport1598 abridgement1600 entertain1601 recreative1615 amusatory1618 nutsa1625 diverter1628 recreator1629 passatempo1632 amuser1724 fun1726 dissipation1733 resource1752 distraction1859 enlivening1859 good, clean fun1867 enlivenment1883 light relief1885 laugh1921 not one's scene1962 violon d'Ingres1963 society > morality > virtue > purity > chastity > modesty or decency > [adjective] > inoffensive to decency moralc1390 unlascivious1592 chaste1621 modest1638 family1695 clean1867 society > leisure > entertainment > [noun] gleea700 playeOE gameeOE lakec1175 skentingc1175 wil-gomenc1275 solacec1290 deduit1297 envesurec1300 playingc1300 disport1303 spilea1325 laking1340 solacingc1384 bourdc1390 mazec1390 welfarea1400 recreationc1400 solancec1400 sporta1425 sportancea1450 sportingc1475 deport1477 recreancea1500 shurting15.. ebate?1518 recreating1538 abatementc1550 pleasuring1556 comfortmenta1558 disporting1561 pastiming1574 riec1576 joyance1595 spleen1598 merriment1600 amusement1603 amusing1603 entertainment1612 spleena1616 divertisement1651 diversion1653 disportment1660 sporting of nature1666 fun1726 délassement1804 gammock1841 pleasurement1843 dallying1889 rec1922 good, clean fun1923 cracka1966 looning1966 shoppertainment1993 1867 Belgravia IV. 48 Since Sir Walter Scott's days English novels have been ‘sane, clean, and wholesome’. 1908 Westm Gaz. 26 Oct. 1/2 M. René Bazin..has..become known on this side of the Channel as the ‘cleanest’ of contemporary French novelists. 1911 E. J. Muddle's Picture Plays 10 The public..demands good, clean, wholesome pictures, to which it can take every member of its household, from the youngest upwards. 1923 Time 24 Mar. 16/1 Abounds in good, clean fun. 1929 J. B. Priestley Good Compan. ii. i. 249 He's one of the best comedians going in Concert Party work—clever, and keeps it clean. 1938 E. Hemingway Fifth Column (1939) i. iii. 25 Brought Anita around for a little spot of good clean fun. 1950 D. Gascoyne Vagrant 53 As resoundingly and full-bloodedly as you like so long as it's only in good clean working-class fun! f. Free from suspicion of criminal or treacherous intent or involvement; not carrying incriminating material (as drugs, weapons, etc.); not a security risk. slang. ΘΚΠ society > law > rule of law > [adjective] > law-abiding > free from suspicion clean1926 1926 J. Black You can't Win xxii. 340 I was clean, there wasn't a scrap of evidence against me. 1938 ‘D. Hume’ Good-bye to Life xiii. 154 ‘If you've got anything likely to hurt folks in your pockets, Wade, I'm feeling sorry for you, because I'm going to frisk you now’. Fortunately for Wade he was ‘clean’. 1961 F. J. Rigney & L. D. Smith Real Bohemia p. xiv Clean, no drugs on person. 1969 M. Puzo Godfather i. x. 134 They'll frisk me when I meet them so I'll have to be clean then, but figure out a way you can get a weapon to me. 1979 A. Boyle Climate of Treason xi. 407 It appears probable that Philby, too, came under the balefully hostile scrutiny of the new régime in the Kremlin. Thanks to a German, Philby was eventually declared ‘clean’. 1982 A. Price Old ‘Vengeful’ 11 The point is..he's..absolutely clean. No contacts. No hint of anything. 5. a. Free from ceremonial defilement, according to the Mosaic law, and similar codes. ΘΚΠ society > faith > worship > cleanness (ceremonial) > [adjective] cleanlyc888 cleanc1000 pure1611 c1000 West Saxon Gospels: Luke (Corpus Cambr.) xi. 41 Þonne beoð eow ealle þing clæne. 1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) Num. xix. 18 In the which whanne a clene man wetith ysoop, he shal sprenge of it the tente. 1609 Bible (Douay) I. Num. xviii. 9 A man that is cleane shal gather the ashes of the cow. 1611 Bible (King James) Lev. vii. 19 As for the flesh, all that be cleane shall eate thereof. View more context for this quotation 1611 Bible (King James) Lev. xi. 37 If any part of their carkasse fall vpon any sowing seed which is to be sowen, it shalbe cleane . View more context for this quotation b. Of beasts: Not defiling, fit to be used for food. Akin to this is the modern use, opposed to ‘foul’ as applied to fish at and immediately after spawning. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > animals for food > [adjective] > fit for food (of animals) cleanc1000 the world > food and drink > food > animals for food > seafood > [adjective] > fit for use clean1870 c1000 Ælfric Genesis vii. 2 Nim into þe of eallum clænum nitenum seofen & seofen. a1325 (c1250) Gen. & Exod. (1968) l. 627 Sacrede he ðor-on for sowles frame Ilc seuende der of clene kin. 1611 Bible (King James) Deut. xiv. 11 Of all cleane birds ye shall eate. View more context for this quotation 1870 H. C. Pennell Mod. Pract. Angler 147 Clean..Salmon fit to eat: neither just going to spawn, nor just after spawning. 1885 W. Black White Heather iii ‘Well, now, is this one all right?’ ‘A clean fish, sir,’ was the confident answer. c. Free from the pollution of leprosy or other contagious disease. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > [adjective] > of health: good > free from disease > specific cleanc1384 unpaining1634 unpalsied?a1656 unhypochondriacous1683 unmortified1732 ungangrened1753 uninflameda1793 uncrippleda1800 unbilified1823 unparalysed1888 uncramped1899 T.B.-tested1951 the world > health and disease > [adjective] > of health: good > conducive to health > non-infective sweeta1325 cleanc1384 gnotobiotic1949 c1384 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(2)) (1850) Matt. viii. 2 Lord, ȝif thou wolt, thou maist make me clene. 1611 Bible (King James) 2 Kings v. 10 Goe and wash in Iordane seuen times..and thou shalt be cleane . View more context for this quotation ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > farming > animal husbandry > sheep-farming > [adjective] > castrated cleana1642 a1642 H. Best Farming & Memorandum Bks. (1984) 3 A cleane weather is such an one as hayth had both his stones taken away. e. Free from or cured of addiction to drugs. slang. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > recovery > [adjective] > cured of drug addiction clean1953 1953 L. Street I was Drug Addict xiii. 110 ‘What did you get on the other cokies?’ ‘This fellow was lousy with it,’ replied Erb... ‘The other one is clean.’ 1956 ‘B. Holiday’ & W. Dufty Lady sings Blues xvi. 146 It was almost a year since I left that private sanatorium in New York clean. 1963 New Society 7 Nov. 9/1 Keeping 208 hypes ‘clean’ or off drugs. 1970 Times 13 Mar. 11 Only one-tenth of heroin addicts are ever completely ‘clean again’. 6. Clean in habit: usually of beasts; cleanly adj. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > [adjective] > desirous of or inclined to cleanness clean1569 neat1577 cleanlya1600 1569 R. Grafton Chron. II. 575 He abhorred her company, as a cleane creature doth a caryon. 1683 T. Tryon Way to Health 381 Beasts that are called Clean, are such as do refuse all kind of unclean Food. 1889 N.E.D. at Clean Mod. The squirrel is a clean animal. