单词 | exorbitance |
释义 | exorbitancen. The quality or condition of being exorbitant. ΘΚΠ the world > space > direction > [noun] > straight or constant direction > deviation from exorbitancea1628 exorbitationa1628 deflection1665 deviation1675 divergence1837 the world > action or operation > inaction > not doing > abstaining or refraining from action > [noun] > avoiding an action or condition > turning aside from a course of action divagation1560 swaya1586 deviation1603 deflection1605 recess1605 recession1614 exit1615 non-residence1615 exorbitancy1623 exorbitancea1628 exorbitationa1628 aberrancy1646 aberrance1661 variationa1662 departurea1694 resilience1838 a1628 J. Preston Life Eternall (1631) i. iv. 66 Now, whence comes this uneven walking, this exorbitance of the wheeles. 1663 J. Spencer Disc. Prodigies 133 All these exorbitances in Nature serve to foil and set off the general beauty..of its Works. 1684 tr. T. Bonet Guide Pract. Physician xi. 373 The first exorbitance [in a case of mania] was very violent and lasted for ten months. 1686 R. Boyle Free Enq. Notion Nature 149 I shall not..mention those Grand Anomalies, or Exorbitances. 1707 J. Floyer Physician's Pulse-watch 186 By the Pulse we find by what Method we must regulate all Exorbitances. 1842 T. De Quincey Philos. Herodotus in Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. Jan. 20/2 Our growing exorbitance from our limits warns us to desist. 2. Divergence from the right path; transgression of law or morality; misconduct, lawlessness, criminality; an instance of the same. archaic. ΘΚΠ society > law > rule of law > lawlessness > [noun] tyrantry1340 tyranny1475 licentiousness1553 lawlessness1591 exorbitance1611 exorbitancy1619 anarchism1642 outlawry1836 outlawry1869 jungle law1894 law of the jungle1894 1611 J. Speed Hist. Great Brit. ix. viii. 504/2 A proiect..so execrable, as well may iustifie King Iohns exorbitances. a1618 J. Sylvester Hymn St. Lewis 324 Eyes deep-vail'd with Ignorance Or Knowledge stained with Sinnes Exorbitance. 1664 B. Gerbier Counsel to Builders (new ed.) i. sig. d2v Beware of ill Builders..since by their Exorbitances, happen many irreparable accidents. 1770 Ann. Reg. 1769 32/2 A picture..sullied with the most dreadful exhorbitances. 1810 W. Scott Lady of Lake Notes p. xxxvii The Border robbers..had committed many exorbitancies. 1850 G. Grote Hist. Greece VII. ii. lv. 46 Such unprincipled exorbitances of behaviour. 3. Excessiveness, extravagance; an instance of this. Now chiefly, outrageous excessiveness, of demands, charges, prices, estimates, etc. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > exaggeration, hyperbole > [noun] > excessiveness, extravagance extremitya1533 exorbitancya1638 exorbitance1646 transvolation1649 hyperbole1652 extremism1865 1646 Mrq. Ormond in Carte Life (1735) III. 470 To heighten the exhorbitance of their expectations and demands. 1706 S. Garth Dispensary (ed. 6) ii. 19 They riot still Unbounded in Exorbitance of Ill. 1793 S. Horsley Serm. (1824) I. 198 The barriers..against..the exorbitance of licentiousness..will soon be borne down. 1852 J. R. McCulloch Treat. Taxation (ed. 2) ii. v. 212 The exorbitance of the duties on tea and tobacco. 1869 R. Browning Ring & Bk. IV. x. 9 The exorbitance Of sin in this one sinner. 1884 Law Rep.: Chancery Div. 26 240 The exorbitance of Hobson's charge for collecting the debts. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1894; most recently modified version published online June 2021). < n.1611 |
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