单词 | concord |
释义 | concordn.1 1. Agreement between persons; concurrence in feeling and opinion; harmony, accord. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > statement > agreement, concurrence, or unanimity > [noun] cordc1300 assentc1386 concordc1386 accordancea1400 unanimity1436 concordancec1450 condescentc1460 greement1483 agreeing?1520 consent1529 consension1570 onenessa1575 consort1590 concurrency1596 agreation1598 convenance1613 concert1618 concurrence1669 accordancy1790 coincidence1795 unanimousness1828 one-mindedness1836 consentience1879 society > society and the community > dissent > absence of dissension or peace > [noun] > concord sibsomenesseOE somec1000 somrednessa1250 accordc1275 onehead1340 unityc1384 concordc1386 accordance1388 union?1435 onement1454 greement1483 agreeance1525 agreement1529 atonementa1535 onenessa1575 onehood?1578 harmony1588 agreea1592 unison1606 commodation1643 bon-accordc1650 unisoniety1663 regalia1745 at-oneness1877 c1386 G. Chaucer Clerk's Tale 1073 Ful many a yer..Lyven these tuo in concord and in rest. a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 23519 Mikel it es þar þair concord, For all ar euer at an acord. a1400 Cov. Myst. 84 Brothyrly concorde..That norchyth love of creatures echon. 1549 Bk. Common Prayer (STC 16267) Mattyns f. iiiiv O God, which art author of peace, and louer of concorde. a1616 W. Shakespeare Macbeth (1623) iv. iii. 99 The sweet Milke of Concord . View more context for this quotation 1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost ii. 497 Devil with Devil damn'd Firm concord holds, men onely disagree. View more context for this quotation 1769 E. Burke Observ. Late State Nation 86 No projects of theirs could endanger the concord of the empire. 1865 Reader 4 Feb. 129/1 There is no..concord in a community not justly governed with a view to the happiness and prosperity of all its members. 2. a. A state of peace and amity between contending parties or nations; concrete a treaty establishing such relations. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > peace > pacification > peace treaty > [noun] accordc1275 peacec1325 concordc1425 treaty1430 corda1500 composition1523 pacification1548 assurance1577 accommodation1624 convention1780 c1425 Wyntoun Cron. vii. vi. 259 Scho be hyr trette mad concord Betwene hyr eme Dawy and hyr Lord. 1490 W. Caxton tr. Eneydos xl. 132 Turnus wolde neuer haue concorde nor peas wyth this kyng euander. a1522 G. Douglas tr. Virgil Æneid (1960) xii. v. 167 The kyng..Left the concord ondone, not brocht till end. 1569 R. Grafton Chron. II. 431 They sent Ambassadors..requyring him of peece and finall concord. 1569 R. Grafton Chron. II. 647 For infringing any point of this concorde. 1721 J. Strype Eccl. Memorials I. v. 61 A treaty..commonly called the Concord of Madril. 1838 W. H. Prescott Hist. Reign Ferdinand & Isabella III. ii. xvii. 224 Abiding by the concord of Salamanca. b. Hence concord-coin, a coin struck by Greek towns of Asia Minor, under the Roman Empire, to commemorate a treaty conferring privileges on each other's citizens; usually called alliance-coin. ΚΠ 1850 J. Leitch tr. K. O. Müller Ancient Art (new ed.) 441 On a concord-coin of Cyzicus with Smyrna..Cora, crowned with ivy, holding a torch. 3. Law. An agreement made in court respecting the conveyance of a fine of lands; also, an agreement made between two or more upon a trespass committed. ΘΚΠ society > law > administration of justice > court proceedings or procedure > action of courts in claims or grievances > [noun] > amicable settlement lovelOE lovedayc1300 transactionc1460 finea1475 concord1530 accord1579 1530 St. German's Secunde Dyaloge Doctour & Student xxiv. f. lxii A concorde ys properlye vpon an agrement bytwene the partyes. 1594 W. West Symbolæogr.: 2nd Pt. ii. §58 Instructions how to draw the Concords of fines. 1767 W. Blackstone Comm. Laws Eng. (new ed.) II. 351. 1805 W. Cruise Digest Laws Eng. Real Prop. V. 23 The third part of a fine is the concord, or agreement entered into openly in the Court of Common Pleas, or before the Chief Justice of that court, or commissioners duly authorised for that purpose. 