单词 | domicile |
释义 | domicilen. 1. A place of residence or ordinary habitation; a dwelling-place, abode; a house or home. Also transferred the dwelling-place of an animal, and figurative. ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > dwelling place or abode > [noun] resteOE worthineeOE settlea900 wickc900 houseOE erdinga1000 teld-stedec1000 wonningc1000 innOE bewistc1200 setnessc1200 wanea1225 i-holda1250 wonec1275 wunselec1275 wonning-place1303 bigginga1325 wonning-stede1338 tabernaclea1340 siegec1374 dwelling-placec1380 lodgingc1380 seea1382 tabernaclea1382 habitationc1384 mansionc1385 arresta1400 bowerc1400 wonning-wanec1400 lengingc1420 tenementc1425 tentc1430 abiding placea1450 mansion place1473 domicile1477 lendingc1480 inhabitance1482 biding-place?1520 seat1535 abode1549 remainingc1550 soil1555 household1585 mansion-seata1586 residing1587 habitance1590 fixation1614 situation?1615 commoratorya1641 haft1785 location1795 fanea1839 inhabitancy1853 habitat1854 occupancy1864 nivas1914 downsetting1927 1477 W. Caxton tr. R. Le Fèvre Hist. Jason (1913) 48 Thalyaunce of my frende and of my domycille. c1550 Complaynt Scotl. (1979) 5 Fureous mars, that hes violently ocupeit the domicillis of tranquil pace. 1599 A. M. tr. O. Gaebelkhover Bk. Physicke 55 Take..the whytest snayles, with their domicills. 1605 F. Bacon Of Aduancem. Learning ii. sig. Ee1v That part of learning, which answereth to one of the Celles, Domiciles, or offices of the Mind of Man; which is that of the Memorie. View more context for this quotation 1794 W. Jones tr. Inst. Hindu Law vi. 43 Let him have no culinary fire, no domicil. 1857 G. H. Lewes Biogr. Hist. Philos. (rev. ed.) 152 That a Tub could suffice for a domicile we may guess from Aristophanes. 1871 R. Ellis tr. Catullus Poems lxiii. 53 To be with the snows, the wild beasts, in a wintery domicile. 2. a. Law. The place where one has his home or permanent residence, to which, if absent, he has the intention of returning. ΚΠ 1766–80 Ld. Mansfield in Burrows Settlement Cases No. 134. 421 The master's place of abode, his domicil, can never be supposed to be at Scarborough. 1861 G. Ross W. Bell's Dict. Law Scotl. (rev. ed.) (at cited word) Where a company has a domicile in more than one country, the proceedings in bankruptcy in any one of the domiciles of the company comprehend the whole personal estate of the entire concern. 1875 E. Poste tr. Gaius Institutionum Iuris Civilis (ed. 2) iii. 336 Domicil is the place which a man has voluntarily chosen for his permanent residence. b. The fact of being resident; residence. ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > [noun] wonningc960 bewistc1200 livingc1350 lodging1362 habitationc1374 indwellinga1382 dwellingc1384 inhabitinga1400 bidingc1400 inhabitationc1400 residencec1405 mansiona1425 winningc1425 demur1444 abodec1450 resianty1467 demurrance1509 resiance1566 place-being1567 residency1579 resiancy1580 commorancy1586 residing1587 inhabitance1588 abodement1592 commorance1594 habit1603 commoration1623 inwoning1647 inhabitancy1681 habitancy1792 domicile1835 occupying1849 abidal1850 tenancy1856 1835 Tomlins' Law Dict. s.v. (L.) The residence of a party for forty days constitutes a domicile as to jurisdiction in Scotland. 1862 London Rev. & Weekly Jrnl. 30 Aug. 180 The American domicile does not take away the power which the State to which the foreigner belongs possesses of interfering for his protection. 1863 C. Lyell Geol. Evid. Antiq. Man 2 A place not only of domicile, but of sepulture. 3. Commerce. The place at which a bill of exchange is made payable. ΚΠ 1892 J. Adam Commercial Corr. 26 The bank or other place where a bill is made payable..is called the domicile of the bill, which is said to be domiciled there. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1897; most recently modified version published online March 2022). domicilev. 1. a. transitive. To establish in a domicile or fixed residence; to settle in a home. ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > providing with dwelling > [verb (transitive)] couchc1400 inhabit1413 seat1586 fix1638 haft1728 domiciliate1778 home1802 domicile1809 settle1853 adopt1897 1809 T. E. Tomlins Jacob's Law-dict. at Domicile The county in which he was domiciled at the time of his death. 1822 J. Jekyll Let. 31 Dec. in Corr. (1894) 132 The Hollands were domiciled in Burlington Street. 1862 London Rev. & Weekly Jrnl. 30 Aug. 180 Aliens who are domiciled in America without having become citizens in the fullest sense. b. transferred and figurative. ΚΠ a1849 J. C. Mangan Poems (1859) 387 Souls wherein dull Time Could domicile decay or house Decrepitude. 1874 J. P. Mahaffy Social Life Greece ix. 278 Medicine had been long domiciled at Athens. 2. Commerce. To make (a bill of exchange, etc.) payable at a certain place. ΚΠ 1809 R. Langford Introd. Trade 18 He should write on it with his acceptance, the address where it will be honoured; such bills are termed domiciled. 1882 R. Bithell Counting-house Dict. s.v. All the Brazilian loans are said to be domiciled at Messrs. N. M. Rothschild & Sons. 3. intransitive (for reflexive). To have one's home, dwell. ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > [verb (intransitive)] > establish residence wickc897 telda1325 buildc1340 nestlea1382 to take (up) one's inn (or inns)a1400 to hold (also keep, make, take, etc.) one's mansiona1425 to take one's lodgec1475 reside1490 inhabit1548 to settle one's rest1562 to sit down1579 to set up (or in) one's staff (of rest)1584 to set (up) one's rest1590 nest1591 to set down one's rest1591 roost1593 inherit1600 habituate1603 seat1612 to take up (one's) residencea1626 settle1627 pitch1629 fix1638 locate1652 to marry and settle1718 domesticate1768 domiciliate1815 to hang up one's hat1826 domicile1831 to stick one's stakes1872 homestead1877 to put down roots1882 to hang one's hat1904 localize1930 1831 Fraser's Mag. V. 2 She domiciles far down in pebbled well. 1834 T. Medwin Angler in Wales I. 166 God forbid that the white ants should ever domicile here. Derivatives ˈdomiciled adj. ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > [adjective] > established in residence steadfasta1272 stationary1604 settled1611 domestic1632 domesticant1642 domiciliated1782 domiciled1855 1855 H. H. Milman Hist. Lat. Christianity VI. xiv. vii. 533 Each was a domiciled stranger. 1858 P. L. Simmonds Dict. Trade Products Domiciled Bill, a bill not made payable at the residence or place of business of the acceptor, but directed for payment by the acceptor at the time of his acceptance. ˈdomiciling n. ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > providing with dwelling > [noun] seatinga1599 settlea1660 domiciling1885 domicilement1888 1885 E. Clodd Myths & Dreams i. iv. 71 After the domiciling of the stories. ˈdomicilement n. the act of domiciling or fact of being domiciled. ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > providing with dwelling > [noun] seatinga1599 settlea1660 domiciling1885 domicilement1888 1888 Charity Organiz. Rev. Apr. 141 Laws of Aethelstan on the domicilement of lordless men. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1897; most recently modified version published online June 2022). < n.1477v.1809 |
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