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > literature > style of language or writing > elegance > [adjective] > correct clean1528 cleanly1579 correct1676 puristical1852 puristic1854 purist1856 1528 Tyball's Conf. in J. Strype Eccl. Memorials (1721) I. App. xvii. 38 The new printed Testament in Englishe..is of more cleyner Englishe. 1531 T. Elyot Bk. named Gouernour i. xiv. sig. Gvii A more clene and elegant stile. c1540 (?a1400) Destr. Troy 77 Gydo..declaret it more clere & on clene wise. 1581 J. Bell tr. W. Haddon & J. Foxe Against Jerome Osorius 260 b The cleane and pure elegancy of Cicero. 1702 E. Calamy Abridgm. Baxter's Life & Times ix. 195 He..had free Conversation (in clean Latin) with the Roreign Envoys. 1705 T. Hearne Remarks & Coll. 28 Nov. (1885) I. 105 The Book is written in a clean stile. 1854 R. W. Emerson Poetry & Imag. in Wks. (1906) III. 158 Writing clean verses for magazines. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > decrease or reduction in quantity, amount, or degree > deduction > [adjective] > free from deduction or remaining after deduction clean1381 net1418 clearc1500 subtilec1503 neat1599 1381 in Eng. Gilds (1870) 46 He shal haue of þe clene katel of þe Gild xx messes songyn for his soule. III. Fair, fine, comely, neat, clever.The sense-development is here uncertain: cf. French propre. ΘΚΠ the mind > goodness and badness > quality of being good > [adjective] goodOE winlyOE snella1000 winc1275 boonc1325 cleana1375 tidya1375 positivea1398 comelyc1400 kindc1400 kindly?a1425 well-formeda1425 trim?a1513 wally?a1513 bonnya1525 delicatea1533 goodlike1562 sappy1563 bein1567 rum1567 benedict1576 warrantable1581 true (also good, sure) as touch1590 goodlisomea1603 respectable1603 clever1738 amusing1753 plummy1787 bone1793 brickish1843 mooi1850 ryebuck1859 spandy1868 greatisha1871 healthy1878 popular1884 beefy1903 onkus1910 quies1919 cushty1929 high-powered1969 not shabby1975 a1375 (c1350) William of Palerne (1867) l. 1609 Wiþ þe clennest cumpanye þat euer king ladde. a1375 (c1350) William of Palerne (1867) l. 1124 Al þe clene cumpanye com to þe place. c1400 (?c1390) Sir Gawain & Green Knight (1940) l. 163 Blyþe stones..richely rayled in his aray clene. a1440 Sir Eglam. 452 He hath slayne syxty on a day, Welle armyd men and clene. 1487 (a1380) J. Barbour Bruce (St. John's Cambr.) xi. 427 The kyng left, with ane clene menȝhe. 1487 (a1380) J. Barbour Bruce (St. John's Cambr.) xi. 141 So gret, so gud men, and so cleyne. 1581 Compendious Exam. Certayne Ordinary Complaints i. 19 He was wonte to keepe halfe a score of cleane men in his house. 10. a. Neatly-made, well-fashioned; not unwieldy; trim, shapely, comely. Cf. clean-limbed adj. at clean- adj. and adv. Compounds, etc. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > beauty > pleasing appearance > [adjective] > neat or trim netc1330 pertc1330 cleanc1386 nicec1400 picked?c1425 dapperc1440 feata1471 gim1513 trig1513 well-trimmedc1513 trick1533 smirk1534 tricksy1552 neat1559 netty1573 deft1579 primpc1590 briska1593 smug1598 spruce1598 sprink1602 terse1602 compt1632 nitle1673 sprig1675 snod1691 tight1697 smugged1706 snug1714 pensy1718 fitty1746 jemmy1751 sprucy1774 smartc1778 natty1785 spry1806 perjink1808 soigné1821 nutty1823 toiletted1823 taut1829 spick and span1846 spicy1846 groomed1853 spiffy1853 well-groomed1865 bandboxy1870 perjinkity1880 spick-span1888 bandbox1916 tiddly1925 whip-smart1937 spit and polish1950 spit-and-polished1977 c1386 G. Chaucer Wife of Bath's Prol. 598 He hadde a paire Of legges and of feet so clene and faire. c1430 Syr Gener. 508 The king was of making so clene, That to love him she must nede. 1645 E. Waller Wks. 74 Thy waste is streight and clean, As Cupids shaft. 1688 London Gaz. No. 2379/4 Lost..a Coach-Gelding..clean of all his Limbs. 1836 G. Stephen Adventures in Search of Horse (1841) iii. 52 The hocks and legs..have that character which the jockies describe as ‘clean’. b. Shipbuilding. Built on fine tapering lines. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > vessel of specific construction or shape > [adjective] > of specific general shape subtile1490 subtle1511 round1600 pinched1655 clean1709 sharp1709 hogged1760 lean1769 beamy1882 broad-beamed1883 1709 London Gaz. No. 4510/7 The Hoy Burthen 9 or 10 Tun, very full built forward, with a clean Tail. 1850 J. Greenwood Sailor's Sea-bk. 107 Clean, a term generally used to express the acuteness or sharpness of a ship's body. 11. Sharp (of wit), clever, smart, skilful, adroit, dexterous; neat and finished in action. (So Old High German chleini ‘sagax, versutus, argutus’.)The first two quotations may belong to 9. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > understanding > intelligence, cleverness > [adjective] keena1000 nimbleOE wittya1100 smeighc1200 understandingc1200 aperta1330 skillwisea1340 witted1377 intelligiblea1382 well-feelinga1382 knowinga1398 finec1400 large?a1425 well-knowingc1425 of understanding1428 capax1432 sententiousc1440 well-wittedc1450 intellectual?a1475 clean1485 industriousc1487 intellective1509 cleanlyc1540 ingenious?a1560 fine-headed1574 conceited1579 conceitful1594 intelligenced1596 dexter1597 ingenuous1598 intelligent1598 senseful1598 parted1600 thinking1605 dexterical1607 solert1612 apprehensivea1616 dexterous1622 solertic1623 intelligential1646 callent1656 cunning1671 thoughtful1674 perceptive1696 clever1716 uptaking1756 spiritual1807 bright1815 gnostic1819 knowledgeable1825 brainy1845 opulent1851 opening1872 super-cerebral1916 brainiac1976 the world > action or operation > ability > skill or skilfulness > [adjective] > skilful or adroit hendc1275 happya1400 clean1485 habile1485 practivea1500 feat1519 well-handeda1529 handsome1542 trick1542 neat1571 dexterous1622 adroit1652 right-handeda1661 artful1663 nitle1673 ambidextrousa1682 clever1716 jemmy1751 slick1807 sleek1822 cleverish1826 featy1844 two-handed1861 nifty1889 mean1918 organized1926 ept1938 1485 W. Caxton tr. Paris & Vienne (1957) 2 He..helde hym self ryght clene in armes. c1540 (?a1400) Destr. Troy 1496 The secund of þe suster..Cassandra was cald, clennest of wytte. 1598 F. Meres in C. M. Ingleby & L. T. Smith Shakespeare's Cent. Prayse (1879) 24 When cheating and craftines is counted the cleanest wit. 1624 P. Massinger Bond-man v. iii. sig. L4v I'le cut as cleane a caper from the Ladder, As euer merry Greeke did. 1655 T. Fuller Church-hist. Brit. i. 38 A clean Conceit, and as full of Wit as Devotion. a1704 T. Brown Declam. Praise Poverty (rev. ed.) in Wks. (1730) I. 93 The legerdeman must be clean. 1857 J. G. Holland Bay-path xxvi. 332 Yes, Sir! that was a clean thing. 1884 James Lillywhite's Cricketers' Ann. ii. iii. 110 T. Bigge, a good but rather nervous bat, and sharp clean field. IV. Clear of obstructions, or unevenness. 12. Unencumbered by anything standing or lying in the way; clear, bare, void. Of anchorage ground: Free from rocks, and the like; opposed to ‘foul’. Of timber: Free from knots. ΘΚΠ the world > space > [adjective] > unobstructed openeOE roomOE cleanc1405 clear1569 rid1866 society > occupation and work > materials > raw material > wood > [adjective] > free from knots clean1626 clear1642 c1405 (c1395) G. Chaucer Franklin's Tale (Hengwrt) (2003) l. 287 Whan ye han maad the coost so clene Of Rokkes that ther nys no stoon ysene. 