单词 | detective |
释义 | detectiveadj.n. A. adj. Having the character or function of detecting; serving to detect; employed for the purpose of detection. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > endeavour > searching or seeking > finding or discovery > [adjective] > serving to detect detective1843 1843 Chambers's Jrnl. 12 54 Intelligent men have been recently selected to form a body called the ‘detective police’..at times the detective policeman attires himself in the dress of ordinary individuals. 1862 J. Skelton Nugæ Criticæ vii. 303 Every author now looks after his mind, as if he were a member of the detective police. 1882 E. P. Hood in Leisure Hour Apr. 227 Instances of the detective power of ridicule. 1882 C. H. Spurgeon Treasury of David VI. Ps. cxxii. 1 [It] is detective as to our character. B. n. One whose occupation it is to discover matters artfully concealed; particularly (and in the original application as short for detective policeman, or the like) a member of the police force employed to investigate specific cases, or to watch particular suspected individuals or classes of offenders. private detective, one not belonging to the police force, who in his private capacity, or as attached to a Detective Agency or Bureau, undertakes similar services for persons employing him. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > enquiry > investigation, inspection > [noun] > person conducting searchera1382 inseerc1438 intracer?a1475 inquisitor?1504 investigator1538 peruser1549 tracer1552 scrutineer1557 examinant1587 revisitor1594 examiner?1608 examinator1612 researcher1615 indagator1620 ferret1629 pryer1674 probator1691 disquisitor1766 grubber1776 prober1777 grubbler1813 detective1850 expiscator1882 society > law > law enforcement > investigation of crime > [noun] > detective plant1812 plain clothes1822 detective1850 plainclothesman1856 mouser1863 D.1869 sleuth1872 tec1879 dee1882 demon1889 sleuth-hound1890 split1891 fink1903 hawkshaw1903 busy1904 dick1905 gumshoe1913 Richard1914 shamus1925 cozzer1950 Five-O1983 1850 W. H. Wills Mod. Sci. Thief-taking in Househ. Words 13 July 368/1 To each division of the Force is attached two officers, who are denominated ‘detectives’. 1850 W. H. Wills Mod. Sci. Thief-taking in Househ. Words 13 July 369/1 The two Detectives of the X division. 1853 C. Dickens Bleak House xxv. 251 Detective Mr. Bucket. 1856 Ann. Reg. 185 Some London detectives were despatched, to give their keen wits to the search. 1871 B. Taylor tr. J. W. von Goethe Faust I. Pref. p. xv There are critical detectives on the track of every author. 1871 B. Jowett in tr. Plato Dialogues II. 39 Your mere detective is wonderful at suspicion and discovery, but when he has to do with good men he is at fault, foolishly imagining that everyone is as bad as himself. 1876 D. R. Fearon School Inspection §59. 90 If the inspector is to be anything more than a mere detective of faults. Compounds C1. detective agency n. ΚΠ attributive. 1872 E. Crapsey Nether Side N.Y. 56 All the large commercial cities are now liberally provided with ‘Detective Agencies’, as they are called. 1959 Encounter 12 v. 30 The detective agency girls. detective anecdote n. ΚΠ 1850 C. Dickens in Househ. Words 14 Sept. 577/1 (title) Three ‘detective’ anecdotes. detective fiction n. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > literature > prose > narrative or story > novel > [noun] > crime or detective novel > collectively crime fiction1905 detective fiction1922 whodunitry1961 1922 ‘Sapper’ Black Gang ii. 28 What I'm going to tell you now..may seem extraordinary and what one would expect in detective fiction. 1928 R. A. Knox Footsteps at Lock iii. 26 The Muse of detective fiction..cannot tell a plain unvarnished tale. 1958 Times Lit. Suppl. 6 June 316/5 This is one of the tales in which M. Simenon indulges his characteristic inquisitiveness about people while preserving the ‘puzzle’ convention of detective-fiction. detective film n. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > cinematography > a film > type of film > [noun] > other types romantic comedy1748 epic1785 pre-release1871 foreign film1899 frivol1903 dramedy1905 film loop1906 first run1910 detective film1911 colour film1912 news film1912 topical1912 cinemicrograph1913 scenic1913 sport1913 newsreel1914 serial1914 sex comedy1915 war picture1915 telefilm1919 comic1920 true crime1923 art house1925 quickie1926 turkey1927 two-reeler1928 smellie1929 disaster film1930 musical1930 feelie1931 sticky1934 action comedy1936 quota quickie1936 re-release1936 screwball comedy1937 telemovie1937 pickup1939 video film1939 actioner1940 space opera1941 telepic1944 biopic1947 kinescope1949 TV movie1949 pièce noire1951 pièce rose1951 deepie1953 misterioso1953 film noir1956 policier1956 psychodrama1956 free film1958 prequel1958 co-production1959 glossy1960 sexploiter1960 sci-fier1961 tie-in1962 chanchada1963 romcom1963 wuxia1963 chick flick1964 showreel1964 mockumentary1965 sword-and-sandal1965 schlockbuster1966 mondo1967 peplum1968 thriller1968 whydunit1968 schlocker1969 buddy-buddy movie1972 buddy-buddy film1974 buddy film1974 science-fictioner1974 screwball1974 buddy movie1975 slasher movie1975 swashbuckler1975 filmi1976 triptych1976 autobiopic1977 Britcom1977 kidflick1977 noir1977 bodice-ripper1979 chopsocky1981 date movie1983 kaiju eiga1984 screener1986 neo-noir1987 indie1990 bromance2001 hack-and-slash2002 mumblecore2005 dark fantasy2007 hack-and-slay2007 gorefest2012 kidult- 1911 C. N. Bennett et al. Handbk. Kinematogr. xiii. 100 Moreover, the bulk of modern motion picture detective films are of the Nick Carter and Sexton Blake variety. detective force n. ΘΚΠ society > law > law enforcement > police force or the police > [noun] > branch or part of police force > specific water1552 armed police1787 special police1804 detective force1849 traffic police1883 vice squad1905 drug squad1913 blue force1920 ghost squad1922 flying squad1927 Sweeney1936 morality squad1945 courtesy patrol1961 strike force1961 pussy posse1963 drugs squad1965 vice1967 mobile1971 uniform branch1972 uniform1978 NCIS1991 1849 Alta California (San Francisco) 24 Dec. 3/2 The badge is of such a character that, when it becomes necessary to employ any of them [sc. policemen], as a detective force, they can be removed. 1850 C. Dickens Detective Police Party in Househ. Words 27 July 411/2 I'm an Officer in the Detective Force. 1888 A. C. Gunter Mr. Potter xx Sergeant Brackett, of the British detective force. detective-inspector n. ΘΚΠ society > law > law enforcement > police force or the police > [noun] > policeman > policeman of specific rank superintendent1789 police inspector1824 police sergeant1824 sergeant1839 inspector1840 station sergeant1846 detective-sergeant1850 detective-inspector1898 desk sergeant1908 sarge1926 skipper1929 supe1977 1898 Westm. Gaz. 17 Nov. 7/2 Detective-inspector Egan said that he arrested the prisoner upon the charge. 1938 Times Lit. Suppl. 8 Oct. 649/2 Some long-suffering detective-inspector at Scotland Yard. detective novel n. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > literature > prose > narrative or story > novel > [noun] > crime or detective novel murder mystery1880 detective story1883 crime novel1884 police novel1889 roman policier1896 true crime1923 detective novel1924 whodunit1930 tec1934 police procedural1957 procedural1963 whydunit1968 1924 19th Cent. May 718 We note that the plot of a detective novel is, in effect, an argument conducted under the guise of fiction. 1942 ‘N. Blake’ in H. Haycraft Murder for Pleasure p. xxii The detective-novel proper is read almost exclusively by the upper and professional classes. detective novelist n. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > literature > prose > narrative or story > novel > [noun] > crime or detective novel > writer of murder man1890 detectivist1892 murdermonger1900 crime writer1914 detective novelist1926 murdermongeress1957 1926 E. M. Wrong Crime & Detection p. xx One temptation the detective novelist does well to avoid. detective-sergeant n. ΘΚΠ society > law > law enforcement > police force or the police > [noun] > policeman > policeman of specific rank superintendent1789 police inspector1824 police sergeant1824 sergeant1839 inspector1840 station sergeant1846 detective-sergeant1850 detective-inspector1898 desk sergeant1908 sarge1926 skipper1929 supe1977 1850 W. H. Wills Mod. Sci. Thief-taking in Househ. Words 13 July 369/2 The Detective sergeant..fairly owned..that he could afford no hope of elucidating the mystery. 1969 Listener 24 Apr. 583/2 Interest centres on the man sent in to investigate, Detective-Sergeant Demosthenes de Goede. detective service n. ΚΠ 1848 E. C. Gaskell Mary Barton II. ii. 31 A well-known officer in the Detective Service. detective story n. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > literature > prose > narrative or story > novel > [noun] > crime or detective novel murder mystery1880 detective story1883 crime novel1884 police novel1889 roman policier1896 true crime1923 detective novel1924 whodunit1930 tec1934 police procedural1957 procedural1963 whydunit1968 1883 A. K. Green (title) XYS, a Detective Story. 1905 G. K. Chesterton Club of Queer Trades iii. 96 The detectives in the detective stories. 1911 F. Swinnerton Casement ii. 75 ‘Douse the glim’..that old phrase in the detective stories he had read. 1962 W. H. Auden Dyer's Hand (1963) 153 The detective-story society is a society of apparently innocent individuals. C2. detective camera n. a term formerly used for a hand camera adapted for taking instantaneous photographs. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > photography > camera > [noun] > general types of box camera1828 daguerreotype1839 view camera1851 pistolgraph1859 pinhole camera1861 panoramic camera1862 pantoscopic camera1865 pistolograph1866 pantoscope1879 detective camera1881 filmograph1881 photographometera1884 photochronograph1887 snap-shooter1890 stand camera1890 tele-objective camera1891 film camera1893 magazine camera1893 panoram1893 telephoto1894 mutograph1897 tele-camera1899 telephote1903 press camera1912 reflex1922 candid camera1929 minicam1935 single-lens reflex1936 plate camera1937 magic eye1938 subminiature1947 miniature1952 all-sky camera1955 microfilmer1959 stereo-camera1959 streak camera1962 gallery camera1964 SLR1964 TLR1965 spy-camera1968 pinhole1976 multi-mode1981 digicam1989 point-and-shoot1991 1881 Brit. Jrnl. Photogr. 28 Jan. 44/2 A form of the detective camera, in which the finding arrangement and the stock of slides are omitted, is in progress. 1882 Year Bk. Photogr. 27 Among novel apparatus we may mention..Mr. Bolas' so-called ‘Detective Camera’. 1888 Brit. Jrnl. Photogr. 18 May 305 The subject of detective cameras is capable of considerable subdivision. 1893 T. Bent Ethiopia 62 Regardless of..strangers, and my wife's detective camera. Derivatives deˈtectiveship n. the office or function of a detective. ΘΚΠ society > law > law enforcement > investigation of crime > [noun] criminal investigation1799 detectiveship1877 detectivism1894 sleuthing1900 1877 J. Hawthorne Garth III. ix. lxxv. 184 In my amateur detectiveship. deˈtectivist n. one who professedly treats of detectives.Apparently an isolated use. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > literature > prose > narrative or story > novel > [noun] > crime or detective novel > writer of murder man1890 detectivist1892 murdermonger1900 crime writer1914 detective novelist1926 murdermongeress1957 1892 W. Wallace in Academy 24 Sept. 261/1 It may be hoped that Dick Donovan is the last of the detectivists in fiction. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1895; most recently modified version published online June 2022). < adj.n.1843 |
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