单词 | discourse |
释义 | discoursen. 1. The process or faculty of reasoning; reasoned argument or thought; reason, rationality. Also more fully discourse of reason. Now rare (somewhat archaic in later use). ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > understanding > reason, faculty of reasoning > process of reasoning, ratiocination > [noun] reasonc1330 skillingc1374 discourse?c1400 discursec1443 argumentationa1492 ratiocination1532 ration1548 discursion1603 discursiveness1647 discoursiveness1661 movement1869 ?c1400 (c1380) G. Chaucer tr. Boethius De Consol. Philos. (BL Add. 10340) (1868) v. pr. iv. l. 4804 It [sc. intelligence] byholdeþ alle þinges so as I shal seye. by a strok of þouȝt formely wiþ oute discours or collacioun [L. sed illo uno ictu mentis formaliter, ut ita dicam, cuncta prospiciens]. 1483 ( tr. G. Deguileville Pilgrimage of Soul (Caxton) iv. xxviii. f. lxxiiijv The sowle..seketh by discors of reson the skyles & the causes of the wonderful beaute of these forsaid creatures. 1553 R. Eden in tr. S. Münster Treat. Newe India Pref. sig. Aijv As could hardely be comprehended by the discourse of reason. 1604 W. Shakespeare Hamlet i. ii. 150 A beast that wants discourse of reason . View more context for this quotation a1618 W. Raleigh Remains (1644) 131 The Dog..we see is plentifully furnished with inward discourse. 1672 Bp. J. Wilkins Of Princ. Nat. Relig. 56 The discerning of that connexion or dependance which there is betwixt several propositions..which is called ratiocination, or discourse. 1732 S. Browne Def. Relig. Nature ii. 85 He not only labours, by his discourse of reason, to destroy the authority of revelation, but to prove it wholly useless. 1788 J. Wesley Wks. (1872) VI. 353 Discourse, strictly speaking, is the motion or progress of the mind from one judgment to another. 1818 S. T. Coleridge Friend (new ed.) I. 268 Reason cannot exist without Understanding; nor does it or can it manifest itself but in and through the understanding, which in our elder writers is often called discourse, or the discursive faculty. a1856 W. Hamilton Lect. Metaphysics (1859) I. App. 415 No one with the ordinary discourse of reason could commit an error in regard to them. 1890 Sunday School Times (Philadelphia) 1 Nov. 691/3 Why are we to renounce the faculty of discourse, to square our minds to those of Dr. Riehm, to let him do the thinking for us? 1905 G. Santayana Life of Reason IV. v. 74 We mean by ‘mind’..not a bundle of psychoses nor an angelic substance, but quick intelligence, the faculty of discourse. 1923 Mind 32 185 No thinking, no discourse of reason, is needed to give him this objective datum; his own innate instinctive tendencies are sufficient. 2005 Stage (Nexis) 20 Oct. 9 And yet the man who had the courage to purchase a Canaletto, whose collection is regarded as one of the finest in private hands, foists this trash on his public. It wants discourse of reason. a. The thread of an argument; a line of reasoning; a reasoned argument. Obsolete. ΚΠ 1532 T. More Confut. Tyndales Answere iii. p. clxxiii By the dyscourse of my dyaloge, I proued clerely that nothyng can be sure & certayne amonge crysten men. 1574 J. Whitgift Def. Aunswere to Admon. ii. i. 77 This my interpretation of their wordes is grounded vpon the whole discourse and drifte of their booke. 1631 L. B. Answere of Catholike Lay Gentleman iii. 70 in Attestation Don C. Coloma This is the whole discourse of this Section. 1683 D. A. Whole Art Converse 87 We..lose a considerable advantage over our Adversary by not reflecting where the weak of his discourse lies. b. More generally: the onward course of something in space or time; succession or sequence of time, events, actions, etc. Cf. course n. 17. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > order, sequence, or succession > [noun] successionc1405 progression1483 discourse1541 consequency1548 array1576 consequence1597 sequence1597 concatenation1614 catenation1641 pursuance1645 consecution1651 successivenessa1676 sequentialism1848 successivity1866 sequentiality1883 the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > forward movement > [noun] > onward course discourse1541 marcha1797 the world > relative properties > order > order, sequence, or succession > continuity or uninterruptedness > [noun] > continuous succession motionc1425 coursec1460 discourse1541 discurse?1549 current1587 running1662 1541 T. Elyot Image of Gouernance xxxiv. f. 80 The naturall discourse of the sunne. 1549 M. Coverdale et al. tr. Erasmus Paraphr. Newe Test. II. 1 Pet. i. f. iiv But whan ye day shal come, & the discourse of thinges turned vp side down, they shalbe tormented. 1577 E. Hellowes tr. A. de Guevara Chron. 65 The riuer Tygris in the discourse of his currant maketh an Ilande. 1588 R. Greene Pandosto sig. C3 This tragicall discourse of fortune so daunted them, as they went like shadowes. 1612 T. Shelton tr. M. de Cervantes Don-Quixote: Pt. 1 ii. v. 89 The Knights-errant..did..suffer much Woe and Misery in the Discourse of their Lives. 1632 J. Porter Flowers of Lives of Renowned Saincts 251 The aspiration of his dayly remorse, through the discourse of their earnest reading, did giue him new courage of life. c. Course of arms (cf. course n. 3); combat. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > armed encounter > [noun] fightc893 coursec1325 stourc1325 acounterc1330 meetingc1330 setc1330 showera1375 brusha1400 semblya1400 hosting1422 poynyec1425 conflictc1440 militancea1460 grate1460 rencounter1471 chaplea1500 flitea1513 concourse?1520 concursion1533 rescounter1543 spurnc1560 rencontrea1572 discourse1573 action1579 combat1582 opposition1598 do1915 1573 T. Bedingfield in tr. G. Cardano Comforte sig. A.2v It would haue better beseemed me to haue taken this trauaile in some discourse of Armes..then in Philosophers skill to haue thus busied my selfe. 