1487 (a1380) J. Barbour Bruce (St. John's Cambr.) xiii. 443 The feld so cleyn wes maid Of ynglis men, that nane abad. 1626 F. Bacon Sylua Syluarum §658 The Timber and Wood are, in some Trees, more Cleane, in some more Knottie. 1712 E. Cooke Voy. S. Sea 196 There is Water enough, and a clean Bottom. 1793 J. Smeaton Narr. Edystone Lighthouse (ed. 2) §262 To drop an anchor as soon as we got into clean ground. 1867 W. H. Smyth & E. Belcher Sailor's Word-bk. Clean, free from danger, as clean coast, clean harbour. 1884 Western Morning News 30 Aug. 1/5 The oak is..clean, and very hearty. 13. a. Clear of inequalities or unevennesses, clean-cut. ΘΚΠ the world > space > shape > flatness or levelness > smoothness > [adjective] > having smooth contours clean1680 unangular1757 clean-cut1842 streamline1907 streamlined1934 the world > health and disease > [adjective] > of health: good > healthy > of specific parts unfootsore?a1500 whole-chested1576 well-blooded1615 regular1694 clean1733 peptic1827 eupeptic1831 competent1881 1680 J. Moxon Mech. Exercises I. xii. 211 If you have not at first brought your Work clean; that is..gone deep enough with your Gouge to take off all the Risings of the Stuff the Draw-knife left. 1733 G. Cheyne Eng. Malady i. xi. 99 The Strokes of such a Pulse are seldom clean and free. 1807 Med. & Physical Jrnl. 17 188 A clean wound, in the fore arm. 1853 E. K. Kane U.S. Grinnell Exped. iv. 34 The clean abrupt edge of the fractures. 1871 J. Tyndall Fragm. Sci. (ed. 6) I. xii. 367 No slate ever exhibited so clean a cleavage. b. Unfeathered: said of pigeons which have no feathers on the legs or feet. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > birds > perching birds > order Columbiformes (pigeons, etc.) > [adjective] > of or belonging to pigeon and dove > of parts of damask-coloured1630 clean1886 pin-winged1890 gravel-eyed1951 1886 G. Ure Our Fancy Pigeons viii. 201 All the best performing tumblers that I have ever seen had clean legs. 1961 W. H. Allen How to raise Pigeons iii. 42 There are two main types, classified as clean-legged and ruffled (with feathers on legs and feet). c. Of aircraft: designed to minimize obstructions to the airflow, streamlined. Cf. cleanness n. 3. ΘΚΠ society > travel > air or space travel > a means of conveyance through the air > aeroplane > qualities and parameters of aircraft > [adjective] > streamlined clean1916 faired2000 1916 H. Barber Aeroplane Speaks 27 A brand new, rakish, up-to-date machine it is..perfectly ‘streamlined’ to minimise drift... ‘Clean looking 'bus... Ought to have a turn of speed with those lines.’ 1939 Flight 14 Dec. p. g/1 It [sc. the speed] is certainly not obtained by aerodynamic cleanness. No one would call the Messerschmitt a clean aircraft. 1961 Engineering 20 Jan. 123/1 The clean-wing (aft-engine) de Havilland Trident..due to fly this year. V. With nouns of action, etc. 14. Where nothing is left behind; entire, complete, total, perfect, sheer. (Influenced by the adverb; with ‘a clean sweep’ cf. to sweep clean at sweep v. 13.) In early use, esp. in alliterative verse, often used vaguely. (See also sweep n. 1a.) ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > high or intense degree > [adjective] > utter or absolute shirea1225 purec1300 properc1380 plainc1395 cleana1400 fine?a1400 entirec1400 veryc1400 starka1425 utterc1430 utterlyc1440 merec1443 absolute1531 outright1532 cleara1535 bloodyc1540 unproachable1544 flat1553 downright1577 sheer1583 right-down?1586 single1590 peremptory1601 perfecta1616 downa1625 implicit1625 every way1628 blank1637 out-and-outa1642 errant1644 inaccessional1651 thorough-paced1651 even down1654 dead1660 double-dyed1667 through stitch1681 through-stitched1682 total1702 thoroughgoing1719 thorough-sped1730 regular1740 plumb1748 hollow1751 unextenuated1765 unmitigated1783 stick, stock, stone dead1796 positive1802 rank1809 heart-whole1823 skire1825 solid1830 fair1835 teetotal1840 bodacious1845 raw1856 literal1857 resounding1873 roaring1884 all out1893 fucking1893 pink1896 twenty-four carat1900 grand slam1915 stone1928 diabolical1933 fricking1937 righteous1940 fecking1952 raving1954 a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 25529 Giue us clene scrift at hald. a1530 W. Bonde Pylgrimage of Perfeccyon (1531) iii. f. CCxxviiv Make clene confessyon. 1531 T. Elyot Bk. named Gouernour i. viii. sig. Dijv With wonderfull strength and clene might. c1540 (?a1400) Destr. Troy 2801 The Kyng..declarit all his clene wille. c1540 (?a1400) Destr. Troy 10441 Schuld haue killit þis kyng with his clen strenkith. 1611 Bible (King James) Lev. xxiii. 22 When ye reape the haruest..thou shalt not make cleane riddance of the corners of the field. View more context for this quotation 1611 R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues Nettoyer au balay, to make cleane work, to sweepe all away. 1868 J. H. Blunt Reformation Church of Eng. I. 318 The clean sweep which had been made of so many ancient rights. Phrases clean breast: a pure or untroubled heart, a clear conscience. Chiefly in to make a clean breast of: to unburden oneself by making a full disclosure or confession of (something, esp. one's mistakes or wrongdoings); to confess fully; also to make a clean breast of it in the same sense. ΘΚΠ society > communication > manifestation > disclosure or revelation > disclose or make revelations [verb (intransitive)] > reveal one's true character > confess subscribea1616 confess to1771 own1772 admit1830 to make a clean breast of1838 fess1840 to own up1844 to spit it out1855 to make a clean breast of it1878 cough1901 to come clean1919 to spill one's guts (out)1927 tell papa1929 OE Hymns (Julius A.vi) lxii. 17 in H. Gneuss Hymnar u. Hymnen im englischen Mittelalter (1968) 343 Prebe ut resistat nostra fides vitiis atque ministret studiis virtutum puro pectore : getyða þæt wiðstande ure geleafa leahtrum & þæt he þenige gecneordnyssum mihta on clænum breoste. 1671 E. Wettenhall Two Disc. Christian Piety & Devotion i. v. 224 The pleasure of devotion, and a clean breast kept thereby, will sweetly constrain us to a strict observance of it. 1753 Extracts Trial J. Stewart in Scots Mag. Oct. 508/1 He pressed him..to make a clean breast, and tell him all. 1838 J. W. Carlyle Lett. I. 96 I would have..made a clean breast of all my thinkings and doings. 1857 Examiner 1 Aug. 483/2 Sir Thomas Redington must show that his hands are clean, or, we should rather say, that he has a clean breast, unadorned with Mr Smith's buttons. 1878 W. Black Green Pastures xxiii. 184 I may as well make a clean breast of it. 1933 ‘N. West’ Miss Lonelyhearts 83 It's better to make a clean breast of matters than to let them fester in the depths of one's soul. 2017 @studioexec1 29 Nov. in twitter.com (accessed 21 Oct. 2019) Come forward, make a clean breast of it, apologize BEFORE any accusations surface. Compounds See clean- adj. and adv. Draft additions December 2002 clean room n. a room or enclosure in which dust, microorganisms, and other contaminants are eliminated or reduced to very low levels, esp. for the purpose of manufacturing electronic components and some types of medical equipment. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > enclosing or enclosure > [noun] > an enclosed space or place > compartment or chamber > having a function cella1398 clean room1961 1961 Science 21 July 227 Airborne particle monitor is modified by the addition of an air-dilution system to cover the range from clean-room atmospheres to the most polluted industrial smogs. 1980 Sci. Amer. Aug. 117/3 The disks and the head assemblies in such a memory are sealed in a small ‘clean room’: a chamber approximately the size of a hatbox, in which the air is continuously recirculated and filtered to exclude any dust particles larger than ·3 micrometer in diameter. 1999 Global Ceramic Rev. Autumn 18/2 Dare referred to their design of medical cleanroom TRMs and calender units.., manufactured without any projections which could act as contamination traps. Draft additions October 2021 Of a fuel, source of energy, technology, etc.: (originally) producing few air pollutants; (in later use also, and now chiefly) producing relatively few or no net emissions of greenhouse gases. ΚΠ 1852 Sci. Amer. 24 Jan. 148/4 Every mechanic in Manchester and Glasgow has his domicile lighted with cheap, convenient, and clean gas light. 1925 Ann. Amer. Acad. Polit. & Social Sci. 128 132/2 The public is increasingly utilizing efficient and clean fuel gas. 1972 Sci. Amer. 24 Jan. 15/2 Our answer is to remove the sulfur from the coal before burning it. The result: clean coal and a clean environment. 1988 Equinox (Camden East, Ont.) Nov. 38/4 Canada's first commercial wind farm..is the latest initiative in the age-old quest to harness the wind as a clean and free source of energy. 2020 Providence (Rhode Island) Jrnl. (Nexis) 19 Sept. a19 We can address the consequences of climate change with..urgency and conviction. Now is the time to lean in and move the clean energy transition forward. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1889; most recently modified version published online June 2022). cleanv. To make clean. 1. a. transitive. To free from dirt, filth, or impurity. ΘΠ the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > cleaning > clean [verb (transitive)] yclense971 cleansea1000 farmOE fayc1220 fowc1350 absterse?a1425 mundify?a1425 muck1429 to cast clean1522 absterge1526 sprinkle1526 reconcile1535 net1536 clengec1540 neat?1575 snuff?1575 rinse1595 deterge1623 scavengea1644 scavenger1645 decrott1653 reform1675 clean1681 deterse1684 fluxa1763 to clean away, offa1839 to clean down1839 scavage1851 untaint1855 to sand and canvas1912 1681 London Gaz. No. 1666/2 The English Frigats are now so well Fitted and Cleaned, that none of the Algerines they meet with, escape them. 1697 W. Dampier New Voy. around World vi. 138 We scrubb'd and clean'd our Men of War. 1716 J. Gay Trivia i. 3 Clean your Shoes. 1800 tr. E. J. B. Bouillon-Lagrange Man. Course Chem. II. 395 A method of cleaning linen..stained by preparations of mercury. 1860 J. Tyndall Glaciers of Alps ii. §7. 259 The portrait..was given to a painter to be cleaned. 1871 B. Jowett tr. Plato Dialogues II. 566 A sponge..to clean the mirror. b. Said, by servants or operatives employed in dirty or dusty work, of making themselves clean and tidy in the afternoon or evening. ΘΠ the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > cleaning > cleaning or cleanliness of the person > clean the person [verb (transitive)] > clean oneself after work clean1876 the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > cleaning > cleaning or cleanliness of the person > clean the person [verb (reflexive)] > clean oneself after work clean1876 1876 M. E. Braddon Joshua Haggard's Daughter I. ix. 285 That afternoon toilet which was known throughout Penmoyle as ‘cleaning oneself’. 1877 E. Peacock Gloss. Words Manley & Corringham, Lincs. (at cited word) Come, Mary, get cleaned; its just tea-time. 1889 Newspr. She (the servant) had gone up stairs to clean herself. c. Often in specific (contextual) senses: e.g. to clear arable land of weeds, esp. of the roots of creeping plants; to clear a ship's bottom of barnacles, shells, seaweeds, and other accretions; to remove from fish, or the like, the parts unfit for food; also reflexive of foul fish, to regain good condition after spawning. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > farming > cultivation or tillage > reclamation > reclaim [verb (transitive)] > clear land > weed land louka1000 weeda1325 cleanc1450 spud1652 swinglea1825 couch1846 twitch1886 society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > shipbuilding and repairing > build a ship [verb (transitive)] > fit out or equip > clean and coat ship's bottom grave1461 clean1697 the world > food and drink > food > food manufacture and preparation > preparation for table or cooking > preparation of meat > dress animals for food [verb (transitive)] > disembowel or clean scour1412 void1535 scald1565 paunch1570 hulk1622 viscerate1727 porge1773 clean1841 gralloch1848 the world > animals > fish > [verb (reflexive)] > regain good condition after spawning clean1867 c1450 in T. Wright & R. P. Wülcker Anglo-Saxon & Old Eng. Vocab. (1884) I. 609 Sarrio, to clene, cutte, or wede. 1697 W. Dampier New Voy. around World xvi. 443 To hale our Ship ashore, to clean her bottom. 1745 P. Thomas True Jrnl. Voy. South-Seas 49 This Day..we also clean'd our Ship's Bottom..in order to her better sailing. 1841 E. W. Lane tr. Thousand & One Nights I. 100 The Maid took the fish, and cleaned them. 1853 A. Soyer Pantropheon 187 Clean and salt a wild boar. 1867 F. Francis Bk. Angling i. 31 About June the chub get upon the shallows to clean themselves. 1886 Law Times 151/2 Land ploughed and cleaned for sowing barley. d. to clean the board (colloquial): to clear off all that it contains, and leave it empty; to clear it. ΘΚΠ the world > space > place > absence > fact of being unoccupied > leave unoccupied [verb (transitive)] > clear out rede1450 banisha1513 to clear out1850 to clean the board1884 1884 Harper's Mag. Jan. 299/2 When a man cleaned the board he had something to be proud of. e. slang. = 4b. ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > taking > stealing or theft > defrauding or swindling > perpetrate (a swindle) [verb (transitive)] > defraud or swindle defraud1362 deceivec1380 plucka1500 lurch1530 defeata1538 souse1545 lick1548 wipe1549 fraud1563 use1564 cozen1573 nick1576 verse1591 rooka1595 trim1600 skelder1602 firk1604 dry-shave1620 fiddle1630 nose1637 foista1640 doa1642 sharka1650 chouse1654 burn1655 bilk1672 under-enter1692 sharp1699 stick1699 finger1709 roguea1714 fling1749 swindle1773 jink1777 queer1778 to do over1781 jump1789 mace1790 chisel1808 slang1812 bucket1819 to clean out1819 give it1819 to put in the hole1819 ramp1819 sting1819 victimize1839 financier1840 gum1840 snakea1861 to take down1865 verneuk1871 bunco1875 rush1875 gyp1879 salt1882 daddle1883 work1884 to have (one) on toast1886 slip1890 to do (a person) in the eye1891 sugar1892 flay1893 to give (someone) the rinky-dink1895 con1896 pad1897 screw1900 short-change1903 to do in1906 window dress1913 ream1914 twist1914 clean1915 rim1918 tweedle1925 hype1926 clip1927 take1927 gazump1928 yentz1930 promote1931 to take (someone) to the cleaners1932 to carve up1933 chizz1948 stiff1950 scam1963 to rip off1969 to stitch up1970 skunk1971 to steal (someone) blind1974 diddle- 1915 L. E. Jackson & C. R. Hellyer Vocab. Criminal Slang 24 Clean, to take all one possesses of a given commodity; to deplete one's assets. Example: ‘He headed in wrong with that bunch and got cleaned.’ 