单词 | alloy |
释义 | alloyn. I. Senses relating to the mixing of metals. 1. The comparative purity of gold or silver; fineness. Cf. allay n.1 1a. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > metal > precious metal > [noun] > gold or silver > degree of purity of allaya1325 toucha1325 assayc1430 finesse1463 betternessc1530 alloy1593 standarda1684 sterling1696 titre1839 1593 J. Eliot Ortho-epia Gallica ii. 169 They shalbe..turned into pure gold, fine, and of better alloy then any naturall, or mynerall gold can be. 1604 E. Grimeston tr. J. de Acosta Nat. & Morall Hist. Indies iv. xii. 245 Silver drawne with Mercurie, is so fine, that it never abates of two thousand three hundred and fourescore of alloy [Sp. ley]. 1677 W. Badcock Touch-stone Gold & Silver Wares (title page) Discovering..how to know Adulterated Wares from those made of the True Standard Alloy. 1685 R. Morden Geogr. Rectified 396 The Mony of this Kingdom is of a good Alloy. 1704 Boston News-let. 4 Dec. 2/2 The Currency of all Pieces of Eight of Peru, Dollars, and other Foreign Species of Silver Coins, whether of the same of Baser Alloy, shall,..stand Regulated, according to their Weight and Fineness. 1752 T. Carte Gen. Hist. Eng. III. 229 This gentleman had coined a vast quantity of testons, of a base alloy and under standard. 1826 W. Russell Treat. Crimes & Misdemeanors I. ii. ii. 69 Silver of sterling alloy or better. 1871 C. Davies Metric Syst. iii. 65 The civil authority stamps its image, to authenticate its weight and alloy. 1911 W. W. Wroth Catal. Coins of Vandals, Ostrogoths & Lombards p. lxiv In respect of fineness the denarius is of good alloy. 1960 Encycl. Islam (new ed.) I. 75/1 Money of good alloy, carefully coined. 2003 T. F. H. Allen et al. Supply-side Sustainability iii. 125 To pay for these wars, the alloy of the gold solidus had to be debased by adding silver. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > monetary value > price > discount > [noun] > discount in exchanging swap1595 alloy1598 1598 J. Florio Worlde of Wordes L'aggio, the aloye or losse of money by exchange, coyning, or banke. 1672 A. Marvell Rehearsal Transpros'd i. 271 Much after the same current Rate and Standard: only there hath been some little difference in the alloy. 3. a. Less valuable metal added to a metal of greater value; esp. less valuable metal added to gold and silver coinage. Cf. allay n.1 3. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > metal > alloy > [noun] > alloy with baser metal > inferior metal mixed with one of greater value allayc1400 alloy1615 1615 T. Tomkis Albumazar iv. i. sig. G4 So doth alloy Make gold, that else were vselesse, seruiceable. 1656 T. Hobbes Six Lessons vi. 59 in Elements Philos. Another Treatise of the Proportions of Alloy in Gold and Silver coine. 1719 W. Wood Surv. Trade (ed. 2) 345 Half the Silver is taken out, and Copper or other Alloy put into the place. 1786 Crit. Rev. Nov. 387 The difference was owing to the silver having too much alloy in it. 1807 T. Young Course Lect. Nat. Philos. I. xii. 124 Five grams of silver, including one tenth of alloy, make a franc. 1860 J. A. Froude Hist. Eng. (ed. 2) V. xxv. 109 Bad shillings, in which 4 ounces of pure metal were mixed with 8 of alloy. 1876 J. E. T. Rogers Man. Polit. Econ. (ed. 3) xi. 4 Only a practised eye can detect the amount of alloy in an ornament professedly manufactured of gold. 1915 W. W. Wall War & our Financial Fabric i. 10 It was decreed that this coin should consist of an arbitrary quantity of gold, mixed with alloy. 1963 H. C. Syrett & J. E. Cooke Papers Alexander Hamilton VII. 468 When the Mint Law was enacted, Congress added even more alloy than Hamilton had recommended. 