1596 E. Spenser Second Pt. Faerie Queene vi. viii. sig. Ff5 At last the caytiue after long discourse, When all his strokes he saw auoyded quite, Resolued in one t'assemble all his force. View more context for this quotation 1619 F. Beaumont & J. Fletcher King & No King ii. sig. C4v Good Captaine Bessus, tell vs the discourse [viz. of single combat] Betweene Tigranes and our King, and how We got the victorie. 3. a. A more or less formal treatment of a subject, in speech or writing, in which it is considered or discussed at length; a treatise, dissertation, homily, or the like; a disquisition. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > speech > speech-making > [noun] > a discourse or lecture spellc888 predicationa1325 lessonc1330 collation1417 sermocination1514 discourse1533 lecture1536 descant1567 peroration1607 homilya1616 sermona1616 exercitation1632 transcursion1641 exhortatory1656 by-discourse1660 screed1748 purlicue1825 rhesis1840 talk1859 lecturette1867 chalk talk1881 pi-jaw1896 1533 T. More 2nd Pt. Confut. Tyndals Answere vi. p. ccxvi Tyndale hath here made vs a longe dyscourse frome Abraams dayes vnto Chryste. 1581 G. Pettie tr. S. Guazzo Ciuile Conuersat. i. 18 b Referring to ye long discourses which ye divines make of it. 1596 J. Harington New Disc. Aiax (advt.) sig. B6 The discourse ensuing is deuided into three parts. 1644 J. Milton Areopagitica 14 The acute and distinct Arminius was perverted meerly by the perusing of a namelesse discours writt'n at Delf. 1711 J. Addison Spectator No. 106. ¶7 Authors who have published Discourses of practical Divinity. 1764 T. Reid Inq. Human Mind iii. 116 Dr. N. Grew read a discourse before the Royal Society in 1675. 1803 Med. & Physical Jrnl. 9 84 The volume opens with a short preliminary Discourse on the education and duties of a Surgeon. 1849 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. II. 176 In the pulpit the effect of his discourses, which were delivered without any note, was heightened by a noble figure. 1915 V. Woolf Voy. Out xii. 176 Pepper..began a discourse upon round dances,..morris dances, and quadrilles. 1966 H. Kemelman Sat. Rabbi went Hungry viii. 39 He knew some members of the congregation..grew restive during his discourse, and would have preferred a more oratorical, hortative style. 1989 Texas Monthly Sept. 138/3 In the guise of a historical novel-cum-suspense-cum-romance lurks a discourse on the cultural limbo of the American Indian. 2012 A. R. Birley in M. van Ackeren Compan. Marcus Aurelius viii. 149 Most of the letter was a discourse on oratory. b. A narrative or account of a particular subject. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > speech > narration > [noun] > a narrative or account talec1200 historyc1230 sawc1320 tellinga1325 treatisec1374 chroniclec1380 process?1387 legendc1390 prosec1390 pistlec1395 treatc1400 relationc1425 rehearsal?a1439 report?a1439 narrationc1449 recorda1450 count1477 redec1480 story1489 recount1490 deductiona1532 repetition1533 narrative1539 discourse1546 account1561 recital1561 enarrative1575 legendary1577 enarration1592 recite1594 repeat1609 texture1611 recitation1614 rendera1616 prospect1625 recitement1646 tell1743 diegesis1829 récit1915 narrative line1953 1546 Bp. S. Gardiner Let. 14 Feb. (1933) 235 I sende herwith the discourse of the Duke of Savoys ambassadour. 1572 Sir T. Smith in H. Ellis Orig. Lett. Eng. Hist. (1827) 2nd Ser. III. 21 This is hitherto a brief discourse of that which hath passed sith my lord Admiralls commyng to Paris. 1575 (title) A brief Discours off the Troubles..abowte the Booke off Common Prayer and Ceremonies. 1632 W. Lithgow Totall Disc. Trav. v. 237 Troubling me..to show them the rare Discourses of my long two yeares survey of Turkey. 1647 T. May Hist. Parl. ii. i. 545 Out of whose faithfull relation of that Rebellion..I have partly collected my discourse of it. 1662 F. Sandford (title) A genealogical history of the kings of Portugal... Containing a discourse of their several lives, marriages, and issues, times of birth, death, and places of burial. 1709 R. Steele Tatler No. 26. 2/1 Instead of going on in a Discourse of what he had seen in that Court, he..fell to enquiring into my Thoughts and Adventures since his Journey. 1919 R. Norton Drowned Gold ii. xxi. 198 Long before I had finished a discourse of my plans and proposals he was as enthusiastic as I. 4. a. The action or process of communicating thought by means of the spoken word; interchange of words; conversation, talk. Also: the words exchanged by this means; speech. In later use also: the written representation of this; communication in written form. of good discourse and variants: capable of conversing well, etc. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > speech > [noun] speechc725 spellc888 tonguec897 spellingc1000 wordOE mathelingOE redec1275 sermonc1275 leeda1300 gale13.. speakc1300 speaking1303 ledenc1320 talea1325 parliamentc1325 winda1330 sermoningc1330 saying1340 melinga1375 talkingc1386 wordc1390 prolationa1393 carpinga1400 eloquencec1400 utteringc1400 language?c1450 reporturec1475 parleyc1490 locutionc1500 talk1539 discourse1545 report1548 tonguec1550 deliverance1553 oration1555 delivery1577 parling1582 parle1584 conveying1586 passage1598 perlocution1599 wording1604 bursta1616 ventilation1615 loquency1623 voicinga1626 verbocination1653 loquence1677 pronunciation1686 loquel1694 jawinga1731 talkee-talkee?1740 vocification1743 talkation1781 voicing1822 utterancy1827 voicing1831 the spoken word1832 outness1851 verbalization1851 voice1855 outgiving1865 stringing1886 praxis1950 the mind > language > speech > conversation > [noun] speechc900 talec1000 speaka1300 reasonc1300 speakinga1325 counsela1350 