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单词 father
释义

fathern.

Brit. /ˈfɑːðə/, U.S. /ˈfɑðər/
Forms: early Old English feadur (Mercian, genitive), early Old English feadrum (Mercian, dative plural), early Old English feodrum (Mercian, dative plural), Old English fadero (Northumbrian, nominative plural), Old English fador (chiefly Northumbrian), Old English fadr- (non-West Saxon, inflected form), Old English fadur (Northumbrian, genitive), Old English fædær (inflected form, rare), Old English faeder (rare), Old English fædes (transmission error), Old English fædir (Northumbrian, dative), Old English faedor- (Northumbrian, inflected form), Old English fædor (Anglian), Old English fædr- (inflected form), Old English fædter (transmission error), Old English fædyr (rare), Old English fæðer (dative, perhaps transmission error), Old English feddr- (rare), Old English fęder, Old English fedr- (Mercian and Kentish), Old English fędr- (inflected form), Old English fedur (rare), Old English fadr- (non-West Saxon, inflected form), Old English–early Middle English fæder, Old English (rare)–early Middle English (chiefly south-west midlands) feder, Old English (rare) Middle English–1500s fader, late Old English fæðeres (genitive, perhaps transmission error), late Old English fieder (Kentish, inflected form), late Old English fedor- (inflected form), late Old English (early Middle English south-west midlands) feader, early Middle English fædeer (genitive, in copy of Old English charter, transmission error), early Middle English faðer (perhaps transmission error), early Middle English uæder (south-west midlands), early Middle English veder (south-west midlands), Middle English faddir, Middle English faddur, Middle English faddyr, Middle English fadere, Middle English faderr ( Ormulum), Middle English fadire, Middle English fadour, Middle English fadr- (inflected form), Middle English fadur, Middle English fadure, Middle English faduree, Middle English fadyre, Middle English faider, Middle English fathir, Middle English fathyr, Middle English faþer, Middle English fayder, Middle English fayer, Middle English ffadere, Middle English ffadur, Middle English ffadyr, Middle English uader, Middle English uadir, Middle English vadir, Middle English 1600s vader, Middle English–1500s ffader, Middle English–1600s fadir, Middle English–1600s fadyr, Middle English–1600s ffather, Middle English–1700s fadre, late Middle English fade (transmission error), late Middle English fadrie (transmission error), late Middle English– father, 1500s fathre, 1500s ffadir, 1500s ffayther, 1500s vather (south-western), 1500s–1600s fathere, 1500s–1600s fatther, 1600s feather, 1600s fother; English regional 1600s– vather (southern), 1700s veather (south-western), 1700s– fadder, 1800s– faather, 1800s– fader, 1800s– fadther (northern), 1800s– fadthre (northern), 1800s– faither, 1800s– fatther, 1800s– fayder (northern), 1800s– fayther, 1800s– feder (northern), 1800s– fether (northern), 1800s– fethur (northern), 1800s– feyther, 1800s– fiather (Wiltshire), 1800s– vaather (southern), 1900s faayther (Lincolnshire), 1900s– faader (southern), 2000s– faathur (south-western); U.S. regional 1800s– fader, 1800s– farruh (southern, in African-American usage), 1900s– farrah (southern, in African-American usage), 1900s– fayther; Scottish pre-1700 fadar, pre-1700 faddir, pre-1700 faddire, pre-1700 faddr- (inflected form), pre-1700 faddyr, pre-1700 faddyre, pre-1700 fadere, pre-1700 fadir, pre-1700 fadire, pre-1700 fadr- (inflected form), pre-1700 fadre, pre-1700 fadyr, pre-1700 fadyre, pre-1700 faiddir, pre-1700 fathar, pre-1700 fathir, pre-1700 fathyr, pre-1700 fathyre, pre-1700 fauder, pre-1700 faydyr, pre-1700 feather, pre-1700 feder, pre-1700 (1700s– northern) fader, pre-1700 1700s– father, pre-1700 (1800s– Shetland) faider, pre-1700 1800s– faither, pre-1700 (1900s– north-eastern) fadder, 1800s fether, 1800s feyther, 1800s– faeder (Shetland), 1800s– fedder (northern), 1900s– faader (Shetland), 1900s– fayder (northern), 1900s– feyder (northern); Irish English (Wexford) 1800s vather.
Origin: A word inherited from Germanic.
Etymology: Cognate with Old Frisian fader , feder (West Frisian faar ), Old Dutch fadar , fader (Middle Dutch vāder , Dutch vader ), Old Saxon fadar , fader (Middle Low German vāder ), Old High German fater (Middle High German vater , German Vater ), early Scandinavian (runic: Sweden) faþiR , Old Icelandic faðir , Norn (Orkney) fa , (Shetland) fy (definite form fyrin ), Old Swedish faþir (Swedish fader , (now usually) far ), Old Danish fathær (Danish fader , (now usually) far ), Gothic fadar (in an isolated attestation in Galatians 4:6; the ordinary word is atta : see dad n.1), < the same Indo-European base as Sanskrit pitṛ , Old Avestan ptar (Younger Avestan pitar ), ancient Greek πατήρ , classical Latin pater ( > Old French paire , pedre , Old French, Middle French pere , French père , Old Occitan, Occitan paire , Catalan pare , Spanish padre , Portuguese pãe , Italian padre ), Oscan patir , Gaulish ater- , atr- , Early Irish athair , Armenian hayr , Tocharian A pācar , Tocharian B pācer , probably originally a derivative (with suffixation) of a nursery word of the pa type (see papa n.2). A similar suffix is found in other Indo-European relationship terms (compare mother n.1, brother n., daughter n.), although these suffixes may ultimately be of different origin.Form and pronunciation history. Spellings with medial th , reflecting the change of postvocalic /d/ to /ð/ before syllabic /r/ or /ər/ (as in mother n.1, hither adv., weather n.), are securely attested from c1400. Apparent earlier examples spelt with ð may show transmission errors, either showing a simple error for d (since the letters differ only by a cross-stroke), or reflecting more general confusion of the graphemes ð and d at the point when the former was becoming obsolete. The English regional (northern) instances with -dther may preserve an interim step in the development from /d/ to /ð/ (so E. J. Dobson Eng. Pronunciation 1500–1700 (ed. 2, 1968) II. §384 and R. Jordan Handb. der mittelenglischen Grammatik (1934) §298), or may reflect a later development arising from association of the form father with words in which th is the reflex of Old English ð (so J. Wright Eng. Dial.Gram. (1905) 297); compare similar spellings with -dther of e.g. brother n., feather n. Modern regional forms with d either preserve the original consonant or show a subsequent change of /ð/ to /d/ (as e.g. in some northern and north-eastern varieties of Scots). Middle English and early modern English had pronunciations with both a long and a short vowel in the first syllable. The modern standard pronunciation with /ɑː/ shows the result of a more recent (post-Great Vowel Shift) lengthening (as also in e.g. rather adv.), while other pronunciations with a long vowel or diphthong (as /ˈfeːðə(r)/, /ˈfeɪðə(r)/, etc., now only found in regional use) show the operation of the Great Vowel Shift on the reflex of Middle English long ā ; see further discussion in E. J. Dobson Eng. Pronunciation 1500–1700 (ed. 2, 1968) II. §§53–5. Inflection. In Old English usually a strong masculine originally belonging to the small class of kinship nouns in –r . An isolated weak genitive plural form is also attested. Original inflection as a kinship term is chiefly reflected in Old English by the frequency of unmarked genitive and dative singular forms (West Saxon fæder ; compare Old Saxon fader , Old High German fater ; genitive and dative singular). Forms with i-mutation of the stem vowel would be expected in the dative and this is apparently attested in Northumbrian feder , but feder otherwise appears chiefly in varieties where feder is also the regular reflex of the nominative (Mercian and Kentish). The early Mercian genitive singular form feadur (with back mutation of the stem vowel) reflects survival of an inherited vowel u in the second syllable in the genitive (frequently assumed to reflect the Indo-European inflectional ending); compare early Northumbrian genitive singular -fadur (in uuldurfadur ; perhaps also later Northumbrian fador , fadur ) and Old Icelandic genitive singular fǫður . Beside these inherited forms, analogical genitive and dative forms are also attested from Old English onwards; compare West Saxon genitive singular fæderes . The unmarked genitive is still frequent in early Middle English, but by the beginning of the early modern English period the s -genitive had become standard. The unmarked genitive survives beyond Middle English in certain Scots compounds (see Compounds 2b). Specific senses. In many senses after corresponding uses, often in post-classical Latin, of classical Latin pater. In sense 3 ultimately after Hebrew 'aḇ forefather, progenitor, extended use of 'aḇ male parent. In spiritual father at sense 7a after post-classical Latin pater spiritualis (see spiritual adj.).
1.
a. The male parent of a human being; a man in relation to his child or children. Also occasionally: a male animal in relation to its offspring. (The male counterpart of mother n.1 1a.)Father is frequently preceded by a possessive (as ‘my father’) or used as a form of address (where, except occasionally in poetic language, my is commonly omitted); it is also used without possessive (e.g., in quot. 1778) in the manner of a proper name.As a form of address, father now tends to be regarded as formal or archaic, while more colloquial equivalents, esp. dad n.1, are preferred (see also daddy n., pa n.1, papa n.2, pop n.4, etc.).absentee father, baby-father, birth father, expectant father, putative father, Roman father, weekend father, etc.: see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > kinsman or relation > parent > father > [noun]
fatherOE
sirec1250
authora1398
flesh-fathera1400
genitor1447
daddy1523
dad1533
bab1598
patera1600
dada1672
relieving officer1677
papa1681
pappy1722
baba1771
pa1773
governor1783
paw1826
fatherkin1839
pop1840
bap1842
pap1844
da1851
baba1862
puppa1885
pops1893
poppa1897
pot and pan1900
papasana1904
daddy-o1913
bapu1930
baby-father1932
abba1955
birth father1977
OE Old Eng. Hexateuch: Deut. (Claud.) xxiv. 16 Ne slea man fæderas for suna gylton, ne suna for fædera gylton.
OE tr. Apollonius of Tyre (1958) xvii. 26 Leofa fæder, þu lyfdest me litle ær þæt ic moste gifan Apollonio swa hwæt swa ic wolde.
a1200 MS Trin. Cambr. in R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies (1873) 2nd Ser. 165 Ðe sune wussheð þe fader deað ar his dai cume.
a1300 (c1275) Physiologus (1991) l. 11 Ðanne reiseð his fader him [sc. a lion cub] mit te rem ðat he makeð.
c1300 Holy Cross (Laud) 457 in C. Horstmann Early S.-Eng. Legendary (1887) 14 He liet cristny and maken him king of al is fader lond.
a1375 (c1350) William of Palerne (1867) l. 241 A kowherde, sire,..is my kynde fader.
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add. 27944) (1975) II. xviii. lxxii. 1225 Þe coldenesse of þe fader and of þe moder haþ maystry in þe mule.
1422 in R. W. Chambers & M. Daunt Bk. London Eng. (1931) 305 (MED) My fathers laste wyll was þat hys londes schuld return Vn-to þe eyre Male & neuer to þe female.
a1425 (?a1400) G. Chaucer Romaunt Rose (Hunterian) (1891) l. 4860 Whanne Fader or moder arn in grave.
a1500 Warkworth's Chron. (1839) 10 Herry Percy, whos fadere was slayne at Yorke felde.
1567 W. Painter Palace of Pleasure II. xxv. f. 237v Then she sayde vnto him: Father, doubt not at all that my heart shall faile in performance of your commaundement.
a1625 F. Beaumont & J. Fletcher Four Plays in One in Comedies & Trag. (1647) sig. Dddddddd4v/2 My mother, father, and uncle love me most indulgently, being the onely branch of all their stocks.
