单词 | cohabitation |
释义 | cohabitationn. 1. a. Dwelling or living together; community of life. archaic (or distinguished from 2 by use of hyphen and secondary stress on co-). ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > [noun] > together companyingc1443 cohabitationc1450 cohabitancy1862 ménage à deux1902 flat-sharing1960 c1450 Mirour Saluacioun 944 The womman Sunamyte dredde the cohabitacionne of Elye. 1555 tr. P. M. Vermigli (title) A treatise of the cohabitacyon of the faithfull with the vnfaithfull. 1645 J. Milton Tetrachordon 14 He is not bid to leave the dear cohabitation of his father, mother, brothers and sisters. a1727 I. Newton Chronol. Anc. Kingdoms Amended (1728) ii. 210 Oannes taught the Chaldæans..Cohabitation in Cities. 1856 F. L. Olmsted Journey Slave States 17 I am struck with the close co-habitation and association of black and white. b. transferred and figurative. ΚΠ 1551 T. Cranmer Answer S. Gardiner 353 Nestorius graunted two natures in Christe, yet..by cohabitation or inhabitation, so that he made but one Christe. 1656 H. Jeanes Treat. Fulnesse of Christ 164 in Mixture Scholasticall Divinity The cohabitation of the Godhead with the manhood, in the person of Christ. 1882 S. H. Vines tr. J. von Sachs Text-bk. Bot. (ed. 2) 329 The Alga which is the host of the Fungus become[s] modified in consequence of the cohabitation. ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > [noun] > together > as community cohabitation1662 1662 W. Petty Treat. Taxes 28 While ever there are people in England, the greatest cohabitation of them will be about the place which is now London. 2. a. Living together in a sexual relationship without being married: see cohabit v. 2. ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > [noun] > together > outside marriage cohabitation1548 domestic partnership1845 shacking1884 shack-up1935 society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > marriage or wedlock > types of marriage custom or practice > [noun] > cohabitation cohabitation1548 bed-companya1555 free union1852 shacking1884 shack-up1935 1548 Act 2 & 3 Edw. VI c. 23 §2 Sentence for Matrimony, commanding Solemnization, Cohabitation, Consummation, and Tractation. 1631 in S. R. Gardiner Rep. Cases Star Chamber & High Comm. (1886) 54 After this was the cohabitation continued and the children borne as before mentioned. 1690 N. Luttrell Diary in Brief Hist. Relation State Affairs (1857) II. 54 For..holding correspondence and cohabitation with one not his wife. 1728 E. Chambers Cycl. Cohabitation, implies a Concubinage, Copulation, or Carnal Knowledge between two Persons. 1754 J. Jortin Remarks Eccl. Hist. III. 227 The cohabitation of slaves was not called by the name of marriage. 1825 S. T. Coleridge Aids Refl. 56 Reflect how little claim so large a number of legal cohabitations have to the name of Christian Marriages. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > sexual relations > sexual activity > [noun] > sexual intercourse ymonec950 moneOE meanc1175 manredc1275 swivinga1300 couplec1320 companyc1330 fellowred1340 the service of Venusc1350 miskissinga1387 fellowshipc1390 meddlinga1398 carnal knowinga1400 flesha1400 knowledgea1400 knowledginga1400 japec1400 commoning?c1425 commixtionc1429 itc1440 communicationc1450 couplingc1475 mellingc1480 carnality1483 copulation1483 mixturea1500 Venus act?1507 Venus exercise?1507 Venus play?1507 Venus work?1507 conversation?c1510 flesh-company1522 act?1532 carnal knowledge1532 occupying?1544 congression1546 soil1555 conjunction1567 fucking1568 rem in re1568 commixture1573 coiture1574 shaking of the sheets?1577 cohabitation1579 bedding1589 congress1589 union1598 embrace1599 making-outa1601 rutting1600 noddy1602 poop-noddy1606 conversinga1610 carnal confederacy1610 wapping1610 businessa1612 coition1615 doinga1616 amation1623 commerce1624 hot cocklesa1627 other thing1628 buck1632 act of love1638 commistion1658 subagitation1658 cuntc1664 coit1671 intimacy1676 the last favour1676 quiffing1686 old hat1697 correspondence1698 frigging1708 Moll Peatley1711 coitus1713 sexual intercourse1753 shagging1772 connection1791 intercourse1803 interunion1822 greens1846 tail1846 copula1864 poking1864 fuckeea1866 sex relation1871 wantonizing1884 belly-flopping1893 twatting1893 jelly roll1895 mattress-jig1896 sex1900 screwing1904 jazz1918 zig-zig1918 other1922 booty1926 pigmeat1926 jazzing1927 poontang1927 relations1927 whoopee1928 nookie1930 hump1931 jig-a-jig1932 homework1933 quickie1933 nasty1934 jig-jig1935 crumpet1936 pussy1937 Sir Berkeley1937 pom-pom1945 poon1947 charvering1954 mollocking1959 leg1967 rumpy-pumpy1968 shafting1971 home plate1972 pata-pata1977 bonking1985 legover1985 knobbing1986 rumpo1986 fanny1993 1579 G. Fenton tr. F. Guicciardini Hist. Guicciardin i. 49 The death of Galeas hapned by immoderat cohabitacion. Derivatives cohabiˈtational adj. ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > [adjective] > together or with conversantc1400 co-inhabiting1643 cohabitational1949 society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > marriage or wedlock > types of marriage custom or practice > [adjective] > relating to cohabitation cohabitational1949 1949 A. Koestler Promise & Fulfilm. v. 284 This is the first coeducational—or rather cohabitational—prison in the world. 1984 Daily Express 18 July 21/2 He took their co-habitational problems—they're both fed up with each other's wally ways—to a marriage guidance counsellor. Draft additions 1993 3. Politics. Co-operation between members (esp. a President and Prime Minister) of opposing parties, originally in France; an instance of this. (Sometimes pronounced as a French word and printed in italics.) ΘΚΠ society > authority > rule or government > politics > party politics > [noun] > system of > co-operation between opposing parties cohabitation1978 1978 Washington Post 23 Mar. a 23/1 Giscard said it was time to achieve ‘a reasonable cohabitation’ between the majority and the opposition in France. 1985 Economist 9 Feb. (Survey Suppl.: France) 20/1 Mr Barre rules out any talk of cohabitation with Mr Mitterand. 1986 Economist 5 Apr. 57/3 Like France, Portugal is adjusting to the ‘cohabitation’ of a Socialist president and a Conservative prime minister. 1987 Times 7 Apr. 15/3 There is evidence that cohabitation may, with time, erode France's considerable diplomatic influence. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1891; most recently modified version published online June 2022). < n.c1450 |
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