2002 O. Prakash in A. K. Bagchi Money & Credit Indian Hist. 42 The purity level of the metal used and the alloy content in the coin. b. Originally: †a mixture of a precious metal with one of lesser value (obsolete). Later: a metal made by intimately combining two or more metals or (less commonly) metals and non-metallic elements, typically to improve a physical property (as strength, hardness, or corrosion resistance). Also: the condition of metals so combined (rare).ferro-, light, super-, Wood's alloy, etc.: see the first element. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > metal > alloy > [noun] layc1480 metal1541 loy1598 mixed metal1617 alloy1689 allay1796 intermetallic1956 society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > metal > alloy > [noun] > alloy with baser metal allay1348 basenessa1475 alloy1689 1689 C. Mather Small Offers toward Service of Tabernacle 90 Gold is a pure metal... It will not readily admit a Mixture or an Alloy with more imperfect metals; unless with Silver. 1723 J. Darby tr. S. Ali Hist. Timur-Bec II. v. xxvii.198 The Syrian money was of a base alloy. 1783 Encycl. Brit. X. 8172/1 An alloy of red copper and zinc, made in the best proportions, to imitate silver and gold. 1785 T. Elliot tr. A.-F. de Fourcroy Elem. Lect. Chem. & Nat. Hist. II. xxxix. 86 When tin is fused with copper, a more weighty metal results... This alloy is the more white, brittle, and sonorous, according to the quantity of tin. 1827 M. Faraday Chem. Manip. xx. 538 Making the alloy of the metal and the platina more complete. 1889 G. M. Hopkins Exper. Sci. (1893) xviii. 423 In this battery one element consists of an alloy of two parts of antimony and one of zinc. 1910 Pop. Mech. 10 Dec. 862/1 An alloy of chromium and cobalt that combines the hardness and malleability of the best tool steel with a resistance to corrosion not possessed by any of the steel products. 1946 Thorpe's Dict. Appl. Chem. (ed. 4) VII. 47/1 Steel may be roughly defined as an alloy of iron and carbon containing up to 1·7% carbon. 2010 New Yorker 20 Sept. 34/1 Meticulous re-creations of extreme facial expressions, carved in alabaster and cast in an alloy of tin and lead. c. Metal consisting of a particular alloy whose use is typical in a particular context and which is therefore not specified; (now esp.) one based on aluminium or magnesium (cf. mag n.7 1). Frequently attributive (cf. Compounds 1). ΚΠ 1851 Debow's Rev. July 96/1 There shall be on the engine of every steam-boat..in every boiler or flue, one or more discs made of alloy, melting at a given temperature. 1886 Engineering 29 Oct. 462/3 A pipe, the top end of which is solid and made of alloy and placed in close proximity to the end of a steam valve spindle. 1905 Fireproof Mag. Feb. 103 The first protection is a fuse made of alloy contained in a tube of vulcanized fibre. 1976 R. Berry Before forever After in A. Richards Penguin Bk. Welsh Short Stories 278 We looked down. Big Strapper all right, standing hunched over a pair of alloy crutches. 1998 D. Weber In Enemy Hands 463 Dirtsiders tended to think of starships as solid chunks of alloy wrapped around passages and compartments. 2010 Searcher Feb. 14/1 It should be very base (only one third fine silver to two thirds alloy) but it appears to be struck in good silver. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > condition or state of being mixed or blended > [noun] > action or fact of mixing mingingOE mongling?c1225 mellinga1375 commixtiona1398 mixtiona1398 compounding1398 meddlinga1400 intermelling1413 mashing1440 medlure?a1475 commistion1495 contemperation1502 intermixtion?1520 mixing1525 mixture1530 mixting1532 minglinga1535 mingle1548 temperature1550 contemperament1565 commixture1567 intermingling1576 commixing1583 intermixture1592 mixc1595 minglement1602 interblending1605 contempering1609 intermeddling1611 contemperating1617 mistion1617 immixtion1653 immistion1658 alloy1672 intermixing1690 blendure1701 intermingledom1753 blending1795 comminglement1833 commingling1854 co-mingling1856 immixture1859 interminglement1873 interfuse1887 melding1939 1672 I. Newton in Philos. Trans. 