1670 G. Havers tr. G. Leti Il Cardinalismo di Santa Chiesa ii. ii. 144 Ginetti..proved his Fathers own Son.
1722 D. Defoe Jrnl. Plague Year 137 To send a preventative Medicine to the Father of the Child.
1753 J. Hanway Hist. Acct. Brit. Trade Caspian Sea I. xiv. 94 For a son to call his father by that endearing name.
1778 F. Burney Evelina II. xxiii. 222 Father grew quite uneasy, like, for fear of his Lordship's taking offence.
1815 W. Wordsworth White Doe of Rylstone ii. 28 But not for lordship or for land, My Father, do I clasp your knees.
1851 G. H. Miles Governess viii. 99 ‘A good father is a daughter's best safeguard.’ ‘Do you call me a good father?’ he retorted.
1857 W. M. Thackeray in Harper's Mag. Dec. 95/2 Only this mornin', when you went out, my darter says, ‘Father, do you know why you have a black coat on?’
1884 Ld. Tennyson Becket v. ii. 189 His father gave him to my care.
1934 Esquire Dec. 49/3 Daughter of Mrs. Sally Alden, father unknown! What malarkey!
1958 P. Gibbs Curtains of Yesterday xiv. 130 ‘How do you think I look, Father?’ she cried gaily. ‘Ravishing!’ he said, good-humouredly.
1973 Iowa Rev. 4 52 Course, I get some good natured kidding, now that I'm going to be a father again, at my age.
2004 R. Dawkins Ancestor's Tale 237 My father regaled my little sister and me with bedtime stories.
b. A man who undertakes the responsibilities of a parent towards a child; a man who adopts a child as his own; a stepfather. Also: a father-in-law.adoptive father, foster-father, good-father, nourish-father, nurse-father, stepfather, etc.: see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > kinsman or relation > parent > father > [noun] > -in law, step, or adoptive
fatherOE
OE Paris Psalter (1932) lxvii. 5 Ealle..þa þe wydewum syn wraðe æt dome oþþe steopcildum wesen strange fæderas.
?a1160 Anglo-Saxon Chron. (Laud) (Peterborough contin.) anno 1140 Þe ærcebiscop & te wise men..makede ðat sahte ðat..he helde him for fader & he him for sune, & sib & sæhte sculde ben betwyx heom.
1597 W. Shakespeare Romeo & Juliet iv. i. 2 My Father Capolet will haue it so. View more context for this quotation
1600 W. Shakespeare Much Ado about Nothing iv. i. 23 Stand thee by Frier, father..Will you with free and vnconstrained soule Giue me this maide your daughter? View more context for this quotation
a1616 W. Shakespeare Macbeth (1623) iv. ii. 64 If you would not [weep for him], it were a good signe, that I should quickely haue a new Father . View more context for this quotation
1699 J. Potter Archæologiæ Græcæ II. iv. xv. 369 Whoever was thus adopted, was at Athens first made free of the City, and then had his Name enroll'd in the Tribe and Ward of his new Father.
1726 A. Smith Mem. Jonathan Wild 197 To convince my new Father and Mother of the Truth of what I say, as well as my intirely beloved, but much more vertuous Spouse.
1796 N.-Y. Weekly Mag. 6 July 6/2 The elder brother bidding him be a father to his children, and recommended his wife to his protection.
1821 Q. Rev. Jan. 463 His condition was not improved when he was taken from school to thresh in a barn, with his legal father.
1885 Frank Leslie's Pleasant Hours Aug. 100/2 I'm your father now, old fellow—think you can learn to call me papa?
1914 Catholic World Feb. 622 ‘He is my father—the only father I have ever known.’ ‘But not the only father you have ever had,’ Wyverne reminded her.
1976 A. Tyler Searching for Caleb xi. 198 ‘Oh, I do hope Father likes the–’ ‘Remind me to ask Father if he wouldn't care to—’ But Duncan was the one Lucy thought of, not her father-in-law at all.
2011 S. Mansfield Where has Oprah taken Us? i. 12 Having no children of his own, he had become her father.
c. A person who assumes the role of father of the bride at a wedding by giving her away at the altar (see to give away 2 at give v. Phrasal verbs 1). Also in father-in-church. Obsolete.nuptial father: see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > marriage or wedlock > wedding or nuptials > people connected with wedding > [noun] > one who brings or gives away bride
bride-leader1552
father1600
despouser1635
nuptial father1748
1600 W. Shakespeare Much Ado about Nothing v. iv. 15 You must be father to your brothers daughter, And giue her to young Claudio. View more context for this quotation
1640 R. Brathwait Ar't Asleepe Husband? 136 He goes on still and without interruption, till he came to Who giveth this woman to bee married, &c. and holding her by the hand, looking ever when some one or other would doe the office of a Father, to give her.
1719 D. Defoe Farther Adventures Robinson Crusoe 191 I was Father at the Altar..and gave her away.
1758 C. Lennox Henrietta I. i. ix. 66 The clerk acted as father to the weeping bride.
1832 M. R. Mitford Our Village V. 216 Where's Miss Judith? Go and give her notice that we are coming, and that I have bespoken to be father at the wedding.
1871 Mrs. H. Wood Dene Hollow I. vi. 151 ‘I shall want you to stand father-in-church to this young lady,’ said Geoffrey to the clerk.
1907 O. Harper Fighting Bill vii. 111 The poor girl..allowed herself to be led to her place by Teddy, who was to act as father and give the bride away.
d. colloquial and regional. Used by a mother to address or refer to the father of her children.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > marriage or wedlock > married person > married man > [noun] > husband > term of address
father1855
1855 C. Dickens Little Dorrit (1857) i. ii. 12 ‘Never mind, Father, never mind!’ said Mrs. Meagles.
1865 W. B. Forfar Kynance Cove vii. 43 ‘That's the way weth fa-ather, always, es n't et, Alice Ann?’ said Mrs. Millar, in a sarcastic tone, turning to her daughter.
1960 C. Watson Bump in Night iv. 40 If anyone was to blame it was Mr Biggadyke. He nearly lost father his job over that business.
2008 D. Sharp Mama does Time xxxv. 239 ‘I'll be back for you in a couple of hours, Mother.’ ‘I'll be right here, Father.’
2. In theological contexts.
a. God considered as a father in relation to Christ, to humankind in general (considered as his offspring, the objects of his loving care, or as owing him obedience and reverence), or to Christians (as his children by adoption or spiritual rebirth). Also occasionally in non-Christian contexts: a god, a male deity. Cf. Our Father n. 1, All-Father n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > deity > Christian God > [noun] > according to other attributes
horn of salvation (health)c825
fatherOE
Our FatherOE
leecha1200
searcher of (men's) heartsa1382
untempter1382
headstone of the cornerc1400
Valentinec1450
illuminator1485
sun?1521
righteous maker1535
shepherd1535
verity1535
strengthener1567
gracer1592
heart-searcher1618
heartbreaker1642
sustainera1680
philanthropist1730
the invisible1781
praise1782
All-Father1814
wisdom1855
omniscient1856
engracer1866
inbreather1873
God of the gaps1933
the great —— in the sky1968
the world > the supernatural > deity > [noun]
godeOE
deityc1374
higher powerc1384
princec1384
divinityc1386
governorc1400
powerc1425
numen1495
fear1535
heaven1554
godheada1586
godhood1586
landlorda1635
supreme1643
supercelestial1652
supernal1661
universality1681
father1820
unspeakable1843
Molimo1861
Mlimo1897
superperson1907
somebody up there1972
sky fairy1997
OE West Saxon Gospels: Matt. (Corpus Cambr.) xxiii. 9 An ys eower fædyr se þe on heofonum ys.
OE Ælfric Homily (Cambr. Ii.4.6) in J. C. Pope Homilies of Ælfric (1967) I. 365 Ic and min Fæder syndon witodlice an.
a1225 (c1200) Vices & Virtues (1888) 25 He..steih in to heuene, and sitt on his fader swiðre.
a1300 Passion our Lord l. 624 in R. Morris Old Eng. Misc. (1872) 55 (MED) Er he wolde astyen to heuene to his vedere.
c1405 (c1390) G. Chaucer Parson's Tale (Hengwrt) (2003) §57 He hath agilt his fader celestial.
1442 in A. T. Bannister Reg. Thome Spofford (1919) 252 (MED) The fader of hevyn have yow in his kepyng.
a1470 T. Malory Morte Darthur (Winch. Coll. 13) (1990) II. 1015 Joy and honoure be to the Fadir of Hevyn.
1533 J. Gau in tr. C. Pedersen Richt Vay To Rdr. sig. Aii Grace, marcie, and pece, of god our fader.
1562 N. Winȝet Last Blast Trompet sig. A2v The lauchfull vocatioun of his heuinlie fader.
1611 B. Jonson Catiline ii. sig. E2v Great Father Mars, and greater Ioue. View more context for this quotation
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost iii. 59 The Almighty Father..bent down his eye, His own works and their works at once to view. View more context for this quotation
1734 I. Watts Reliquiæ Juveniles lii. 202 To see all the Disciples of Christ grown up into such a Catholic Spirit, as to be ready to worship God their common Father..in the same Assembly.
1775 J. Harris Philos. Arrangem. x. 249 Thro' which Relation They are called His Offspring, and He Their Father.
1820 P. B. Shelley Prometheus Unbound i. i. 37 Most unwillingly I come, by the great Father's will driven down, To execute a doom of new revenge.
1864 Ld. Tennyson Enoch Arden in Enoch Arden, etc. 43 Uphold me, Father, in my loneliness A little longer!
1872 J. Morley Voltaire i. 2 Some..austere step-son of the Christian God, jealous of the divine benignity..of his father's house.
1914 C. S. Thoms Working Man's Christ xii. 254 Our Father who art in heaven, remember in love and mercy the man I gambled out of fifty dollars to-day.
1977 J. Johnston Shadows on our Skin 136 Please don't let anyone speak again, prayed Joe. Dear Father of Mercy, let no one utter, let us have only silence.
2011 Daily Post (N. Wales) (Nexis) 25 July 18 We sometimes forget that everything we have has been given to us by our heavenly father and, therefore, is not ours to keep.
b. Chiefly with the and capital initial. The First Person (person n. 6a) of the Trinity. Cf. son n.1 2, Holy Ghost n. 1, and God the Father at god n. 5b.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > deity > Christian God > the Trinity > the Father > [noun]
fatherOE
fatherheada1425
first person?a1450
omniparent1609
OE West Saxon Gospels: John (Corpus Cambr.) xiv. 26 Se haliga frofre gast þe fæder [L. pater] sent on minum naman.
OE Homily: Hist. Holy Rood-tree (Kansas Y 103) in Speculum (1962) 37 63 Þas gyrda getacniað Fæder & Sunu & þone halgan gast.
a1225 (?OE) MS Lamb. in R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies (1868) 1st Ser. 53 Þe feder and þe sune and þe halie gast iscilde us þer wið.
c1330 (?a1300) Arthour & Merlin (Auch.) (1973) l. 930 Þurth God þe Fadres miȝt.
a1400 Psalter (Vesp.) i. 7 in C. Horstmann Yorkshire Writers (1896) II. 131 Blisse to þe fadre and to þe sone And to þe haligaste.
a1450 (?a1390) J. Mirk Instr. Parish Priests (Claud.) (1974) l. 459 Leue on fader and sone & holy gost.
1548 tr. M. Luther Chiefe Articles Christen Faythe sig. Avjv The Holy Goost from the Father and the Sonne procedynge.
1561 T. Norton tr. J. Calvin Inst. Christian Relig. i. f. 40v Wherby appeareth, that the name of God is there relatiuely taken, and therefore restrained to the Person of the Father.
1621 R. Burton Anat. Melancholy iii. i. i. ii. 505 The holy Ghost is the Loue of the Father and the Sonne.
1675 T. Brooks Paradice Opened 71 God the father, who from Eternity, had fore-assigned Christ to this office of a Mediator.
1737 A. Pope Epist. of Horace ii. i. 7 And God the Father turns a School-Divine.
1770 H. Brooke Fool of Quality V. xvii. 220 Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, will then become co-embodied in this divine body.
1851 J. M. Neale Mediæval Hymns 127 Honour, laud, and praise addressing To the Father and the Son.
1886 F. W. Farrar Hist. Interpr. 288 Christ had ascended incorporeally to the Father.
1932 E. A. Kirkpatrick Sci. of Man in Making xiii. 336 The religious minded are concerned with doing the Father's will.
1980 Times 20 Dec. 14/2 God the Father had redeemed the loss of grace mankind had suffered as a result of the first Adam's fall.
