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单词 demon
释义

demonn.adj.

Brit. /ˈdiːmən/, U.S. /ˈdimən/
Forms:

α. Old English– demon, 1500s–1700s doemon, 1500s– daemon (in later use chiefly in branch II.), 1600s deemon.

β. Old English demonia (plural), Middle English demonyes (plural).

Origin: Of multiple origins. Partly a borrowing from Latin. Partly a borrowing from French. Etymons: Latin daemōn; French demon.
Etymology: In α. forms originally < (i) classical Latin daemōn (in post-classical Latin also demon: see below); subsequently reinforced by or reborrowed < (ii) Middle French demon, daemon (also daimon , daymon ), French démon spirit (whether good or evil) which governs the fate of an individual or of a group of people (c1370; 1552 in Rabelais denoting the attendant spirit of Socrates; rare before 1652), evil spirit, devil (a1380), (especially in classical mythology) supernatural being of a nature between gods and humans (1546), idol, false god (1605 or earlier), a source or cause of evil or great harm (1631 or earlier), (especially in Christian theology) one of the fallen angels (1690) < classical Latin daemōn supernatural being or spirit (2nd cent. a.d. in Apuleius), in post-classical Latin also evil spirit (late 2nd cent. in Tertullian), heathen deity, idol (Vulgate), inner or attendant spirit associated with a person (a1364 in the passage translated in quot. a1387 at sense 7, with reference to the genius of Socrates) < ancient Greek δαίμων god, goddess, divine power, deity, destiny, fate, good or evil genius of a family or person, in Hellenistic Greek also spiritual or semi-divine being, evil spirit < δαίεσθαι to divide (see geodetic n.) + -μων , suffix forming nouns. In β. forms < classical Latin daemonium (also daemonion) the indwelling spirit or genius claimed by Socrates (2nd cent. a.d. in Apuleius), in post-classical Latin also evil spirit, heathen deity, idol (late 2nd cent. in Tertullian) < ancient Greek δαιμόνιον divine power, divinity, inferior divine being, genius of Socrates, in Hellenistic Greek also evil spirit (especially in Septuagint, New Testament, and Christian writers), use as noun of neuter of δαιμόνιος of or belonging to a divine power, miraculous, marvellous < δαίμων + -ιος, suffix forming adjectives.Foreign-language parallels. Both Latin nouns were also borrowed into other European languages. Compare: (i) Catalan dèmon , Spanish †demon (c1230), Portuguese demo (1210), Italian demone (late 13th cent.), and also German Dämon (1521 as demon ; in early use often with Latin inflectional endings), all < Latin daemōn ; (ii) Old French demoine , demoygne evil spirit (first quarter of the 13th cent.), Old Occitan demoni , Catalan dimoni (12th cent.; also †demoni ), Spanish demonio (c1230), Portuguese demônio (13th cent.), Italian demonio (a1292), and also German Dämonium (1581 as daemonium ), all < classical Latin daemonium . Inflection in Old English The word is attested only twice in Old English: once as dative plural dēmonum , probably implying a strong masculine dēmon (see α. forms), and once as nominative plural dēmonia (see β. forms) with Latin (neuter nominative plural) case inflection. Semantic development of sense 1. The negative connotations of all three subsenses of sense 1 are largely due to the concept of demons in Judaism and Christianity. The Septuagint uses ancient Greek δαιμόνιον (not δαίμων ) to translate the two occurrences in the Old Testament and Hebrew Scriptures of Hebrew šēdīm (plural noun) evil spirits, false gods (Deuteronomy 32:17, Psalm 106:37; in both instances with reference to sacrifices being offered to Canaanite idols), and also to translate two out of the four occurrences (Leviticus 17:7, 2 Chronicles 11:15) of śĕʿīrīm, plural of śāʿīr satyr. The same perception of foreign gods appears to be shown by Psalm 96:5 (compare quot. OE at sense 1b), where the Septuagint uses δαιμόνια to render Hebrew 'elilīm (plural noun) worthless gods, idols. The Hebrew texts of the Old Testament and Hebrew Scriptures do not refer to evil spirits possessing people in exactly the same way as in the New Testament. However, there are several rough parallels: in 1 Samuel 16:14–23, 18:10, and 19:9, Saul is influenced by an evil spirit, which however is sent by God; and in Psalm 91:6, ancient Greek δαιμόνιον is used in the Septuagint to translate Hebrew qeṭeḇ ‘destruction’, which gave rise to the so-called ‘noonday demon’ (often taken in the Christian monastic tradition to mean the sin of sloth). In later post-exilic (Hellenistic) times, a concept of demons as possessing people and especially as the negative counterparts of God in a dualistic world view began to develop in Judaism, and it is in this context that ancient Greek δαιμόνιον frequently occurs in the Apocrypha or deuterocanonical books (especially in Tobit) and in the New Testament. The New Testament frequently mentions demonic possession and the casting out of evil spirits. Although the usual Greek word for such spirits in the New Testament is δαιμόνιον , in one instance (Matthew 8:31) δαίμονες (plural of δαίμων ) occurs in the same sense. By contrast, ancient Greek διάβολος (see diabolic adj.), the ulterior etymon of devil n., is not used in the plural in either the Septuagint or the New Testament. In the Vulgate, the Hebrew and Greek nouns are generally translated by classical Latin daemonium (plural daemonia ); however, daemōn (plural daemones ) is used once in the Old Testament and Hebrew Scriptures (Leviticus 17:7) and in ten places in the New Testament (of which eight occur in the Gospel according to Matthew). The Latin, Greek, and Hebrew words mentioned are translated by devil n. in the West Saxon Gospels, as well as in the King James Bible and other early modern English versions of the Bible; the Wycliffite Bible uses both devil n. and fiend n. The Revised Version of 1881–5 substituted demon in Deuteronomy and Psalms, but in the New Testament retained devil in the text, with demon given in the margin. The lack of early evidence for demon in the sense ‘an evil spirit that possesses a person’ appears to be due to this substitution of devil n. in early English Bible versions. Other specific senses. In sense 4 originally after French diable devil (see diable int.; 1862 (in the passage translated in quot. 1865) or earlier in this sense). In sense 6, the patience game is apparently so called on account of its difficulty (compare quot. 1895). In the specific use in sense 7 (frequently in references to the ‘daemon of Socrates’; compare later daimon n.), ultimately after ancient Greek δαιμόνιον. Socrates claimed to be guided not by a δαίμων , but by a δαιμόνιον (compare classical Latin dīvīnum quiddam ‘a divine something’ (Cicero)), a certain divine principle or agency, an inward monitor or oracle. Socrates's accusers represented this as a personal ‘demon’ or evil spirit, and the same was done by many of the Church Fathers (under the influence of sense 1c), whence the post-classical Latin, and hence the English, uses in this sense.
