单词 | cramp |
释义 | crampn.1 a. An involuntary, violent and painful contraction of the muscles, usually the result of a slight strain, a sudden chill, etc.Usually spoken of as cramp, formerly and still colloquial the cramp; a cramp is a particular case or form of the seizure. The word is also used of affections accompanied by feelings akin to those of cramp, and assumed to be in part due to it, as cramp of the chest (= angina pectoris n. at angina n. Compounds), cramp of the heart, cramp of the stomach, etc., and it is also applied to paralytic affections caused by over-exertion of particular muscles of the hand, as compositor's cramp, musician's cramp, scrivener's cramp, shoemaker's cramp, writer's cramp. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > diseases of tissue > disorders affecting muscles > [noun] > spasm or cramp cramp1374 emprosthotonosa1398 spasmc1400 spasmusc1400 crickc1424 crumpa1500 misspringinga1500 spasma?1541 convulsion1585 catch1830 kink1848 tonus1891 1374 G. Chaucer Troilus & Criseyde iii. 1022 Wel he felte a-boute his herte crepe..The crampe [v.r. craumpe] of deth. 1377 W. Langland Piers Plowman B. xiii. 335 I cacche þe crompe, þe cardiacle some tyme. c1400 Lanfranc's Cirurg. 99 Þe crampe is a syknes..in þe which syknes cordis & senewis weren drawen to her bigynnynge. c1400 Lanfranc's Cirurg. 105 Þre maner of crampis: þe toon is clepid amprostonos, þe toþer empistenos, þe iij. tetanus. 1563 T. Gale Certaine Wks. Chirurg. iv. ii. f. 20v Wyth this vnguent annoynt the member whiche hath the crampe. a1616 W. Shakespeare As you like It (1623) iv. i. 97 Leander..he went but forth to wash him in the Hellespont, and being taken with the crampe, was droun'd. View more context for this quotation a1616 W. Shakespeare Tempest (1623) i. ii. 371 Ile racke thee with old Crampes . View more context for this quotation 1700 in Maidment Sc. Pasquils (1868) 357 Who to your bed will cramps and stitches bring. 1788 F. Burney Diary Feb. (1842) IV. 114 He recounted to me the particulars of his sudden seizure..from the cramp in his stomach. 1873 A. Flint Treat. Princ. Med. (ed. 4) 746 Painful contraction of muscles..not produced by any obvious cause, is known as cramp. 1887 Times 27 Aug. 11/6 The deceased, while bathing with his father, was seized with cramp. b. Applied to diseases of animals, esp. a disease of the wings to which hawks are liable. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > animal disease or disorder > disorders of birds > [noun] > disorders of hawks crampc1430 frouncea1450 teena1450 crayc1450 ryec1450 aggresteyne1486 agrum1486 fallera1486 filanders1486 gall1575 pantas1575 pin1575 pin gout1575 stroke1575 apoplexy1614 crock1614 formica1614 privy evil1614 back-worma1682 verol1688 croak1707 c1430 Bk. Hawkyng in T. Wright & J. O. Halliwell Reliquiæ Antiquæ (1845) I. 298 If he take colde ore he be full sommyd, for soth he schall gendre the crampe. c1430 Bk. Hawkyng in T. Wright & J. O. Halliwell Reliquiæ Antiquæ (1845) I. 302 For the cramp in hawkes wyng. 1486 Bk. St. Albans B viij a The Croampe commyth to an hawke with takyng of coolde in hir yowthe. 1614 S. Latham Falconry ii. xxvi. 122 The Crocke and the Crampe are two very dangerous euils. 1736 N. Bailey Dict. Domesticum 218 Cramp a distemper in sheep. 1774 O. Goldsmith Hist. Earth V. 337 They should be kept very clean, as indeed should all singing birds..otherwise they will have the cramp, and perhaps the claws will drop off. c. figurative. ΚΠ 1647 J. Hall Poems i. 64 Nor anger pull With cramps the Soule. 