2003 Baptist Times 9 Oct. 1/3 The three ladies each gave a testimony before being sprinkled with water in the name of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
c. Christ considered as a father in relation to Christians or humankind. Now somewhat rare.Quot. 1859 echoes quot. a1470.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > deity > Christian God > the Trinity > the Son or Christ > [noun] > according to other attributes
horn of salvation (health)c825
fatherOE
sun of righteousnessOE
priestc1175
leecha1200
vinec1315
apostlec1382
amenc1384
shepherdc1384
the Wisdom of the Father1402
high priest1526
pelican1526
mediatora1530
reconcilerc1531
branch1535
morning star1535
surety1535
vicar1651
arch-shepherd1656
hierarch1855
particularity1930
OE Azarias 103 Þec, Crist cyning, ceolas weorðian, fæder, forst ond snaw, folca waldend.
OE Crist III 1218 Þonne Crist siteð..on heahsetle, heofonmægna God, fæder ælmihtig.
c1400 (c1378) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Laud 581) (1869) v. l. 511 (MED) If it be þi wille, Þat art owre fader and owre brother.
a1470 T. Malory Morte Darthur (Winch. Coll. 13) (1990) II. 1014 Fayre Fader, Jesu Cryst! I thanke The.
1581 R. Crowley Aunswer Sixe Reasons vi. sig. G.jv The Church (being the spowse of Christe) is our mother, and hath receyued commission, from her husband, and our father Christ, to teach vs all those things that he hath taught and commaunded her to doo.
1646 W. Prynne Canterburies Doome 214 Honour, Reverence and respect the sacred and glorious Virgin Mary with an especiall Love: she is the Mother of our Soveraigne Lord and heavenly Father Christ Iesus.
1664 H. More Modest Enq. Myst. Iniquity i. ii. vi. 122 Christ..is the Everlasting Father and holy Regeneratour of his true Church into his own life and likeness.
1734 J. Mottley Stow's Surv. London & Westm. I. ii. iii. 313/2 My Life's first Hour proved the Last to me..to our Father Christ I went.
1859 Ld. Tennyson Guinevere in Idylls of King 254 Our fair father Christ.
1952 R. Bunzel Chichicastenango iii. 156 I pray you to give the blessing over our drink, which is that of Our Father, Jesus Christ.
2013 Daily Oklahoman (Nexis) 5 Apr. a12 His faith in Christ our Father showed through in everything he did.
3. A male ancestor more remote than a parent; a forefather, a progenitor; esp. the founder of a race or family, spec. Adam or one of the biblical patriarchs (see patriarch n. 2a(b)). More loosely: a man belonging to an earlier age.See also to be gathered to one's fathers at Phrases 3.chief father, elder-father, former father, forn-father, grandfather, stem-father, stock-father, etc.: see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > kinsman or relation > ancestor > [noun]
elder-fathereOE
fatherOE
elder971
alderOE
eldfatherOE
forme-fadera1200
ancestorc1300
grandsirec1300
aiela1325
belsirea1325
predecessora1325
forefather1377
morea1382
progenitorc1384
antecessorc1400
forn-fatherc1460
forebear1488
ancient1540
antecestrec1550
fore-grandsirec1550
grandfather1575
ascendant1604
forerunnera1616
ancienter1654
tupuna1845
society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > kinsman or relation > ancestor > [noun] > collectively
fatherOE
forthfatherc1000
eldringsc1300
lineage13..
ancestry?a1400
fore-eldersa1400
ancestory1642
majority1646
society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > kinsman or relation > ancestor > [noun] > first ancestor or patriarch
chief fatherc1400
father?a1425
primitive1486
stock-father1600
stem1604
primogenitor1643
patriarch1758
stem-father1879
society > society and the community > social class > nobility > aristocracy or upper class > [noun] > member of > patrician > collectively
fathera1538
patricianship1824
OE (Northumbrian) Lindisf. Gospels: Luke i. 55 Sicut locutus est ad patres nostros abraham et semini eius in sæcula : suæ gesprecen wæs to fadores usra & sede his in worulde.
OE West Saxon Gospels: Matt. (Corpus Cambr.) iii. 9 Ne cweþað betwux eow, we habbað Abraham us to fæder.
OE Ælfric Homily: Sermo ad Populum (Corpus Cambr. 188) in J. C. Pope Homilies of Ælfric (1967) I. 419 Se frumsceapena mann.., Adam ure fæder, wæs ðurh God swa gesceapen þæt he beon mihte butan synnum.
a1200 (?c1175) Poema Morale (Trin. Cambr.) 197 in R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies (1873) 2nd Ser. 226 Vre foremes faderes gult we abugeð alle.
a1300 (c1275) Physiologus (1991) l. 494 Ðus fel Adam ðurȝ a tre, Vre firste fader.
c1400 (c1378) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Laud 581) (1869) B. iii. l. 126 Ȝowre fadre she felled þorw fals biheste.
?a1425 (c1400) Mandeville's Trav. (Titus C.xvi) (1919) 43 (MED) The Sarazines..han the place in gret reuerence for the holy fadres, the Patriarkes þat lyȝn þere.
a1538 T. Starkey Dial. Pole & Lupset (1989) 13 Theyr cyvyle ordynance & statutys devysyd by theyr old fatherys in every secte.
1589 A. Barlowe in R. Hakluyt Principal Navigations 732 The Sauages were neuer at it [sc. Schycoake], onely they speake of it, by the report of their Fathers, and other men, whome they haue heard affirme it, to be about one daies iourney about.
1641 Naunton's Fragmenta Regalia sig. E2 He loved Sword and Buckler men, and such as our Fathers were wont to call, men of their hands.
1671 J. Milton Paradise Regain'd i. 351 God; who fed Our Fathers here with Manna. View more context for this quotation
1708 J. Philips Cyder i. 36 In ancient Days, The Roman Legions, and great Cæsar found Our Fathers no mean Foes.
1778 W. Burgh Inq. Belief Christians ii. 74 The transmitted sin of our first Father.
a1800 W. Cowper Yardley-Oak in W. Hayley Life & Posthumous Writings Cowper (1804) III. 415 One man alone, the father of us all, Drew not his life from woman.
1849 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. I. 20 Nor were the arts of peace neglected by our fathers during that stirring period.
1974 Historia 23 32 Kimon returned from Skyros claiming to have the bones of Theseus, the national hero and ancestral father of the Athenians and the Ionians.
1992 Presbyterian Rec. Sept. 19/2 History is always ambiguous. Maybe we're debunking too much these days, exposing the sins of our fathers.
2010 N.Y. Rev. Bks. 11 Mar. 22/2 On one side were those who remained true to the faith of their fathers.
4.
a. A person, esp. a ruler or superior, who provides protecting care like that of a father; a person who shows paternal kindness, or to whom filial reverence and obedience are due.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > safety > protection or defence > care, protection, or charge > [noun] > one who looks after > protector or patron
fathereOE
mundOE
governor1340
protectorc1390
feedera1400
patronc1400
taker-upa1425
fautora1464
provisora1475
vower1488
presidenta1522
parent1526
guardiant1618
big brother1837
avoué1851
fanger-
eOE Anglo-Saxon Chron. (Parker) anno 920 Hine geces þa to fæder & to hlaforde Scotta cyning & eall Scotta þeod.
OE Ælfric Lives of Saints (Julius) (1881) I. 116 Ealle þa hyredmenn hine [sc. St Sebastian] hæfdon for fæder and mid lufe wurðodon.
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(1)) (1850) Job xxix. 16 Fader I was of pore men [L. pater eram pauperum].
a1460 Earl of March & Earl of Rutland Let. in H. Ellis Orig. Lett. Eng. Hist. (1824) 1st Ser. I. 9 Oure..ryght noble lorde and ffadur.
1531 T. Elyot Bk. named Gouernour iii. xx. sig. c.vii The senate & people..wolde haue hym called, the great Alexander, and father of the countray.
a1586 Sir P. Sidney Arcadia (1590) iii. xix. sig. Tt4 You are a Prince, & a father of people, who ought..to set downe all priuate conceits, in comparison of what for the publike is profitable.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Henry VI, Pt. 1 (1623) iii. i. 101 A Father of the Common-weale. View more context for this quotation
1636 P. Massinger Great Duke of Florence i. ii. sig. C2v For her love I will be a Father to thee.
1669 J. Worlidge Systema Agriculturæ Pref. sig. C2v In Germany, no young Farmer is permitted to marry..till he..hath planted, and is a Father of such a stated number of Wallnut-Trees.
1732 S.-Carolina Gaz. 6 May 2/2 A Prince, who upon the highest Reason may challenge to be stiled The Father of his Country.
1867 E. A. Freeman Hist. Norman Conquest I. iii. 159 It was meant to assert..that Scots..owed no duty to Rome or to Byzantium, but only to their Father and Lord at Winchester.
1889 Harper's Mag. July 198/1 The Czar is the father of his people, the Lord's anointed, the head of the orthodox Church.
1913 G. V. May Jack Denton's Devotion ii. 30 I pray you, son of the great nation beyond the seas, tell me where I can find America's father, Mr. Cogswell?
1979 J. Harvey Plate Shop xi. 56 As he grew older, and had a family at home, he came to see that he was the father of the shop.
2009 New Yorker 9 Mar. 47/3 Oddsson held on. ‘The father of the nation has become the madman on the roof,’ Magnason said.
b. A patron of literature or the arts. Chiefly historical with reference to Francis I of France (1494–1547). [With reference to Francis I of France after French père des lettres (16th cent. in Middle French).]
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > easiness > aid, help, or assistance > support > patronage > [noun] > patron > of the arts or literature
fathera1522
Maecenas1542
a1522 G. Douglas in tr. Virgil Æneid (1957) i. Prol. 85 Fader of bukis, protectour to sciens and lair, My speciall gud Lord Henry, Lord Sanct Clair.
1751 J. Kippax tr. J. de Uztáriz Theory & Pract. Commerce & Maritime Affairs I. xxvii. 129 This father of arts and letters was the first of our kings, that projected the introduction of trade into France by distant voyages into the remote parts of the world.
1789 T. Holcroft tr. J. L. D'Alembert Let. in tr. King Frederick II Posthumous Wks. XI. lxxxii. 268 I am told that it is here intended to suppress the royal college, founded by Francis I, the father of literature.
1837 H. Hallam Hist. Lit. I. v. 461 Francis I. has obtained a glorious title, the Father of French literature.
1859 T. A. Trollope Decade Ital. Women II. 398 It is quite time that the historic claims of many princely ‘fathers of literature’..should be more rightly appreciated.
1982 R. J. Knecht Francis I i. 1 It was the birthplace of King Francis I, the ‘knight-king’ (roi-chevalier) and ‘father of letters’ (père des lettres).
5.
a. Roman History. In plural. With capital initial. The senators of ancient Rome (cf. conscript fathers at conscript adj. 1a). Also occasionally: the Patricians (patrician n.1 1b).
ΚΠ
OE Glosses to Boethius (Corpus Cambr. 214) in W. C. Hale Edition & Codicol. Study CCCC MS 214 (Ph.D. diss., Univ. Pennsylvania) (1978) 287 Sed quondam dabat improbus uerend [is] Patribus indecores curules : ac eugefyrn sealde se manfulla arwurþum fædrum unwlitige oþþe bysmurfulle ealdorsetl.
?c1400 (c1380) G. Chaucer tr. Boethius De Consol. Philos. (BL Add. 10340) (1868) i. pr. iv. l. 414 Ȝit hadde I not desserued of þe fadres [L. patribus], þat is to seyne of þe senatours.
1445 tr. Claudian's De Consulatu Stilichonis in Anglia (1905) 28 281 (MED) Why knowith not yit the volume of Rome which conscript fadris shewith.
c1540 J. Bellenden tr. Livy Hist. Rome (1901) I. ii. xv. 187 The samyn ȝere deceissit Meninius Agrippa, quhilk wes lufit baith with þe faderis [L. patribus] and small pepill.