intercommuningc1374 dalliancec1400 communication1419 communancec1449 collocutiona1464 parlour?c1475 sermocination1514 commona1529 dialogue?1533 interlocutiona1534 discourse1545 discoursing1550 conference1565 purposea1572 talk1572 interspeech1579 conversationa1586 devising1586 intercourse1596 intercommunication1603 eclogue1604 commercing1610 communion1614 negocea1617 alloquy1623 confariation1652 gob1681 gab1761 commune1814 colloquy1817 conversing1884 cross-talk1887 bull session1920 rap1957 1545 Bp. S. Gardiner Let. 26 Nov. (1933) 203 The man is wise and of good discourse, as the Italyan sayth. ?1549 T. Sternhold Certayne Psalmes xlix. sig. C.iv For why my mouthe shal make discourse of many thynges right wyse. 1597 W. Shakespeare Richard III v. v. 52 Ample enterchange of sweet discourse . View more context for this quotation 1597 F. Bacon Ess. f. 2 Some in their discourse, desire rather commendation of wit..then of iudgement. a1616 W. Shakespeare Comedy of Errors (1623) iii. i. 110 I know a wench of excellent discourse, Prettie and wittie. View more context for this quotation c1660 J. Evelyn Diary anno 1620 (1955) II. 2 His Wisdome was greate, and judgment most acute; of solid discourse, affable, humble. 1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost viii. 211 Sweeter thy discourse is to my eare Then Fruits of Palm-tree. View more context for this quotation 1713 A. Pope Narr. Robert Norris 21 I..laid hold of that Opportunity of entering into Discourse with him. 1763 G. Ridley Life Dr. N. Ridley ii. 73 The King..sending for Cranmer was pleased with his discourse and behaviour. 1802 J. Croswell New World Planted ii. iv. 16 Our thoughts were issuing in free discourse, On peace and friendship with king Massasoit. 1841 Penny Cycl. XIX. 232/2 He was a slow man and of little discourse; but he had a true judgment when he considered things at his own leisure. 1872 H. W. Longfellow Prel. in Three Bks. Song i. 7 Meanwhile the Student held discourse With the Musician. 1884 T. W. Hunt Princ. Written Disc. ii. iii. 206 Oratory is the art of rendering written discourse effectively by the voice. 1917 L. W. Rapeer Teaching Elem. School Subj. iii. 64 (caption) A cumulative curve for word frequencies in written discourse. 1918 A. G. Gardiner Leaves in Wind 13 Those passionate spirits..pausing in their eager talk to salute deep-browed Homer as, perchance, he passes in grave discourse with the ‘mighty-mouthed inventor of harmonies’. 1939 Kenyon Rev. 1 413 Scientific discourse is, in summary, statemental or predictive in character. 1983 J. Sachs in K. E. Nelson Children's Lang. IV. i. 25 I suggest that we look carefully at the child's opportunities to learn other aspects of syntax and semantics in discourse with adults. 2007 Vanity Fair Feb. 162/1 In male company, considerably coarser discourse comes easily to his lips. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > speech > [noun] > faculty or power of speech speech?a1000 speaka1300 carpc1400 utterance1474 speakingc1480 discourse1609 languagea1616 verbalness1647 vocal1838 speechfulness1880 1609 W. Shakespeare Troilus & Cressida i. ii. 249 Is not birth, beauty, good shape, discourse..and such like, the spice & salt that season a man? View more context for this quotation c. As a count noun: a conversation, a talk.In quot. 1714: a subject for talk or comment. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > speech > conversation > [noun] > a, the, or this conversation speakc1300 dialoguec1450 speech1469 talk1548 colloquy1581 enterparlance1595 dialogism1603 colloquium1609 discourse1632 conversea1645 colloque1658 conversation1694 say1786 intercommune1820 tell1864 chin1877 conversation piece1936 rabbit1941 rabbit and pork1941 goss1983 1632 W. Lithgow Totall Disc. Trav. vi. 286 In the midst of my Discourses, I told his Highnesse..the Guardians request. 1644 J. Milton Of Educ. 1 The satisfaction which you professe to have receiv'd from those incidentall discourses. 1714 B. Mandeville Fable Bees 222 If these Admonitions do not reform him in a little time..he'll become a Discourse to the whole Neighbourhood. 1726 J. Swift Gulliver II. iii. ii. 16 They neither can speak, nor attend to the Discourses of others. 1785 Gentleman's Mag. June 451/2 Being yesterday visiting a friend, whose son is studying mathematics, we entered into a discourse on the doctrine of chances. 1829 Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. 26 148 This led to a confabulatory discourse between the men. 1887 C. Bowen tr. Virgil Æneid i, in tr. Virgil in Eng. Verse 105 Dido the while with many discourses lengthens the night. 1916 E. M. Rhodes Desire of Moth (1920) v. 110 His neighbors came together and held a whispered discourse. 1964 R. Gover Here goes Kitten 70 We had a most stimulating discourse (albeit accompanied by two pitchers of martinis and, of course, some twisting). 1999 National Underwriter (Nexis) 28 June 19 We were regaled with a discourse between her and her mother-in-law over the timing of visitation rights with her kids. ΘΚΠ society > communication > information > rumour > [noun] speechc1000 wordOE hearinga1300 opinion1340 talesa1375 famea1387 inklinga1400 slandera1400 noising1422 rumour?a1425 bruit1477 nickinga1500 commoninga1513 roarc1520 murmura1522 hearsay?1533 cry1569 scandal1596 vogue1626 discourse1677 sough1716 circulation1775 gossip1811 myth1849 breeze1879 sound1899 potin1922 dirt1926 rumble1929 skinny1938 labrish1942 lie and story1950 scam1964 he-say-she-say1972 factoid1973 ripple1977 goss1985 1677 Bp. G. Burnet Mem. Dukes of Hamilton iii. 186 Upon this many Discourses went about, People of all sides passing construction as they were affected. 