1648 W. Jenkyn Ὁδηγος Τυϕλος i. 9 There is scarce a word..in the writing whereof his fingers were not wofully troubled with the Cretian cramp [i.e. lying]. CompoundsCategories » cramp-bark n. U.S. the bark of the American cranberry tree, having anti-spasmodic properties; also the plant itself. cramp-bone n. the kneecap or patella of a sheep, believed to be a charm against cramp. ΘΚΠ the world > the supernatural > the occult > sorcery, witchcraft, or magic > enchantment or casting spells > [noun] > occult medicine > amulet against disease or to aid healing > against cramp cramp-ring1463 cramp-stone1630 cramp-bone1844 1844 C. Dickens Martin Chuzzlewit xlvi. 528 Carried in her pocket..along with two cramp-bones. 1849 C. Dickens David Copperfield (1850) xvii. 179 He could turn crampbones into chessmen. cramp-ray n. = cramp-fish n. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > fish > subclass Elasmobranchii > order Hypotremata > [noun] > member of family Torpedinidae (electric ray) torpedo?1527 cramp-fish1591 numbfish1711 numbing fish1748 cramp-ray1769 electric ray1774 torpedo-ray1804 torpedo-fish1825 1769 T. Pennant Brit. Zool. (new ed.) III. iv. 67 The Cramp-ray..inhabite hot, or..warm climates. 1790 Coll. Voy. round World I. xii. 323 The torpedo, or cramp-ray, is a very curious fish. cramp-spider n. the Whirligig, a water-beetle. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > order Coleoptera or beetles and weevils > [noun] > Adephaga (carnivorous beetles) > Hydradephaga (aquatic) > member of family Gyrinidae (whirligig) whirligig1713 cramp-spider1721 whirlwig1816 weaver1864 mellow bug1894 gyrinid1925 1721 R. Bradley Philos. Acct. Wks. Nature 147 Water Beetles of several kinds, Boat-Flies, a Monoculus, and Cramp Spider. cramp-stone n. a stone used as a charm against cramp. ΘΚΠ the world > the supernatural > the occult > sorcery, witchcraft, or magic > enchantment or casting spells > [noun] > occult medicine > amulet against disease or to aid healing > against cramp cramp-ring1463 cramp-stone1630 cramp-bone1844 1630 P. Massinger Picture sig. M Ricardo. I haue the crampe all ouer me. Hilario...a crampstone as I take it Were very vsefull. 1877 F. Ross et al. Gloss. Words Holderness Cramp-steean, a certain kind of pebble carried in the pocket as a preservative against cramp. cramp-word n. (see cramp adj. 1). Draft additions March 2017 cramp ball n. (also in plural) (a) †a knar or spherical growth, esp. from an oak tree (obsolete rare); (b) a variety of inedible ascomycete fungus, Daldinia concentrica (family Xylariaceae), having a hard, spherical black fruiting body; also called King Alfred's cakes.So named on account of a fabled ability to ward off cramp when carried. ΚΠ 1904 South Eastern Naturalist p. xxiv The peculiar abortive ends, ‘knars’, frequently seen in the bark of beech, holly, and other trees, are occasionally carried by old men in the villages around Haslemere as an antidote for cramp! and are known as ‘cramp balls’. 1959 E. F. Linssen Beetles Brit. Isles 1st Ser. 40 On the dead wood of our Ash, Fraxinus excelsior, are often found the hard black balls—cramp balls—of the fungus Daldinia concentrica. 1967 W. P. K. Findlay Wayside & Woodland Fungi vii. 70 Daldinia concentrica: Cramp Balls... The hard, round, blackish fruit bodies of this fungus may be found at any time of the year on dead branches or trunks of ash trees. 2008 Financial Times 26 Apr. (Weekend Mag.) 39 Surround the cramp ball with honeysuckle bark, hold it and blow until you have flames. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1893; most recently modified version published online March 2022). crampn.2ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > clutching or gripping equipment > [noun] > hook hookc900 haspedec1400 cleek1426 cleek-staffc1440 cramp1503 hock1530 gib-crook1564 cramp-iron1565 gib1567 cramper1598 bench hook1619 crampon1660 wall-hook1681 dressing hook1683 woodcock-eye1796 doghook1821 click1846 clipper1849 ice hook1853 witchetty1862 slip-hook1863 snap-hook1875 clip-hook1882 pelican1890 snake hook1944 1503 tr. Kalendayr Shyppars sig. eiv Weellys in hel..to the maynayr of myllys..towrnant..the qwych weellys had crampons of yrn qweyr war the prydful men & women hangyt & tormentyt. 