1594 W. Shakespeare Titus Andronicus iii. i. 1 Heare me graue Fathers . View more context for this quotation
1619 E. M. Bolton tr. Florus Rom. Hist. i. i. 9 The councell of estate should belong to the old, and ancient, who for their authoritie should be called Fathers [L. patres], and for their antiquitie, Senators, or Aldermen.
1741 C. Middleton Hist. Life Cicero I. v. 382 The authority of the Fathers, and the interests of the Republic.
1842 T. B. Macaulay Battle Lake Regillus in Lays Anc. Rome 100 The Fathers of the City Are met in high debate.
1842 T. B. Macaulay Horatius in Lays Anc. Rome 60 The Tribunes beard the high, And the Fathers grind the low.
1875 W. Ihne Early Rome iii. 37 From among the patricians, again, he [sc. Romulus] chose a hundred of the oldest and wisest men, whom he called Fathers.
1960 A. Duggan Family Favourites x. 198 He attended the Senate, and occasionally delivered a short speech to the assembled Fathers.
1990 C. McCullough First Man in Rome (1991) 39 The patrician was the antique aristocrat, one whose family was listed among the Fathers of Rome.
b. In plural. The leading men or elders of any city or assembly. Also occasionally in singular.city father, town father: see the first element.
ΚΠ
?1560 T. Norton Orations of Arsanes sig. L.iijv The Princes of Germanie, the fathers of Venice, and other Christian Kynges and states.
1590 T. Fenne Frutes f. 57 A graue Father of Carthage who boldly stood foorth.
1697 J. Dryden tr. Virgil Æneis i, in tr. Virgil Wks. 201 From whence the Race of Alban Fathers come.
1781 E. Gibbon Decline & Fall II. xviii. 93 A council of senators, emphatically styled the Fathers of the City.
1788 E. Gibbon Decline & Fall IV. xlvii. 555 The fathers..of the council were awed by this martial array.
1828 W. Scott Fair Maid of Perth vii, in Chron. Canongate 2nd Ser. I. 162 They were..the fathers of the city.
1842 N. Hawthorne Twice-told Tales II. 36 The Selectmen of Boston, plain, patriarchal fathers of the people.
1962 Listener 25 Oct. 647/2 The Council Fathers are supposed to maintain complete discretion, though almost all of them ‘leak’ to the press.
2008 Rio Rancho (New Mexico) Observer 4 May 6/1 What better way could the fathers of the city spend money than on its youth?
c. The longest serving (or sometimes the oldest) member of a society or institution. Cf. Father of the House n. at Phrases 6.Recorded earliest in †Father of the City: the oldest alderman (alderman n. 3) of the City of London (obsolete).
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > social relations > an association, society, or organization > [noun] > member > oldest member
father1668
society > authority > office > holder of office > magistrate > municipal magistrate > [noun] > alderman > specific London alderman
grey cloak1621
Father of the City1668
society > authority > rule or government > ruler or governor > deliberative, legislative, or administrative assembly > governing or legislative body of a nation or community > English or British parliament > [noun] > Member of Parliament > oldest member
father1893
1668 N. Hardy Royal Common-wealths Man 32 He at length became and so continued for some years..the first among the 26. the eldest Alderman upon the bench that had served in the Office of a Lord Mayor, to whom is given that honourable title of the Father of the City.
1705 T. Hearne Remarks & Coll. 13 Sept. Sr Robert Clayton..Alderman, the Father of yt City.
1764 Gentleman's & London Mag. Oct. 606/2 In the same year, upon the motion of Sir Robert Ladbrooke, then Father of the city, the thanks of the court of aldermen were given to Sir John Barnard.
1816 Daily National Intelligencer (Washington) 3 Dec. The venerable William Findley, now the oldest member, and by courtesy considered the Father, of the House of Representatives, has so far recovered the long illness which confined him at home the whole of the last session, as to have taken his seat.
1837 ‘Nimrod’ Chace, Turf, & Road ii. 132 Mr. Warde the father of the field, may..be called the father of the road also.
1856 C. Dickens Little Dorrit (1857) i. vi. 47 You'll be the Father of the Marshalsea.
1880 Athenæum 18 Dec. 820/1 Sir Edward Sabine, now in his ninety-second year, is the father of the Society.
1893 Daily Tel. 8 July 7/3 The Right Hon. C. P. Villiers, M.P., ‘Father of the House of Commons’, was robbed of his watch on Thursday.
1944 N.Y. Times 27 July 16/3 At the end of his term he will have served five years longer than Justice Morrill of Vermont, once called the Father of the Senate.
1997 Western Daily Press (Nexis) 17 July 37 The 80-year-old Father of the House of Commons has been sifting through papers at his elegant period home in Salisbury Cathedral Close for some years now.
d. A person appointed to preside over an organization or an event.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > control > person in control > [noun] > leader
lattewc825
lodera1325
chieftainc1386
foreleadera1400
bellwetherc1430
aurigac1460
leader1489
Moses1528
ringleader1548
general1582
foreman1603
coryphaeus1633
foreheada1641
senator1656
father1771
o-muraji1869
simba1964
neta1984
society > authority > control > person in control > [noun] > one who presides > over a body of persons or their meetings
presidentc1390
praeses1619
pres.1686
father1771
1771 T. Smollett Humphry Clinker II. 244 I will take your place..and think myself happy to be hailed, Father of the Feast.
1889 Dict. National Biogr. XVII. 303/1 He also took a leading part in the institution of the Smithfield Cattle Show, and on the death of Richard Astley was made ‘father’ of the show.
1916 Amer. Indian Mag. Oct. 347 As an indication of the busy life of our Society's ‘father’ the Fisk University News gives some of his engagements up to mid-October.
2006 F. Gabelnick in E. B. Klein & I. L. Pritchard Relatedness in Global Econ. vii. 163 Neither brother will claim the title of president or CEO... No one is the father of the organization.
6.
a. As a title prefixed to the name of an older man, or one who commands respect. Also as a form of address to such a man. Cf. old man n. Compounds 4. Now rare, except in fixed collocations, as Father Christmas n. at Compounds 2a, (Old) Father Time at time n. 34b. Occasionally used mockingly.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > behaviour > good behaviour > courtesy > courteous forms of address or title > [noun] > title > for a man > for old or older man
fatherOE
Mang1926
OE tr. Gospel of Nicodemus (Cambr.) xv. §4. 188 Þa Iudeas..wæron clypigende and cweðende: La fæder Ioseph, syb sig myd þynum ingange.
c1175 ( Homily: Hist. Holy Rood-tree (Bodl. 343) (1894) 6 Ða andswarede him dauid & cwæð, ‘Ealæ, fæder moyses.’
a1325 (c1250) Gen. & Exod. (1968) l. 2399 Iacob was brogt bi-foren ðe king..‘Fader derer [read dere],’ quað pharaon.
a1438 Bk. Margery Kempe i. 57 (MED) In schort tyme..comyth..an elde man..‘Fadyr’ seyde þe preste becawse of reuerens.
1559 W. Cuningham Cosmogr. Glasse Pref. sig. Aivv How often doth father Moses in his .V. bookes, make mention of Babilon.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Coriolanus (1623) v. i. 3 He call'd me Father . View more context for this quotation
1699 R. Bentley Diss. Epist. Phalaris (new ed.) 413 It was the common way in Conversation..when Persons of Age and Authority spoke kindly to their Juniors, to say, Son, or, Daughter; and the others again used to say, Father, or, Mother: though there was no Kindred at all between them.
1799 R. Southey in Morning Post 17 Jan. 2/4 You are old, Father William, the young man said.
a1854 Canting Songs in J. Coleman Hist. Cant & Slang Dicts. (2004) I. 213 Then placed him in the nearest pew long side of father grey locks.
1947 B. Bhattacharya So Many Hungers! xiv. 211 A shrivel of a man came toddling... He saw Rahoul at the gates of the kitchen. ‘Father, is it true? You will give us rice to eat.’
2003 Herald (Glasgow) (Nexis) 21 July 24 Old Father Winter, formerly a vicious old plaguer of midwinter households,..became fused with St Nicholas and re-emerged as Father Christmas.
b. As a title prefixed to the name of a major river, esp. the Thames. Cf. Father of waters (also rivers, floods) at Phrases 5, Old Man River n. at old man n. Compounds 4.
ΚΠ
1590 E. Spenser Faerie Queene i. i. sig. A6 As when old father Nilus gins to swell..His fattie waues doe fertile slime outwell.
1661 T. Ross tr. Silius Italicus Second Punick War i. 23 Untill on the Italian Shore The Ship arriv'd: where Father Tyber [L. pater..Thybris], made More rich by Anyo's Waters, doth invade With Yellow Waves the Sea.
1713 A. Pope Windsor-Forest 9 In vain on Father Thames she calls for Aid.
1747 T. Gray Ode Eton Coll. 4 Say, Father Thames,..Who foremost now delight to cleave With pliant Arm thy glassy Wave?
1813 H. Smith & J. Smith Horace in London i. ii. 19 Sir Francis..To father Thames commits his fate: In secret the uxorious tide Safe bears him to the Surrey side.
1897 Daily News 6 July 5/3 Hardy bargemen who ply Father Thames by day and night from Twickenham Ferry to the Nore.
1932 Collier's 9 Jan. 24/1 Father Mississippi had brought down a drift log and lodged it here, which caused an obstructed current to drop its sediment.
1999 Caravan Mag. June 69/3 Old Father Thames skirts it and the river Thame runs through to join the main river nearby.
7. Ecclesiastical and religious uses.
a. A male religious teacher, counsellor, or leader regarded as having a paternal relationship with those whom he advises; a spiritual director; a confessor. Also more fully spiritual father. Also as a form of address.With quot. 1614, cf. Job 29:16: ‘I was a father to the poor: and the cause which I knew not I searched out.’ (King James Bible).ghostly father, godfather, shrift-father, etc.: see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > confessor > [noun]
shriftc897
fatherOE
shrift-father?c1225
penancerc1300
confessor1340
shriver1340
penitencera1387
penitentiary?a1475
pentionary1560
confessary1629
confessarius1661
scruple-drawer1701
soul friend1891
society > faith > worship > preaching > catechesis > [noun] > one who performs
fatherOE
catechizerc1449
mystagoguec1540
oracle1548
catechist1564
guru1613
director1671
swami1901
society > faith > worship > preaching > catechesis > [noun] > one who performs > to whom one owes one's spiritual life
fatherOE
OE Ælfric Catholic Homilies: 1st Ser. (Royal) (1997) xxvii. 407 Þa ðe for heofonan rices myrhðe forlætað fæder & moder..hi underfoð manega gastlice fæderas.
OE Regularis Concordia (Tiber.) (1993) xxii. 37 Ut fratrum unusquisque suę conscientię reatum patri spirituali..per humilem reuelet confessionem : þæt gebroþra æghwylc hys inngehydes gylt fæder gastlicum..þurh eadmode geopenige andetnesse.
a1225 (c1200) Vices & Virtues (1888) 7 (MED) Mine gastliche faderes.
?c1225 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 235 Inoch is to segge swa. þet þe schrift fader witerliche understonde hwat þu wule meanen.
c1384 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(2)) (1850) 1 Cor. iv. 15 If ȝe han ten thousandis of litle maistris in Crist Jhesu, but not manye fadris [L. patres].
a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) i. l. 1865 Min holy fader, so I wile.
c1400 (?a1387) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Huntington HM 137) (1873) C. i. l. 120 Ȝe sholde be here fadres and techen hem betere.
c1405 (c1390) G. Chaucer Parson's Tale (Ellesmere) (1877) §909 So is his [sc. a child's] godfader his fader espiritueel.
a1438 Bk. Margery Kempe i. 44 (MED) Þe ankyr of þe Frer Prechowrys in Lenn, whech was principal gostly fadyr to þis creatur.
?a1500 (a1471) Brut (Lyell) in J. S. Davies Eng. Chron. (1856) 64 (MED) There thay slow him horribly, thair fader and thair bisshoppe.
1567 W. Allen Treat. Def. Priesthod 226 We call them Confessours, & of olde in Grece, they were named Spirituall maisters or Fathers.