1702 R. L'Estrange tr. Josephus Jewish Antiq. ii. ix, in Wks. 43 There went a Discourse about, that made their malice against them yet more implacable. a1715 Bp. G. Burnet Hist. Own Time (1724) I. 168 Many discourses were set about upon this occasion. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > knowledge, what is known > familiarity > [noun] > with a subject, skill insightc1175 practice1504 sight1530 experiment1575 discourse1589 practic1592 expertness1659 experimentals1748 sophistication1915 1589 R. Lane in R. Hakluyt Princ. Navigations 256 A very graue and wise man, and of a very singular good discourse in matters concerning the state. 1604 E. Grimeston tr. J. de Acosta Nat. & Morall Hist. Indies i. v. 17 The Portugals..a Nation that hath more discourse in the Arte of Navigation then any other. 6. Interaction, dealings, communication.Apparently rare before 20th cent.; in quot. 1603 perhaps with the narrower sense ‘familiar intercourse, familiarity’. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > relationship > correlation > [noun] > interaction interdeal1591 circulation1597 discourse1603 reciprocation1656 intercommunion1817 interaction1832 interplay1863 meshing1967 the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > knowledge, what is known > familiarity > [noun] enqueyntance1297 knowledgec1384 homeliness1402 acquaintancec1540 familiarity1574 habit1586 discourse1603 frequence1603 familiarness1612 conversationa1626 conversea1652 acquaintedness1661 intimacy1714 inquaintancea1834 hability1840 society > society and the community > social relations > [noun] conversationc1340 dolea1400 repairc1425 fellowshipc1450 frequentation?1520 communion1529 society1531 commerce1537 commercement1537 society1538 trade1555 intercourse1557 company1576 intercommunication1586 interdeal1591 entertain1602 consort1607 entregent1607 quarter1608 commercing1610 converse1610 trucka1625 congress1628 socialty1638 frequency1642 socialitya1649 socialness1727 intercommuniona1761 social life1812 dialogue1890 discourse1963 1603 W. Shakespeare Hamlet iii. i. 110 If you be faire and honest, Your beauty should admit no discourse to your honesty. 1963 Listener 21 Mar. 487/1 It enforces an economic embargo against the mainland, prohibits normal discourse between the two peoples. 2005 S. Pike We changed World xiv. 155 The Berlin Wall still prevented discourse between the East and West in Europe in 1984. 7. The body of statements, analysis, opinions, etc., relating to a particular domain of intellectual or social activity, esp. as characterized by recurring themes, concepts, or values; (also) the set of shared beliefs, values, etc., implied or expressed by this. Frequently with of or modifying word. ΚΠ 1931 Amer. Hist. Rev. 37 233 The form and substance of historical facts, having a negotiable existence only in literary discourse, vary with the words employed to convey them. 1949 A. Pap Elements Analyt. Philos. vi. 109 It is not necessary to postulate a mysterious realm of abstract entities, called ‘numbers’, as the subject-matter of mathematical discourse. 1958 Polit. Stud. 6 243 The term ‘process’ seems to enter social and political discourse today in two different ways. 1970 A. W. Gouldner Coming Crisis of Western Sociol. iv. 133 The domestic implications of this functional ideology were not lost upon the peers who shared its universe of discourse. 1976 T. Eagleton Crit. & Ideol. ii. 54 A dominant ideological formation is constituted by a relatively coherent set of ‘discourses’ of values, representations and beliefs. 1980 Feminist Stud. 6 278 Luce Irigaray's books insist that because it is philosophical discourse that lays down the law for all other discourses, the discourse of philosophy must first of all be overthrown and disrupted. 1986 Oxf. Art Jrnl. Jan. 49/1 What might be called the discourse of Vietnam has continued to be present in various social, political, and cultural forms. 2006 Wall St. Jrnl. 7 July a12/5 Islam..has adopted part of the anticapitalist discourse of communism. 8. Linguistics. A connected series of utterances by which meaning is communicated, esp. one forming a unit for analysis; spoken or written communication regarded as consisting of such utterances. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > linguistics > other schools of linguistics > [noun] > text or discourse analysis > unit of text or discourse text1935 discourse1951 stretch1961 1951 Z. S. Harris Methods in Struct. Ling. ii. 11 The universe of discourse for each statement in the descriptive analysis is a single whole utterance in the language in question. 1951 Z. S. Harris Methods in Struct. Ling. iii. 28 For the incidence of formal features of this type only long discourses or conversations can serve as samples of the language. 1957 G. L. Trager in Encycl. Brit. XIV. 162 h/2 The syntax of any language can be arrived at in analogous ways. The phonologically determined parts of a discourse are found, and their constituent phrases separated out. 1995 Lang. in Society 24 476 The matrix language..is..the language that provides the largest proportion of morphemes within a discourse of at least two sentences. Compounds C1. General attributive (in later use chiefly in senses 7 and 8). ΚΠ 1628 J. Earle Micro-cosmogr. xlviii. sig. I1v He is strangely vnfix't, and a new man euery day, as his last discourse-books Meditations transport him. 1884 E. L. Houghton tr. E. Reuss Hist. Sacred Script. New Test. I. i. 191 Substantially, however, the whole discourse material of Mark has been gone over again in Matthew. 1960 Amer. Speech 35 216 To him [sc. Henry Hoenigswald] the ‘meaning’ of morphemes is the range of their respective discourse-environments. 1967 Amer. Anthropologist 69 676/1 The same procedure is followed for developing a discourse topic. 1987 L. A. McCloskey in D. B. Carter Current Conceptions Sex Roles & Sex Typing ix. 143 Harding contends that women devise these subversive discourse strategies to gain access to the man's world. 