I. An evil spirit, and related senses.
1.
a. Any evil spirit or malevolent supernatural being; a devil. Used in various religions and mythologies, and also in folklore, fairy tales, etc., to refer to a range of beings, including servants of the Devil, tormentors in hell, evil spirits that are conjured by humans, malevolent ghosts, etc.rock demon, water demon, etc.: see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > supernatural being > evil spirit or demon > [noun]
evil angel, spiritc950
ghosteOE
uncleanOE
demonOE
devilOE
devilshineOE
groa1225
debleriea1325
devilnessa1400
devilryc1400
sprat?a1475
nicker1481
fiend of hell1509
imp1526
virtue1584
elf1587
succubus1601
blue devilc1616
black man1656
woolsaw1757
buggane1775
bhut1785
demonic1785
pishachi1807
devil-devil1831
skookum1838
taipo1848
lightning bird1870
demonry1883
pisaca1885
mafufunyanas1963
mare1981
OE (Northumbrian) Liturgical Texts (Durham Ritual) in A. H. Thompson & U. Lindelöf Rituale Ecclesiae Dunelmensis (1927) 146 Ut defendat segites nostras a uermibus, a uolatilibus, a demonibus, a fulminibus, ab omni temptatione diabuli : þætte gescilde acras usa from wyrmum from flegendum from demonum uel from dioblum from legeðum from aelcum costunge diobles.
c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1963) l. 7876 Heo beoð ihaten ful iwis incubii demones.
?a1400 (a1338) R. Mannyng Chron. (Petyt) (1996) i. l. 7974 Incubi demones is called þer name, ffendes in bedde, so þei sayn, þat many women haf forlayn.
?a1475 Ludus Coventriae (1922) 371 (MED) Blow flamys of fer..mak redy ageyn we com to this demon.
1566 Exam. John Walsh To Rdr. sig. A.ijv Questioning with his Demon how long hee shoulde raygne Pope.
1594 T. Kyd tr. R. Garnier Cornelia iii. sig. Ev Thinke not it was Pompeys spryte, But some false Dæmon that beguild your sight.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Henry V (1623) ii. ii. 118 If that same Dæmon that hath gull'd thee thus, Should with his Lyon-gate walke the whole world. View more context for this quotation
1699 W. Dampier Voy. & Descr. iii. iv. 32 [They] fired their Guns to kill the old Dæmon that they say inhabits there to disturb poor Seamen.
1766 W. Kenrick Falstaff's Wedding v. iv. 61 In the name of heav'n and earth, what art thou? Ouphe, fairy, ghost, hobgoblin, or demon?
1782 J. Priestley Hist. Corruptions Christianity I. i. 8 A malignant dæmon had brought [them] into his power.
1813 W. Scott Bridal of Triermain ii. Concl. vii. 113 But would'st thou bid the demons fly Like mist before the dawning sky.
1865 T. Wright Hist. Caricature & Grotesque iv. 69 The three special characteristics of mediæval demons were horns, hoofs..and tails.
1954 Artibus Asiae Supplementum 13 41 Their consorts..reveal themselves in the lower scene as rāksasīs, female demons ready and eager to devour their mates.
1983 M. S. Peck People of Lie (1985) iii. 117 Myths in which princes and princesses and other beings have become captive to the evil power of some wicked witch or demon.
2012 G. Damico Croak xviii. 227 ‘Will the fiery demons of hell be arriving to claim your mortality?’ ‘No, the fiery hell demons have the weekend off.’
b. An idol, a false god. Now historical.In implicit or explicit contrast with the Christian God.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > deity > [noun] > false or heathen god
devileOE
demonOE
false goda1175
field-devil1530
puppetries1610
OE Arundel Psalter xcv. 5 Quoniam omnes dii gentium demonia, dominus autem celos fecit : forðon ealle godas þeoda demonia drihten soþlice heofonas geworhte.
1620 W. Hart tr. F. de Croÿ Three Conformities i. v. 10 The infinitenes of diuers patrons, aduocates, and tutelare Saints, whom you haue substituted in place of the ancient Gods and Demons [Fr. demons] of the Gentiles, whose names are vnknowne each to another.
1677 T. Gale Court of Gentiles: Pt. III iii. 51 Al the Phenician Baalim and Grecian Demons were but Idolatric Imitamens or Apes of the true Messias.
1732 P. Smith Preservative against Quakerism ii. 26 To worship that lying Spirit as God, is really the same gross Idolatry, with that of the Heathens worshipping of Demons or Devils as the true God.
1885 Bible (R.V.) Deut. xxxii. 17 They sacrificed unto demons, which were no God.
1916 G. F. Taylor Second Coming of Jesus xxviii. 174 Hundreds of years before Christ, men worshipped demons.
2011 S. A. Mitchell Witchcraft & Magic in Nordic Middle Ages iii. 92 From the perspective of the thirteenth-century saga authors, the heathen world is..a world consisting entirely of soulless mechanistic appeals to demons.
c. An evil spirit that possesses a person, animal, etc.In quot. 1613 with admixture of sense 1b.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > supernatural being > evil spirit or demon > [noun] > familiar or possessing spirit
spiritc1350
familiar devila1464
familiar spirita1545
Python1548
familiar1583
succubus1601
demon1613
paredrusa1641
maisterel1652
obsessor1652
paredrial1652
cad1657
kanaima1825
Zar1868
1613 T. Milles tr. P. Mexia et al. Treasurie Auncient & Moderne Times viii. x. 765/2 Those Gods which the Iewes had caused to be left to the people..consisted of dumbe and insensible Statues... Infamous Dæmons possessed themselues of these Statues and Symulacres.
1651 J. F. tr. H. C. Agrippa Three Bks. Occult Philos. iii. xli. 481 These souls sometimes..seise upon the bodies of creeping things, and brutes, entering into them, what kind soever they be of, possessing them like Demons.
1678 R. Cudworth True Intellect. Syst. Universe v. 706 Persons..wholly Demoniacal and Possessed by Evil Demons.
1728 E. Chambers Cycl. at Demoniac A Person possess'd with a Spirit, or Demon.
1767 T. Hutchinson Hist. Province Massachusets-Bay, 1691–1750 i. 16 A young woman..supposed to be posessed with dæmons.
1884 E. B. Tylor in Science 19 Dec. 547 The old philosophy which accounts for disease in general as the intrusion of a malignant spirit still largely remains; and the exorcising such a demon is practised by white men as a religious rite.