1597 R. Hooker Of Lawes Eccl. Politie v. lxiv. 156 It sauoureth more of pietie to giue them their old accustomed name of fathers and mothers in God.
1614 W. Kinsman & E. Kinsman tr. A. de Villegas Lives of Saints 620 All his [sc. St Thomas Becket's] other vertues:..so good a father to the poore, that none departed from him without reliefe.
1651 D. Cawdrey Inconsistencie Independent Way 164 In the Church, the Ministers are spirituall fathers to the members.
1677 Lady Chaworth in MSS Duke of Rutland (12th Rep. Hist. MSS Comm.) (1889) App. v. 43 The D[uchess] of Portsmouth..has promised it to her ghostly father.
1717 T. Brett Independency Church upon State 50 Although God have given the Bishop a Right to such Maintenance, yet if he has it not, he is no less the Father of that Flock than if he had it.
1769 H. Venn in Life (1835) 152 A lady said to me, ‘You, Sir, are my spiritual father!’
1783 H. Bright Praxis 59 My Fathers and Mothers in a religious, spiritual and godly Sense, or Proparents, who covenanted for me at the Baptismal Font.
1828 T. S. Grimshawe Mem. L. Richmond (1829) 132 He was regarded by them [sc. the communicants] as a father.
1889 W. Pater Appreciations 239 Do you think it could be my duty, as a relative of Mademoiselle de Courteheuse, her spiritual father, as a prelate of the Church, to lend my hands to such disorder?
1908 D. De Leon tr. E. Sue Branding Needle iii. iii. 114 Ah, my father in Christ!
1967 H. Welch Pract. Chinese Buddhism 1900–1950 ii. ix. 247 That monk became his ‘father’.
2010 Gettysburg (Pa.) Times 28 July a7/1 I have had the privilege of walking with a spiritual father since 1998.
b. A priest belonging to a religious or monastic order. Also as a title given to the head of a monastery or other religious community. Cf. brother n. 9, Father Superior at superior adj. 6b.Cowley Father, Oblate Father, purple father, White Father, etc.: see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > church government > monasticism > religious superior > abbot > [noun]
abboteOE
fatherOE
Pater Abbasc1400
father abbot1479
abbas1550
abbot-presbyter1641
abbate1750
OE St. Euphrosyne (Julius) in W. W. Skeat Ælfric's Lives of Saints (1900) II. 336 Þæs mynstres fæder wæs swyðe mære beforan gode.
c1300 St. Brendan (Laud) l. 13 in C. Horstmann Early S.-Eng. Legendary (1887) 220 (MED) Fader..par charite, oþur red þov most take.
?c1335 (a1300) Land of Cokaygne l. 176 in W. Heuser Kildare-Gedichte (1904) 149 (MED) Þilk monke þat slepiþ best..Of him is hoppe..To be sone uadir abbot.
1526 W. Bonde Pylgrimage of Perfection ii. sig. Riii Abbot Pyor..whiche amonge a greate multitude of fathers & bretherne, gathered to gyther, in maner of a visitacion..dyd in this wyse.
a1604 M. Hanmer Chron. Ireland 48 in J. Ware Two Hist. Ireland (1633) He..became father of the Monkes of Saint Hilarie.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Measure for Measure (1623) iii. i. 280 'Blesse you good Father Frier. View more context for this quotation
1691 A. Gavin Frauds Romish Monks iii. 140 The Capuchin Fathers are the only men that have witnessed some horror for so extravagant a Pomp.
1739 T. Gray Jrnl. in France in Wks. (1884) I. 244 It [sc. the Chartreuse] contains about 100 Fathers, and Freres together.
1757 tr. J. G. Keyssler Trav. III. 112 S. Maria di Galiera is a beautiful church, and belongs to the fathers of the oratory.
1838 F. W. Brewster Let. 28 Nov. in Month (1944) July 269 I am the only Father alive of the English Carmel at Tongres.
1931 H. A. L. Fisher in J. C. Squires If it had happened Otherwise 123 The general had set out on his errand, disguised as a Jesuit Father, and charged with letters and proclamations to the Canadian French.
1953 Studies 42 430 He received Anglican orders from Bishop Grafton, of Fond-du-Lac, himself a Cowley Father.
2015 K. Górniak-Kocikowska in I. A. Murzaku Monasticism in Eastern Europe vii. 167 There are also two female orders residing in Licheń and assisting the Marian Fathers.
c. Holy Father n. (frequently preceded by the or our) the Pope. [Compare post-classical Latin sanctus pater (8th century in a British source with reference to a pope).]
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > clerical superior > pope > [noun]
popeeOE
apostoilec1275
vicary1303
vicar1340
bridge maker1341
Antichristc1370
vicar generalc1386
Holy Fatherc1400
servant of the servants of Godc1405
His Holy Fatherhood?a1425
universal bishopc1475
holiness1502
harlot1535
papa1555
Apostolic seat1560
vicegerent1572
man of Rome1581
pontiff1583
bullman1588
apostolicship1599
Pontifex Maximus1610
infallibleship1613
sanctity1633
popeship1641
decretaliarch1656
blessedness1670
Holy seata1674
infallibilityship1679
pontifexa1680
holyshipc1680
unholiness1682
His Infallibility1834
Pape1927
c1400 Brut (Rawl. B. 171) 163 Al þe reaume & patronages of cherches of Engeland and of Irland..we wille resceyue & holde of oure moder che[r]che of Rome, as fee ferme, doyng feaute to our holy fader þe Pope.
1410 in W. Fraser Red Bk. Menteith (1880) II. 281 Our hally fadire the Pape.
1418 in R. W. Chambers & M. Daunt Bk. London Eng. (1931) 292 (MED) Þe bulles of prouision maad vnto hym by oure holy fader, þe pope.
?a1425 (c1400) Mandeville's Trav. (Titus C.xvi) (1919) 209 (MED) I..schewed my lif to oure holy fadir, the Pope.
1527 T. Walle in G. Cavendish Life Wolsey (1827) App. 521 They..by force imprisoned our Holy Father the Pope.
1588 (title) The Holy Bull, And Crusado of Rome: First published by the Holy father Gregory the xiii.
1607 B. Barnes Divils Charter ii. i. sig. D2 We little thought it our most holy father, that our alegeance to the Church of Rome..should haue enforc'd you to take sanctuary.
1682 J. Banks Vertue Betray'd i. i. 3 Now, by our Holy Father's Triple Crown It must not, cannot, nay, it shall not be.
1741 B. Willis Let. 28 Oct. in A. P. Jenkins Corr. T. Secker (1991) 64 He..taught held & affyrmed that our Holy Fadre The Pope of Rome is a great Best & a devyll of Hell.
1771 E. Kimber & R. Johnson Wotton's Baronetage of Eng. III. 85 Provided to the bishopric of Chichester, by the pope, and consecrated by the holy father himself, on the first Sunday in Lent, anno 1247.
1808 Z. M. Pike Acct. Exped. Sources Mississippi (1810) iii. App. 24 The people's superstition is so great that they are running after the holy father in the streets, and endeavoring to kiss the hem of his garment.
1858 O. W. Holmes Autocrat of Breakfast-table vii. 186 Many a Holy Father's ‘niece’ Has softly smoothed the papal chair.
1922 Glasgow Herald 23 Jan. 11 Every good Catholic should see eye to eye with the Holy Father in everything.
1970 Daily Tel. 28 Aug. 14 The warning contained in the Holy Father's sweeping condemnation of nowaday permissiveness.
2005 Austin (Texas) Amer.-Statesman (Nexis) 4 Apr. e1 All those in attendance were ushered into an audience chamber, and the Holy Father soon entered.
d. In formal designations for a bishop, as Reverend Father, Right Reverend Father (in God), †worshipful father (in God). Similarly in formal designations for an archbishop, as Most Reverend Father (in God). Now chiefly Roman Catholic Church. [Compare post-classical Latin reverendissimus pater, reverentissimus pater (from 8th century in British sources).]
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > clerical superior > archbishop > [noun]
archbishopc885
erchevesque?a1400
father1418
arch-flamena1530
archbish1560
hierarch1574
arch-prelate1597
grace1625
society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > clerical superior > bishop > [noun]
bishopc897
patriarcheOE
bispa1300
ordinarya1325
ordinar?1403
father1418
discretion1421
pontificalc1440
diocesanc1450
rocheter1559
monseigneur1561
pope1563
bite-sheep1570
presul1577
rochet1581
diocesser1606
lawn sleevesc1640
episcopant1641
Right Reverend1681
diocesian1686
lawn-man1795
diocesiarch1805
bish1875
shire-bishop1880
1418 in R. W. Chambers & M. Daunt Bk. London Eng. (1931) 294 (MED) Worshipful fader yn god, right trusty and welbeloued. We grete yow wel.
1448 in S. A. Moore Lett. & Papers J. Shillingford (1871) 39 (MED) Please hit yn to youre..Lordship..to write unto the right reverend fader yn God..Edmund Bysshop of the Cathedrall churche of Excetre.
1473–4 Rolls of Parl.: Edward IV (Electronic ed.) Parl. Oct. 1472 2nd Roll §10. m. 16 That worshipfull fader William Wykeham, sumtyme bisshop of Wynchestre.
1508 J. Fisher Treat. Penyt. Psalmes sig. aa This treatise..was..compyled by the ryght reuerente fader in god Iohan fyssher..bysshop of Rochester.
?1521 J. Fisher Serm. agayn Luther (title page) Ye most reuerend fader in god ye lord Thomas Cardinal of Yorke.
1597 W. Shakespeare Richard III iii. vii. 61 He is within with two right reuerend fathers, Diuinely bent to meditation. View more context for this quotation
1628 Churchwardens' Accts. St. Margaret's, Westm. in J. Nichols Illustr. Manners & Expences Antient Times (1797) 38 Item, of the Right Reverend Father in God the Lord Bishop of Winchester.
1682 D. Abercromby Protestancy to be Embrac'd Ded. sig. A2 To the Right Reverend Father in God, Henry, Lord Bishop of London, Dean of His Majesties Chappel.
1715 ‘C. Dodd’ Secret Policy Eng. Society of Jesus 152 You also, reverend Father, have a sensible rap over the Knuckles in the same Brief.
1772 T. Nugent tr. J. F. de Isla Hist. Friar Gerund I. 370 God forgive his Gravityship the very Reverend Father Provincial.
1838 J. H. Ingraham Burton I. i. vi. 89 She says to me, with much sighing and whispering, ‘Reverend father, [etc.]’.
1893 Catholic Dict. (new ed.) 590/1 The Very Reverend Father Colin died..at the age of eighty-five.
1901 Times 16 Mar. 8/1 The King has been pleased to appoint the Right Reverend Father in God Randall, Bishop of Winchester, to be Clerk of the Closet.
1934 Sewanee Rev. 42 350 An earnest group of scholars, laboring under the watchful eye of the Right Reverend Father in God, Bishop Lancelot Andrewes.
1954 Times 13 Sept. 8/4 A telegram from the Pope, signed by Archbishop Montini, has been sent to the Most Rev. Father K. Lynch.
2009 B. Mitchell tr. G. Grass Tin Drum 123 Mama..entered the Church of the Sacred Heart each Saturday and confessed to the Right Reverend Father [Ger. Hochwürden] Wiehnke.
e. As a prefix to the first name or surname of a priest; abbreviated F. or Fr. Also as a form of address to a priest.The title was formerly restricted to those priests belonging to a religious or monastic order (see sense 7b), and therefore initially discontinued in the reformed Church of England. In the 19th cent., Father became the usual English mode of designating a Roman Catholic priest, even among non-Roman Catholics, but some secular priests still refused the title as incorrect, preferring their names to be prefixed ‘The Rev.’. The title has also come to be adopted by many priests within the High Church wing of the Church of England.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > priest > [noun]
priesteOE
presbyterOE
sirec1290
beauperec1300
sirc1386
fatherhooda1393
fatherheada1434
paternity1439
pater1481
fathershipa1500
father1528
key-bearer?1531
key-keeper?1556
vicegerent1572
priestdom1588
sacerdosa1592
flasher1611
priesthooda1616
père1619
sacerdote1685
firekeeper1789
soggarth1836
priestship1868
soutane1890
joss-man1913
1528 Rede me & be nott Wrothe sig. bviv I knowe a fryer in a place, Whom they call father Matthias.
1529 T. More Dyaloge Dyuers Maters i. f. xxiiv/1 The good Scottysh freer father Donold.
1593 in Dublin Rev. (1896) July 65 Mr Orton hath deliverid to me 66 rials for father gibbons.