2001 D. Crystal Lang. & Internet v. 143 General feedback or back-channelling reactions are also found as opening sentences—‘Yeah’, ‘Thanks’, ‘Wow!’, ‘Great idea’—as well as discourse features such as ‘Well’ and ‘Umm’. C2. discourse analysis n. Linguistics a method of analysing the structure of texts or utterances longer than one sentence, taking into account both their linguistic content and their sociolinguistic context; analysis performed using this method. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > linguistics > other schools of linguistics > [noun] > text or discourse analysis discourse analysis1952 text linguistics1973 1952 Z. S. Harris in Language 28 1 (title) Discourse analysis. 1952 Z. S. Harris in Language 28 1 One can approach discourse analysis from two types of problem, which turn out to be related. 1957 Z. S. Harris in Disc. Anal. Reprints (1963) 7 Discourse analysis is a method of seeking in any connected discrete linear material..which contains more than one elementary sentence, some global structure characterizing the whole discourse. 1983 G. Brown & G. Yule Discourse Anal. i. 26 ‘Doing discourse analysis’ certainly involves ‘doing syntax and semantics’, but it primarily consists of ‘doing pragmatics’. 2010 Observer 9 May (New Review section) 23/4 Retweeting is not just interesting in terms of discourse analysis; it's also the key to understanding why Twitter is a radically different form of social networking. discourse analyst n. Linguistics a person who engages in discourse analysis. ΚΠ 1958 Philos. Sci. 25 204/2 Such rules would determine the activity of competent historians. And they could be investigated by discourse analysts. 1987 Multilingua 6 248 Discourse analysts have concentrated mainly on the smaller, more easily identifiable units ‘move’ and ‘exchange’. 1996 Appl. Linguistics 17 128 This is fine for the adman, but irritating for the discourse analyst. discourse community n. Linguistics and Sociology a group of people sharing a common and distinct mode of communication or discourse, esp. within a particular domain of intellectual or social activity. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > [noun] > a community > other types of community churchOE phalanx1602 republic1610 phalanstery1839 faith community1896 technocracy1925 plural community1939 Dogpatch1946 discourse community1972 1972 C. Oglesby in D. C. Noel Seeing Castaneda (1976) iii. ix. 163 As it was understood by the discourse community that employed it, Snow's observation that a breach had arisen in the body-mind continuum was taken as implying..the desirability of its being repaired. 1982 Bull. Amer. Acad. Arts & Sci. Feb. 19 A question of the commensurability of conceptual structures from one discourse community to the next. 2010 D. S. Giannoni Mapping Acad. Values in Disciplines ii. 32 It is a fact of life that most people belong to several discourse communities.., whether of a vocational or private nature. discourse marker n. Linguistics a word or phrase whose function is to organize discourse into segments and situate a clause, sentence, etc., within a larger context. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > linguistics > linguistic unit > word > [noun] > other specific types of word hard word1533 household word1574 magic word1581 grandam words1598 signal word1645 book worda1670 wordie1718 my whole1777 foundling1827–38 keyword1827 Mesopotamia1827 thought-word1844 word-symbol1852 nursery word1853 pivot word1865 rattler1865 object word1876 pillow word1877 nonce-word1884 non-word1893 fossil1901 blessed word1910 bogy-word1919 catch-all1922 pseudo-word1929 false friend1931 plus word1939 descriptor1946 meta-word1952 discourse marker1967 shrub2008 1967 Found. Lang. 3 310 Performative verbs can be viewed as discourse operators or discourse markers, elements of the ‘metatext’, devices used to ‘place’ individual utterances in a larger context. 2000 Economist 24 June 8/4 I am an avid follower of The Economist's seamless uniformity of style: chatty discourse markers (for a start, touch wood, in any event, possibly, not exactly, astonishingly enough); opinionated colloquialisms [etc.]. discourse theory n. Linguistics and Sociology a theoretical approach which uses discourse analysis to examine various social concepts, structures, and institutions. ΚΠ 1969 College Composition & Communication 20 298/1 There are some useful cautions about determination of aims made in literary theory by W. K. Wimsatt and Monroe Beardsley which can be extended to discourse theory. 2007 J. Blain & R. Wallis Sacred Sites 12 To use discourse theory to problematise constructions of reality that may otherwise seem ‘commonsense’. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2013; most recently modified version published online June 2022). discoursev.α. 1500s dyscourse, 1500s–1600s discorse, 1500s– discourse, 1600s descourse; English regional (Isle of Wight) 1800s– discoous; also Scottish 1900s– discoorse; Irish English 1800s discoorse. β. 1500s–1600s discurse; Scottish pre-1700 disceurse, pre-1700 discurse. 1. a. transitive. To consider, go through, or treat of in speech or writing; to discuss, talk over; to talk or converse about; (formerly) †to tell, recount, relate (obsolete). Now rare (chiefly archaic and literary in later use). ΘΚΠ the mind > language > speech > conversation > converse with [verb (transitive)] > discuss or confer about bespeakc1175 roundc1275 talka1387 discuss1402 commune1423 common1435 discutec1440 ventilate?1530 discourse1546 confer1552 consult?1553 imparlc1600 parle1631 conjobble1692 to talk over1734 chew1939 punt1945 to kick about1966 1546 S. Gardiner Declar. True Articles f. lxxxi Adde not to gods worde. Whiche I haue harde many tymes vsed, lyke a key to cleue logges, and therefore haue discoursed thunderstandynge of it. 1556 N. Grimald tr. Cicero Thre Bks. Duties ii. f. 64v But these things ar wont to be more exactly discoursed [L. disputari], when we exhort men to philosophie. 