1926 J. Black You can't Win iv. 27 The poker players..who brought their victims into the back room to ‘clean’ them. 1950 A. Lomax Mister Jelly Roll (1952) ii. 54 If they didn't clean this sucker by legitimate cheating, one of the tough guys would take his money anyhow. f. To ‘clean’ (an aeroplane) aerodynamically, to make streamlined. Also with up. So cleaning-up n. Cf. clean adj. 13c. ΘΚΠ society > travel > air or space travel > a means of conveyance through the air > construction and servicing aircraft or spacecraft > [noun] > making streamlined cleaning-up1922 fairing1927 streamlining1936 society > travel > air or space travel > a means of conveyance through the air > construction and servicing aircraft or spacecraft > construct and service aircraft or spacecraft [verb (transitive)] > make streamlined streamline1918 clean1922 fair1934 laminarize1961 1922 Flight 14 702/2 The ‘cleaning-up’ of the latest model has resulted in an astonishing gain in maximum speed. 1931 Flight 16 Jan. 61 The Short ‘Singapore’ Mark II has been cleaned up by placing the four Rolls-Royce ‘F’ engines in tandem, and by abolishing the chine struts. 1931 Flight 16 Oct. 1033/1 This new aircraft has been cleaned cleaner than any Armstrong-Whitworth aircraft we have seen. 2. a. absol., and intransitive (for reflexive). ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > cleaning > clean [verb (intransitive)] abstergify1612 exterge1657 clean1708 to clean up1886 society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > shipbuilding and repairing > [verb (intransitive)] > have bottom cleaned clean1708 1708 London Gaz. No. 4431/15 The same Day came in..Her Majesty's Ships..to clean. 1748 J. Lind Lett. Navy (1757) iii. 123 Our fleets may winter there, clean and repair. 1880 W. MacCormac Antiseptic Surg. 113 The wound had in the first place to ‘clean’, and this cleaning was necessitated by the death of a superficial layer of tissue. b. Nautical. To change into an appropriate uniform, to don a uniform prescribed for any set duty. colloquial. ΚΠ 1915 ‘Bartimeus’ Tall Ship iii. 48 The Captain had ‘cleaned’ already. 1916 G. Franklin Naval Digression i. ix. 70 We..perform that seemingly impossible feat of ‘cleaning’ into a dirty rig. 3. a. transitive. to clean down: to clean from top to bottom, or by sweeping down. to clean up: to clean by taking up dirt or dust; to bring (a thing) up to a certain pitch or standard of cleanness; (also) to obtain by cleaning, to acquire as gain or profit; (also) to deal with effectively, to get the better of: see also sense 6 and clean n. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > cleaning > clean [verb (transitive)] yclense971 cleansea1000 farmOE fayc1220 fowc1350 absterse?a1425 mundify?a1425 muck1429 to cast clean1522 absterge1526 sprinkle1526 reconcile1535 net1536 clengec1540 neat?1575 snuff?1575 rinse1595 deterge1623 scavengea1644 scavenger1645 decrott1653 reform1675 clean1681 deterse1684 fluxa1763 to clean away, offa1839 to clean down1839 scavage1851 untaint1855 to sand and canvas1912 the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > cleaning > clean [verb (transitive)] > to certain standard to clean up1839 the world > food and drink > farming > cultivation or tillage > reclamation > reclaim [verb (transitive)] > clear land redeeOE ridlOE grubc1374 stub1464 clot1483 shrub1553 clear1634 cure1719 stump1796 spade1819 slash1821 underbrush1824 to clean up1839 underbush1886 screef1913 society > occupation and work > industry > mining > mine [verb (intransitive)] > collect together valuable product to clean up1872 the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > cleaning > clean [verb (intransitive)] abstergify1612 exterge1657 clean1708 to clean up1886 1839 in J. S. Bassett Plantation Overseer (1925) 117 I have got my cotton land the half of it cleaned up. 1847 C. Brontë Jane Eyre III. viii. 183 My first aim will be..to clean down Moor-House from chamber to cellar. 1872 ‘M. Twain’ Roughing It xxxvi. 255 The machinery was stopped and we ‘cleaned up’. That is to say, we..washed the mud patiently away till nothing was left but the long accumulating mass of quicksilver. 1886 W. Besant Children of Gibeon I. ii. i. 243 For thirty years..not even admitting a woman to clean up. b. transitive. With up. To make a clean sweep of. Π 1903 Westm. Gaz. 31 Jan. 8/1 The seals clean up the seas much as the rabbits clean up the grass in Australia and the locusts clean up the crops in Africa. 4. to clean out: a. To clean by emptying; hence transferred to empty, exhaust, leave bare. Also figurative. ΘΠ the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > cleaning > clean [verb (transitive)] > by emptying to clean out1844 to muck out1851 the world > space > place > absence > fact of being unoccupied > leave unoccupied [verb (transitive)] > empty > empty or exhaust draw1483 rinse1575 sponge1610 clear1699 bottom1808 to clean out1844 deplete1850 deplenish1859 1844 W. H. Maxwell Wanderings in Highlands & Islands I. ix. 177 The larder was utterly cleaned out. 1858 O. W. Holmes Autocrat of Breakfast-table iii. 67 There is a great danger that a man's first life-story shall clean him out, so to speak, of his best thoughts. 1866 T. Carlyle Inaug. Addr. Edinb. 180 You will see how we may clean-out the foul things in that Chancery Court. 1887 Scotsman 19 Mar. The obligation to clean out the canal. b. slang. To deprive of cash, to ‘rook’. ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > taking > stealing or theft > defrauding or swindling > perpetrate (a swindle) [verb (transitive)] > defraud or swindle defraud1362 deceivec1380 plucka1500 lurch1530 defeata1538 souse1545 lick1548 wipe1549 fraud1563 use1564 cozen1573 nick1576 verse1591 rooka1595 trim1600 skelder1602 firk1604 dry-shave1620 fiddle1630 nose1637 foista1640 doa1642 sharka1650 chouse1654 burn1655 bilk1672 under-enter1692 sharp1699 stick1699 finger1709 roguea1714 fling1749 swindle1773 jink1777 queer1778 to do over1781 jump1789 mace1790 chisel1808 slang1812 bucket1819 to clean out1819 give it1819 to put in the hole1819 ramp1819 sting1819 victimize1839 financier1840 gum1840 snakea1861 to take down1865 verneuk1871 bunco1875 rush1875 gyp1879 salt1882 daddle1883 work1884 to have (one) on toast1886 slip1890 to do (a person) in the eye1891 sugar1892 flay1893 to give (someone) the rinky-dink1895 con1896 pad1897 screw1900 short-change1903 to do in1906 window dress1913 ream1914 twist1914 clean1915 rim1918 tweedle1925 hype1926 clip1927 take1927 gazump1928 yentz1930 promote1931 to take (someone) to the cleaners1932 to carve up1933 chizz1948 stiff1950 scam1963 to rip off1969 to stitch up1970 skunk1971 to steal (someone) blind1974 diddle- 1819 J. H. Vaux New Vocab. Flash Lang. in Memoirs II. 163 Cleaned out, said of a gambler who has lost his last stake at play; also, of a flat who has been stript of all his money. 