1671 (Royal Soc.) 6 3083 If any two Colours be mixed, which in the series of those, generated by the Prisme, not too far distant one from another, they by their mutual alloy compound that colour, which in the said series appeareth in the mid-way between them. 1791 Gentleman's Mag. Dec. 1122 The condensation produced by the alloy of alkali with water. 1834 London Med. Gaz. 2 Aug. 636/2 The experiments of Herschel, who called into action an enormous power by the alloy of a mass of mercury with a millionth part of its weight of sodium. 1888 Engineering 6 Apr. 346/1 By alloy of lead with cadmium, the latter was caused to oxidise with great rapidity when melted. II. Figurative uses. 5. Intrinsic character or nature; quality. Cf. allay n.1 1b. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > disposition or character > [noun] > qualities, stuff conditionsc1374 allaya1456 mettle?1520 stuff1557 alloy1594 wood1594 intrinsical1655 cast1711 calibre1808 timber1906 the world > existence and causation > existence > intrinsicality or inherence > essence or intrinsic nature > [noun] pitheOE i-cundeeOE roota1325 substancec1330 juicec1380 marrowa1382 formc1385 acta1398 quidditya1398 substantial forma1398 inward1398 savourc1400 inwardc1450 allaya1456 essencya1475 being1521 bottom1531 spirit?1534 summary1548 ecceity1549 core1556 flower1568 formality1570 sum and substance1572 alloy1594 soul1598 inwardness1605 quid1606 fibre1607 selfness1611 whatness1611 essentialityc1616 propera1626 the whole shot1628 substantiala1631 esse1642 entity1643 virtuality1646 ingeny1647 quoddity1647 intimacy1648 ens1649 inbeing1661 essence1667 interiority1701 intrinsic1716 stamen1758 character1761 quidditas1782 hyparxis1792 rasa1800 bone1829 what1861 isness1865 inscape1868 as-suchness1909 Wesen1959 1594 R. Carew tr. J. Huarte Exam. Mens Wits 2nd Proeme sig. Avv If thy wit be of the common and vulgar alloy [It. se il tuo ingegno è dei communi, & uolgari]. 1647 N. Bacon Hist. Disc. Govt. 27 To inhaunce the price of a Presbyter somewhat within the aloye of a Bishop. 1674 N. Fairfax Treat. Bulk & Selvedge 136 Workings of so lofty and refined an alloy. 1737 M. Green Spleen 38 Miserable elves,..Curst with such souls of base alloy. 1775 R. Jephson Braganza i. i. 6 Minds of coarse alloy But bluntly feel the touch of others wrongs. 1871 N. F. Cooke Satan in Society vi. 192 A valid generation, which, crossed in turn with blood of good alloy, will produce another generation. 1895 Athenæum 16 Feb. 224/3 That grave periodical in which every young numismatist is expected to win his spurs—or have his alloy assayed. 1901 Black & White Budget 9 Nov. 206/1 The mother sitting on the doorstep knows that little baby's prattle brings a ray of sunshine into her alloy. 2010 J. B. Collins tr. F. Braudel in P. Daileader & P. Whalen French Historians xxi. 324 His humanism of sound alloy. 6. Something which is mixed with another thing of different character or quality; esp. an undesirable element which impairs or debases something good. Also: admixture of something undesirable. Cf. allay n.1 2b, 4. Now rare.See also no joy without alloy at joy n. Additions. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > harm or detriment > [noun] > a harmful thing or person > element allaya1450 alloy1602 the world > action or operation > harm or detriment > [noun] > by impairing element allay1579 alloy1712 1602 J. Manningham Diary 6 Aug. (1976) 80 My dealings may be free from base alloy, but yet not currant amongst honourable persons. a1682 Sir T. Browne Christian Morals (1716) i. 32 There is Dross, Alloy, and Embasement in all human Temper. 