1570 J. Foxe Actes & Monumentes (rev. ed.) II. 1891/2 We haue discoursed the story of Master Robert Glouer. 1594 C. Marlowe & T. Nashe Dido ii. sig. B3v May I entreate thee to discourse at large..how Troy was ouercome. a1652 J. Smith Select Disc. (1660) ix. iii. 393 Having discoursed the Nobleness of Religion in its original and Nature; we come now to consider the Excellency of Religion in its Properties. 1654 R. Whitlock Ζωοτομία 388 Alcibiades cut of his Dogs Taile..that so the talkative people might lesse discourse his other Actions. 1716 J. Collier tr. Gregory of Nazianzus Panegyrick upon Maccabees 57 I need not discourse, that Passion, Rancour, and Malice, are not allow'd a Christian. 1726 J. Swift Gulliver I. ii. viii. 154 Discoursing this matter with the Sailors while I was asleep. 1823 ‘B. Cornwall’ Flood of Thessaly 184 Moans, beside Its waters rising, discourse tales of sin. 1893 Manifesto Nov. 255/2 The learned Hindoos..Discoursed the sacred office of the soul. 1905 Edinb. Rev. Apr. 120 [The scene] of Virginia discoursing her Radicalism at the Duke's dinner table. 1913 H. de Reuter Let. 27 Nov. in G. E. Morrison Corr. (1978) II. 257 We invite your particular attention to the enclosed letter from our Chief Editor, with whom we have discoursed the matter in its various aspects. b. intransitive. Frequently with of, on, upon. To speak or write (in later use at length or formally) on a particular topic. Cf. discourse n. 3a. Also without construction: to hold forth, pronounce, sermonize. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > speech > speech-making > make a speech [verb (intransitive)] > discourse or lecture carpa1375 movec1400 descant1536 discourse1547 lecturea1592 homilize1624 dissert1657 lecturize1661 pronounce1663 to hold forth1668 to hold out1689 sermonize1753 dissertate1766 society > leisure > the arts > literature > prose > non-fiction > treatise or dissertation > write treatise or dissertation [verb (intransitive)] draw1340 discourse1547 1547 Bp. S. Gardiner Let. 23 Feb. (1933) 259 But to the matter of images, wherin I have discoursed at large. 1566 T. Blundeville Order curing Horses Dis. xxv. sig. F.iiiv, in Fower Offices Horsemanshippe Thus farre I haue discoursed of the Convulsion of Synewes, and of the causes thereof, according to the opinions of the learned Phisitians. 1593 R. Parsons & H. Walpole Newes from Spayne & Holland f. 23 This is the first point that was discoursed of. 1628 W. Prynne Briefe Suruay Mr. Cozens 23 They haue discoursed of these seuen sinnes. 1632 W. Lithgow Totall Disc. Trav. vi. 239 Josephus..largely discourseth of many hundred thousands famished..within this multipotent City. 1690 J. Locke Ess. Humane Understanding i. ii. 13 The general Maxims, we are discoursing of, are not known to Children, Ideots, and a great part of Mankind. 1750 N. Lardner Wks. (1838) III. 38 Mr. Wolff has discoursed largely of this matter. 1818 M. W. Shelley Frankenstein I. i. 58 The professor discoursed with the greatest fluency of potassium and boron, of sulphates and oxyds. a1862 H. T. Buckle Hist. Civilisation Eng. (1869) III. iv. 203 If he discoursed for two hours without intermission, he was valued as a zealous pastor. 1896 W. C. Russell What Cheer! xiii. 215 Beer flowed freely whilst the tragedy was discoursed of. 1919 ‘E. M. Delafield’ Consequences xii. 131 Noel often discoursed freely of a Utopian future for the tenantry at Trevose. 1980 Jrnl. Manx Mus. No. 89. 22/1 The early writers discoursed at some length on..the discovery of bog-oak in the curraghs. 2002 W. Self Dorian (2003) 267 The Director was holding the table's attention, discoursing on the scandalous situation in which he found himself. c. intransitive. To hold discourse; to converse, confer; to speak with another or others, to talk, converse. Frequently with preposition (esp. about, of, upon): to engage in discussion or conversation about a particular matter. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > speech > conversation > converse [verb (intransitive)] yedc888 speak971 rounda1200 talka1225 tevela1225 intercommunec1374 fable1382 parlec1400 reason?c1425 communique?1473 devise1477 cutc1525 wade1527 enterparle1536 discourse1550 to hold one chat, with chat, in chat1573 parley1576 purpose1590 dialogue1595 commerce1596 dialoguize1596 communicate1598 propose1600 dialogize1601 converse1615 tella1616 interlocute1621 interparle1791 conversate1811 colloquize1823 conversationize1826 colloque1850 visit1862 colloquy1868 to make conversation1921 the mind > language > speech > conversation > converse with [verb (transitive)] to speak to ——c825 speakc950 to speak with ——971 to speak unto ——c1386 entertain1553 to stand with ——1564 wissel1571 discourse1677 dialogue1681 converse1718 1550 [see discoursing n.]. 1586 T. Bowes tr. P. de la Primaudaye French Acad. I. 4 They discoursed togither of the corruption, which then was in all estates of France. 1600 W. Shakespeare Midsummer Night's Dream v. i. 150 For all the rest, Let Lyon, Moone-shine, Wall, and louers twaine, At large discourse . View more context for this quotation 1660 Exact Accompt Trial Regicides 154 We would sit up discoursing about these unhappy wars. 1677 C. Hatton in E. M. Thompson Corr. Family of Hatton (1878) I. 152 Several persouns are discoursed of to succeed him. 1726 W. R. Chetwood Voy. & Adventures Capt. R. Boyle 204 And he in return, instructed me in the Portugueze Language; so that in a short time we could discourse in either. 