1616 in Publ. Catholic Rec. Soc. (1906) 3 40 Father Didacus de Fuente, on of the familie of St. Dominike.
a1684 J. Evelyn Diary anno 1645 (1955) II. 469 Father Kircher, who was then setting forth his greate work Obeliscus Pamphilius.
1719 D. Defoe Farther Adventures Robinson Crusoe 288 Father Simon, was courteous.
1741 R. Challoner Mem. Missionary Priests I. 413 This same Year also were banished, Father William Weston, S.J.,..Father John Roberts, O.S.B.,..Mr. Anthony Wright, and Mr. James West, Priests.
1832 H. Martineau Ireland ii. 17 Father Glenny had readily absolv'd her from the sin of mistrusting heaven.
1890 Dublin Rev. 24 236 Our readers do not need to be told who Father Faber was.
1914 G. K. Chesterton Wisdom of Father Brown i. 24 Father Brown, I seriously ask you to compose your flock, for their sakes.
1953 B. Pym Jane & Prudence ii. 20Father Lomax, he calls himself,’ corrected Mrs. Glaze; ‘but of course he isn't married. There's no woman sets foot in that vicarage.’
1960 Times 27 Apr. 16/4 Archbishop John (of Paris),..Protodeacon Nicholas, Father George, and Father Vladimir took part in the service.
1976 J. Patrick Compulsion in Divorce—Anyone? 16 Forgive me, Father, for I have sinned.
1995 G. Linehan & A. Mathews Good Luck, Father Ted (TV script, penultimate draft) in Father Ted (1999) 13/1 Mrs Doyle (turning to Jack): Now, Father, what do you say to a cup?
8.
a. An originator, inventor, or founder of something; an important male figure in the origin and early history of something. Also: a man who provides the most conspicuous, influential, or archetypal example of something.In Old English with genitive.Pilgrim Fathers, puritan fathers: see the first element.See also Phrases 1.
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > causation > initiating or causing to begin > [noun] > institution or founding > one who or that which founds or establishes > those who found
fatherOE
society > authority > rule or government > ruler or governor > deliberative, legislative, or administrative assembly > [noun] > leaders of
father1588
OE Ælfric Catholic Homilies: 1st Ser. (Royal) (1997) xi. 268 He [sc. the devil] is leas & nan soðfæstnys nis on him, ac he is fæder ælcere leasungę.
c1390 (a1376) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Vernon) (1867) A. i. l. 14 He [sc. God] is Fader of Fei.
a1450 (?c1421) J. Lydgate Siege Thebes (Arun.) (1911) l. 4493 (MED) Old Creon, fader of fellonye.
?1529 R. Hyrde tr. J. L. Vives Instr. Christen Woman i. viii. sig. H.ijv Socrates the father of Philisophie [L. philosophiae parens] dyd get by sobre dyet, that he was neuer infected with any sore or ieoperdous sicknes.
1588 ‘M. Marprelate’ Oh read ouer D. Iohn Bridges: Epist. 34 Iohn Cant. was the first father of this horrible error in our Church.
1601 P. Holland tr. Pliny Hist. World I. xv. iv. 432 The Greekes, whom we may count the very fathers and fosters of all vices [Fr. vrays Peres-nourrissiers de tous vices; L. vitiorum omnium genitores].
1700 J. Dryden Fables Pref., in Wks. (Globe) 499 He [sc. Chaucer] is the father of English poetry.
1748 S. Richardson Clarissa IV. xlviii. 283 Hannibal was called The father of warlike stratagems.
1795 Hull Advertiser 14 Nov. 3/3 Dr. Hooper the father of the canal.
1829 W. Scott Jrnl. 29 May (1946) 73 Words..sung by the fathers of the reformation.
1844 D. Gooch Diaries (1892) 54 I may..I think, claim to be the father of express trains.
1875 B. Jowett in tr. Plato Dialogues (ed. 2) I. p. ix To represent Plato as the father of Idealism.
1934 S. R. Nelson All about Jazz i. 23 Chas. Washington..was the father of the fakers, as he was unable to read a note of music.
1954 Law & Contemp. Probl. 19 656 ‘Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar,’ the Father of Psychoanalysis reminded them.
2004 New Yorker 2 Aug. 35/2 To refer to Rickles, as people often have, as ‘the father of insult comedy’ is perhaps a little far-fetched.
b. One of the early Christian writers, on whose works much later doctrine and theology is based. Also more fully Father of the Church. [After post-classical Latin pater ecclesiae (from 8th century in British and continental sources).] Usually applied to those writers of the first five centuries of Christianity.Apostolic Fathers, church father, Greek fathers, etc.: see the first element.
ΚΠ
OE Ælfric Lives of Saints (Julius) (1881) I. 16 Ealle þa geleaffullan fæderas þe godes lare awriton.
a1225 (c1200) Vices & Virtues (1888) 149 Hit seið in Vitas patrum ðat at sume sal waren ðe hali faderes to-gedere igadered.
1340 Ayenbite (1866) 155 (MED) Ase zayþ þe boc of collacions of holy uaderes.
c1425 Bk. Found. St. Bartholomew's (1923) 1 (MED) The rewle of the moost holy fader Austyn.
a1475 Bk. Quinte Essence (1889) 18 (MED) It is preued in vitas patrum, þat is to seye, in lyues and colaciouns of fadris.
1549 Bk. Common Prayer (STC 16267) Pref. sig. ❧.i If a manne woulde searche out by the auncient fathers.
1598 W. Shakespeare Love's Labour's Lost iv. ii. 146 As a certaine Father saith. View more context for this quotation
a1641 R. Montagu Acts & Monuments (1642) 200 To this discourse of Basil, other Fathers agree.
1692 J. Ray Misc. Disc. xi. 193 I have already given many Testimonies of the ancient Fathers and Doctors of the Church.
1710 H. Prideaux Orig. & Right Tithes 141 Irenaeus and Origen, and other Fathers.
1776 J. Chelsum Remarks Last Chapters Gibbon's Hist. 20 The Greek as well as the Latin Fathers.
1839 H. W. Longfellow Hyperion II. iv. vii. 191 I gazed with secret rapture on the vast folios of the Christian Fathers.
1887 J. R. Lowell Democracy in Prose Wks. (1890) VI. 14 A Father of the Church said that property was theft many centuries before Proudhon was born.
1911 Catholic Encycl. XI. 313/1 It is not true that the doctrine of original sin does not appear in the works of the pre-Augustinian Fathers.
1984 Canad. Lit. Spring 196 Although I would take issue with the early Church Fathers on many things, I would agree that despair is..one of the deadly sins.
2000 N. Russell Cyril of Alexandria (front matter) The Greek and Latin fathers of the Church are central to the creation of Christian doctrine.
2001 Church Times 15 June 16/1 A Patristic scholar with a particular interest in St Gregory of Nyssa and the Cappadocian Fathers.
c. U.S. Frequently with capital initial. An American statesman of the Revolutionary period, esp. any of those involved in framing the constitution. Also (in Father of the Country and similar phrases): spec. George Washington. Cf. founding father at founding adj.
ΚΠ
1787 H. Knox Let. 19 Mar. in G. Washington Writings (1891) XI. 123 The glorious republican epithet, The Father of your Country.
1810 Port Folio Feb. 86 How few of the fathers of the constitution..now participate in her employments and public functions!
1864 G. Benis Precedents of Amer. Neutrality 58 The Father of his Country [sc. Washington] was urging upon his countrymen a policy of peace and non-entanglement with foreign complications.
1888 J. Bryce Amer. Commonw. II. xli. 105 Much less sought after and prized than in ‘the days of the Fathers’.
1929 N.Y. Times 3 Mar. ix. 15/2 They knew nothing of the story of the Father of the American Republic, or of the little mound of brick and mortar a stone's throw away that marked the spot where he was born.
1943 E. M. R. von Kuehnelt-Leddihn Menace of Herd 11 Our Constitutional fathers, familiar with the strength and weakness of both autocracy and democracy,..defined a representative republican form of government.
1970 G. Scott-Heron Vulture 136 America has always been known as the land of the free whites and the home of the slave. One of the greatest perpetuators of this type of hypocrisy was the Father of the country, George Washington.
2004 J. Kinory & I. van Dam tr. L. Gerken Constit. Liberty in Open Econ. 195 In all probability, the fathers of the constitution would have acted no differently if they had decided to provide for the possibility of changing the constitution..via a referendum.
9.
a. Something which gives rise to or produces another thing. Also: something which protects or nurtures another thing. Cf. parent n. 3, child n. 14b.In quot. OE as part of a riddle (describing the operation of a double bellows, where one half inflates the other) using anthropomorphic imagery.See also the wish is father to the thought at Phrases 2b.
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > causation > source or origin > [noun]
welleOE
mothereOE
ordeOE
wellspringeOE
fathereOE
headeOE
oreOE
wellspringOE
rootc1175
morea1200
beginningc1200
head wella1325
sourcec1374
principlea1382
risinga1382
springinga1382
fountain14..
springerc1410
nativity?a1425
racinea1425
spring1435
headspring?a1439
seminaryc1440
originationc1443
spring wellc1450
sourdre1477
primordialc1487
naissance1490
wellhead?1492
offspringa1500
conduit-head1517
damc1540
springhead1547
principium1550
mint1555
principal1555
centre1557
head fountain1563
parentage1581
rise1589
spawna1591
fount1594
parent1597
taproot1601
origin1604
fountainhead1606
radix1607
springa1616
abundary1622
rist1622
primitive1628
primary1632
land-spring1642
extraction1655
upstart1669
progenerator1692
fontala1711
well-eye1826
first birth1838
ancestry1880
Quelle1893
eOE Metrical Dialogue of Solomon & Saturn (Corpus Cambr. 422) ii. 448 Hwæt witeð us wyrd seo swiðe..frumscylda gehwæs fæder and modor, deaðes dohtor?
OE Riddle 37 8 Ne swylteð he symle, þonne syllan sceal innað þam oþrum..; he sunu wyrceð, bið him sylfa fæder.
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add. 27944) (1975) II. xvii. i. 883 Aristotil seiþ þat þe erþe is moder and þe sonne fader of treen.
1577 B. Googe tr. C. Heresbach Foure Bks. Husbandry ii. f. 74v So shal the branch [when grafted] liue being both nourished by his olde mother, and his newe father.
1593 A. Chute Beawtie Dishonoured 37 Ah death old father of our common end.
1600 W. Shakespeare Henry IV, Pt. 2 i. i. 8 Euery minute now Should be the father of some Stratagem. View more context for this quotation
1604 King James VI & I Counterblaste to Tobacco sig. B3 The foure Complexions, (whose fathers are the foure Elements).
1668 Duchess of Newcastle Presence 117 in Plays For Time and Experience is the Father and Mother of Wisdom.
1786 J. E. Smith tr. C. Linnaeus Diss. Sexes Plants 53 in tr. C. Linnaeus Refl. Study Nature It is easily propagated by cuttings, and agrees perfectly with its mother in fructification, and with its father in leaves.
1911 Gas Engine Aug. 419/2 The designer is father to the blue print—the blue print is father to the pattern—and the pattern is father to the casting.
1995 B. W. Piasecki Corporate Environmental Strategy iv. 48 Albert Greenstein, an ARCO public relations executive, described the results as follows: ‘If necessity is the mother of invention, the threat of regulation is often its father.’
b. Computing. The second most recent, or second most frequently updated, backup of some data. Often attributive, as father tape. Cf. grandfather n. 6, son n.1 10.
ΘΚΠ
society > computing and information technology > hardware > secondary storage > [noun] > magnetic > tape drive > generations of tape
father1961
grandfather1961
son1961
1961 Commerc. Law Jrnl. 66 377/1 You will hear about ‘grandfather’, ‘father’, and ‘son’ tapes, or ‘first’, ‘second’, and ‘third’ generation tapes.