1922 G. H. Hubbard Spiritual Messages of Miracle Stories xix. 160 A sorrowing father brings his little son, who is possessed by a demon.
2005 Church Times 7 Oct. 10/2 It requires skill to identify and then to bind and exorcise the demon.
2.
a. A cruel, wicked, or destructive person or animal. Also in weakened use: a mischievous or unmanageable person, esp. a child. Cf. devil n. 4, fiend n. 4a.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > goodness and badness > harmfulness > ill-will > thing or person > [noun]
demon1591
the world > action or operation > behaviour > bad behaviour > unkindness > ill will, malevolence > [noun] > person or thing displaying
devilOE
hatelc1175
fiendc1220
hellhoundc1340
foea1393
atterlingc1450
basilisk1477
ill-willerc1500
attercop1508
malign1536
ettercapa1583
demon1591
viper1596
dragon1600
ill-wisher1607
malevolent1609
malevolo1648
1591 E. Spenser Ruines of Rome in Complaints sig. S3v The Romaine Dæmon Doth yet himselfe with fatall hand enforce, Againe on foote to reare her pouldred corse.
1631 B. Jonson Bartholmew Fayre iii. v. 41 in Wks. II A caueat against cutpurses!..i' faith, I would faine see that Dæmon, your Cutpurse, you talke of.
1776 J. Leacock Fall Brit. Tyranny 22 Lord Paramount is that demon, that bird of prey, that ministerial cormorant, that waits to devour, and who first thought to disturb the repose of America.
1821 W. Scott Pirate III. xiii. 309 The Boatswain used to be staunch enough, and so is Goffe, though an incarnate demon.
1829 T. Carlyle in Foreign Rev. Jan. 421 The Tartar Khan, with his shaggy demons of the wilderness.
1913 Methodist Rev. Mar. 188 Petrarch..declares in his prose works woman to be a true demon.
1934 J. Tobias Ready-made Family ii. 37 Gracie pulls the rope taut. Henry trips and falls sprawling... You little demon! What did you do that for?
1997 Bangkok Post 26 Feb. 8/6 They denounce him as a greedy corporate demon who's trying to dominate the Internet.
2004 F. W. Thackeray Events that changed Germany p. ix Hitler and his Nazi demons enslaved a not-unwilling Germany.
b. A hideously ugly animal. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > [noun]
neteneOE
wightc888
deerc950
beastc1225
jument1382
creaturea1387
animala1398
bestialc1400
bullifanta1528
bovya1549
animant1599
man or beast1600
breather1609
fellow creature1726
fig-fauns1750
critter1815
fellow1816
demon1821
skelm1827
1821 T. G. Wainewright in London Mag. Apr. 442/1 The grim demon of a bull-dog, who interrupts the cat in her unhallowed dalliance with the rat.
3.
a. A source or cause of evil or great harm; something pernicious or corrupting; esp. a destructive emotion or activity. Frequently personified. Also in apposition.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > goodness and badness > badness or evil > [noun] > source of
demon1635
ki-mon1871
1635 E. Grimeston tr. M. Baudier Hist. Imperiall Estate Grand Seigneurs xix. 113 Necessitie is a powerfull Dæmon [Fr. demon], and his vertue makes him also to be honoured.
1677 Z. Babington Advice to Grand Jurors To Rdr. sig. B7v Not with a direct design to kill any, but rather to fright, weaken, and drive away that Dæmon of Passion in man to commit Murther.
1695 T. W. tr. J. Abbadie Art of knowing One-self ii. i. 95 By the God of this Age, he means the Demon of Concupiscence.
1712 J. Addison Spectator No. 387. ¶11 Melancholy is a kind of Demon that haunts our Island.
1754 W. Pitt Let. 24 Jan. in Lett. to Nephew (1804) v. 39 Beware..of Anger, that dæmon, that destroyer of our peace.
1809 N. Pinkney Trav. South of France 86 The dæmon of anarchy has here raised a superb trophy on a monument of ruins.
1838 Jrnl. Amer. Temperance Union Mar. 39/2 The sufferings which the demon Intemperance is scattering broad-cast around him.
1873 T. W. Knox Underground l. 729 He was then ahead of the game nearly one thousand dollars, and the demon of avarice was fully aroused in his soul.
1894 ‘R. Andom’ We Three & Troddles xxii. 210 The demon dyspepsia had marked him down.
1921 Ice & Refrigeration Dec. 379/1 That wretched demon—jealousy, was being eliminated, and a spirit of hearty cooperation had taken its place.
1955 P. Larkin Let. 16 Apr. in Lett. Monica (2010) 152 You may make a supreme effort one evening, say, to ‘talk it out’, to banish the demon, & so on, putting out all your unselfishness and concern for her—but in the morning you'll find nothing has altered.
1993 S. Elkins & E. L. McKitrick Age of Federalism (1995) vii. 281 The demon of speculation may undoubtedly be seen as the demon of capitalism itself.
2003 D. E. Talbert Baggage Claim (2005) 115 Lust is a demon. And it ain't no small demon.
b. spec. With reference to alcoholic drink or (in later use) a drug regarded as evil or harmful. Chiefly with the, and frequently in apposition (sometimes passing into attributive), as demon drink, demon rum, demon weed, etc. Now frequently used facetiously. When used in apposition, sometimes passing into an adjective.See also drink-demon n. at drink n. Compounds 1a(a).
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > drink > intoxicating liquor > [noun]
drink1042
liquor1340
bousea1350
cidera1382
dwale1393
sicera1400
barrelc1400
strong drinkc1405
watera1475
swig1548
tipple1581
amber1598
tickle-brain1598
malt pie1599
swill1602
spicket1615
lap1618
John Barleycornc1625
pottle1632
upsy Englisha1640
upsy Friese1648
tipplage1653
heartsease1668
fuddle1680
rosin1691
tea1693
suck1699
guzzlea1704
alcohol1742
the right stuff1748
intoxicant1757
lush1790
tear-brain1796
demon1799
rum1799
poison1805
fogram1808
swizzle1813
gatter1818
wine(s) and spirit(s)1819
mother's milkc1821
skink1823
alcoholics1832
jough1834
alky1844
waipiro1845
medicine1847
stimulant1848
booze1859
tiddly1859
neck oil1860
lotion1864
shrab1867
nose paint1880
fixing1882
wet1894
rabbit1895
shicker1900
jollop1920
mule1920
giggle-water1929
rookus juice1929
River Ouse1931
juice1932
lunatic soup1933
wallop1933
skimish1936
sauce1940
turps1945
grog1946
joy juice1960
1799 Columbian Songster iv. xciii. 29 How happy is the man, Who has a quiet home; Who loves to do what good he can, And hates the demon, Rum.
