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单词 demoiselle
释义

demoisellen.

Brit. /ˌdɛmwɑːˈzɛl/, /ˌdɛm(w)əˈzɛl/, U.S. /ˌdɛm(w)ɑˈzɛl/
Forms: 1500s demoysell, 1600s demoisell, 1600s– demoiselle, 1700s demoisel, 1900s– desmoiselle (irregular); also Scottish pre-1700 demycel.
Origin: A borrowing from French. Etymon: French demoiselle.
Etymology: < Anglo-Norman demaysele, demoyselle and Middle French demiselle, Middle French, French demoiselle young unmarried lady, young woman, girl (see damsel n.), migratory crane (1680), any of various broad-winged damselflies (1680), a small brightly coloured fish of the family Pomacentridae (1831 or earlier): see further damsel n. Compare mademoiselle n. The various animals in branch II. are so called on account of their graceful appearance.With sense 3 compare the following earlier instance of the French noun in an English context:1700 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 22 673 It [sc. Libella] is a flying Insect, called in France Demoiselle, from the variety of its Colours, transparency of Wings, and its stately Flight. With sense 4 compare also the use of French regional (French Antilles) demoiselle for various other Caribbean fish species, as reported in the following quot.:1846 Mem. Amer. Acad. Arts & Sci. New Ser. 2 338 Called ‘Striped Angel-fish’, at Jamaica; ‘Demoiselle’, at Martinique. In sense 5 after Seychelles Creole demwazel ( < French demoiselle). Compare the following earlier instance of the French noun in an English context as the name of a shark, although the name is here applied to a smaller Atlantic species, perhaps the silky shark, Carcharhinus falciformis (it is also later attested as a name for the bonnethead, Sphyrna tiburo):1771 tr. A.-J. Pernety Hist. Voy. Malouine Islands 64 Its skin was rough and hard like that of a shark, but considerably finer, nearly the same as that of the skin of a kind of shark, commonly slim and of a middling size, which our sailors call Demoiselle [Fr. Demoiselle].
I. Literal uses.
1. Originally: a young, unmarried lady; a maid, a damsel (now historical). Later more generally: a young woman; a girl. Cf. mademoiselle n. 2a.In later use, typically in literary or self-consciously archaic use, or in French contexts.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > social class > nobility > [noun] > noble person or man > noblewoman > young or unmarried
damselc1290
demoisellec1480
the world > people > person > young person > young woman > [noun]
daughterOE
maidenOE
young womanOE
mayc1175
burdc1225
maidc1275
wenchc1290
file1303
virginc1330
girla1375
damselc1380
young ladya1393
jilla1425
juvenclec1430
young person1438
domicellea1464
quean1488
trull1525
pulleta1533
Tib1533
kittyc1560
dell1567
gillian1573
nymph1584
winklota1586
frotion1587
yuffrouw1589
pigeon1592
tit1599
nannicock1600
muggle1608
gixy1611
infanta1611
dilla1627
tittiea1628
whimsy1631
ladykin1632
stammel1639
moggie1648
zitellaa1660
baggagea1668
miss1668
baby1684
burdie1718
demoiselle1720
queanie?1800
intombi1809
muchacha1811
jilt1816
titter1819
ragazza1827
gouge1828
craft1829
meisie1838
sheila1839
sixteenc1840
chica1843
femme1846
muffin1854
gel1857
quail1859
kitten1870
bud1880
fräulein1883
sub-debutante1887
sweet-and-twenty1887
flapper1888
jelly1889
queen1894
chick1899
pusher1902
bit of fluff1903
chicklet1905
twist and twirl1905
twist1906
head1913
sub-deb1916
tabby1916
mouse1917
tittie1918
chickie1919
wren1920
bim1922
nifty1923
quiff1923
wimp1923
bride1924
job1927
junior miss1927
hag1932
tab1932
sort1933
palone1934
brush1941
knitting1943
teenybopper1966
weeny-bopper1972
Valley Girl1982
c1480 (a1400) St. Christopher l. 447 in W. M. Metcalfe Legends Saints Sc. Dial. (1896) I. 353 Twa demycelis, þat ȝonge ware, & of bewte had na pare.
1520 Chron. Eng. i. f. 8v/1 A gentyl demoysell [1480 damisell] that was wonder fayre.
1676 tr. Narr. Process against Madam Brinvilliers 15 The Demoiselle d' Aubray having said that Briancourt was a Rascal, he had answered, That she knew not the Obligation she had to him.
1720 D. Manley Power of Love iv. 230 A young Demoisel scarce born a Gentlewoman, call'd Desideria.
1762 L. Sterne Let. 17 June in Lett. 1739–64 (2009) 280 A month's play with a French Demoiselle.
1824 Ld. Byron Don Juan: Canto XV xlii. 26 A dashing demoiselle of good estate.
1884 H. Hunter & W. Whyte My Ducats (1885) iii. 38 One student, skating along with his demoiselle, has cannoned against another.
1915 D. H. Lawrence Rainbow iv. 92 Anna became a lofty demoiselle of sixteen.
1942 W. Stevens Parts of World 146 Bastard chateaux and smoky demoiselles, No more.
1956 C. Porter Compl. Lyrics (1983) 330 Though I'm daffy for demoiselles with parlor tricks, when they talk about wedding bells I cry, ‘Nix, nix’!
