单词 | fax |
释义 | † faxn.1 Obsolete. 1. The hair of the head. ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > hair > hair of head > [noun] lockeOE faxc900 hairc1000 hairc1000 headOE topc1275 toppingc1400 peruke1548 fleece1577 crine1581 head of hair1587 poll1603 a fell of haira1616 thatcha1634 maidenhair1648 chevelure1652 wool1697 toupet1834 nob-thatch1846 barnet1857 toss1946 c900 tr. Bede Eccl. Hist. ii. xvi He..hæfde blæc feax. OE Beowulf 2967 Swat ædrum sprong forð under fexe. c1000 Sax. Leechd. I. 110 Wiþ þæt ðæt mannes fex fealle. c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1978) l. 12398 [Heo] luken heom bi uaxe [c1300 Otho þan heere] and laiden heom to grunde. a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 7244 Thoru his fax his force was tint. c1440 Bone Flor. 1545 Then they lowsyd hur feyre faxe, That was yelowe as the waxe. c1480 (a1400) St. Martha 7 in W. M. Metcalfe Legends Saints Sc. Dial. (1896) I. 285 Scho was far of fax and face. a1522 G. Douglas tr. Virgil Æneid (1957) ii. v. 51 Hys fax and berd was fadyt quhar he stude. 1548 Hall's Vnion: Henry VIII f. xv Ye fassis of their head set ful of new deuised facions. 1575 J. Rolland Treat. Court Venus i. f. 17v With countinance and facts virginall. 1606 P. Holland in tr. Suetonius Hist. Twelve Caesars Annot. 30* Whose lokes and faix were so slicke and glib with sweet oyles, that they shone againe. 1610 P. Holland tr. W. Camden Brit. i. 723 Fax in the old English tongue signifieth..the haire of the head.] 2. derisively. The face. [Perhaps a misunderstanding of the obsolete word as preserved in poetic phrases; some other Scots examples in 16th cent. would admit of a similar interpretation.] ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > external parts of body > head > face > [noun] leera700 nebeOE onseneeOE wlitec950 anlethOE nebshaftc1225 snouta1300 facec1300 visage1303 semblantc1315 vicea1325 cheera1350 countenance1393 front1398 fashiona1400 visurec1400 physiognomyc1425 groina1500 faxa1522 favour1525 facies1565 visor1575 complexiona1616 frontispiecea1625 mun1667 phiz1687 mug1708 mazard1725 physiog1791 dial plate1811 fizzog1811 jiba1825 dial1837 figurehead1840 Chevy Chase1859 mooey1859 snoot1861 chivvy1889 clock1899 map1899 mush1902 pan1920 kisser1938 boat1958 boat race1958 punim1965 a1522 G. Douglas in tr. Virgil Æneid (1959) viii. Prol. 32 The fillok hyr deformyt fax wald haue a fair face. Compounds fax-net n. a hairnet. ΚΠ OE Antwerp Gloss. (1955) 48 Reticulum, feaxnet. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1895; most recently modified version published online December 2021). faxn.2 colloquial. Facts. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > [noun] > truth known by observation, fact truth1395 feata1400 fact1542 fact?1560 vidimus1610 unquestionable1661 fax1837 1837 W. M. Thackeray in Fraser's Mag. XVI. 644 (title) The Yellowplush correspondence. Fashnable fax and polite annygoats. 1945 (title of aviation news-sheet) Plane fax. 1977 Sounds 1 Jan. 20/1 Balanced fax about sniffin' are hard to come by—even Release, the London-based advice/aid centre is short on information. 1987 London Evening Standard 6 Mar. 25 (heading) Food fax. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1993; most recently modified version published online March 2022). faxn.3 Commerce. Facsimile, facsimile telegraphy. Also, a facsimile copy obtained in this way. Frequently attributive. ΘΚΠ society > communication > telecommunication > communication of visual images > [noun] facsimile1877 telephotography1880 phototelegraphy1886 telephoty1889 picture telegraphy1896 telechirograph1903 telautography1905 radiophotography1915 telephoto1923 wirephoto1923 telefacsimile1940 telefax1941 fax1946 faxing1982 society > communication > telecommunication > communication of visual images > [adjective] telephotic1878 telephotographic1879 telautographic1888 phototelegraphic1907 fax1972 society > communication > telecommunication > communication of visual images > [noun] > image or copy obtained by phototelegram1871 telephotograph1880 telephotogram1900 radiophotograph1922 wirephoto1923 photo-radiogram1924 wire photograph1925 radiophoto1926 photogram1928 fax1980 fax-back1988 1946 Billboard 27 Apr. 7/4 Home Fax 18 months away... Facsimile busted right out of the laboratory Wednesday..at a demonstration of the Hogan Faximile system for the press. 