1838 C. Dickens Oliver Twist III. xxxviii. 38 He has cleaned me out; but I can go and earn some more. a1861 T. Winthrop John Brent i. 7 They had been burnt out, they had been cleaned out, they had been drowned out. 1901 S. E. White Westerners xiii. 94 Bunco men can clean him out in a gambling joint. c. To defeat or deal effectively with (a person); to eject from a place. U.S. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > prosperity > success > mastery or superiority > have or gain mastery or superiority over [verb (transitive)] > overcome or defeat shendc893 overwinOE overheaveOE mate?c1225 to say checkmatea1346 vanquishc1366 stightlea1375 outrayc1390 to put undera1393 forbeat1393 to shave (a person's) beardc1412 to put to (also at, unto) the (also one's) worsec1425 adawc1440 supprisec1440 to knock downc1450 to put to the worsta1475 waurc1475 convanquish1483 to put out1485 trima1529 convince1548 foil1548 whip1571 evict1596 superate1598 reduce1605 convict1607 defail1608 cast1610 banga1616 evince1620 worst1646 conquer1655 cuffa1657 trounce1657 to ride down1670 outdo1677 routa1704 lurcha1716 fling1790 bowl1793 lick1800 beat1801 mill1810 to row (someone) up Salt River1828 defeat1830 sack1830 skunk1832 whop1836 pip1838 throw1850 to clean out1858 take1864 wallop1865 to sock it to1877 whack1877 to clean up1888 to beat out1893 to see off1919 to lower the boom on1920 tonk1926 clobber1944 ace1950 to run into the ground1955 1858 in Kansas Hist. Coll. XIV. 99 I could clean you out quicker than greased lightning would pass a funeral. 1863 Harper's Mag. Sept. 569/2 ‘All right,’ says Rhind; ‘fire, boys!’ and in a very short time that ambush was ‘cleaned out’. 1871 Congress. Globe 5 Jan. 316/1 The enemy did take possession of the house one day. They were ‘cleaned out’ as we say; they were compelled to leave the house. 1892 J. L. Ford Dr. Dodd's School i. 10 He could lick the whole crowd of them with one hand tied behind his back. Do you remember how he cleaned out the townies that Saturday afternoon? 1908 S. E. White Riverman xxii. 197 I don't bet those Saginaw river-pigs are any more two-fisted than the boys on this river. I'd go up and clean 'em out. d. To clear (a place) of the persons occupying it. U.S. ΘΚΠ the world > space > place > absence > fact of being unoccupied > leave unoccupied [verb (transitive)] > make unoccupied wanec1200 evacuate1607 untenant1640 vacant1649 unstock1655 disnesta1700 to clean out1858 distenant1876 1858 in Kansas Hist. Coll. (1896) V. 567 These same men attacked Barnesville..and literally cleaned it out, both of inhabitants and property. 1870–9 B. Harte Society Stanislaus 20 On several occasions he had cleaned out the town. 1883 G. W. Peck Peck's Bad Boy No. 2. 29 Pa got mad and said he could clean out the whole shebang. 1901 M. E. Ryan That Girl Montana vii. 97 They..would proceed to ‘clean out’ any establishment where their own peculiar set was ignored. 1902 S. E. White Blazed Trail vi. 48 Nothing pleases him better than..to embark on an earnest effort to ‘clean out’ a rival town. 5. to clean away, off: to remove dirt, defilement, or the like; also in extended use. ΘΠ the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > cleaning > clean [verb (transitive)] yclense971 cleansea1000 farmOE fayc1220 fowc1350 absterse?a1425 mundify?a1425 muck1429 to cast clean1522 absterge1526 sprinkle1526 reconcile1535 net1536 clengec1540 neat?1575 snuff?1575 rinse1595 deterge1623 scavengea1644 scavenger1645 decrott1653 reform1675 clean1681 deterse1684 fluxa1763 to clean away, offa1839 to clean down1839 scavage1851 untaint1855 to sand and canvas1912 a1839 W. M. Praed Poems (1864) II. 3 A thousand hands..Clean off each ancient stain or soil. 1910 O. Johnson Varmint iv. 58 You know you said you were going to clean off the whole slate with Al. 6. to clean up (see also sense 3a). Various colloquial and slang uses (chiefly U.S.): a. transitive. To obtain, acquire as gain or profit. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > management of money > income, revenue, or profit > getting or making money > get or make money [verb (transitive)] > be profitable to > make in profit winc1175 gain1530 advantage1557 lucre1570 superlucrate1652 cleara1719 realize1720 net1765 to clean up1831 mop1861 gross1884 to cash in1904 1831 J. M. Peck Guide for Emigrants 147 He gave a friend one measured acre..and cleaned up thirty-five bushels and eight quarts [of wheat]. 1904 ‘O. Henry’ Cabbages & Kings vi. 104 So, this man I was speaking of cleaned up $288; and then he went away. 1906 C. de L. Canfield Diary of Forty-niner (1920) 51 I hope to clean up about ten thousand dollars. 1929 [see sense 6e]. 1931 L. A. G. Strong Garden xxx. 278 He had seen them clean up all three places in the Open Quarter; he had seen them, individually, win a score of races. 1960 20th Cent. Dec. 555 A concerted drive to ensure that this 25-year-old veteran cleans up another £16 million. b. transitive. To beat, vanquish; spec. in gambling, to make a large profit from, to take all the money from. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > prosperity > success > mastery or superiority > have or gain mastery or superiority over [verb (transitive)] > overcome or defeat shendc893 overwinOE overheaveOE mate?c1225 to say checkmatea1346 vanquishc1366 stightlea1375 outrayc1390 to put undera1393 forbeat1393 to shave (a person's) beardc1412 to put to (also at, unto) the (also one's) worsec1425 adawc1440 supprisec1440 to knock downc1450 to put to the worsta1475 waurc1475 convanquish1483 to put out1485 trima1529 convince1548 foil1548 whip1571 evict1596 superate1598 reduce1605 convict1607 defail1608 cast1610 banga1616 evince1620 worst1646 conquer1655 cuffa1657 trounce1657 to ride down1670 outdo1677 routa1704 lurcha1716 fling1790 bowl1793 lick1800 beat1801 mill1810 to row (someone) up Salt River1828 defeat1830 sack1830 skunk1832 whop1836 pip1838 throw1850 to clean out1858 take1864 wallop1865 to sock it to1877 whack1877 to clean up1888 to beat out1893 to see off1919 to lower the boom on1920 tonk1926 clobber1944 ace1950 to run into the ground1955 society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > games of chance > gamble at a game [verb (transitive)] > make large profit from skin1819 to clean up1888 1888 P. H. Sheridan Personal Mem. I. 47 The citizens..intended cleaning up the hostiles. 1932 J. Dos Passos 1919 43 They..shot some pool and Joe was pretty good and cleaned up the local boys. 1932 J. T. Farrell Young Lonigan vi. 279 He pretended that he had cleaned up all the tough guys on Fifty-eighth Street. 1949 N.Z. Free Lance 24 Aug. 10 You jokers cleaned us up at footie. c. transitive. To clear (a place, etc.) of harmful or immoral influences, elements, or persons; to rid (an area) of remaining pockets of enemy resistance. So cleaning-up n. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > victory > [noun] > complete ridding of resistance mop-up1900 mopping-up1909 cleaning-up1916 clean-up1930 society > morality > virtue > purity > make pure [verb (transitive)] > remove immoral elements from to clean up1916 society > morality > virtue > purity > [noun] > moral purification > removing immoral elements cleaning-up1916 clean-up1930 society > armed hostility > victory > make victorious [verb (transitive)] > completely rid of resistance mop1901 to clean up1942 1916 W. A. Du Puy Uncle Sam 170 The cleaning up of the customs scandals in the port of New York was a most complicated task. 1925 C. E. Mulford Cottonwood Gulch 188 Our friend Dangerfield [the sheriff] will clean up this cursed country like a new broom. 1929 Times 15 Feb. More than 3,000 persons were arrested..by the Chicago police in a new effort to ‘clean up’ the city. 1930 Times Lit. Suppl. 1 May 359/1 American troops engaged in ‘cleaning up’ that distressful republic. 1942 P. Jordan Diary 29 Nov. (1943) 64 British parachutists have been dropped..at Depienne, where they are to clean up an airfield. 1943 Ann. Reg. 1942 128 After North Africa had been ‘cleaned up’, Parliament would be asked to approve a proposal that troops of the Union should serve outside Africa. 1967 G. Freeman Undergrowth of Lit. xi. 163 A political broadsheet published in California in 1966 calling for the banning of pornography had, as one of the arguments in favour of legally ‘cleaning up’ the state, [etc.]. d. transitive. To strip or empty the contents of. ΚΠ 1917 P. G. Wodehouse Uneasy Money xv. 169 Then the man comes down for a visit and goes about cleaning up the neighbouring houses. e. intransitive. To make a large profit. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > management of money > income, revenue, or profit > getting or making money > get or make money [verb (intransitive)] > make profit > make large profit to clean up1929 1929 D. Hammett Red Harvest xii. 119 You thought..you could clean up a little dough playing him?.. Did you clean up? 1941 B. Schulberg What makes Sammy Run? i. 11 I mean profit. That show must be cleaning up. 1947 J. Steinbeck Wayward Bus 36 It's the fastest-selling novelty I've ever handled. Little Wonder is cleaning up with it. Draft additions 1997 transitive. Weightlifting. To lift (a weight attached to a bar-bell) from the floor to shoulder height in a single movement: usually the first part of an overhead lift. Frequently in phrases to clean and jerk (or press). Cf. clean n. Additions 2. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > athletics > contend in athletics [verb (transitive)] > lift jerk1891 clean1936 1936 Health & Strength 26 Sept. 455/3 I can jerk 180 lb to arms' length from the shoulders but cannot ‘clean’ more than 154 lb. 1956 Muscle Power Mar. 46/3 To equal Eder's press Paul would have to clean and press 482 pounds. 1956 Strength & Health Nov. 17/2 The Russian is here seen cleaning a formidable 391-lb. weight. 1957 Muscle Power Jan. 48/3 In a meet in which most of Russia's famous lifters took part against an Egyptian team, he pressed 248, snatched 270 and cleaned and jerked 319½. 1988 Strength Athlete Oct.–Nov. 7/1 After someone had been trying to bench press 260lbs Louis strode over and clean and pressed the weight (on an exercise bar) with ease. 1990 D. Ackerman Nat. Hist. Senses ii. 102 The human body is miraculous and beautiful, whether it can ‘clean and jerk’ three hundred pounds, swim the English Channel, or survive a year riding the subway. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1889; most recently modified version published online March 2022). cleanadv. I. Of manner: in a ‘clean’ manner.In many instances, this may be analysed as an adj. standing as complement of the predicate, and referring to a n. expressed or understood: e.g. clean purged, purged so as to be clean, etc. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > light > intensity of light > [adverb] > brightly brighteOE lightOE shireOE fairOE brightlyOE sheen?c1225 shirelyc1230 sheenly1340 clearlya1375 shininglyc1384 clearc1385 cleana1400 shrillc1400 enclerea1440 lucidentlyc1508 sheerly1508 splendently1576 shiny1596 nitently1657 a1400–50 Alexander 55 A Boll of bras burneschid full clene. c1420 Anturs of Arth. xxix Her countur-felit, and hur kelle were colurt ful clene. 2. In a manner free from dirt; or so as to leave no dirt, refuse, or obstructions. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > [adverb] cleanc1000 cleanlyc1200 spotlesslya1671 cleanlily1698 innocently1715 specklessly1862 c1000 Ælfric Leviticus xxiii. 22 Ne ripe ge to clæne. 1487 (a1380) J. Barbour Bruce (St. John's Cambr.) xviii. 213 The feld was clengit cleyne. 1523 Ld. Berners tr. J. Froissart Cronycles I. xxvii. 40 Clene confessed and repentaunt. ?1531 J. Frith Disput. Purgatorye i. sig. b6 One that were clene purged of his witte. 1614 G. Markham Cheape & Good Husbandry (1668) i. i. 5 Stroak his neck and body clean over, leaving no sweat nor filth. a1631 J. Donne Serm. (1954) VII. 335 A man walks cleane, if in a foule way, he contract but a few spots of dirt. 1889 N.E.D. at Clean Mod. The room must be clean swept. 3. Cleverly, neatly, dexterously; ‘without miscarriage’ (Johnson). ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > ability > skill or skilfulness > [adverb] > skilfully or adroitly slylyc1275 sly1370 featly1436 addresslya1500 sleightly?c1510 clean1531 trickly1542 neatlya1547 trick1564 cleanly1583 cleverly1654 clever1664 adroitly1695 adeptly1804 slick1825 shrewdly1851 cleverishly1881 slickly1893 niftily1901 eptly1974 1531 T. Elyot Bk. named Gouernour i. xvii. sig. Jiijv The moste honorable exercise..is to ryde suerly and clene. 1597 T. Morley Plaine & Easie Introd. Musicke 179 Howe to..sing cleane, expressing their wordes with deuotion and passion. 1612 J. Brinsley Ludus Lit. iv. 36 To helpe to write cleane, fast and faire together. 1781 S. Johnson Broome in Pref. Wks. Eng. Poets VIII. 12 Pope came off clean with Homer. 1865 tr. L. Spohr Autobiogr. i. 42 Tietz played the secondo..without faltering and perfectly clean. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > wholeness > completeness > [adverb] > completely or thoroughly welleOE furtherlyc1175 through and through?1316 perfectlya1400 radically?a1425 roundly?a1425 substantiallya1425 perfectc1425 thoroughly1442 substantiallyc1449 throughlya1450 naitlyc1450 through1472 surely?a1475 cleanc1475 through stitch1573 fundamentally1587 down1616 perfectedly1692 minutely1796 homea1825 good1834 rotten1840 out1971 full on1979 c1475 (?c1425) Avowing of King Arthur (1984) l. 598 He is.. clene clad in stele. c1515 Ld. Berners tr. Bk. Duke Huon of Burdeux (1882–7) lviii. 197 Gerames yssued out clene armed. 1569 R. Grafton Chron. II. 477 Came to the Dolphyns presence, which was cleane armed. II. Of degree. 