1970 O. Dopping Computers & Data Processing xvi. 265 The new master tape (‘son’) is retained till the next updating run in which it serves as the old master tape (‘father’).
1993 PC Mag. 26 Oct. (Network Ed. Suppl.) 26/3 With GFS [sc. Grandfather/Father/Son] rotation,..the daily backup is done on the son, the monthly backup is done on the father, and the weekly backup is done on the grandfather.
2005 A. Calder Business Guide Information Security 134 A backup cycle usually works on a grandfather, father, son basis.
10. At Cambridge, and occasionally Oxford, University: a college officer who accompanies students at an examination, or who presents them at a degree ceremony. Cf. praelector n. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > education > member of university > [noun] > fellow
fellowc1405
father?c1550
student1589
by-fellow1856
idle-fellow1919
?c1550 Stokys's Bk. in G. Peacock Observ. Statutes Univ. Cambr. (1841) App. p. vi The Father shall enter hys commendacions of hys chyldren.
1762 J. Woodforde Diary 2 Mar. in Woodforde at Oxf. (1969) 75 We went up into the School of Languages..where I answer'd under —— Batchelor, Mr. Adams being so good as to oppose me, Oglander Senr. was my Father, and I was his Son.
1772 J. Jebb Remarks Present Mode Educ. 20 The students enter..preceded by a Master of Arts..who on this occasion is called the Father of the College to which he belongs.
1803 Gradus ad Cantabrigiam Father, one of the Fellows of a College..who..attends all the examinations for Bachelor's Degree, to see that..justice is done to the men of his own College.
1884 C. Dickens, Jr. Dict. Univ. Cambr. 34 Then the Senior Wrangler..is presented to the Vice-Chancellor by his Father (or Prælector) and receives his degree on his knees.
2004 Straits Times (Singapore) (Nexis) 12 Aug. Dr Marrian, who is Praelector, or Father of the college, was his assigned tutor.

Phrases

P1. Designations of biblical or ecclesiastical origin.
a. the Father of Lights and variants: God. [After post-classical Latin pater luminum (Vulgate), itself after Hellenistic Greek πατὴρ τῶν ϕώτων (New Testament), both in James 1:17 (see quot. c1384).]
ΚΠ
OE (Northumbrian) Liturgical Texts (Durham Ritual) in A. H. Thompson & U. Lindelöf Rituale Ecclesiae Dunelmensis (1927) 28 Omne donum perfectum de sursum est descendens a patre luminum : ælc geafo wisfæst ufa is ofdune stigende from feder lehta.
c1384 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Royal) (1850) James i. 17 Ech best thing ȝouun, and al parfijt ȝift is fro aboue, comynge doun of the fadir of liȝtis [L. Patre luminum], anentis whom is not ouerchaunginge, nether schadewing of whileness, or tyme.
1529 T. More Dyaloge Dyuers Maters i. xvii. f. xxiv/1 Euery good and very perfyte gyfte commeth from aboue descendyng from the father of lyghtys.
1662 J. Chandler tr. J. B. van Helmont Oriatrike 195 The light of the same proceeding immediately and fountainously from the Father of Lights.
1753 W. Hopkins Appeal to Common Sense Christian People 178 Join with me in solemn Thanks to the Father of Lights.
1833 J. Montgomery Lect. Poetry & Gen. Lit. vi. 224 No living writer can hope for immortality in its only enviable earthly sense, who does not occupy his talents on subjects..not disreputable to their Author,—the Father of lights!
1876 J. S. Blackie Songs Relig. & Life 68 That first Father of Lights From whom the ray vivific marvellous burst.
1917 Jrnl. Race Devel. 7 279 True reform is deadened. There is no news for a big struggle. There is no upward look to the Father of Lights.
1961 Jrnl. Eng. & Germanic Philol. 60 625 The Christians, too, saw Jehovah as a bright God, the Father of Lights.
2008 M. Ward Planet Narnia (2010) ii. 28 Since God is the Father of lights, even the dim and guttering lights of paganism could be ascribed ultimately to Him.
b. the father of lies and variants: the Devil. [With allusion to John 8:44: ‘Ye are of your father the devil, and the lusts of your father ye will do. He was a murderer from the beginning, and abode not in the truth, because there is no truth in him. When he speaketh a lie, he speaketh of his own: for he is a liar, and the father of it.’ (King James Version). Compare post-classical Latin pater mendacii, literally ‘father of the lie’ (4th or 5th century in Augustine).]
ΚΠ
OE (Northumbrian) Lindisf. Gospels: John (headings to readings) xxiii Diabolum homicidam et mendacii patrem adsignat : diobul monnslaga & leasunges ðone fæder tobecnað.
c1430 N. Love Mirror Blessed Life (Brasenose e.9) (1908) 16 Ȝoure enemye and myne, the fader of lesynge.
1528 W. Tyndale Obed. Christen Man f. cxij Now ye preach no thinge but lyes, and therfore are of the devyll the father of al lyes and of him are ye sent.
1624 R. Montagu Gagg for New Gospell? xxvi. 204 Thou Lyer, and misborne Elfe of the Father of lies.
1749 Counter-apol. 19 I should suspect him for a cheat; and tell him to his face, that he was rather an emissary of the father of lies than an angel from Heaven.
1825 J. Neal Brother Jonathan II. 5 The Father of Lies himself.
1866 J. E. Cooke Surry of Eagle's-nest cxx. 435 The father of lies himself might have envied the consummate skill of the secret enemy who concocted this story.
1919 Hispanic Amer. Hist. Rev. 2 260 Priests and laymen alike regarded the native beliefs with frank contempt, and..did not hesitate to attribute them to the father of lies.
1962 M. Trevor Newman 201 It seemed worse than useless to attempt to fight the father of lies with comforting generalizations.
2009 A. V. Smithson Facedown 290 As the father of lies, the enemy continued his prodding me, keeping me from victory over sin.
c. the father of (the) faith and variants.
(a) St Peter. Obsolete. rare.
ΚΠ
a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) v. l. 1904 Whan Peter, fader of the feith, At domesdai schal with him bringe Judeam, which thurgh his prechinge He wan.
(b) The biblical patriarch Abraham. Cf. the father of the faithful at Phrases 1d.
ΚΠ
1552 Abp. J. Hamilton Catech. vi. xix. f. liiiiv Quhen our Lord was to destroy the forsaid citeis he reuelit the same destructioun to Abraham, the first father of our faith.
1555 R. Eden in tr. Peter Martyr of Angleria Decades of Newe Worlde Pref. sig. aiijv Abraham the father of fayth.
1719 Evening-office of Church (ed. 2) 50/2 The great Father of our Faith, Abraham, offer'd a Holocaust on the Altar for his Son.
1867 T. Crosse Lect. Early Script. (ed. 2) xi. 270 Here Abraham, the father of faith,..is described as tempted through the agency of the woman.
1977 G. Gutiérrez in G. Gutiérrez et al. Liberation & Change i. iii. 91 Him who Paul calls the father of the faith.
2006 Times 11 Nov. 70/4 A fellow chaplain reminded me that Abraham, the father of faith, was told by God that his descendants would be as many as the stars in the sky.
d. the father of the faithful and variants: the biblical patriarch Abraham. Cf. Phrases 1c(b). [After post-classical Latin pater omnium credentium (Vulgate) and its model ancient Greek πατήρ πάντων τῶν πιστευόντων (New Testament).]
ΚΠ
1550 J. Hooper in tr. Tertullian Seconde Bk. vnto his Wyf To Rdr. sig. Av Therfore Abraham the father of the faythfulles bounde his seruaunte by an othe that he shoulde not take any of the doughters of Canaan for hys sonne Isaac.
1652 T. Hodges Hoary Head Crowned Ep. Ded. 3 Blessed Abraham the father of the faithfull.
1742 G. Whitefield Nine Serm. iv. 94 Abraham..shone with such distinguished Lustre, that he was called the Friend of God, the Father of the Faithful.
1838 Evangelical Mag. Aug. 388/2 Like the father of the faithful, he commanded his children and his household after him, that they should keep the way of the Lord.
1863 Old Guard Jan. 11/1 You, Gentlemen, say that slavery is a sin. Abraham, ‘the father of the faithful’, had a thousand slaves.
1910 Biblical World 36 310 The sheik of the desert who became the pattern of faith and the Father of the Faithful is not the only man that has had an open mind.
2009 E. Cripe Not ashamed of Gospel x. 83 Abraham is the father of the Nation of Israel, but he is also the father of the Faithful.
P2.
a. In various proverbial phrases.
ΚΠ
OE tr. Defensor Liber Scintillarum (1969) lvi. 334 Filius sapiens letificat patrem filius stultus mestitia est matris suę : sunu wis geblissað fæder bearn stunt unrotnyss ys moder his.
c1250 Bracton's Note Bk. (1887) III. 501 Fader to þe bowe, þe sune to þe lowe.
a1275 (?c1200) Prov. Alfred (Trin. Cambr.) (1955) 130 Fader be þu wid child, & be þu wuidewis [emended in ed. to widewis] frend.
c1450 MS Douce 52 in Festschrift zum XII. Neuphilologentage (1906) 55 (MED) Be the fadur what he be, Welle is the chylde to the.
c1450 MS Douce 52 in Festschrift zum XII. Neuphilologentage (1906) 54 (MED) Childe is pigge, and fader is the flicche.
c1475 Proverbs (Rawl. D.328) in Mod. Philol. (1940) 38 124 (MED) Sepe probat natus de qua sit stirpe creatus: Sygge fader, sygge sonne.
a1500 (c1340) R. Rolle Psalter (Univ. Oxf. 64) (1884) xciv. §10. 342 Ill sunnys folous ill fadirs.
1549 H. Latimer 2nd Serm. before Kynges Maiestie 3rd Serm. sig. Ji Happye is the chylde, whose father goeth to the deuyl.
1576 W. Lambarde Perambulation of Kent 400 The Father to the Boughe, The Sonne to the Ploughe.
1600 R. Surflet tr. C. Estienne & J. Liébault Maison Rustique iii. xlv. 513 This is it which some vtter in a prouerbe: That he that will plant his father must cut off his head.
1647 J. Howell New Vol. of Lett. 239 He will be a wise child that knows his right father.
?1796 Female Char. Vindicated 10 A Father's a Father, till he gets a new wife, And a Mother's a Mother, all the days of her life.
1823 J. Collins Dict. Spanish Prov. 45 To a hoarding father succeeds an extravagant son.
1872 R. M. Ballantyne Norsemen in West ii. 21 You know the saying, A dutiful son makes a glad father.
1880 J. De Finod tr. Thousand Flashes French Wit 107 A father is a banker given by nature.
1922 D. E. Marvin Antiq. Prov. 63 If you wish to know a father observe his son.
1992 St. Petersburg (Florida) Times (Nexis) 30 July 2 When you follow the path of your father, you learn to walk like him.
b. Proverb. the wish is father to the thought: an unexpressed desire gives rise to a thought or resolution.
ΚΠ
1600 W. Shakespeare Henry IV, Pt. 2 iv. iii. 221 Thy wish was father (Harry,) to that thought. View more context for this quotation
1791 G. Rous Thoughts on Govt. (ed. 2) 17 I will not say, Edmund, thy wish is father to that thought!
1859 C. Kingsley Misc. (1860) I. 7 He..too often makes the wish father to the thought.
1934 C. S. Churchill Let. 22 Dec. in W. S. Churchill & C. S. Churchill Speaking for Themselves (1999) xvi. 365 I can't think how I read it wrong—I suppose the wish being father to the thought.
2009 Times 4 Feb. 11/1 In a Great Leap Forward, the wish is father to the thought.
c. Proverb. the child is father of (also to) the man and variants: childhood experience determines adult character or behaviour.