1581 J. Bell tr. W. Haddon & J. Foxe Against Jerome Osorius 434 For the undoyng of which [knottes] shall neede no great yron crampe, but a seely simple wyer onely shall suffice. 1648 Bp. J. Wilkins Math. Magick i. vii. 52 A sharp graple or cramp of iron, which may be apt to take hold of any place where it lights. 1883 W. H. Cope Gloss. Hampshire Words Cramp, a bent iron, or the like. 2. A small bar of metal with the ends bent, used for holding together two pieces of masonry, timber, etc., a clamp; = cramp-iron n. 2. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > building and constructing equipment > fastenings > [noun] > cramp crampon1490 cramp1594 cramper1598 cramp-iron1598 1594 H. Plat Jewell House 26 Peece the timber work in such sort, as that it may resemble an arch of stone, make the ioints strong, and binde them fast with crampes or dogs of iron. 1628 Louth Churchwardens' Accts. IV. 34 in E. Peacock Gloss. Words Manley & Corringham, Lincs. A Drill for puttinge in ye cramps xijd. 1751 C. Labelye Descr. Westm. Bridge 20 Every Course cramped together with Iron Cramps, let into the Stones. 1793 J. Smeaton Narr. Edystone Lighthouse (ed. 2) §41 Iron cramps were used to retain the stones of each course together. 1805 R. Southey Madoc i. xv. 161 Now have they From the stone coffin wrenched the iron cramps. 1842 J. Gwilt Encycl. Archit. Gloss. 958 Cramp, a piece of metal..for fastening stones together... In modern buildings iron is chiefly used. The Romans wisely used cramps of bronze. 3. A portable tool or press with a movable part which can be screwed up so as to hold things together; esp. one used by joiners and others for pressing together two pieces of wood, etc., which are being joined (see quots.). Cf. clamp n.1 2. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > clutching or gripping equipment > [noun] > clamp benda1250 clam1399 clamer1556 cramp1669 clamp1688 grapple1768 dog1833 shackle1838 Samson1842 1669 S. Sturmy Mariners Mag. ii. i. 52 A pair of Cramps made of Iron, with Screws to fasten the Scale of Equal Parts and the Scale to be made together. 1842 J. Gwilt Encycl. Archit. Gloss. 958 Cramp, an iron instrument about four feet long, having a screw at one end, and a moveable shoulder at the other, employed by carpenters and joiners for forcing mortise and tenon work together. 1849 J. Weale Rudim. Dict. Terms Archit. i. 126/1 Cramp, a short bar of iron, with its ends bent so as to form three sides of a parallelogram: at one end a set-screw is inserted, so that two pieces of metal, being placed between, can be held firmly together by the screw. 1882 Worcs. Exhib. Catal. iii. 16 Joiner's Screws, Cramps. 4. In other technical uses. ΚΠ 1612 S. Sturtevant Metallica viii. 67 The Windmilnes in More-fields..haue a deuise called the Crampe, which will sodenly stay (in the face of the storme) the..circumgyration of the wheeles. b. = crampet n. 3, crampon n. 3. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > footwear > shoe or boot > crampon > [noun] crampet1638 crampon1789 cramp-iron1818 cramp1890 1890 J. Kerr Hist. Curling i. i. 59 Riddell sprung upon the cramps. 1890 J. Kerr Hist. Curling ii. i. 206 A pair of cramps cost 2s. 8d. 1892 Cornhill Mag. June 612 He..puts on his heavy shoes with iron cramps in the soles. ΚΠ 1813 J. Hogg Queen's Wake iii. 203 The youth, on cramps of polished steel..Like lightning o'er the lake they glide. Categories » d. Shoemaking. ‘A piece of wood having a curve corresponding to that of the upper part of the instep, on which the upper leather of a boot is stretched to give it the requisite shape’ (Webster). Also called crimp. 