1790 J. Trapp tr. J. Lavallée Negro II. 196 We discoursed together for some time. 1840 Monthly Mag. Nov. 472 This said they all, discoursing of the ring, There never had been such a wonder-thing In ring-craft seen. 1871 B. Jowett tr. Plato Dialogues I. 87 I am quite willing to discourse with Socrates in his own manner. 1920 S. Lewis Main St. ii. 13 Precisely thus, and not in honeyed pentameters, discoursed Elaine and the worn Sir Launcelot. 1993 P. Ackroyd House of Dr. Dee (1994) ii. 53 I discoursed with him upon eccentricity and parallax. 2011 New Yorker 30 May 85/1 They prolong the anticipation by discoursing about tongue hockey, which He maintains the public doesn't like to watch. d. transitive. figurative. Esp. of a person's eyes: to be expressive of or give evidence of (something), as by movement, direction, etc. Also intransitive. Now rare. ΘΚΠ society > communication > [verb (transitive)] showc1175 conveyc1386 directa1400 address1490 communicate1529 participate1531 import1565 discourse1591 tradit1657 to set out1695 trajecta1711 1591 R. Greene Maidens Dreame sig. B3v His open hands discourst his inward grace. 1597 W. Shakespeare Romeo & Juliet ii. i. 55 She speakes, but she sayes nothing. What of that? Her eye discourseth, I will answere it. View more context for this quotation 1607 F. Beaumont Woman Hater iii. i. sig. E1 Ile promise peace And fould mine Armes vp, let but mine eye discourse. 1835 Spectator 13 June 568/1 His wife..reaches over to him with a letter in the other [hand], her lips and eyes discoursing her errand. 1960 Illustr. London News 9 Jan. 70/1 Joss Ackland, who appears as the knight, has the outward image; his eye discourses. e. transitive. Chiefly literary. To give out (music or sound).Frequently echoing quot. 1604. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > degree, kind, or quality of sound > pleasantness of sound > make pleasant sound [verb (transitive)] > make musical or harmonious > give forth musical sound discourse1604 1604 W. Shakespeare Hamlet iii. ii. 347 Giue it breath with your mouth, & it wil discourse most eloquent musique. View more context for this quotation 1756 Connoisseur No. 128. 772 She is always either humming a tune, or ‘discoursing most eloquent music’. 1780 Mirror No. 109 (1781) 3 331 When time had given her a little more composure, her lute discoursed melancholy music. 1837 T. Carlyle French Revol. III. iii. ix. 219 The tocsins discourse stern music. 1860 C. J. Lever Day's Ride xv, in All Year Round 3 Nov. 75/1 I am none the poorer in dispensing my knowledge than is the nightingale in discoursing her sweet music to the night air. 1881 Scribner's Monthly 21 267/2 The Ridgemont brass band was discoursing familiar strains. 1919 H. P. Adam Paris sees it Through i. 3 A tail-coated orchestra discoursed the latest negroid syncopations. 1934 A. Huxley Beyond Mexique Bay 119 The visitor of 1933 may think himself lucky if he hears a marimba orchestra discoursing tangos. 1964 Irish Press 1 Jan. 10/3 Taking his stand at some handy street corner and discoursing his music on his elegant and tuneful instrument. 2000 V. Ryan Where Cypress Rises 116 One of these sweet birds joined our picnic the other day, and discoursed most eloquent music during and after our repast. f. transitive. To utter, say (words, text, etc.); to speak or write formally. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > speech > speak, say, or utter [verb (transitive)] speakc825 queatheOE forthdoc900 i-seggenc900 sayeOE speak971 meleOE quidOE spella1000 forthbringc1000 givec1175 warpa1225 mootc1225 i-schirea1250 upbringa1250 outsay?c1250 spilec1275 talec1275 wisea1300 crackc1315 nevena1325 cast1330 rehearsec1330 roundc1330 spend1362 carpa1375 sermona1382 to speak outc1384 usea1387 minc1390 pronouncea1393 lancec1400 mellc1400 nurnc1400 slingc1400 tellc1400 wordc1400 yelpc1400 worka1425 utterc1444 outspeakc1449 yielda1450 arecchec1460 roose?a1475 cutc1525 to come forth with1532 bubble1536 prolate1542 report1548 prolocute1570 bespeak1579 wield1581 upbraid1587 up with (also mid) ——1594 name1595 upbrayc1600 discoursea1616 tonguea1616 to bring out1665 voice1665 emit1753 lip1789 to out with1802 pitch1811 go1836 to open one's head1843 vocabulize1861 shoot1915 verbal1920 be1982 a1616 W. Shakespeare Othello (1623) ii. iii. 274 Drunke? And speake Parrat?.. And discourse Fustian with ones owne shadow? 1654 R. Whitlock Ζωοτομία 446 Who it may be can discourse nothing but slander, or censure. 1744 J. Harris Three Treat. iii. i. 108 Not an Epicure has more Joy..in recollecting, what we have discoursed on these Subjects. 1849 U.S. Mag. & Democratic Rev. Feb. 113 Will it satisfy the popular hope to discourse most eloquent words? 1883 J. M. Sherwood Lamb in Midst of Throne xiv. 337 His heart ever warm and loving, his lips discoursing words of infinite tenderness. 1916 Sunday Chron. (Paterson, New Jersey) 26 Nov. 8/1 Everybody expects him to discourse words of praise for the untiring efforts of his wife in his behalf. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > speech > conversation > converse with [verb (transitive)] > spend in talking discoursea1616 talk1676 a1616 W. Shakespeare Cymbeline (1623) iii. iii. 38 How..shall we discourse The freezing houres away? View more context for this quotation a1625 W. Shakespeare & J. Fletcher Two Noble Kinsmen (1634) iii. vii. 48 Ile stay Cosen And ev'ry day discourse you into health. View more context for this quotation 1672 J. Eachard Mr. Hobbs's State Nature Considered 155 I always found it an endless thing to reason and discourse people into any soundness of mind. 1797 R. C. Dallas Lucretia ii, in Misc. Writings 134 I would..Discourse the weariness of time away. 1846 E. Robinson Cæsar Borgia III. xv. 308 He hath discoursed her into blessed and calm moods, wherein she weeps so that it does one good to see her. 1866 Contemp. Rev. 1 308 Are there not the Wanderer, and the Pastor, besides another wise speaker, to discourse him into a happy state of mind? h. transitive. To speak or converse with (a person), to talk to, address; to engage in discussion or conversation with, confer with; †to make a speech to, lecture (obsolete). Now rare (chiefly Irish English in later use).Common until the mid 18th cent. ΚΠ 1673 Char. Coffee-house 5 To discourse him seriously is to read the Ethicks to a Monkey. 