1848 Wharton (at cited word) Concord..upon a trespass committed..is divided into concord executory, and concord executed. 4. a. Agreement or harmony between things; esp. said in reference to sounds and rhythmical movements, and in uses thence derived. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > degree, kind, or quality of sound > pleasantness of sound > [noun] > musical or harmonious quality concorda1340 harmony1528 consonance1594 balance1929 society > leisure > the arts > music > musical sound > [noun] > agreement of sounds or harmony cordc1300 accordmentc1330 concorda1340 accorda1387 consonancya1387 accordancea1400 cordinga1400 symphonyc1440 proportiona1450 chord?c1475 uthec1478 attemperance1481 consonant1483 monochordc1500 concordancea1513 concent1538 consort1587 harmoge1601 minstrelsy1605 dissonancy1626 harmoniousness1679 harmonicalness1693 concentus1769 attune1850 the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > thing heard > [noun] > sound > assemblage or body of > blended or concordant > quality of concorda1340 consonancya1387 symphonyc1440 consonance1594 the world > relative properties > order > agreement, harmony, or congruity > [noun] accordmentc1330 accorda1398 consonancya1398 unitya1398 accordancea1400 commoningc1400 convenience1413 correspondence1413 answeringc1425 conformityc1430 consonance1430 congruity1447 concordancec1450 consonantc1475 agreement1495 monochordc1500 conveniencya1513 agreeance1525 agreeableness1531 concinnity1531 congruence1533 harmony?1533 concent1563 tunableness1569 agreeing1575 answerableness1577 concert1578 consent1578 sympathy1578 concord1579 symphonia1579 correspondency1589 atone1595 coherence1597 respondence1598 symphony1598 sortance1600 coherency1603 respondency1603 symbolizing1605 coaptation1614 compositiona1616 sympathizing1632 comportance1648 compliance1649 syntax1649 concinneness1655 symmetry1655 homology1656 consistency1659 consentaneousness1660 consistence1670 comportment1675 harmoniousness1679 symbolism1722 congruousness1727 accordancy1790 sameness1790 consentaneity1798 consilience1840 chime1847 consensus1854 solidarity1874 synchromesh1966 concordancing1976 a1340 R. Rolle Psalter cl. 4 In pesful felagheship & concord of voicys. 1509 S. Hawes Pastime of Pleasure xvi. xiv The vii. scyences in one monacorde, Eche upon other do full well depende, Musyke hath them so set in concorde. 1579 S. Gosson Schoole of Abuse f. 8 The concorde of the Elementes and their qualities. 1600 W. Shakespeare Merchant of Venice v. i. 84 The man that hath no musique in himselfe, nor is not moued with concord of sweet sounds. View more context for this quotation 1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost vi. 311 If Natures concord broke, Among the Constellations warr were sprung. View more context for this quotation 1744 J. Paterson Compl. Comm. Paradise Lost 171 If two stringed instruments be exactly tuned alike, the one that is not play'd on, will answer to that which is playd on, in perfect concord. 1849 M. Somerville On Connexion Physical Sci. (ed. 8) xvii. 158 When their vibrations are so related as to have a common period, after a few oscillations they produce concord. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > versification > rhyme > [noun] rhymec1300 ranea1500 chiming1580 jingling1582 concord1589 rhythm1599 1589 G. Puttenham Arte Eng. Poesie ii. v. 64 We..do giue the name of ryme onely to our concordes, or tunable consentes in the latter end of our verses. 1589 G. Puttenham Arte Eng. Poesie ii. vii. 66 The fal of a verse..with a certaine tunable sound which being matched with another of like sound, do make a [concord]. 5. Music. A combination of notes which is in itself satisfactory to the ear, requiring no ‘resolution’ or following chord: opposed to discord. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical sound > harmony or sounds in combination > chord > [noun] > concord or perfect chord concord1590 chord1597 perfect chord1597 equison1609 consonance1624 consonant1694 perfect triad1878 1590 R. Harvey Plaine Percevall sig. D3 All diuisions framde with such long discords, & not so much as a concord to end withall. 1597 T. Morley Plaine & Easie Introd. Musicke 70 Phi. What is a Concord? Ma. It is a mixt sound compact of diuers voyces, entring with delight in the eare. 1664 T. Campion Art Descant in J. Playford Brief Introd. Skill Musick (ed. 4) (verso title page) There are Nine Concords of Musick, as followeth, a Unison, Third, Fift, Sixt, Eight, Tenth, Twelfth, Thirteenth, and Fifteenth: whereof five are called perfect, and four unperfect. 1788 T. Cavallo in Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 78 244 When the combinations of the two sounds are agreeable, they are called concords. 1881 G. A. Macfarren Counterpoint (ed. 3) i. 2 A concord is a chord that is satisfactory in itself and has no need to be followed by any others. 6. Grammar. Formal agreement between words as parts of speech, expressing the relation of fact between things and their attributes or predicates.This formal agreement consists in the words concerned being put in the same case, number, gender, and person, as far as the inflectional structure of the language provides for this, or as other considerations (in respect to gender and number) do not forbid it. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > linguistics > study of grammar > syntax or word order > syntactic relations > [noun] > concord or agreement congruity1393 concord1530 agreement1549 concordancea1568 congruence1933 1530 J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement Introd. 38 The latines have the concordes of grammar. 1612 J. Brinsley Posing of Parts f. 27 What meane you by Concords? A. The agreements of words togither, in some speciall Accidents or qualities: as in one Number, Person, Case, or Gender. 1751 J. Harris Hermes ii. iii. 262 From this Natural Concord of Subject and Accident, arises the Grammatical Concord of Substantive and Adjective. 7. Form or Formula of Concord [ < German Koncordienformel, Eintrachtsformel, Latin Formula Concordiae] : a symbolical document drawn up in 1576–1577, and containing an exposition and determination of points of Lutheran doctrine concerning which differences had arisen among Lutheran divines. (This and eight other formularies, œcumenical and Lutheran, were published in 1580, in Latin and German, under the collective title of Liber Concordiæ, Koncordienbuch ‘Book of concord’.) ΚΠ 1764 A. Maclaine tr. J. L. von Mosheim Eccl. Hist. Cent. 16. ii. 1. §39 The result of all was the famous Form of Concord, which has made so much noise in the world. 1764 A. Maclaine tr. J. L. von Mosheim Eccl. Hist. Cent. 16. ii. 1. §41 Nor were the followers of Zwingle and Calvin the only opposers of the Form of Concord. 1887 G. P. Fisher Hist. Christian Church 424 Melancthon's departure from Luther on the question of the Lord's Supper, and on the part taken by the human will in conversion, awakened intense hostility on the side of the strict Lutherans. These..embodied their dissent from the peculiarities of Melancthon in the creed called the ‘Form of Concord’. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1891; most recently modified version published online March 2022). Concordn.2 U.S. 1. a. attributive in Concord coach or wagon, a type of vehicle originally made at Concord, N.H. ΚΠ 1853 Shasta Courier (Redding, Calif.) 12 Mar. The Proprietors of the above line..have placed upon this route their splendid stock of American Horses and elegant Concord Coaches. 1853 Deseret News (Great Salt Lake City, Utah Territory) 14 May A man calling himself Wm. McClafflin hired of the subscriber, a grey horse and Concord wagon. 1855 F. S. Marryat Mountains & Molehills 249 The stage coach was of American manufacture, and of the class known as ‘Concord’ coaches. 1860 J. G. Holland Miss Gilbert's Career xxiii. 399 Strings of rustic lovers in Concord wagons make pilgrimages to the shrines of learning. 