5. The cluster of calyces or husks of a bunch of nuts. ΚΠ 1866 Nature & Art 1 Dec. 216 A basket or bag of nuts in their husks or cramps being produced. 1866 Nature & Art 1 Dec. 216 For so many lovers had Sue of the Vale, That no cramp of nuts could give half of the tale. 6. ‘A pillar of rock or mineral left for support’ (Raymond, Mining Gloss. 1881). ΚΠ 1881 Trans. Amer. Inst. Mining Engineers 1880–1 9 124 Cramp, a pillar of rock or mineral left for support. 7. A cramped or stiffly wrinkled part in paper, etc.; a fold, crease, ruck. ΘΚΠ the world > space > shape > unevenness > projection or prominence > corrugation > [noun] > wrinkled condition > wrinkle or crease rimpleeOE frouncec1374 runklea1400 wrinklea1420 ruge?a1425 crimple1440 wreathc1440 wrimple1499 rumple?a1513 scrumple?a1513 wimple1513 crease1578 bag1587 crinkle1596 pucker1598 press1601 crumple1607 creasing1665 ruck1774 cramp1828 fold1840 ruckle1853 bumfle1867 1828 O. Gregory Hutton's Course Math. (ed. 9) II. 55 And when the paper is become dry, it will, by contracting again, stretch itself smooth and flat from any cramps and unevenness. 8. figurative. A constraining and narrowly confining force or power; a cramping restraint. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > difficulty > hindrance > restriction of free action > [noun] > that which fetterOE shackle?c1225 cagec1300 chainc1374 to cut a large thong of another man's leatherc1380 corda1382 gablea1555 obligation1582 hamper1613 tethera1628 girdlea1630 confiner1654 trammela1657 cramp1719 swathe1864 tie1868 lockstep1963 society > authority > subjection > restraint or restraining > restriction or limitation > [noun] > of free action > that which fetterOE shackle?c1225 cagec1300 chainc1374 to cut a large thong of another man's leatherc1380 corda1382 gablea1555 obligation1582 manacle1587 hamper1613 tethera1628 girdlea1630 confiner1654 trammela1657 cramp1719 swathe1864 tie1868 1719 W. Wood Surv. Trade (ed. 2) 255 They are too wise to have any such Cramps upon Trade. 1781 W. Cowper Truth 466 Crippling his pleasures with the cramp of fear! 1820 H. Matthews Diary of Invalid 454 His genius was embarrassed by the cramp and confinement of the French literary laws. 1839 H. Hallam Introd. Lit. Europe IV. iii. 271 Attempts to fasten down the progressive powers of the human mind by the cramps of association. 9. A cramped or constrained condition or state. ΚΠ 1864 J. R. Lowell Fireside Trav. 143 The compressed nature struggles through at every crevice, but can never get the cramp and stunt out of it. Compounds C1. cramp-frame, cramp-hole, cramp-joint, etc. ΚΠ 1796 S. Pegge Anonymiana (1809) 346 The cramp-holes..do not perfectly correspond to the letters. C2. Categories » cramp-drill n. a portable drill consisting of a frame similar to the joiner's cramp, with a drill-spindle, feed-screw, and support for the article to be drilled. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1893; most recently modified version published online March 2022). crampadj. 1. a. Difficult to make out, understand, or decipher; crabbed. cramp word: a word difficult to pronounce or understand. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > literature > style of language or writing > obscurity > [adjective] darkOE murka1400 cloudyc1400 mistyc1400 unclearc1400 obturate?a1425 obscure?a1439 unplain?c1535 obumbilatec1540 abstruse?1549 darksome1574 mysteriousa1586 obstruse1604 muddy1611 unperspicuous1634 clouded1641 imperspicuous1654 cramp1674 unlucid1711 abstract1725 opaque1761 obumbratory1799 darkling1813 sludgy1901 society > communication > writing > handwriting or style of > [adjective] > small or cramped strict1649 cramp1731 polymicrian1829 niggling1854 cramped1876 1674 N. Fairfax Treat. Bulk & Selvedge Contents Doctor More's cramp argument brought off. 1683 A. Snape Anat. Horse iv. i. 151 The Cramp-names (as we call them) of the Muscles are no such hindrance nor discouragement to me as..to most others. 