1712 Spectator No. 548. ⁋4 Every one has in him a natural alloy, tho' one may be fuller of dross than another. 1788 J. Madison in Federalist Papers xli. 38 The purest of human blessings must have a portion of alloy in them. 1816 J. Austen Emma I. i. 2 Disadvantages which threatened alloy to her many enjoyments. View more context for this quotation 1849 C. Brontë Shirley II. iii. 83 A base alloy of moral cowardice. 1863 A. Jameson Legends Monastic Orders (ed. 3) 166 A face..so spiritualised, so refined from all earthly alloy. 1932 R. Niebuhr Moral Man & Immoral Society iv. 93 Unquestionably there is an alloy of projected self-interest in patriotic altruism. 1980 J. Barnes Metroland ii. ii. 94 All the best lies have an alloy of truth. 7. A mixture, blend, or combination of two or more things. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > condition or state of being mixed or blended > [noun] > a mixture mingingOE mungc1175 meddlingc1384 mellaya1400 mixture?a1425 commixtion?a1439 medley1440 brothc1515 mingly1545 mingle1548 maslin1574 miscellane1582 commixture1590 flaumpaump1593 salad1603 miscellany1609 common1619 cento1625 misturea1626 mixtil1654 concrete1656 contemperation1664 ragout1672 crasis1677 alloy1707 mixtible1750 galimatias1762 misc.1851 syllabub1859 mixtry1862 cocktail1868 blend1883 admix1908 mix-up1918 mix1959 meld1973 katogo1994 1707 tr. M. Dacier Comm. of Hierocles in Life of Pythagoras 244 This Alloy of our Will and of his [sc. God's] Judgement, is what produces that which he [sc. Pythagoras] calls Fortune. 1849 J. A. Froude Nemesis of Faith 149 Why must it [sc. the Bible] be wholly true? Why not contain the same alloy of true and false to be found in all other books? 1897 Month Jan. 37 It is half-truths, alloys of truth and falsehood, which do mischief. 1913 H. A. Jones Found. National Drama iv. 79 Is not all the greatest literature of the world cunningly fashioned from an alloy of body and spirit? 1997 N.Y. Mag. 5 May 113 (caption) The Franco-Italian alloy that's become known as ‘New York’ cuisine. 2005 Wire Dec. 72/1 ‘Listen Attentively’ joins the swelling ranks of Fela tributes, this one nailing the essential toughness in Afrobeat's alloy of clavé, snare and stabbing horn riffs. Compounds C1. General attributive, esp. in sense 3c, as alloy casting, alloy content, alloy frame, etc. ΚΠ 1879 Electrician 7 June 32/1 An isolated thermo-electric couple is ordinarily composed of a prism in metal or alloy casting. 1909 Automobile 16 Sept. 462/1 The equipment necessary for determining alloy contents, carbon, silicon, sulphur, phosphorus, manganese, copper, arsenic, etc. 1944 Jrnl. Royal Aeronaut. Soc. 48 365 In liquid-cooled engines, separate steel cylinders were generally abandoned in favour of monobloc light alloy castings. 1957 New Scientist 19 Dec. 12/3 The trainee had to make up her own weaves with elastic on a light alloy frame. 2000 Jrnl. Membrane Sci. 170 91 The composition and phase structures of the alloy film were studied. 2010 Coarse Fisherman Apr. 57/2 This extra-wide bed features a lightweight alloy frame. C2. alloy junction n. Electronics (now chiefly historical) a junction (junction n. 2b) formed by adding one or more impurity metals to a semiconductor (so forming an alloy). ΚΠ 1954 Physica 20 1048 Ge bar with alloy junction on surface. 1978 Solid-state Electronics 21 1270/2 The output characteristics of an alloy junction transistor. 1990 P. R. Morris Hist. World Semiconductor Industry iv. 34 The alloy junction device was more efficient as an electronic switch than the grown junction transistor and for this reason was widely used in computers. alloy steel n. an alloy of steel and another metal. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > metal > alloy > [noun] > steel alloys meteor powder1827 meteor steel1827 meteoric steel1831 alloy steel1887 alnico1935 1887 Amer. Engineer 13 Apr. 127/1 The nearer the steel comes to being pure iron and carbon the better it is. The last remark has not application to what might be called alloy steel. 1952 H. Manley Non-destructive Testing iii. 21 Internal cracks in forged alloy steels and lamination in thick plate are easily detected. 2004 Tool & Machinery Catal. 2005 (Axminster Power Tool Centre Ltd.) ix. 3/3 The high quality alloy steel blade is clenched into a heavy brass backing. alloy wheel n. a wheel made of a special alloy; esp. one on a motor vehicle, typically made of an alloy of aluminium or (formerly) magnesium; usually in plural.Alloy wheels on cars have been favoured on account of their lighter weight and their bright appearance. ΚΠ 1913 Gen. Electr. Rev. 16 912/2 Hardness and conductivity, the essential characteristics, are obtained in the case of the alloy wheels by a mixture over 90 per cent copper with a small amount of tin. 1969 C. Trickey Building & Racing 850 Mini i. 10/2 Mag. alloy wheels are highly desirable from other points of view. 1977 Amer. Motorcyclist Oct. 17 (advt.) The Lester Cast Alloy Wheel is the best and toughest there is. 2005 Daily Tel. 22 June 3 (advt.) Sports bumpers, front fogs, alloy wheels and one year's free insurance. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2012; most recently modified version published online December 2021). alloyv. I. Senses relating to the mixing of metals. 1. transitive. To combine (metals) so as to form an alloy; to combine (a metal) with one or more other metals or (less commonly) non-metallic elements, typically to improve a physical property (as strength, hardness, or corrosion resistance). Usually in passive.Originally with reference to the addition of another metal to gold or silver. Cf. sense 2. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > working with specific materials > working with metal > work with metal [verb (transitive)] > mix metals lay1489 alchemy1615 alloy1625 1625 S. Purchas Pilgrimes III. v. ii. 951 (margin) Fine Siluer for worke must be alloyed. 1720 tr. N. Lémery Course Chym. (ed. 4) iii. 88 If..one uses in this Operation common Tin, alloyed with Copper, the Oil..will be more Escarotick. 1756 R. Rolt New Dict. Trade Blare, a small copper coin, alloyed with a little silver, struck at Bern. 1789 R. Kerr tr. A. Lavoisier Elements Chem. 211 These alloys should be named according to the metal in largest proportion in the mixture or combination; thus the term alloy of gold and silver [Fr. alliage d'or et d'argent], or gold alloyed [Fr. allié] with silver, indicates that gold is the predominating metal. 1803 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 93 112 Mr. Brisson..has observed, that a mutual penetration takes place, when eleven parts of gold are alloyed with one of copper. 1836–41 W. T. Brande Man. Chem. (ed. 5) 605 Rhodium is insoluble in acids, but, when alloyed with copper or lead, the nitrohydrochloric acid dissolves it. 1875 R. Hunt & F. W. Rudler Ure's Dict. Arts (ed. 7) I. 93 Gold and silver, in their pure state, are too soft.., but when alloyed with a little copper, they acquire the requisite hardness. 1909 Workshop Receipts (new ed.) I. 41/1 Pure gold is but little used in the arts: it is too soft. It is generally alloyed with silver and copper, both to harden it and depreciate its value. 1936 E. A. Atkins & A. G. Walker Electr. Arc & Oxy-acetylene Welding (ed. 3) xix. 282 When copper is alloyed with zinc it is usually called brass. 