1829 Vermont Chron. 17 July 114/4 We have many in the ship, who might have been an ornament to society, but for the demon, drink.
1832 Sailor's Mag. July 347 But O, the demon Rum! has been the cause..of all this mournful change.
1840 Teetotaler 1 Aug. 43/2 What damns tens and hundreds of thousands of souls yearly? Will not every tongue reply, ‘'Tis drink! the demon drink!’
1848 Sc. Temperance Rev. June 285/2 Intemperance is a possession as well as a disease, alcohol is the demon, we are determined to cast him out.
1873 Sword & Trowel June 270 The demon whisky keeps his votaries in too willing subjection.
1915 99th Ann. Rep. Amer. Bible Soc. 55 People were in mourning, for that demon, drink, had been voted out of the town.
1922 J. Joyce Ulysses ii. xiii. [Nausicaa] 338 Had her father only avoided the clutches of the demon drink.
1939 D. Thomas Coll. Lett. (1987) 380 I'm just about to pawn, for debts and the demon alcohol, a silver christening present to Llewelyn.
1976 New Scientist 19 Feb. 424/1 The Russians are fighting the good fight against the demon vodka.
1989 Crisis Mar. 3/1 Some truly horrifying accounts of the degradation wrought by drugs, especially by the new demon, crack.
1998 S. D. Cashman Amer. Ascendant vi. 155 Thousands of pamphlets and posters warning people of the evils of demon drink.
2002 Chicago Tribune 17 Apr. i. 13/1 Political notables..who have admitted to partaking of the demon weed in their youth.
c. In plural. Recurrent (and often destructive) fears, compulsions, anxieties, etc., experienced by a person. Frequently with possessive.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > fear > apprehension > [noun] > apprehension > emotion caused by sense of danger
fearc1175
effere1553
demons1874
1874 F. L. Benedict Frank Worthington's Name xxv. 141/1 So Milly battled with her demons, and yielded to the fierce dictates of her jealousy and her rage.
1940 Washington Post 9 Sept. 6 After considerable stroking, soothing, and patting upon my part, Junior again lies quietly, the calm and beatific smile upon his features indicating that his demons have been at least temporarily subdued.
1967 Guardian 14 May 18 The cruellest, most brilliant sport..where a man wrestles with his demons.
1991 S. C. Cohen Lives of Value i. 8 Mostly I spend time alone in my office, struggling with my demons, though I love my work as much as I love anything in my life—sometimes more.
2012 Independent 20 Jan. 17/4 One night I failed to sleep a wink but completed a day's work without incident, and this helped to banish some of the demons.
4.
a. An exceptionally fast, strong, energetic, or skilful person or animal, esp. one that is extremely skilful at a particular activity. Also: a fanatic or enthusiast for an activity, habit, etc. Also in extended use. Cf. Compounds 2b. See also speed demon n. at speed n. Compounds 4.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > manner of action > vigour or energy > [noun] > vigorous or energetic person > extremely > of superhuman energy or skill
demon1865
1865 F. C. L. Wraxall tr. E. About in Second Empire in French Lit. II. vii. 134 Fears might have been entertained that poor Fougas would die in the first hour of his life, but this demon of a man [Fr. ce diable d'homme] bent and straightened again like a spring.
1877 Coursing Cal. Autumn 1876 315 It was hard lines indeed for Mr Watson to meet with such a demon of a hare for the decider.
1888 G. M. Hopkins Let. 19 Oct. (1935) 296 Sir Robert Stewart (a demon for rule) says it is correct.
1899 Westm. Gaz. 6 Feb. 3/1 He is a demon of accuracy.
1905 Shearer (Sydney) 19 Aug. 8/3 If for ‘yakker’ [= work] you're a demon You can do their share as well!
1908 D. Blackburn Leaven 268 Gambling? He's a demon at it... He is very smart.
1948 J. Fairfax Run o' Waters 58 The Little Falcon..a little black demon of incredible speed.
1963 A. Baron Lowlife ix. 72 She was a demon for economizing.
1989 Car & Driver Oct. 134/3 The Hatchback should be a demon, however, at slaloming around high monthly payments.
1995 Alternative Press May 43/2 In the studio, Sweet is a demon, banging down tracks and approving first mixes.
2008 R. Farooki Corner Shop (2009) 293 She's the fittest by far, I'll bet she's a demon in the sack.
b. like a demon: very energetically or assiduously; in a very skilful or thorough way; with great endurance. Frequently in to work like a demon.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > manner of action > vigour or energy > act or do vigorously [verb (intransitive)]
twig1573
to go at ——1675
to go it1794
to come it1796
to lay it on thick1806
to blaze away1826
bushwhack1837
steam1842
split1844
rustle1882
to work like a demon1884
yank1888
go-at-it1904
to go somea1911
to put a jerk in it1919
to go (also do) one's (also a) dinger1923
to work (etc.) one's ass off1924
to go to town1933
to gie (or give) it laldy1974
the world > action or operation > manner of action > vigour or energy > acting vigorously or energetically [phrase] > with great vigour or energy
with (also in) mood and maineOE
vigour13..
with or by (all one's) might and mainc1330
with (one's) forcec1380
like anything1665
hammer and tongs1708
like stour1787
(in) double tides1788
like blazes1818
like winking1827
with a will1827
like winky1830
like all possessed1833
in a big way1840
like (or worse than) sin1840
full swing1843
like a Trojan1846
like one o'clock1847
like sixty1848
like forty1852
like wildfire1857
like old boots1865
like blue murder1867
like steam1905
like stink1929
like one thing1938
like a demon1945
up a storm1953
1884 M. E. Braddon Ishmael I. vii. 117 He was idle and irregular in his life, worked with fury for a couple of days, and then left off for three, or worked like a demon for a morning, and spent the whole afternoon out of doors.
1931 M. Moore Let. 24 June in Sel. Lett. (1997) 257 I take my jeroba up there and am working like a demon to complete it.
1945 T. Raddall Tambour 154 MacNeill backskating like a demon, swung in and pokechecked shrewdly.
1970 E. Kübler-Ross On Death & Dying (1973) viii. 130 I could work like a demon. I had fellows that came to my house and told my wife that I worked too hard.
2006 Sunday Mail (Brisbane) 9 July 9/1 I'm actually a real girly girl. I get my nails and hair done, and shop like a demon.