1697 J. Potter Archæologiæ Græcæ I. ii. xx. 327 Proposing Riddles, and cramp Questions. 1708 Brit. Apollo 19–21 May Your Lawyer's..Cramp Law Terms. 1731 R. Wodrow Corr. (1843) III. 481 It's pity a gentleman should write in so cramp a style, as to need a Dictionary at the margin and the foot of the page. 1858 Lit. Churchman IV. 407/1 The cramp Latinity of Tertullian. 1887 W. D. Parish & W. F. Shaw Dict. Kentish Dial. Cramp-word, a word difficult to be understood. ‘Our new parson..uses so many of these cramp-words.’ b. In cramp handwriting now associated with cramped adj., constrained, not written freely and distinctly. Π 1734 H. Fielding Don Quixote in Eng. Introd. sig. A7v They are written in such damn'd cramp Hands, you will never be able to read them. 1865 T. Carlyle Hist. Friedrich II of Prussia V. xviii. ii. 28 Handwriting, not too cramp for him. 2. Contracted, strait, narrow; cramping. ΘΠ the world > space > [adjective] > confined, restricted, or insufficiently spacious narroweOE straitc1290 unwidea1400 scanta1533 angust1540 roomless1548 pinched?1567 niggard1595 strict1598 straitened1602 pinching1607 incommodious1615 incapacious1635 over-strait1645 straiteninga1652 cramp1786 bottleneck1854 cramped1884 tight1937 claustrophobic1946 claustrophobe1954 the world > action or operation > difficulty > hindrance > restriction of free action > [adjective] strangling1606 straiteninga1652 fettery1654 cramp1786 cramping1788 astricting1837 strait-jacketing1950 society > authority > subjection > restraint or restraining > restriction or limitation > [adjective] > of free action strangling1606 straiteninga1652 fettery1654 cramp1786 cramping1788 astricting1837 strait-jacketing1950 1786 A. M. Bennett Juvenile Indiscretions I. 30 The old gentleman made a cramp sort of a will. 1807 J. Beresford Miseries Human Life II. xviii. 134 On your way to your seat in a cramp corner. 1856 R. W. Emerson Eng. Traits xviii. 304 There is cramp limitation in their habit of thought..a tortoise's instinct to hold hard to the ground. 1863 G. F. Pardon Hoyle's Games Modernized 357 at Billiards Cramp-Games, those in which one player gives to another some apparently great advantages. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1893; most recently modified version published online March 2022). crampv. I. Connected with cramp n.1 a. transitive. To give the cramp to (a person); to cause to be seized with cramp. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > diseases of tissue > disorders affecting muscles > affect with muscular disorder [verb (transitive)] > of person: spasm or cramp cramp1572 1572 R. Harrison tr. L. Lavater Of Ghostes iii. ii. 185 When thou wilt cramp some man by the toes in the night time. 1587 A. Fleming et al. Holinshed's Chron. (new ed.) III. 972/2 William Foxleie..fell asleepe and could not be wakened with pricking, cramping, or otherwise burning whatsoeuer. 1589 J. Lyly Pappe with Hatchet B What fast a sleepe? Nay faith, Ile cramp thee till I wake thee. 1699 B. E. New Dict. Canting Crew Cramped, a weight with a string tied to one's Toe, when a Sleep, much used by School-boies, one to another. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > diseases of tissue > disorders affecting muscles > affect with muscular disorder [verb (transitive)] > of person: spasm or cramp > of part: spasm or cramp crampishc1374 cramp1602 convulse1691 crick1850 1602 J. Marston Hist. Antonio & Mellida ii. sig. D2v O how impatience cramps my cracked veins. a1627 T. Middleton et al. Widdow (1652) ii. ii. 23 And I take your rayling at my Patron Sir, Ile cramp your joynts! 1634 J. Ford Chron. Hist. Perkin Warbeck iii. sig. F I can laugh..When the Gowt crampes my joynts. 2. To affect with the painful stiffness, numbness, or contraction of the muscles which characterizes cramp; the result of a constrained position, paralysis, exposure to cold, etc. Usually in passive. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > diseases of tissue > disorders affecting muscles > affect with muscular disorder [verb (transitive)] > affect with stiffness forclutcha1300 stiffen?1611 cramp1639 becramp1655 1639 [see sense 3a]. 1697 J. Dryden tr. Virgil Georgics iii, in tr. Virgil Wks. 118 When the contracted Limbs were cramp'd . View more context for this quotation 1731 G. Medley tr. P. Kolb Present State Cape Good-Hope II. 206 Whoever touches this fish..his limbs will immediately be cramp'd and benumb'd. 1778 S. E. Burney Let. 5 July in F. Burney Early Diary (1889) II. 239 We stood till we were cramp'd to death, not daring to move. 1863 ‘G. Eliot’ Romola I. v. 76 A man with a deep-veined hand cramped by much copying of manuscripts. 1869 E. M. Goulburn Pursuit of Holiness iii. 23 A hand which was probably cramped together, and curved by the complaint. II. Connected mainly with cramp n.2, but often affected by cramp n.1 a. To compress or squeeze (the body and limbs) with irons in punishment or torture. Contrasted with to rack. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ society > authority > punishment > torture > [verb (transitive)] > press (to death) pressc1400 wringa1529 cramp?1554 impress1651 ?1554 tr. H. Latimer Protestation in J. Foxe Actes & Monuments (1563) 980/1 Racking and crampyng, iniuryng and wrongyng the same [scripture]. 1607 B. Jonson Volpone v. xii. sig. O Thou art to lie in prison, crampt with irons, Till thou bee'st sick, and lame indeed. View more context for this quotation 1639 P. Massinger Unnaturall Combat i. i. sig. C Now crampt with irons, Hunger, and could, they hardly doe support me. b. figurative and transferred. To compress forcibly. ΘΚΠ the world > space > extension in space > reduction in size or extent > reduce in size or extent [verb (transitive)] > compress or constrict thrumc1275 constrainc1374 nip1381 rinea1398 compress1398 withstrainc1400 coarctc1420 pincha1425 strain1426 nipe1440 thrumble1513 comprime?1541 astrict1548 sneap1598 cling1601 wring1603 constringe1609 coarctate1620 compinge1621 choke1635 compel1657 cramp1673 hunch1738 constrict1759 tighten1853 scrunch1861 throttle1863 1673 A. Walker Leez Lachrymans 12 Levelling Principles which..would wrack and cramp all conditions of Men into one size and Stature. 1705 J. Addison Remarks Italy 323 The Antiquaries..are for cramping their Subjects into as narrow a Space as they can. 1711 J. Addison Spectator No. 58. ⁋10 The Verses were to be cramped or extended to the Dimensions of the Frame that was prepared for them. 4. a. To confine narrowly, fetter or shut in (in space), so as to restrict the physical freedom of. Often with up. ΘΚΠ society > authority > subjection > restraint or restraining > restraint depriving of liberty > confinement > confine [verb (transitive)] > confine in a narrow space threnga1154 thringc1250 straitc1420 estrait1529 straiten1576 stew1590 estraitena1610 crowdc1632 cramp1683 to box in1845 poke1860 1683 Apol. Protestants France iv. 35 They intended to seize upon him and the Admiral, to cramp the one in Prison, and cut off the others head. 1705 tr. W. Bosman New Descr. Coast of Guinea iii. 43 To Banish, or at least cramp Akim so that he should not be able to go far in-land. 1726 G. Leoni tr. L. B. Alberti Architecture I. 89 a The Camp ought not..to be so crampt up and confined, as not to afford sufficient room. 1796 C. Marshall Gardening (1813) xvii. 278 Bad planting by cramping the root, etc., will often induce sickliness. 