1967 O. Almeida Metalworking iv. 63 Lead melts at 327°C and pure tin melts at 232°C but when they are alloyed together they start to melt..at about 183°C. 2009 Dayton (Ohio) Daily News (Nexis) 27 Jan. d6 Plain steel may be alloyed with special elements to produce steel for a particular use. 2. transitive. To combine (a precious metal) with a less valuable one in order to lower its standard or quality without this being apparent, or to improve its durability; spec. to debase by this means. Usually in passive. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > working with specific materials > working with metal > work with metal [verb (transitive)] > mix metals > alloy with baser metal allayc1400 alloy1663 1663 R. Boyle Some Considerations Usefulnesse Exper. Nat. Philos. ii. App. 313 The Copper wherewith Silver-Coyns are wont to be alloy'd. 1692 J. Locke Some Considerations Lowering Interest 134 Most of the Silver of the World, both in Money and Vessels, being alloy'd, (i.e. mixed with some baser Metals). 1763 W. Lewis Commercium Philosophico-technicum 40 The golden covering may be in some parts worn off; or the base metal, with which it had been iniquitously alloyed, may be corroded by the air. 1872 Bk. Hall Marks 111 A large quantity of jewellery has been made of Gold alloyed in this manner. 2009 Times (Nexis) 12 Oct. 25 The king had commissioned a goldsmith to manufacture a pure gold crown for him, but suspected that it had been fraudulently alloyed with silver. 3. intransitive. Of metal: to form an alloy. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > metal > alloy > become alloy [verb (intransitive)] alloy1807 1807 A. Aikin & C. R. Aikin Dict. Chem. & Mineral. II. 39/2 Potassium and zinc alloy with difficulty on account of the volatility of the potassium at the heat required. 1875 R. Hunt & F. W. Rudler Ure's Dict. Arts (ed. 7) I. 99 Gold and iron alloy with ease. 1906 J. G. Goesel Minerals & Metals xxxii. 93 The cerites..might be employed to alloy with other metals and to reduce their oxids, if the raw material should be found to be more abundant. 2006 J. F. King in H. E. Friedrich & B. L. Mordike Magnesium Technol. iv. 139 Metallic zinc and silver alloy easily with magnesium. II. Figurative uses. 4. transitive. To temper, moderate, or subdue; to allay. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > manner of action > lack of violence, severity, or intensity > make less violent or severe [verb (transitive)] temperc1000 keelc1175 slakea1300 abate?c1335 settle1338 swagea1340 modifyc1385 rebatea1398 bate1398 moder1414 releasea1425 remiss?a1425 moderate1435 alethe?1440 delaya1450 appal1470 addulce1477 mollify1496 mean?a1513 relent1535 qualify1536 temperatea1540 aplake1578 slack1589 relaxate1598 milden1603 mitigate1611 relax1612 alleniate1615 allay1628 alloy1634 castigate1653 smoothen1655 tendera1656 mitify1656 meeken1662 remitigate1671 obviscate1684 slacken1685 chastise1704 dulcify1744 absorb1791 demulceate1817 chasten1856 modulate1974 mediate1987 the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > destroy [verb (transitive)] > crush, stifle, or overwhelm (feelings, etc.) > storms, etc. allay1493 alloy1634 1634 T. Jackson Knowledg of Christ Jesus iii. xxviii. 305 No flesh could see the glory of God and live, save only as the brightnesse of it was to bee alloyed by a vaile a flesh. 1659 R. Baxter Five Disputations of Church-government iv. 378 None of these or other Reasons will alloy the Imperious distemper of the Proud. 1661 E. Hickeringill Jamaica 10 The heat in the day time being alwaies alloy'd with the Sea Breezes. 1714 T. Swinden Enq. Nature & Place of Hell viii. 174 In some Countries that are exceeding hot in themselves, the cool Breezes do so alloy the sultry Quality of the Climate. 1875 J. Ruskin Lect. Art (ed. 2) ii. 42 Gentle and submissive persons, who might by their true patience have alloyed the hardness of the common crowd. 1930 S. Hoffenstein Year in, you're Out 143 Who measured the immeasurable void, And all its dread of darkness thus alloyed? 