5. Chiefly Australian slang (usually depreciative).
a. A policeman, esp. a detective. [Probably punningly after D-man (although this is apparently first attested later; < D. n. at D n. Initialisms 3a (compare also dee n. 2) + man n.1).]
ΘΚΠ
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
1889 A. Barrère & C. G. Leland Dict. Slang I. 304/1 Demons (Australian), prison slang for police. ‘The demons put pincher on me’, I was apprehended.
1891 Truth (Sydney) 17 May 3/4 I only wish I had one of them button-hole cameras you see advertised—the demons use them I believe.
1933 Bulletin (Sydney) 15 Nov. 38/1 Those ‘demons’, the fools, were chasing the wrong people, as usual.
1941 K. Tennant Battlers viii. 96 The showers were ‘demons’, or plain-clothes detectives.
1950 Here & Now (N.Z.) 16 Nov. When they got to the station a big demon walked into Joe's cell with his coat off.
1967 K. Giles Death & Mr. Prettyman ii. 61 ‘Tell the truth, Bert,’ said the Australian, ‘always help a demon in distress.’
2006 R. Bramwell in C. Hooper Tall Man (2009) i. 38 I was visited by four demons..who obtained a statement from me.
b. A convict, esp. an escaped convict; a bushranger. Now historical and rare. [Punningly after Van Diemen's Land (also humorously respelt as Van Demon's Land, 1836 or earlier), the former name of the island of Tasmania to which convicts were formerly deported (see Vandemonian adj. and n.).]
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > taking > stealing or theft > thief > robber > brigand > [noun] > in other countries
dacoit1788
gang-robber1812
bush-ranger1817
klepht1820
flayer1832
ranger1840
dacoity1849
sticker-up1853
boh1888
demon1909
shifta1920
1909 J. R. Ware Passing Eng. Victorian Era 107/1 Demons, old hands at bushranging; derived from men who arrive from Van Dieman's [sic] Land (Tasmania), some of whom are popularly supposed to have inaugurated bushranging in Australia.
1945 S. J. Baker Austral. Lang. ii. 42 A large number of synonyms for convict became current [in the early part of the nineteenth century], among them canary, transport,..demon (a Van Diemen's Land convict), [etc.].
1986 R. Hughes Fatal Shore (1988) xv. 565 Every unsolved crime in Victoria..was automatically blamed on the ‘Vandemonians’, or simply the ‘Demons’.
6. British. Cards. More fully demon patience. Also with capital initial(s). A kind of one-pack patience game played with a tableau of four columns and a reserve of thirteen cards. Also occasionally: = racing demon n. at racing n.2 Compounds 2. In the United States known as Canfield (see Canfield n.).
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > card game > patience or solitaire > [noun] > varieties of
spider1890
demon1893
Miss Milligan1899
Klondike1902
Canfield1912
poker patience1912
clock solitaire1919
pisha paysha1928
clock patience1937
1893 M. W. Jones Games of Patience 3rd Ser. ix. 19 Demon Patience.
1895 ‘J. S. Winter’ Magnificent Young Man xvii. 156 It is well called ‘Demon Patience’. I have often tried a dozen times to do it and failed each time.
1900 ‘L. Hoffmann’ Illustr. Bk. Patience Games 36 The Demon.
1918 H. G. Wells Joan & Peter xi. 388 A new card game, Demon Patience, a scrambling sort of game in which you piled on aces in the middle and cried ‘Stop!’ as soon as your stack was out.
1919 ‘K. Mansfield’ Let. 4 Oct. (1993) III. 7 You know how, when we get hungry, we are at last even unable to play demon for wanting the hashhammer to sound.
1936 ‘P. Quentin’ Puzzle for Fools xii. 95 I began to wonder whether she stole cards from a concealed pack... Her demon came out three times running.
1976 D. Parlett Patience Games 11/1 With minimal scope for skill, Demon is..unlikely to appeal to any but hard-bitten gamblers.
2009 P. Lively Family Album 113 Monopoly, badminton in the garden, demon patience, quoits in the garden, snakes and ladders, why not get out the table tennis things?
II. In neutral or positive senses: a supernatural being, spirit, or divinity.
7. Frequently with possessive adjective. A spirit associated with a particular person; an inner or attendant spirit; (also) an inner source of creative inspiration.See note in etymology. The sense ‘inner or attendant spirit’ is now frequently associated with Philip Pullman's trilogy of novels His Dark Materials (1995–2000), in which, in a parallel universe, a daemon is a person's soul or spirit which exists outside the body in the form of an animal (cf. quots. 1997 and 2007).
ΚΠ
a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1871) III. 279 We haveþ i-lerned of Socrates, þat was alway tendaunt to a spirit þat was i-cleped demon [L. dæmon].
1597 H. M. tr. J. Du Bec-Crispin Hist. Tamerlan 6 The gouernment of his estate, wherin he [sc. Tamerlane] said his professed Demon [Fr. son Dæmon de profession] did oftentimes especiallie direct him.
1603 P. Holland tr. Plutarch Morals 1222 The soule..that obeieth not nor hearkeneth to her owne familiar and proper dæmon [Fr. Dæmon; Gk. δαίμονα].
a1616 W. Shakespeare Antony & Cleopatra (1623) ii. iii. 17 Oh Anthony..Thy Dæmon that thy spirit which keepes thee, is Noble, Couragious, high vnmatchable.
1758 J. Home Agis ii. 24 Inspiration, The guardian God, the Demon of the mind, Thus often presses on the human breast.
1768 A. Tucker Light of Nature Pursued I. ii. 162 Conscience particularly acts as a monitor, like Socrates's Demon.
1865 W. E. H. Lecky Hist. Rationalism I. iv. 414 (note) Minucius Felix thought the dæmon of Socrates was a devil.
1932 R. Kipling Limits & Renewals 142 Was my Demon going to lay the hot coal of inspiration on Lettcombe's unshorn lips—not on mine?
1981 C. Potok Bk. Lights i. i. 26 There is deep, deep within us the irrational as well. It is our motor energy, our creative demon.
1997 P. Pullman Subtle Knife (1998) vi. 124 You're talking about Stan Grumman? His dæmon was an osprey.
2007 S. R. Munt Queer Attachments (2008) vii. 188 Pullman establishes the strangeness of this world by granting each person a daemon, which can be variously interpreted as the individual soul, spirit, emotional expression, unconscious, [etc.].
8. Greek Mythology. A supernatural being of a nature between gods and humans; an inferior divinity or spirit; spec. the soul of a deceased person, esp. a deified hero.