1831 Darwin in Life & Lett. (1887) I. 212 My objection to the vessel is it's smallness, which cramps one so for room. 1841 I. D'Israeli Amenities Lit. III. 323 A company of puppy-dogs cramped up in a bag. ΘΚΠ the world > space > place > placing or fact of being placed in (a) position > insertion or putting in > insert or put in [verb (transitive)] > forcibly > cram or stuff in crama1400 wedge1513 enfarce1564 pester1570 farce1579 stuff1579 ram1582 impact1601 thrum1603 to cramp in1605 crowd1609 impack1611 screw1635 infarciate1657 stodge1674 choke1747 bodkin1793 jam1793 bodkinize1833 pump1899 shoehorn1927 1605 F. Bacon Of Aduancem. Learning ii. sig. Vv3 Those which Crampe in [into a writing] matters impertinent. View more context for this quotation c. transitive and intransitive. To deflect or turn to one side. U.S. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > directing or managing a ship > direct or manage ship [verb (transitive)] > set a ship's course > turn in specific direction wind1623 cramp1875 society > travel > travel by water > action or motion of vessel > [verb (intransitive)] > be steered > swerve or deviate sheer1626 whiffle1801 cramp1924 1875 ‘M. Twain’ in Atlantic Mar. 286/2 A boat hates shoal water... Now cramp her down! Snatch her! 1875 ‘M. Twain’ in Atlantic Monthly Apr. 448/1 Cramp her up to the bar! What are you standing up through the middle of the river for? 1924 W. M. Raine Troubled Waters iii She tried to cramp to the left. 5. figurative. a. To restrict or confine within injuriously narrow limits (any action or operations). ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > difficulty > hindrance > restriction of free action > restrict in free action [verb (transitive)] bindc1200 hamper?a1366 chain1377 coarctc1400 prison?a1425 tether?a1505 fetter1526 imprisona1533 strait1533 swaddle1539 measure1560 shacklea1568 to tie up1570 manacle1577 straitena1586 hopple1586 immew16.. scant1600 cabina1616 criba1616 trammela1616 copse1617 cramp1625 cloister1627 incarcerate1640 hidebind1642 strait-lace1662 perstringe1679 hough-band1688 cabin1780 pin1795 strait jacket1814 peg1832 befetter1837 to tie the hands of1866 corset1935 society > authority > subjection > restraint or restraining > restriction or limitation > restrict or limit [verb (transitive)] > in free action bind971 hamper?a1366 chain1377 coarctc1400 prison?a1425 tether?a1505 fetter1526 imprisona1533 strait1533 swaddle1539 measure1560 shacklea1568 to tie up1570 manacle1577 straitena1586 hopple1586 immew16.. scant1600 cabina1616 criba1616 trammela1616 copse1617 cramp1625 cloister1627 incarcerate1640 hidebind1642 to box up1659 strait-lace1662 perstringe1679 hough-band1688 cabin1780 pin1795 strait jacket1814 peg1832 befetter1837 to tie the hands of1866 hog-tie1924 corset1935 1625 F. Bacon Ess. (new ed.) 243 It is impossible to conceiue, the Number of Inconueniences, that will ensue, if Borrowing be Cramped. 1647 [see sense 5b]. 1665 J. Glanvill Sciri Tuum: Authors Defense 3 in Scepsis Scientifica That sloath and laziness which..hath cramp't endeavour. 1724 J. Swift Let. to People of Ireland 15 Those who have used Power to cramp Liberty. 1749 G. Berkeley Word to Wise in Wks. (1871) III. 443 The hardness of the landlord cramps the industry of the tenant. 1780 T. Jefferson Corr. in Wks. (1859) I. 242 The want of money cramps every effort. 