2000 N. S. Murrell in H. Gossai & N. S. Murrell Relig., Culture & Trad. in Caribbean i. 13 To..alloy the fears of the plantocracy and the state about so-called ‘suspicious’ church activities. 5. transitive. To qualify or diminish (a pleasure, feeling, etc.) by the admixture of something unpleasant; to contaminate or adulterate. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > decrease or reduction in quantity, amount, or degree > reduce in quantity, amount, or degree [verb (transitive)] littleeOE anitherOE wanzelOE lessc1225 slakea1300 littenc1300 aslakec1314 adminisha1325 allayc1330 settle1338 low1340 minisha1382 reprovea1382 abatea1398 rebatea1398 subtlea1398 alaskia1400 forlyten?a1400 imminish14.. lessenc1410 diminish1417 repress?a1425 assuagec1430 scarcec1440 small1440 underslakec1440 alessa1450 debate?c1450 batec1460 decreasec1470 appetisse1474 alow1494 mince1499 perswage?1504 remita1513 inless?1521 attenuate1530 weaken1530 defray1532 mitigate1532 minorate1534 narrow?1548 diminuec1550 extenuate1555 amain1578 exolve1578 base1581 dejecta1586 amoinder1588 faint1598 qualify1604 contract1605 to pull down1607 shrivel1609 to take down1610 disaugment1611 impoverish1611 shrink1628 decoct1629 persway1631 unflame1635 straiten1645 depress1647 reduce1649 detract1654 minuate1657 alloy1661 lower?1662 sinka1684 retreat1690 nip1785 to drive down1840 minify1866 to knock down1867 to damp down1869 scale1887 mute1891 clip1938 to roll back1942 to cut back1943 downscale1945 downrate1958 slim1963 downshift1972 the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > condition or state of being mixed or blended > mix or blend [verb (transitive)] > add as ingredient to a mixture > qualify by admixture > adulterate adulterc1384 feigna1398 sophisticatec1400 infect?1440 counterfeit1495 adulterate?1526 dash1548 falsify1562 elay1573 abuse1574 base1581 corrupt1581 debase1591 adulterize1593 compass1594 sophisticate1604 allay1634 huckster1642 hucksterize1646 cauponize1652 alloy1661 balderdash1674 impurify1693 doctor1726 vitiate1728 sand1851 dope1898 the world > action or operation > harm or detriment > cause or effect (harm) [verb (transitive)] > do harm or injury to > affect detrimentally > by an unpleasant element allayc1225 sauce?1518 distemper1594 allay1634 alloy1832 1661 J. Evelyn Panegyric to Charles II 4 I will not go too far in repeating the sorrowes which are vanish't..; least whilst we strive to represent the vices of others, we seem to..alloy our present rejoycing. 1663 E. Waterhouse Comm. Fortescue's De Laudibus Legum Introd. sig. c2 It leaves men in the dark, and subjects their Actions to uncertainty, which alloyes the credit and grandeur of them. a1701 H. Maundrell Of Valley of Salt in Journey to Jerusalem (1721) 9 Some [heaps of Salt] being exquisitely White, Others alloy'd with Dirt. 1785 E. K. Mathews Constance I. ii. 9 She was soon convinced that the most supreme felicity of this world is alloyed. 1832 H. Martineau Ella of Garveloch x. 117 Their external prosperity was not alloyed by troubles from within. 1881 Cornhill Mag. May 634 His evident disapproval..served the proverbial purpose of alloying her otherwise perfect happiness. 1907 R. Barr Meas. of Rule (1908) xiv. 191 I do not think that envy of his undoubted capacity, his marvellous knowledge, and his almost uncanny skill in debate, alloyed my feelings towards him. 1951 ‘J. Wyndham’ Day of Triffids xv. 259 My pleasure in him was at times alloyed with misgivings over the state of things. 2000 Sleazenation Dec. 73/3 Performances were alloyed with elements from the French feerie, the burlesque and operetta. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2012; most recently modified version published online December 2021). < n.1593v.1625 |
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