1870 Congress. Globe 30 Mar. App. 264/2 Building the famous Concord wagons, found in all parts of the country. 1873 J. H. Beadle Undeveloped West xv. 255 From noon till 5 p.m. we endure the thumping of a concord coach over the Sierra spurs. 1887 Harper's Mag. May 871/2 Concord coaches with inviting outside seats stood about. 1903 C. B. Loomis Cheerful Americans 3 I climbed into the Concord wagon. 1909 C. H. Sternberg Life Fossil Hunter 144 I entered a Concord coach drawn by a team of eight horses. 1947 Steamboat Pilot (Colorado) 16 Jan. 2/7, 52 ‘Concord wagons’, as the stage~coaches were called. 1948 J. D. Rittenhouse Amer. Horse-drawn Vehicles 47 Concord coaches..carried nine passengers inside and as many more as could cling to the roof. b. elliptical. A Concord coach. ΚΠ 1894 R. Kipling in Cent. Mag. Dec. 294/1 'Tain't half as interestin' ez goin' daown-taown in the Concord. 1908 C. E. Mulford Orphan iv. 38 Bill Howland emerged from the..office..and strolled down the street to where his Concord stood. 1925 C. E. Mulford Cottonwood Gulch xiv. 172 Along the road came a dusty Concord,..drawn by six horses. 2. Concord grape n. a variety of grape originating at Concord, Massachusetts. Also elliptical. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > fruit and vegetables > fruit or a fruit > berry > [noun] > grape > types of grapes muscadel1517 muscadine1598 olive grape1601 grapeletc1620 burlace1629 muscat1655 grapeling1694 chasselas1699 wild grape1770 scuppernong1811 Roussanne1824 Cannonau1828 labrusca1854 Concord grape1858 sultana grape1861 dyer1865 vinifera1888 Chardonnay1934 Gewürztraminer1940 Cabernet1946 brunello1966 Rondinella1970 the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular types of fruit > [noun] > edible berries > grape > type of labruscaa1398 muscadel1517 muscadine1598 olive grape1601 grapeletc1620 burlace1629 frontignaca1642 fox-grape1648 verjuice grape1648 muscat1655 morillon1691 muscatel1691 grapeling1694 chasselas1699 muscadella1707 frontignan1756 Morocco1763 Pineau1763 Malaga1769 wild grape1770 Nebbiolo1788 Macabeo1794 Malbec1833 Hamburg grape1838 muscadel1852 Concord grape1858 garnacha1860 sultana grape1861 Canaiolo1862 dyer1865 Sémillon1875 Bual1882 lady's finger1892 Grignolino1894 Tokay grape1896 Durif1897 Morocco grape1908 Viognier1908 gros Colmar1927 Montepulciano1927 Shiraz1927 Verdicchio1940 Cinsault1945 Müller-Thurgau1951 Mavrud1959 Pinotage1964 Mavron1965 Syrah1969 Parellada1979 1858 Trans. Michigan Agric. Soc. 10 217 Mr. Prince thought it a better grape than the Concord. 1864 9th Ann. Rep. Maine Board Agric. i. 35 Years after the introduction of the Isabella came the Diana, Concord, and some others. 1871 R. Somers Southern States 128 The ‘Concord’ grape is almost black, of rather thick skin, but juicy and sweet. 1902 Fortn. Rev. June 1007 I miss the California grapes and the Concords with their clusters of deep blue berries. 1910 S. E. White Adventures of Bobby Orde x. 125 The satiny ‘Concords’.., however, were better dipped in cool water. 1946 S. H. Holbrook Lost Men Amer. Hist. 129 Ephraim Bull, originator of the Concord grape, America's first great contribution to horticulture. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1933; most recently modified version published online December 2020). concordv. Obsolete except in sense 5. 1. a. intransitive. To come into agreement, agree, concur. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > statement > agreement, concurrence, or unanimity > be in agreement [verb (intransitive)] > come to or arrive at an agreement saughtel1154 assentc1300 appointc1374 consent1487 concord1489 convenec1550 to join issue1600 consigna1616 meet1781 gree1786 1489 (a1380) J. Barbour Bruce (Adv.) i. 71 At ye last yai all concordyt, Yat all yar spek suld be recordyt Till Schyr Eduuard. 1535 W. Stewart tr. H. Boethius Bk. Cron. Scotl. (1858) I. 112 Thus culd thai nocht concord into ane will. 1552 R. Huloet Abcedarium Anglico Latinum Concorden or agree. 1607 T. Walkington Optick Glasse 14 I do not concord with the Poet in that trivial verse. 