ΚΠ
1569 J. Sanford tr. H. C. Agrippa Of Vanitie Artes & Sci. f. 2 Grammarians..doo expounde this woord Dæmon, that is a Spirite, as if it were Sapiens, that is, Wise [L. grammatici plerique dæmones quasi scientes exponunt].
1572 R. Harrison tr. L. Lavater Of Ghostes i. i. 2 The Gentiles (as S. Augustine and other fathers doo testifie) supposed that the soules of men became Dæmones, that is, good or euill angels.
1587 Sir P. Sidney & A. Golding tr. P. de Mornay Trewnesse Christian Relig. xix. 346 And vnto Cratylus ageine [Plato] saith, when the good man departeth this world,..he becommeth a Demon [Fr. dæmon].
a1638 J. Mede Apostasy Latter Times (1641) (subtitle) The gentiles theology of dæmons, i.e. inferiour divine powers: supposed to be mediatours between God and man.
1680 H. More Apocalypsis Apocalypseos 252 Dæmons according to the Greek idiom, signify either Angels, or the Souls of men, any Spirits out of Terrestrial bodies, the Souls of Saints, and Spirits of Angels.
1774 J. Bryant New Syst. (new ed.) I. 52 Subordinate dæmons, which they supposed to be emanations and derivatives from their chief Deity.
1846 G. Grote Hist. Greece I. i. ii. 91 In Homer, there is scarcely any distinction between gods and dæmons.
1904 H. S. Williams Historians' Hist. World III. iv. 104 The Curetes..appear also as beneficent daemons in the Cretan folk-lore.
2009 A. F. Garvie in Æschylus Persae 76 Petrounias..at least asks why it is all right for Darius to be described in such terms, but his answer, that he is dead and functions as a daemon, is unsatisfactory.
9. Esp. in non-Christian contexts: any spirit or supernatural being (not regarded as intrinsically evil).
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > supernatural being > [noun]
ghostOE
spiritc1350
minda1398
sprite?1440
intelligencea1456
esperite1477
intelligency1582
genio1590
geniusa1592
ethereal1610
spirituality1628
supernatural1660
jynx1662
duende1691
atua1769
nat1819
demon1822
Wandjina1938
1822 Time's Telescope: Guide to Almanack 80 He is supposed to be a kind of benevolent demon... He is presumed to befriend the human race.
1850 H. Christmas tr. A. Calmet Phantom World xlvii. 343 Some have advanced the opinion that there were certain benign demons, differing from those who are malevolent and hostile to mankind, to which (benign demons) they have attributed playful and harmless operations.
1923 D. A. Mackenzie Myths China & Japan vi. 73 In early Buddhist art the mungoose, spitting jewels, is placed in the right hand of Kubera, god of wealth, who stands on the back of a Yaksha (a bird demon).
1963 M. I. Gerhardt Art of Story-telling iv. iv. 337 The same demon who did Ma'rûf such a good turn by transporting him to a far country, now takes ill-advised pity on the abandoned Fâtima and transports her likewise.
1991 G. H. Sutherland Disguises of Demon iv. 112 He demonstrates that there are, indeed, good animals and bad animals, good demons and wicked demons.
10. Any of various notional entities having special abilities, used in scientific thought experiments. Frequently with reference to the particular person associated with the experiment; cf. Maxwell's demon n. at Maxwell n.2 1a, Laplace n. 1.Apparently arising from Descartes' use of a powerful or omnipotent evil demon which attempts to mislead him as to the nature of reality and existence: see Descartes Meditationes (1641) i. §xii.
ΚΠ
1874 W. Thomson in Proc. Royal Soc. Edinb. 8 (1875) 326 (note) The definition of a demon, according to the use of this word by Maxwell, is an intelligent being endowed with free-will and fine enough tactile and perceptive organization to give him the faculty of observing and influencing individual molecules of matter.
1931 Monist 41 3 Utilizing these data an imaginary being like Laplace's demon..could calculate the state at any time.
1988 Sci. Amer. Feb. 6/1 No harm would be done if a demon could produce a small temperature difference in a small system containing only a few molecules.
2006 C. Seife Decoding Universe 78 The demon simply had to decide which side of a partition an atom is on—but the physics underlying Szilard's demon was precisely the same as Maxwell's.

Compounds

C1.
a. General attributive (chiefly in sense 1), as demon deed, demon idolatry, etc.
ΚΠ
a1638 J. Mede Apostasy Latter Times (1641) 13 Did not God forbid his people this rite because abused to Dæmon Idolatry?
1677 T. Gale Court of Gentiles: Pt. III iii. 177 Al those demon-doctrines..introduced by Antichrist and his Sectators.
1677 T. Gale Court of Gentiles: Pt. III iii. 56 The Demon-theology..was brought into the Christian Church first by the Gnostics.
1718 N. Amhurst Protestant Popery ii. 28 On Dæmon-Wings she reach'd the Coasts of Day.
1774 J. Bryant New Syst. (new ed.) I. 141 Among all the dæmon herd what one is there of a form..so odious..as Priapus.
1814 Ld. Byron Corsair ii. iv. 38 Some Afrit sprite, Whose demon death-blow left no hope for fight.
1851 M. Reid Scalp Hunters I. xi. 144 They seem endowed with demon life!
1863 W. Phillips Speeches iv. 57 The demon altar of our land.
1909 W. S. Gilbert Fallen Fairies I. 190 The demon deeds Of all the goblin murder-mongers that Infest that sink of seething infamy!
1993 M. J. Plotkin Tales Shaman's Apprentice i. 2 Masks painted with glistening black demon faces, announcing an element of the macabre.
b.
demon ship n.
ΚΠ
1827 T. Hood Whims & Oddities 2nd Ser. 38 (title) The demon-ship.
1917 W. Bassett Wander-ships 100 Most of these demon ships are not conceived to have been built by human hands.
2010 N. D. Wilson Chestnut King xix. 335 No one wants first foot on a demon ship?
demon worship n.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > worship > kinds of worship > [noun] > of devils, demons, or the Devil
devil worship1533
demonomany1597
demon worshipa1638
demonomy1638
diabolism1650
demonolatry1655
devil-worshipping1677
devilism1688
demoniculture1879
demonism1920
a1638 J. Mede Apostasy Latter Times (1641) 124 Did not Dæmon-worship enter after the same manner?
1655 H. Hammond Acct. Mr. Cawdry's Triplex Diatribe iii. 50 The first [Commandment], which by commanding to have no other Gods but that one true God, excludes the δεισιδαιμονία or demon worship.
