单词 | commix |
释义 | commixv. 1. a. transitive. To mix (two or more things) together; to mix (one thing) with another or others; to blend, combine.With quot. 1907, cf. commixtion n. 6. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > condition or state of being mixed or blended > mix or blend [verb (transitive)] mingeOE blandOE mongle?c1225 meddlec1350 sprengea1382 compoundc1384 intermeddlec1384 temperc1386 mell1387 found?c1390 joinc1400 intermell1413 commix?a1425 medley?a1425 mix?a1425 amenge?c1450 immix?a1475 immixt?a1475 minglea1475 tremp1480 commixt1481 incarry1486 mixtionc1500 mixta1513 demelle1516 confect1540 intermixt1551 intermingle1555 bemix1559 intermix1562 contemper1567 blenge1570 bemingle1574 contemperate1590 masha1591 commeddle1604 immingle1606 blenda1616 intemper1627 commingle1648 conferment1651 subigate1657 to mix up1672 mould1701 meine1736 caudle1795 combine1799 interblenda1849 inmix1892 meld1936 ?a1425 tr. Catherine of Siena Orcherd of Syon (Harl.) (1966) 245 (MED) Þis myn oonly sooþfast sone incarnate, commixte and medlid wiþ þe liȝt of my godheed in dyuyne nature. tr. Palladius De re Rustica (Duke Humfrey) (1896) i. l. 567 Figis grounde Commixt with flour [c1450 Bodl. Add. comyxt; L. mixtis pollinibus]. 1583 P. Barrough Methode of Phisicke iii. v. 84 You may commixe with the said thinges veriuice. 1608 E. Topsell Hist. Serpents 33 Commixe the ashes of a serpent with..the seedes of Fennegreke. 1669 W. Charleton Mysterie of Vintners in Two Disc. 172 Beat them till they be throughly commix'd. 1773 H. Jackson in Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 63 6 Commixing three spoonfuls with a gallon of malt liquor. 1855 R. C. Singleton tr. Virgil Georgics v, in tr. Virgil Wks. I. 178 Gore with foam commixed. 1875 Jrnl. Royal Asiatic Soc. 7 109 A man having numerous wives should take powder of Batatas paniculata with its own sap, repeatedly commixed, and then dried. 1907 J. M. Kerr Codes Calif. III. iv. ii. 1120/1 Where defendant has so intermingled and commixed the property sued for with other property that it cannot be distinguished, judgment in alternative form is not necessary. 2007 Canberra Times (Nexis) 4 Mar. a3 Having to drink recycled water that may once have been commixed with sewage. b. transitive. Of immaterial things. Now frequently poetic. ΚΠ c1450 ( J. Walton tr. Boethius De Consol. Philos. (Linc. Cathedral 103) 252 (MED) If alle þinges stood in þis degree, Also commixt [L. misceri] wiþ fortune and wiþ chaunce. c1550 Clariodus (1830) i. l. 1370 He had ane joy, commixt with feare. 1596 Raigne of Edward III sig. G4v Profit must with honor be comixt . View more context for this quotation 1601 W. Cornwallis Ess. II. xxxi. sig. Sv This so sweetly commixeth her defects with those thoughts of liking. 1665 J. Webb Vindic. Stone-Heng (1725) 219 They commixt set Forms..in one and the same Temple. 1756 Crit. Rev. Mar. 135 A good attempt made at commixing morality with entertainment. 1797 Sporting Mag. Oct. 8/1 He is actuated by such honourable feelings, commixed with such a vein of pleasantry, that the austerity of judgment becomes softened. 1818 S. T. Coleridge tr. Lactantius in Friend (new ed.) I. 134 He will confound and commix all things spiritual and temporal. 1901 J. W. De Forest Downing Legends iv. 166 Extatic bellows from abysses, Commixed with groaning. 1959 W. Nichols Coll. Narr. Poems in Times Lit. Suppl. 7 Aug. 461/3 Awe and truth, commixed in strangest shapes, came as obeying some symbolic law. 2014 DNA (Nexis) 26 July We've witnessed stars turning into style magnates by commixing style and class. c. intransitive. To mix or mingle (with something or someone else). Now rare. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > condition or state of being mixed or blended > become mixed or blended [verb (intransitive)] mingOE meddlec1350 mella1387 blenda1400 commix?1520 admixa1522 mixa1522 mingle1530 wallc1598 co-minglea1616 comminglea1626 congregate1626 intermingle1626 intermella1641 conflux1662 intermix1722 partake1731 to work up1841 interfuse1851 interblend1854 immingle1858 inmix1892 meld1959 ?1520 J. Rastell Nature .iiii. Element sig. A.v These elementis..commyx to gyder dayly. a1616 W. Shakespeare Cymbeline (1623) iv. ii. 57 The Smile, mocking the Sigh, that it would flye From so diuine a Temple, to commix With windes. View more context for this quotation 1675 W. Penn England's Present Interest 52 They will commix as Iron and Clay. 1734 H. Carey Trag. Chrononhotonthologos 26 Hills! Vales! Seas! Mountains! all commixing crumble. 1776 G. Campbell Philos. of Rhetoric I. xi. i. 301 So far is this pleasure from commixing with the pathos. 1849 A. H. Clough Poems & Prose Remains (1869) II. 30 Oh, with mine commixing I thy breath of life shall feel. 1997 Washington Post 15 July d9/4 When we do have to work or play or commix in the heat, we could do worse than remember the weather-wise words of Walt Whitman. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > relationship > variety > variation [verb (intransitive)] > be jumbled together jumblea1529 commix1606 the world > relative properties > relationship > variety > make varied or diversify [verb (transitive)] > mix or jumble jumperc1374 jumble1542 hotchpotch1573 shuffle1593 pell-mell1606 chequerc1632 hash1654 hodge-podge1773 check1790 gallimaufry1831 commix1847 the world > space > relative position > arrangement or fact of being arranged > state of being scattered or dispersed > scatter [verb (transitive)] > among other things interpose1602 intersow1614 intersperse1647 chequer1677 commix1847 intersprinkle1848 thread1884 the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > condition or state of being mixed or blended > mix or blend [verb (transitive)] > add as ingredient to a mixture > qualify by admixture > diversify by intermixture lace1485 interlace1531 intermingle1553 besprinkle1561 interlard1570 commix1847 1606 No-body & Some-body sig. C4 We will not haue a Clawbacks hand comixt With such heroick peeres. 1847 H. Miller First Impressions Eng. vi. 112 With these [fields] there are commixed innumerable cottages. 1916 Confederate Veteran May 233/1 The fleur-de-lis..I place, commixed with jessamine spray, By Ashby's side. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > sexual relations > sexual activity > engage in sexual activity [verb (intransitive)] > have sexual intercourse playOE to do (also work) one's kindc1225 bedc1315 couple1362 gendera1382 to go togetherc1390 to come togethera1398 meddlea1398 felterc1400 companya1425 swivec1440 japea1450 mellc1450 to have to do with (also mid, of, on)1474 engender1483 fuck?a1513 conversec1540 jostlec1540 confederate1557 coeate1576 jumble1582 mate1589 do1594 conjoin1597 grind1598 consortc1600 pair1603 to dance (a dance) between a pair of sheets1608 commix1610 cock1611 nibble1611 wap1611 bolstera1616 incorporate1622 truck1622 subagitate1623 occupya1626 minglec1630 copulate1632 fere1632 rut1637 joust1639 fanfreluche1653 carnalize1703 screw1725 pump1730 correspond1756 shag1770 hump1785 conjugate1790 diddle1879 to get some1889 fuckeec1890 jig-a-jig1896 perform1902 rabbit1919 jazz1920 sex1921 root1922 yentz1923 to make love1927 rock1931 mollock1932 to make (beautiful) music (together)1936 sleep1936 bang1937 lumber1938 to hop into bed (with)1951 to make out1951 ball1955 score1960 trick1965 to have it away1966 to roll in the hay1966 to get down1967 poontang1968 pork1968 shtup1969 shack1976 bonk1984 boink1985 1610 J. Healey tr. St. Augustine Citie of God xv. xxiii. 561 The women with whome they [sc. Devills] comixe [L. misceantur]. 1661 Thracian Wonder iv. i. sig. Fv Curses the man she did commix withal. 1703 tr. G. de Costes de La Calprenède Cassandra ii. 129 It had long before been rumoured, that his Mother Olympias conceived him by Jupiter Hammon, who commixed with her in the shape of a Dragon. 1813 T. Jefferson Let. 28 Oct. in Writings (1903) XIII. 394 We do not commix for the sake of pleasure, but of the procreation of children. 1920 Amer. Med. Feb. 89/2 Not only the young brothers indiscriminately copulated with their sisters, but parents commixed with their children. 4. intransitive. Of a group, population, etc.: to mix or associate (with others). Also: to intermarry; (of an animal) to interbreed. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > marriage or wedlock > types of marriage custom or practice > [verb (intransitive)] > practise exogamy intermarry1611 commix1619 1619 H. Ainsworth Annot. Fifth Bk. Moses called Deuteronomie sig. T4v/2 They..might enter into the congregation, and be commixed with them. 1659 J. Evelyn tr. St. John Chrysostom Golden Bk. 16 Lest..a certain impure..rabble enter, and commix themselves with our Citizens. 1736 E. Smith Cure of Deism I. viii. 215 All Communication in Victuals and Worship being so cut off, it was morally impossible for them, keeping those Statutes, to commix with other People. 1787 J. Ledyard Jrnl. in Journey through Russia (1966) 173 Those Nations..have not commixed..and intermarried with other Nations. 1839 C. H. Smith Nat. Hist. Dogs (Naturalist's Libr.: Mammalia IX) I. 161 There are three if not four original species [of pig]..with powers to commix. 1899 J. F.Muro Story of Brit. Race ii. 32 These broad-heads, commixed with some of the long-heads from north and south who preceded them, were..the true ‘Celts’. 1908 P. Dinneen tr. G. Keating Hist. Irel. II. ix. 173 The Gentiles will come over the stuttering sea, They will commix with the men of Ireland. 2007 D. Ford Red Star iii. 44 His relatives..mostly preferred to associate with themselves on the balcony and not to descend and commix with the customers. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2015; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < v.?a1425 |
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