1677 T. Gale Court of Gentiles: Pt. IV iv. 10 This Hypothesis both Plato and Aristotle concord in. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > statement > agreement, concurrence, or unanimity > agree with [verb (transitive)] > agree (a thing) to be (something) concord1606 1606 Bp. W. Barlow One of Foure Serm. Hampton Court E 1 b Who all concord the Succession and Superioritie of Bishops to bee Apostolicall. 2. Of things: To agree, be in harmony, harmonize. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > agreement, harmony, or congruity > agree/be in harmony/be congruous [verb (intransitive)] accord1340 cord1340 concordc1374 agree1447 to stand togetherc1449 rhyme?a1475 commonc1475 gree?a1513 correspond1529 consent1540 cotton1567 pan1572 reciprocate1574 concur1576 meet1579 suit1589 sorta1592 condog1592 square1592 fit1594 congrue1600 sympathize1601 symbolize1605 to go even1607 coherea1616 congreea1616 hita1616 piece1622 to fall in1626 harmonize1629 consist1638 comply1645 shadow1648 quare1651 atonea1657 symphonize1661 syncretize1675 chime1690 jibe1813 consone1873 c1374 G. Chaucer Troilus & Criseyde iii. 1703 The world..Dyuerseth so his stoundes concordynge. 1477 Earl Rivers tr. Dictes or Sayengis Philosophhres (Caxton) (1877) lf. 17v Wyt goth by ordre and may concorde in one sentence. 1564 T. Becon New Catech. in Catech. & Other Pieces (1844) 409 This doctrine..concordeth and agreeth therewith in all points. a1646 J. Gregory Posthuma (1649) 9 Their writings all concorded. 1776 Ld. Stirling in J. Sparks Corr. Amer. Revol. (1853) I. 173 The aid I called in..exactly concords with your sentiments. 1884 tr. Turgenieff's Diary Superfl. Man (N. York ed.) 129 It concords with my character though. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > statement > agreement, concurrence, or unanimity > agree with [verb (transitive)] > arrange or fix by agreement assentc1300 commona1450 condescend1509 concord1548 gree1597 settle1620 adjust1710 1548 Hall's Vnion: Henry VI f. cix The finall conclusion taken, concorded, and agreed betwene his noble brother kyng, Henry the fifth, and kyng Charles, the v. a1670 J. Hacket Scrinia Reserata (1693) i. 212 To concord Conditions for the Royal Marriage. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > dissent > absence of dissension or peace > cause to become united or in concord [verb (transitive)] accord1340 to bring, make, set at one1542 unite1547 concord1548 concert1598 unanimate1702 the world > relative properties > order > agreement, harmony, or congruity > agree, harmonize, or be congruous with [verb (transitive)] > bring into agreement or harmony concile1398 commune1423 agree1532 concord1548 conciliate1573 square1578 concent1596 tally1607 to wind up1608 accommodate1609 adjust1611 conform1646 reconcilea1672 attune1744 harmonize1767 1548 W. Thomas in J. Strype Eccl. Memorials (1721) II. App. R. 60 Man cannot so directly concord them, as to make them always agree. 1597 J. Payne Royall Exchange 4 Be taught to add St. Iames worcks wth St. Pauls faythe, concording theme to gethers..as vnseperable companions. 1623 W. Sclater Quæstion of Tythes 162 [To] concord Canons. a1670 J. Hacket Scrinia Reserata (1693) i. 102 He lived and died..with Wind-Mills of Union to concord Rome and England, England and Rome. 5. [Back-formation < concordance n. 6b] To rearrange the words of a text in the form of a concordance. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > linguistics > linguistic unit > lexicography > [verb (transitive)] > make a concordance to > arrange into a concordance concord1969 1969 Computers & Humanities 3 251 By concording every word in Dobbie's 3,182 line text..Bessinger arrived at a word total of 38,128. 1971 Times Lit. Suppl. 18 June 716/2 Dr. Howard-Hill concords sheet C of Quarto O of 1 Henry IV. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1891; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.1a1340n.21853v.c1374 |
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