1722 R. Blackmore Redemption v. 281 O Rome, thy church infallible has err'd, Which æmulous of Pagan rites, transfer'd This demon-worship to the num'rous lands To which thy pontiffs send their proud commands.
1879 M. D. Conway Demonol. II. iv. xiv. 158 The theory that man could get along without any Angelolatry or Demon-worship.
1991 A. Campbell Sidewinder xii. 145 It was..a forbidden place, holding dark secrets associated with demon worship.
C2. Appositive.
a. Chiefly in sense 1, as demon bride, demon king, demon spirit, etc.
ΚΠ
1614 E. Grimeston tr. P. Matthieu Hist. Lewis XI i. 2 Paris receiues him as the Demon Gardian of her wals.
a1638 J. Mede Apostasy Latter Times (1641) 27 A worshipper of Dæmon-gods.
1711 R. Blackmore Nature of Man i. 25 Impious Priests, full of the Demon Guest,..Exclaiming loud, the Fiend within confest.
1795 Ld. Monboddo Antient Metaphysics IV. ii. vii. 160 Those Dæmon Kings of Egypt were real personages as much as Menes, their first human King.
1814 J. Galt Prophetess iii. iv Like the demon-hags of Tartarus.
1820 J. Keats Isabella in Lamia & Other Poems 71 And let his spirit, like a demon-mole, Work through the clayey soil and gravel hard.
1890 E. H. Barker Wayfaring in France 15 That small demon-insect, the mosquito.
1904 M. Beerbohm Around Theatres (1924) II. 50 In the 'seventies pantomime was flourishing still. Demon King and Fairy Queen..were familiar.
1922 Theosophical Path Mar. 291 The demon-bride was seen by some upon the rocks urging the waves to madness.
1999 R. E. Guiley Encycl. Witches & Witchcraft (ed. 2) 221/2 A mandragoras, a demon spirit resembling a little man with no beard.
2006 New Yorker 25 Dec. 10/2 Tom Sawyer may represent a kind of demon-child.
b. In sense 4, as demon pitcher, demon player; demon cook, demon gardener, etc. In early use chiefly with reference to someone who excels in a particular sport.Recorded earliest in demon bowler n. at Compounds 5.Sometimes, esp. in later use, passing into adj.
ΚΠ
1861 Birmingham Daily Post 5 Sept. 3/2 Jackson, ‘the demon bowler’, is another member of this powerful team.
1884 Cleveland (Ohio) Herald 28 May 3/3 In New York they call Whitney the demon pitcher.
1890 Golf 26 Dec. 234/2 Peerless Horace..—a demon player.
1912 C. E. Van Loan Ten-thousand-dollar Arm 40 The last thing the demon hitter heard before the storm broke was the thud of the ball in the glove.
1977 New Yorker 3 Oct. 111/1 Curry, up to now a demon punter, could not average better than twenty-nine yards a kick.
1988 L. Colwin Home Cooking xvii. 111 ‘Don't serve it to men’, said an English friend of mine who is a demon cook.
1990 R. Blount First Hubby 183 The seven DaSilva siblings were demon campaigners, wearing hats, leading cheers.
1997 Condé Nast Traveler Mar. 187/3 Kunseng, a lady trader and a demon hand at pool.
2000 B. Weathers & S. G. Michaud Left for Dead 98 He was in any case a demon gardener—Jackson and Perkins, the rose people, often asked him to try out their new hybrids.
C3. Instrumental, as demon-born, demon-haunted, demon-infested, demon-possessed, etc.
ΚΠ
1797 R. Southey Poems 155 Nor dost thou Fancy with such magic mock My heart, as, demon-born, old Merlin knew.
1884 A. T. de Vere Poet. Wks. VI. 64 As one demon-possessed He glared upon that youth; his wan cheek burned.
1900 W. S. Urmy Christ came Again i. viii. 114 A demon-infested man repossessed by a sevenfold force of devils.
1924 R. Campbell Flaming Terrapin iii. 41 Sleep was a long dark tunnel demon-scooped Out of the Night's black rock.
1936 Discovery June 187/2 The newly-made spirit-doctors proceed to exorcise the pepo..from the scores of demon-stricken people.
1995 C. Sagan (title) The demon-haunted world.
C4. Objective, as demon hunter, demon hunting, demon killer, demon slayer, etc.
ΚΠ
1812 Morning Chron. 19 Nov. A new grand Melo Dramatic Spectacle, written by Miss Scott, called Asgard the Demon Hunter.
1889 Z. A. Ragozin Story of Media & Babylon iv. 73 The title of honor given..most frequently to Indra, the champion demon-killer of them all.
1927 Theosophist 48 539 The demon-killing has thus a threefold meaning.
1963 H. B. Franklin Wake of Gods ii. 50 He is no demon-hunting Ahab.
1997 Neon May 41/1 Bruce Campbell, newly transformed from weasely college kid to muscle-bound demon-slayer, dispenses pump-action justice with square-jawed savoir-faire.
C5.
demon bird n. any of various birds associated in folklore with misfortune or death, or regarded as demonic in nature or aspect; esp. the devil bird of Sri Lanka (see devil bird n. 3). [With reference to Sri Lanka used to render Sinhala ulama.]
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > birds > order Strigiformes or owl > [noun] > unspecified and miscellaneous types
brown owl1678
demon bird1821
devil bird1846
cat-owl1854
1821 J. Davy Acct. Interior of Ceylon ii. iii. 424 During the night at Yadalgammé, we heard the cries of the demon-bird, or Ulama, as it is also called by the natives. Perched in a neighbouring tree, it made loud and hideous screams, conveying the idea of extreme distress.
1840 J. Forbes Eleven Years in Ceylon (1841) 353 I first heard the wild and wailing cry of the gaulawa, or demon-bird.
1861 Trans. Ethnol. Soc. London 1 43 The demon bird of the Assyrians.
1905 Spolia Zeylanica 3 30 The Demon bird, or ‘Ulamá’ of Ceylon, so-called on account of its dreadful moaning hoot, is commonly identified with Huhua nepalensis (= Bubo nipalensis) and also with Syrnium indrani.
1998 Jrnl. Irish Archaeol. 9 9/2 Tírechán referred to St Patrick's heroic visit to the mountain..during which time he was confronted by demon birds.
demon bowler n. Cricket an intimidatingly fast or exceptionally skilful bowler. Also used as an epithet of particular bowlers, esp. (originally) John Jackson (1833–1901) and (chiefly) Frederick Spofforth (1853–1926).