5. Without anything omitted or left; without any exception that may vitiate the statement, without qualification; wholly, entirely, quite, absolutely.This sense naturally arose from the consideration that when a substance is taken entirely out of any vessel, etc., without leaving a particle behind, the vessel is left clean, and its cleanness is a measure of the completeness of the removal. Hence clean was naturally used with all verbs of taking, driving, or going away, of losing, and thence of finishing up, completing, or performing any action. a. with verbs of removal, and the like. (The use of adverbs or prepositional phrases qualifying the verb introduces const. c.) ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > wholeness > completeness > [adverb] > fully or to full extent or in full > with no exceptions > without omission or qualification cleana1000 cleanlyc1050 a1000 Cod. Dipl. I. 311 Ðæt min cynn clæne [MS. clane] gewite. c1330 R. Mannyng Chron. (1810) 7 Þei chaced out þe Bretons so clene. c1386 G. Chaucer Squire's Tale 618 Al his loue is clene fro me ago. c1420 Chron. Vilod. 800 His syȝt was clene ytake hym fro. 1555 J. Heywood Two Hundred Epigrammes with Thyrde sig. B.vii When mery drynkers drynke of cleane. 1561 J. Hollybush tr. H. Brunschwig Most Excellent Homish Apothecarye f. 11 Somtyme is the hearing lost clene. 1611 Bible (King James) Josh. iii. 17 Vntill all the people were passed cleane ouer Iordan. View more context for this quotation 1629 Vse of Law 33 in J. Doddridge Lawyers Light The heire is cleane discharged of the Burthen. 1745 P. Thomas True Jrnl. Voy. South-Seas 286 One of our great Shot..carried one of his Legs clean off. 1853 G. Brimley Ess. (1858) vii. 280 The purpose of the book seems clean gone out of the writer's mind. 1883 ‘G. Lloyd’ Ebb & Flow II. xxi. 22 I believe he's gone clean off his head. b. with other verbs. ΚΠ c1380 Sir Ferumbras (1879) l. 3537 Clene þanne þay turnde hure mod. c1420 Anturs of Arth. xl And cleuet his schild clene. 1547 Certain Serm. or Homilies Falling from God ii, in J. Griffiths Two Bks. Homilies (1859) i. 86 They shall clean overgrow us. 1590 E. Spenser Faerie Queene i.i. sig. B2 All cleane dismayd to see so vncouth sight. a1604 M. Hanmer Chron. Ireland 121 in J. Ware Two Hist. Ireland (1633) Vanquished and cleane overthrowne. 1849 A. H. Clough Poems & Prose Remains (1869) II. 15 Food which..may be clean-denied me e'en to-day. 1867 A. Trollope Last Chron. Barset II. lxiv. 218 Perhaps you didn't know that he was clean ruined? c. with prepositions and adverbs, as against, without, beside, away, from, through, out, over, etc. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > high or intense degree > [adverb] > utterly allOE allOE outlyOE thwert-outc1175 skerea1225 thoroughc1225 downrightc1275 purec1300 purelyc1300 faira1325 finelyc1330 quitec1330 quitelyc1330 utterlyc1374 outerlya1382 plainlya1382 straighta1387 allutterly1389 starkc1390 oultrelya1393 plata1393 barec1400 outrightc1400 incomparablyc1422 absolutely?a1425 simpliciter?a1425 staringa1425 quitementa1450 properlyc1450 directly1455 merec1475 incomparable1482 preciselyc1503 clean?1515 cleara1522 plain1535 merely1546 stark1553 perfectly1555 right-down1566 simply1574 flat1577 flatly1577 skire1581 plumb1588 dead?1589 rankly1590 stark1593 sheera1600 start1599 handsmooth1600 peremptory1601 sheerly1601 rank1602 utter1619 point-blank1624 proofa1625 peremptorily1626 downrightly1632 right-down1646 solid1651 clever1664 just1668 hollow1671 entirely1673 blank1677 even down1677 cleverly1696 uncomparatively1702 subtly1733 point1762 cussed1779 regularly1789 unqualifiedly1789 irredeemably1790 positively1800 cussedly1802 heart1812 proper1816 slick1818 blankly1822 bang1828 smack1828 pluperfectly1831 unmitigatedly1832 bodaciously1833 unredeemedly1835 out of sight1839 bodacious1845 regular1846 thoroughly1846 ingrainedly1869 muckinga1880 fucking1893 motherless1898 self1907 stone1928 sideways1956 terminally1974 ?1515 Hyckescorner (de Worde) sig. C.ii Clean fro thy welthe she wyll the lyfte. ?1518 Virgilius sig. aiij He toke a ronne and lept klene over. 1526 Bible (Tyndale) Acts xxvi. 9 To do..thynges, clene agaynst the name off Jesus. 1562 T. Cooper Answere Def. Truth f. 18, in Apol. Priuate Masse In this ye speake cleane beside the worde of god. 1587 W. Harrison Descr. Eng. (1877) ii. xiii. i. 255 The new towne standeth cleane without the limits of the old. 1593 T. Bilson Perpetual Govt. Christes Church 201 Cleane against the intent of the writers. a1616 W. Shakespeare Comedy of Errors (1623) i. i. 133 Roming cleane through the bounds of Asia. View more context for this quotation 1745 P. Thomas True Jrnl. Voy. South-Seas 282 Every Part of which was cut clean through. 1857 D. Livingstone Missionary Trav. S. Afr. vii. 140 note (Frank Vardon) A ball..went clean through his shoulder-blade. d. with such adjectives as contrary, different, other, contradictory, impossible, wrong, etc. ΚΠ a1538 T. Starkey Dial. Pole & Lupset (1989) 6 The wych thyng to me semyth clene contrary. 1551 R. Record Pathway to Knowl. i. Defin. An other thyng cleane different from the depenesse. 1587 W. Harrison Descr. Eng. (1877) ii. i. i. 35 I am cleane of another mind. a1593 H. Smith Wks. (1867) II. 430 The church of Rome, being clean contradictory, doth marvellously err. a1635 R. Sibbes in C. H. Spurgeon Treasury of David (1871) II. Ps. xxvii. 8 With God it is clean otherwise. 1839 C. Brontë Let. 26 July in E. C. Gaskell Life C. Brontë (1857) I. viii. 196 Your proposal has almost driven me ‘clean daft’. 1851 D. Jerrold St. Giles & St. James (new ed.) xxix, in Writings I. 299 She was going clean wrong. 1883 J. S. Stallybrass tr. J. Grimm Teutonic Mythol. III. Introd. 50 To make a real portrait of Deity is clean impossible. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > wholeness > completeness > completely [phrase] > in full or to fullest extent > fully or without exceptions or qualifications quite and cleana1175 for odd or evenc1425 the fullness of timec1425 in toto1798 sans phrase1808 hook, line, and sinker1838 a1175 Cott. Hom. 231 Þat hi alle clone simle belocen were. c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1978) l. 11866 He wes al clane [c1300 Otho cleane] of olifantes bane. c1330 R. Mannyng Chron. (1810) 50 Knoute..chaced him out of Norweie quyte & clene. a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Fairf. 14) l. 14803 Alle þis cuntree..rises wiþ him quite & clene. c1440 Partonope 5484 Youre old manerys be turned alle clene. 1487 (a1380) J. Barbour Bruce (St. John's Cambr.) x. 124 [He] saw the king distroy vp, cleyn and law, His land. 1587 Sir P. Sidney & A. Golding tr. P. de Mornay Trewnesse Christian Relig. Pref. sig. **v They breake of quite and cleane. 1613 H. Finch Law (1636) 105 And thereof quit and cleane to ouste the feoffee, donee, or lessee. 1832 Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. Apr. 640 Are ye quite and clean gane wrang? This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1889; most recently modified version published online March 2022). > see alsoalso refers to : clean-adj.adv. < n.a1889adj.883v.c1450adv.a1000 see also |
随便看 |
|
英语词典包含1132095条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。