2004 P. McIntosh Harper's Quine (2007) ii. 42 ‘Enchanted to serve you, demoiselle,’ said Gil in ambiguous French, and returned the kiss with careful courtesy.
II. In the names of animals.
2. A small graceful migratory crane of central Eurasia, Anthropoides virgo, mainly pale grey with a black head and breast and white ear tufts. Also demoiselle crane.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > birds > order Gruiformes > [noun] > family Gruidae (cranes) > genus Anthropoides > anthropoides virgo or demoiselle
demoiselle1687
kulang1698
Numidian crane1767
buffoon-bird1774
1687 Philos. Trans. 1686–7 (Royal Soc.) 16 374 Six Demoiselles of Numidia, a Kind of Crane.
1753 ‘T. Broderick’ Lett. from Several Parts Europe & East II. cxiii. 242 The demoiselle that danced as it walked, for its position painted both these motions, attracted the pleased eye.
1836 C. F. Partington Brit. Cycl. Nat. Hist. II. 675/1 This species is generally styled the demoiselle crane, as is supposed from the comparative lightness and elegance of its form.
1866 R. D. Blackmore Cradock Nowell III. xi. 181 Cradock followed up that stream, and found quite a tidy little brook..edged with many a quaint bright bird, scissor-bills and avosets, demoiselles and flamingoes.
1910 Blackwood's Mag. Feb. 285/2 The kulan, too, or demoiselle cranes, are lovely birds..and are found in great numbers all up the river Jumna.
1993 Harper's Mag. June 51/2 We listened to the murmur of the river, and the wail of lapwings and the cry of crakes and the primordial wood-block rattle of the demoiselles.
3. Any of various broad-winged damselflies of the genus Calopteryx or the family Calopterygidae, typically having bright metallic colours on the wings and body.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > subclass Pterygota > [noun] > division Exopterygota or Hemimetabola > order Odonata > member of (dragonfly)
adderbolt1483
dragonfly1626
bolt-head1668
libella1694
devil's needle1745
mayfly1747
horse-stinger1773
devil's darning-needle1809
demoiselle1835
adder1876
odonate1890
odonatan1944
1835 Analyst 2 410 Now turn to the river where..those most beautiful of all the tribe, the demoiselle-dragon flies, with vests of the deepest changing green and purple wings, are fluttering over the sparkling water.
1844 Zoologist 2 709 Thus I contracted an acquaintance with these demoiselles.
1895 Westm. Gaz. 18 July 2/1 I waved my Panama gaily at the meadow browns and red admirals,..the bee hawk moths and the demoiselles, that filled the air with movement.
1937 C. Longfield Dragonflies Brit. Isles 144 The Demoiselle Agrion... This jewel of the Damsel-flies can only be mistaken for one other, the Banded Agrion.
1984 New Scientist 11 Oct. 70/1 A population study of the Beautiful Demoiselle, Calopteryx virgo (L.).
2001 Guardian 23 July i. 16/2 Along one of the lodes, or narrow drainage ditches, I came across several banded demoiselles, an absolutely stunning little insect.
4. = damsel-fish n. at damsel n. Compounds 2.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > fish > superorder Acanthopterygii (spiny fins) > order Perciformes (perches) > suborder Percoidei > [noun] > family Pomacentridae > member of (damsel-fish)
Beau-gregory1847
coral-fish1880
goldfish1882
demoiselle1884
Garibaldi1885
damsel-fish1905
white-ear1922
anemonefish1924
maomao1926
1884 G. B. Goode in G. B. Goode et al. Fisheries U.S.: Sect. I 275 The Demoiselle and the Cichlid Families.
1926 C. W. Beebe Arcturus Adventure xii. 315 Out from this very coral rock in its path there would shoot a diminutive demoiselle, fins erect in righteous wrath.
1967 N.Z. Listener 29 Dec. 5/1 At a depth of 160 feet, diver Jeff Pearch is surrounded by a shoal of demoiselles as he swims behind the branches of a long-armed red sponge.
2002 Internat. Wildlife Encycl. VI. 638/1 Most damselfish, or demoiselles, live in shallow tropical waters, and particularly favor the area around coral reefs.
5. The tiger shark of the Indian Ocean, Galeocerdo cuvier. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > fish > subclass Elasmobranchii > order Pleurotremata > [noun] > family Carcharinidae > galeocerdo cuvier (tiger-shark)
tiger-shark1787
tiger1797
sea-lawyer1811
demoiselle1889
1867 R. L. Playfair in Proc. Zool. Soc. 871 Galeocerdo tigrinus... Creole name ‘Damoiselle’.]
1889 Cent. Dict. Demoiselle,..4. A shark, Galeocerdo tigrinus, about 12 feet long.
1934 Crown Colonist Sept. 408/1 The waters [around the Seychelles] abound with all varieties of shark, paramount among them being the dreaded ‘Demoiselle’ shark, the most ferocious of all species and the curse of all fishermen.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2014; most recently modified version published online June 2022).
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