1873 W. H. Dixon Hist. Two Queens I. ii. vii. 109 Trade was cramped by laws and customs. b. To compress or narrow (the mind, faculties, etc.) by preventing their free growth. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > want of knowledge, ignorance > intellectual ignorance > deprive of enlightenment [verb (transitive)] obfuscate1536 darken1582 benight1610 cramp1647 benighten1844 1647 J. Howell New Vol. of Lett. 62 The last weeke you sent me word, that you were..crampd with Busines... If you write not this weeke,..I shall thinke you are crampd in your affection rather then your fingers. a1704 T. Brown Declam. Praise Wealth in Wks. (1707) I. i. 123 Poverty cramps the Mind. 1711 E. Budgell Spectator No. 162. ¶9 They cramp their own Abilities too much by Imitation. 1818 M. W. Shelley Frankenstein I. v. 131 A selfish pursuit had cramped and narrowed me. 1877 ‘H. A. Page’ T. De Quincey: Life & Writings I. xiii. 273. [It] chilled his energies, and cramped his powers of production. c. to cramp one's style: to restrict one's natural actions or behaviour. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > difficulty > hindrance > hinder [verb (intransitive)] hinderc1386 to be (also get, stand, etc.) in one's way1481 to trump in (one's) way1570 to put in one's spoke1580 to put a spoke in one's wheel1583 to be (also get, stand, etc.) in the waya1750 snag1833 to cramp one's style1917 1819 C. Lamb Let. 7 June (1935) II. 250 I will never write another letter with alternate inks. You cannot imagine how it cramps the flow of the style.] 1917 A. Woollcott Let. 2 Sept. (1944) 26 I think the very fact of a censorship cramps one's style. 1919 Punch 9 Apr. 283 (caption) Cramping his style. 1923 Saucy Stories 1 Nov. 124/1 I always go out with Edith... Edith never cramps my style. 1928 W. S. Maugham Ashenden 21 If I get into any trouble, you will never be admitted into any of the allied countries for the rest of your life. I can't help thinking it would cramp your style. 1930 R. Lehmann Note in Music 44 He was so debonair and independent: it would take a lot to cramp his style. 1956 B. Goolden Singing & Gold viii. 179 He got a kick out of being with Daphne even if she cramped his style. 1963 J. Joesten They call it Intelligence xx. 190 Troll did not allow this misfortune to cramp his style. III. Connected with cramp n.2 alone. 6. To fasten or secure with a cramp or cramps; esp. in Building, to join stones (together) with cramp-irons. †to cramp up: to do up or repair by this means. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > working with tools or equipment > fastening > fasten [verb (transitive)] > with cramp crampona1533 cramp1654 1654 J. Trapp Comm. Ezra x. iii Tottering houses must be crampt with iron barres, or they will soon down. 1675 J. Evelyn Mem. (1867) II. 102 This vessel was flat-bottomed..It consisted of two distinct keels cramped together with huge timbers. 1745 G. Knight in Philos. Trans. 1744–5 (Royal Soc.) 43 162 A Steel Bar..capped or armed with Iron at each End, cramped with Silver. 1793 J. Smeaton Narr. Edystone Lighthouse (ed. 2) §93 The stones..were all cramped with iron, each to its neighbour. 1800 Duke of Wellington Dispatches (1837) I. 113 The 1st regiment will have their gallopers..which I have cramped up for them; it is impossible to do anything to those belonging to the 4th regiment. 1885 Manch. Examiner 21 July 6/5 Supported by iron braces, which were cramped on to the central core. 7. Shoemaking. To form (the instep of a boot, etc.) on a boot-cramp. ΚΠ 1864 in Webster's Amer. Dict. Eng. Lang. ; and later Dicts. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1893; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.11374n.21503adj.1674v.?1554 |
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