1677 A. Yarranton England's Improvem. 25 All the People..will discourse their Parliament Men in these things hinted at. 1692 J. Locke 3rd Let. for Toleration ii. 69 A Friend whom I discoursed on this Point. a1695 A. Wood Life (1894) III. 408 He overtook me on horse back..and discours'd me aloud. 1702 L. Echard Gen. Eccl. Hist. ii. i. 152 While Peter thus discours'd the People. a1741 T. Browne Answer Disc. Bp. Stillingfleet (1749) 127 [They] made it their business, by discoursing the King, and sending Messages to the Duke, to bring them to an Agreement. 1763 B. Franklin Let. 9 Feb. in Wks. (1887) III. 229 That I might..have more convenient opportunities of discoursing them on our publick affairs. 1841 C. E. Tonna Personal Recoll. vii. 148 Whenever Pat came ‘to discourse me’ I got rich lessons in the very brogue itself. 1849 J. G. Whittier Leaves from Margaret Smith's Jrnl. in Prose Wks. (1889) I. 21 Sir Thomas discoursed us in his lively way. 1900 19th Cent. June 986 We know our Elizabeth, and shall be glad to meet her again, no matter on what subject she may choose to discourse us. 1915 P. A. Sheehan Graves at Kilmorna (1918) xl. 291 ‘But are you able to discourse them, Owen?’ said Myles, ‘the same as in the old times?’ ΘΚΠ the world > space > extension in space > extend in space [verb (intransitive)] bredeOE comeOE ylasta1175 drawc1180 areachc1225 lastc1275 tillc1290 durea1300 reachc1330 spreada1400 halec1400 reignc1400 splatec1440 extend1481 endure1523 span1535 discoursea1547 wina1578 distend1581 intend1594 sweep1789 outlie1876 the world > movement > progressive motion > move along [verb (intransitive)] goeOE lithec900 nimOE fare971 shakeOE strikea1000 gangOE gengOE seekc1000 glidea1275 wevec1300 hove1390 drevea1400 sway?a1400 wainc1540 discoursea1547 yede1563 trot1612 to get along1683 locomove1792 locomote1831 a1547 Earl of Surrey tr. Virgil Fourth Bk. Aeneas (1554) iv. sig. Ciii Wyth sylence [i.e. silent] looke discoursyng [L. pererrat] ouer all. 1555 R. Eden tr. Peter Martyr of Angleria Decades of Newe Worlde f. 213v A greate parte of lande..discoursynge towarde the West. 3. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > thought > continued thinking, reflection, contemplation > thinking about, consideration, deliberation > consider, deliberate [verb (transitive)] i-thenchec897 showeOE i-mune971 thinkOE overthinkOE takec1175 umbethinkc1175 waltc1200 bethinkc1220 wend?c1225 weighc1380 delivera1382 peisea1382 considerc1385 musec1390 to look over ——a1393 advise?c1400 debatec1400 roll?c1400 revert?a1425 advertc1425 deliberc1425 movec1425 musec1425 revolvec1425 contemplec1429 overseec1440 to think overc1440 perpend1447 roil1447 pondera1450 to eat inc1450 involvec1470 ponderate?a1475 reputec1475 counterpoise1477 poisea1483 traversec1487 umbecast1487 digest1488 undercast1489 overhalec1500 rumble1519 volve?1520 compassa1522 recount1526 trutinate1528 cast1530 expend1531 ruminate1533 concoct1534 contemplate1538 deliberate1540 revolute1553 chawa1558 to turn over1568 cud1569 cogitate1570 huik1570 chew1579 meditatec1580 discourse1581 speculate1599 theorize1599 scance1603 verse1614 pensitate1623 agitate1629 spell1633 view1637 study1659 designa1676 introspect1683 troll1685 balance1692 to figure on or upon1837 reflect1862 mull1873 to mull over1874 scour1882 mill1905 1581 G. Pettie tr. S. Guazzo Ciuile Conuersat. i. f. 19 He discoursed many thinges in his minde [Fr. Il faisoit en son esprit, vne infinité de discours; It. Discorreua infinite cose]. ?1611 G. Chapman tr. Homer Iliads ii. 2 He discourst, how best he might approue His vow made for Achilles grace. ΚΠ 1588 E. Aggas tr. Caueat for France 26 Euerie mans delight is priuately to discourse that the state is sicke. a1623 W. Pemble Vindiciae Fidei (1627) vi. ii. 198 Whence they proceed to discourse that Charity is the forme of Faith. 1660 Bp. J. Taylor Ductor Dubitantium I. i. ii. Rule 3 §5 If in philosophy we discourse that the true God, being a Spirit without shape or figure, cannot be represented by an image. c. intransitive. To employ reasoning or logic; to reason. Cf. discourse n. 1. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > understanding > reason, faculty of reasoning > process of reasoning, ratiocination > reason, ratiocinate [verb (intransitive)] argumentc1320 reason1551 discourse1599 ratiocinate1643 rationate1644 logicize1835 to think straighta1916 1599 J. Davies Nosce Teipsum 15 Nor can her selfe discourse, or iudge of ought, But what the sense Collects and home doth bring; And yet the power of her discoursing thought, From these Collections, is a Diuerse thing. a1652 J. Smith Select Disc. (1660) iv. vi. 98 A Mind, i.e. something within us that thinks, apprehends, reasons, and discourses. 1700 J. Dryden tr. Ovid Of Pythagorean Philos. in Fables 518 Those very Elements..Translated grow, have Sense, or can discourse. 1755 S. Johnson Dict. Eng. Lang. Discourse,..to reason; to pass from premises to conclusions. 1952 R. W. Mulligan tr. St. Thomas Aquinas Disputed Questions on Truth I. ii. 66 Every intellect that knows one thing from another is one which discourses and reasons. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2013; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.?c1400v.1546 |
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