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > cricket > cricketer > [noun] > bowler > types of bowler
slow bowler1823
fast bowler1828
bias bowler1854
round-arm1858
demon bowler1861
left-hander1864
chucker1882
lobster1889
slow1895
leg-breaker1904
speed merchant1913
leg-spinner1920
spin bowler1920
off-spinner1924
quickie1934
tweaker1935
swerve-bowler1944
pace bowler1947
seam bowler1948
spinner1951
seamer1952
wrist-spinner1957
outswinger1958
swing bowler1958
quick1960
stock bowler1968
paceman1972
leggy1979
1861Demon bowler [see Compounds 2b].
1878 Morning Post 29 May 7/5 Mr. E. F. Spofforth is called in Australia ‘The Demon Bowler’, and his performance on Monday appears to justify the title.
1899 County Gentleman 5 Aug. 969/1 The present dry season has been the despair of all demon bowlers, but batsmen have been delighted.
1931 Daily Gleaner (Kingston, Jamaica) 19 Jan. 14/5 He and Francis, are a pair of demon bowlers, and by many judges, regarded as faster than Gregory at his best.
1996 Guardian 14 Mar. 8/1 The demon bowler, the canny golfer and the tennis pro all know how a spinning ball can swerve.
2012 Brisbane News (Nexis) 15 Aug. 10 I was a nervous batsman and lived in fear of a couple of Indian lads who were demon bowlers.
demonkind n. [after mankind n.] demons collectively.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > supernatural being > evil spirit or demon > [noun] > collective or race of
devilry1583
demonkind1706
orken1855
1706 R. Brocklesby Explic. Gospel-theism i. i. 9/2 The Demon-kind. Which intervening between the Gods and Men, [etc.].
1857 Tait's Edinb. Mag. 24 378 The sentences, on all mankind and demonkind.
2002 Australian (Nexis) 25 June c6 One of the more powerful demon clans wants to..enslave humankind and demonkind.
demonland n. [in quot. 1846 after Chinese Gŭifāng, a former (Shang Dynasty) place name ( < gŭi ghost, supernatural being, also used to denote some foreign peoples + fāng quarter, region)] a realm inhabited by evil beings or demons; an evil place; cf. fairyland n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > supernatural being > evil spirit or demon > [noun] > realm of
demonland1846
1846 W. H. Medhurst in tr. Shoo King 359 The inhabitants of the demon land [Chinese Gŭifāng] having become dissolute, Woo-ting attacked them.
1859 G. Wilson & A. Geikie Mem. E. Forbes i. 29 Grim or gentle visitants from Demonland or Fairyland.
1903 A. H. Lewis Black Lion Inn v. 56 Elves and gnomes and brownies and other malignant, small folk of Demonland.
2012 Sunday Tel. (Nexis) 5 Feb. (Features section) 15 They [sc. the Anglo-Saxons] lived in the kind of lawless demonland that libertarians in the US would have us return to now, the rule of clans and hundreds of kings.
demon lover n. (a) a lover in spirit form; a lover that is a demon; also figurative; (b) an exceptionally good lover. Frequently with allusion to quot. 1816, hence often implying a lover who is alluring or enchanting.
ΚΠ
1816 S. T. Coleridge Kubla Khan in Christabel 56 A savage place! as holy and inchanted As e'er beneath a waning moon was haunted By woman wailing for her demon-lover!
1886 Macmillan's Mag. Dec. 152/1 It was like the good-bye of a girl who had been borne away by a demon-lover.
1937 P. G. Wodehouse Lord Emsworth & Others v. 172 When a woman is to all intents and purposes waiting for a demon lover, it requires super-salesmanship to induce her to accept..an Ernest Plinlimmon.
1988 D. Allison Trash 111 Katy always said she wanted to be the Demon Lover, the one we desire even when we know it is not us she wants, but our souls.
1995 N. Hornby High Fidelity (1996) v. 65 I know, however, that Ian was something of a demon lover... I could hear it all.
2007 S. L. Plum Solitary Goose 7 When Yellow Woman is kidnapped by a demon-lover..her sisters call her back.
demon possession n. = demonic possession n. at demonic adj. and n. Compounds.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > supernatural being > evil spirit or demon > [noun] > familiar or possessing spirit > possession by
wood dreameOE
demoniacal possession1601
possession1601
obsession1607
pythonism1654
demoniac possession1698
endiablementa1734
endemoniasm1751
demon possession1838
demonic possession1853
spirit possession1854
bedevilment1861
diabolepsy1886
1838 Foreign Q. Rev. 22 119 The Scripture doctrine demonstrates per se the fact of demon possession of a modified character.
1894 J. L. Nevius (title) Demon possession and allied themes.
1936 Discovery June 185 The condition of ‘demon possession’, which may be collective, affecting a whole village.
2006 D. Williams Start Here vii. 64 Because of the unscientific worldview in ancient time, what was really a psychotic disorder was seen as a demon possession.
demon star n. [ < demon n. + star n.1, after Arabic al-ġūl the demon (see Algol n.1)] Algol, the star β Persei.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the universe > constellation > binary star or system > [noun] > eclipsing
Algola1393
demon star1868
1868 Fraser's Mag. Dec. 763/1 There is also the star Algol, or the Demon... But Eta Argûs exhibits far more remarkable changes than those presented by the Demon-star and the star Wonderful.
1971 C. Sergel You were born on Rotten Day i. 29 The demon star Algol is flashing disaster!
2001 P. Moore 2002 Yearbk. Astron. i. 106 Beta Lyrae..is a remarkable system. It is an eclipsing binary, but quite different from Algol, the Demon Star, in Perseus.

Derivatives

ˈdemonlike adv. and adj.
ΚΠ
1690 W. Baxter tr. Plutarch Of Isis & Osiris in M. Morgan et al. tr. Plutarch Morals IV. 94 We also hear Homer often calling such as are extraordinary good, Godlike... But the Epithet derived from Dæmons, we find him to bestow upon the Good and Bad indifferently, as; Dæmon-like, Sir, make hast.
1707 G. Hickes Two Treat. Pref. p. xlvi A Sovereign Pontif, and Dæmon-like Mediator betwixt God, and Man.
1764 J. Grainger Sugar-cane iii. 91 From every quarter, in tumultuous bands, The Negroes rush; and, 'mid the crackling flames, Plunge, dæmon-like!
1822 E. Nathan Langreath III. 416 Demon-like horrors.
1894 Pop. Sci. Monthly Nov. 10 The wild spirits of the mountains swept demonlike across the valley of the glaciers.
1999 Legacy 16 135 Warner's heroine exhibits demonlike characteristics that can never quite be contained.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2014; most recently modified version published online June 2022).
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n.adj.OE
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