1948 Time 12 Jan. 62/3 The big news about ‘fax’ was that, technically, the bugs were pretty well worked out of it. 1957 Editor & Publisher 13 Apr. 57/1 (heading) Contrast cut from fax pix. 1969 Pop. Electronics Feb. 33/1 The facsimile process (or ‘fax’ as it is called in the trade) has had its ups and downs. 1971 D. M. Costigan Fax p. vii Probably the most impressive thing about facsimile (fax, for short)..is its enormous potential. 1972 Sci. Amer. Sept. 140/3 Futurists predict that a ‘fax’ terminal in the home or business office may someday supplement or even replace the mail carrier. 1976 New Scientist 30 Sept. 683/1 If the letter is put—by hand—on to a facsimile (‘fax’) machine for transmitting, this is acceptable, too. But it is equally possible for the computer to generate the fax signals electronically. 1980 J. McNeil Spy Game xvii. 179 I want a fax of the passport photo wired from Washington. 1984 Times 21 Feb. 25/1 STC Business Systems has launched a new fax machine equipped with automatic transmissions and stacking systems... It is claimed that it can transmit an A4 page across the world in 15 seconds. 1984 Daily Tel. 28 Nov. 8 (advt.) NEFAX is UK and European brand leader in fax. Draft additions 1993 b. A fax machine. ΘΚΠ society > communication > telecommunication > communication of visual images > [noun] > apparatus for telectrograph1857 telelectrograph1857 telectroscope1878 telelectroscope1879 telephotograph1880 telautographa1884 telephote1896 phototelegraph1907 telewriter1907 telecopier1966 fax1983 1983 Forbes 29 Aug. 132/1 Most machines are now manufactured in Japan, even though they have American labels. This has turned the major American fax manufacturers into vendors. 1986 Personal Computing Dec. 162/2 Digital faxes are quite common in businesses, primarily because they use the same protocols and can communicate with each other regardless of manufacturer. 1987 Sunday Mail Mag. (Brisbane) 16 Aug. 8/2 He keeps permanently in touch with his Los Angeles office by portable fax and telex. 1989 Lit. Rev. Aug. 58/1 His Elizabethan forebears had nothing coming between them and their audience but the London air—no Fax or answer machine. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1989; most recently modified version published online March 2022). faxv. Commerce. To transmit (a document, etc.) in facsimile by scanning it and transmitting the resulting signal by wire or radio for use in reproducing the document at the receiving end. ΘΚΠ society > communication > telecommunication > communication of visual images > [verb (intransitive)] fax1979 society > communication > telecommunication > communication of visual images > [verb (transitive)] telephote1880 telefax1943 fax1979 1979 Datamation Aug. 75/3 (heading) Who will fax the mail? 1983 Libr. Assoc. Rec. Nov. 406/1 The BLLD had installed a couple of machines and was prepared to fax requests to any library which had the necessary hardware to receive it, and was prepared to pay. 1984 Sunday Times 11 Mar. 69/1 Stories edited by journalists are sent by facsimile transmission—‘faxed’—across Europe to the printing works. 1986 Bookseller 3 Oct. 1422/2 Titles not in stock are gathered by the central computer and listed by publisher in ISBN sequence before being faxed, telexed or skypacked to the individual publishers. Derivatives ˈfaxer n. (also faxxer (nonstandard, rare)) a person who faxes. ΘΚΠ society > communication > telecommunication > communication of visual images > [noun] > one who faxer1988 1988 Newsweek 25 July 54/1 Evans is one happy faxer. ˈfaxing n. (also faxxing (nonstandard)) the action of the verb. ΘΚΠ society > communication > telecommunication > communication of visual images > [noun] facsimile1877 telephotography1880 phototelegraphy1886 telephoty1889 picture telegraphy1896 telechirograph1903 telautography1905 radiophotography1915 telephoto1923 wirephoto1923 telefacsimile1940 telefax1941 fax1946 faxing1982 1982 Financial Times 7 Apr. iii. p. vii/1 Faxing systems are a rapidly growing part of business communications and British Telecom is determined to make them easier, simpler and cheaper. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1993; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.1c900n.21837n.31946v.1979 |
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