ΚΠ
1807 W. Wordsworth Poems II. 44 The Child is Father of the Man.
1824 Examiner 11 June 433/1 Mr. Canning was the cleverest boy at Eton: he is, perhaps, the cleverest man in the House of Commons..in the sense in which, according to Mr. Wordsworth, ‘the child is father to the man’.
a1855 C. Brontë Professor (1857) I. vii. 130The boy is father to the man,’ it is said; and so I often thought when I looked at my boys and remembered the political history of their ancestors.
1912 Times 25 July 8/1 Give a child a toy which it especially likes. Its first question is, ‘Is it my very own?’—and the child is father of the man.
1968 Illustr. London News 7 Dec. 32/3 This film is enormously complicated.., but all it seems to be saying is that the child is father of the man.
2001 New Jersey Countryside Autumn 76 New Jersey's private country day schools all acknowledge along with poet William Wordsworth that the ‘Child is father of the man’.
P3. to be gathered to one's fathers (also formerly †to be put to one's fathers, †to be laid unto one's fathers, †to sleep with one's fathers): to be dead and buried. [In to be gathered to one's fathers, to be put to one's fathers, and to be laid unto one's fathers ultimately after Hebrew ne'ĕspū 'el-'ăḇōṯāw they were gathered to their fathers (Judges 2:10); in to sleep with one's fathers ultimately after Hebrew yiškaḇ ʿim-'ăḇōṯāw he slept with his fathers (frequently in the books of Kings and Chronicles, indicating the death of a king of Israel or Judah).]
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > death > [verb (intransitive)] > be dead
sleepc950
restOE
liea1000
to be deadc1000
to lie lowa1275
layc1300
to be gathered to one's fathersa1382
to be gathered to one's fathers1382
to sup with our Saviour, with Our (the) Lord, with (Jesus) Christa1400
repose1586
slumber1594
to sup in heaven or hell1642
to turn one's toes up to the daisies1842
to be out of the way1881
to push up daisiesa1918
to have had it1942
RIP1962
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) (1961) Judges ii. 10 Al þat generacion is gedered to here faders [L. congregata est ad patres suos].
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) (1963) 3 Kings i. 21 Whan my lord kyng schal slepe with his fadris [L. cum dormierit..cum patribus suis].
c1425 Bk. Found. St. Bartholomew's (1923) 34 (MED) He decessid and was put to his fadres.
1548 N. Udall et al. tr. Erasmus Paraphr. Newe Test. I. Acts xiii. f. li Dauid (after he had in his tyme fulfilled ye will of god) fell on sleape, & was laid vnto his fathers.
1609 Bp. W. Barlow Answer Catholike English-man (new ed.) 95 The Reader may iudge, how hee would vse his Maiesties owne fame if hee were gathered to his Fathers.
1698 M. Pix Deceiver Deceived iii. 24 In a months time he went to sleep with his Fathers.
a1702 N. Taylor Pract. Disc. (1703) 207 Other Calamities which it may be will fall upon us before we are gathered to our Fathers.
1776 R. Winter Serm. Death J. Winter 19 Even a David..must fall asleep, and be laid to his fathers.
1832 Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. 31 843 He salivates for some threescore years,..and is gathered to his fathers, to spit no more.
1880 Harper's Mag. July 186/2 Finally La Lande died in the odor of sanctity, and was gathered to his fathers.
a1902 S. Butler Way of All Flesh (1903) iii. 12 About one year after his wife's death Mr Pontifex also was gathered to his fathers.
1944 G. Heyer Friday's Child xx. 234 The pug, not being as yet gathered to its fathers, was her particular charge.
2015 Tampa Bay (Florida) Times (Nexis) 11 Oct. (Obituaries) 8 b DeCubellis, Germain L. ‘Jerry’ of Tampa, died and was gathered to his fathers on October 3, 2015.
P4.
father of the bride n. the father of a bride, esp. on the day of her wedding; now also as a modifier. Sometimes abbreviated FOTB (also FOB).In early use not a fixed phrase.
ΚΠ
1548 Hall's Vnion: Henry VI f. clxiviij The Marques of Suffolke..espoused the said Ladie, in the churche of sainct Martyns. At whiche mariage were present, the father and mother of the bride.
1818 Lit. Gaz. 4 Apr. 220/1 When they arrive at the house of the bride, the father of the bridegroom asks the father of the bride..if he will permit his daughter to join the party.
1910 Salt Lake Tribune 19 June (Miscellaneous section) 3/5 The father of the bride usually gives away his daughter unless physically unable to do so, when the next nearest masculine relative performs the office.
2012 Irish Daily Mail (Nexis) 4 Aug. We married in 2009, with Keith making a brilliant father-of-the bride speech that had everyone laughing and crying.
P5. Father of waters (also rivers, floods): (a name for) a large or important river, esp. (U.S.) the Mississippi. Cf. sense 6b. [With quots. 1600, 1669, and perhaps also quot. 1759, compare Ge'ez Abawi , the name of the Blue Nile (15th century; apparently a derivative of 'ab father: see Abuna n.).
The name of the Mississippi River, pace quot. 1761, ultimately derives < Old Ottawa missisipi, literally ‘large river’.]
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > water > rivers and streams > specific rivers > [noun]
Thamesc893
Father of waters (also rivers, floods)1567
muddy1825
Old Man River1902
1567 G. Fenton tr. M. Bandello Certaine Tragicall Disc. f. 227 Refreshed by the beautifull hande of Erydan, sometyme called the father of ryuers [Fr. pere des fleuues], and nowe termed by the title of Po.
1600 J. Pory tr. G. Botero in Gen. Descr. Afr. 13 in tr. J. Leo Africanus Geogr. Hist. Afr. The Abassins haue no great knowledge of Nilus by reason of the mountaines which deuide them from it; for which cause they call Abagni the father of riuers [It. chiamano l'Abagni padre dell'acque].
1669 P. Wyche tr. J. Lobo Short Relation Nile 8 The River Nile, by the natives called Abani [Port. Abbaui] (i.e.) the Father of Waters.
1713 A. Pope Windsor-Forest 10 Thou too, great Father of the British Floods!
1759 S. Johnson Prince of Abissinia I. i. 2 The mighty emperour, in whose dominions the Father of waters begins his course.
1761 London Mag. Mar. 120/2 It [sc. the Mississippi] takes its name from an Indian word which means, The antient Father of Rivers.
1818 H. B. Fearon Sketches Amer. 257 The facilities of export afforded by those ‘fathers of waters’, the Ohio, Mississippi, and Missouri.
1836 J. Hall Statistics of West iii. 46 The traveler is struck with the magnitude..of the stream which has been so appropriately called, the Father of waters.
1857 Trans. Mich. Agric. Soc. 8 193 I was..more than a hundred miles on the sunset side of the father of floods.
1865 A. Trollope Can you forgive Her? II. xxix. 228 Who has ever been through Basle, and not stood..looking down upon the father of waters?
1917 J. F. Daly Life A. Daly 64 A voyage down the Father of Waters in war times.
1949 Times-Picayune (New Orleans) 27 Mar. 7 With summer approaching, the unique craft will start slipping down Father of Waters.
2003 T. Belue Hunters of Kentucky 1 Onward, southwesterly, churned Speleawee-theepee..to its spill into the Father of Waters roiling brown and muddy.
P6.
Father of the House n. the oldest member of a legislative assembly; (British) a title given to the member of the House of Commons with the longest continuous service.
ΚΠ
1821 Daily National Intelligencer (Washington) 9 Apr. Thomas Newton is re-elected a member of the House of Representatives. He is now the oldest member of the House, who is by courtesy called the Father of the House.
1837 New Eng. Farmer 6 Sept. 65/1 Were he [sc. Mr Coke of Norfolk, England] still a member [of Parliament], which his age (82) now prevents, he would be by many years the ‘Father of the House’.
1954 Househ. Guide & Almanac (News of World) 304/1 It is a common misconception that the ‘Father of the House’ is the oldest member. The title is reserved for that Member with the longest unbroken service.
1994 Mail on Sunday (Nexis) 27 Mar. 36 Edward Heath is the Father of the House and remains unmesmerized by Baroness Thatcher.
2010 Sun (Nexis) 20 May 13 The Father of the House—that's the longest-serving MP, in this case a chap who's been there since 945 bc.
P7. like a father: (with reference to speech) in an authoritative or severe manner; strictly. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > rule or government > paternalism > [phrase]
like a father1830
society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > kinsman or relation > parent > father > fatherhood > [adverb]
fatherlyOE
fatherlike?a1513
like a father1830
1830 J. K. Paulding Chron. Gotham 64 If she wont listen to reason, I will talk to her like a father.
1872 J. P. Simpson World & Stage i. 7 I'll see her again—speak to her like a father.
1926 F. W. Crofts Inspector French & Cheyne Myst. vi. 74 James talked to him like a father and he seemed to swallow it all down.
1946 Signalman's Jrnl. Feb. 72/3 It is going to mean that the Parent–Teachers Associations or similar outfits should check up on these teachers and talk to them like a father.
P8. colloquial (originally Irish English). the father and mother of a —— and variants: the largest, most notable, or most severe example of (something). Also (esp. Australian and New Zealand) the father of a ——. Cf. mother n.1 Compounds 6b.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > high or intense degree > greatly or very much [phrase] > extremely > remarkable or extraordinary
the father and mother of a ——1824
the father of a ——1824
1824 W. Cobbett in Spirit of Eng. Mag. (Boston, Mass.) 15 Dec. 218/1 Did not the Cochranes and Cockburns assist to gain for us that which Paddy would call ‘father of a beating’?
1892 R. Kipling in Two Tales 24 Dec. 57 It would ha' bin my duty..to give you the father an' mother av a beltin.
1908 E. Œ. Somerville & ‘M. Ross’ Further Experiences Irish R.M. viii. 197 There's been the father and mother of a row down there between old Sir Thomas and Hackett.
1948 D. Ballantyne Cunninghams ii. xi. 216 The local side got the father of a hiding.
1954 G. Smith Flaw in Crystal 139 They've allowed me to arrange the father and mother of a credit overdraft with the banks.
1960 Punch 13 July 47/2 The stage is set for the father and mother of a row.
2013 Express (Nexis) 30 Aug. 15 One injured rambler and he could be facing the father and mother of all lawsuits.
P9. Father of the Chapel: see chapel n. 10b; dollar of the fathers: see dollar n. 5; Great White Father: see great adj., n., adv., and int. Compounds 1e. like father like son: see like adj., adv., conj., and prep. Phrases 6b(b); the father of mischief: see mischief n. Phrases 2e; son-before-the-father: see son n.1 Phrases 1e.

Compounds

C1.
a.
(a) General attributive and appositive, as father fool, father God, father symbol, father tree, etc.
ΚΠ
OE Ælfric Catholic Homilies: 1st Ser. (Royal) (1997) xx. 337 Se fæder is god of nanum gode, se sunu is god of þam fæder gode.
?a1430 T. Hoccleve Mother of God l. 114 in Minor Poems (1970) i. 55 The fadir god gan edifie (By his sone oonlygeten specially) To him an hows.
1529 T. More Dyaloge Dyuers Maters iv. f. cxix/2 An olde sage father fole in Kent.
1598 W. Shakespeare Henry IV, Pt. 1 ii. v. 458 That gray iniquity, that father ruffian . View more context for this quotation
1605 J. Sylvester tr. G. de S. Du Bartas Deuine Weekes & Wks. ii. ii. 454 From fruitfull Loignes of one old Father-stock.
1606 J. Sylvester tr. G. de S. Du Bartas Deuine Weekes & Wks. (new ed.) ii. iii. 5 Fruites that..have a vertue given..to draw their Father-Tree to heav'n.
1646 Sir T. Browne Pseudodoxia Epidemica i. i. 1 The first and father cause of Common Error. View more context for this quotation
1646 Sir T. Browne Pseudodoxia Epidemica vii. xiii. 366 A like conceit there passeth of Melasigenes, alias Homer, the father Poet, that he pined away upon the Riddle of the fishermen. View more context for this quotation
1721 R. Samber tr. A. de La Motte 100 New Court Fables i. ii. 82 In this Calamity, what alas! what can the Father Bird [Fr. le Pere oiseau] now do?
1815 W. Scott Lord of Isles iii. xxix. 119 The Father-ruffian of the band.
1842 Ld. Tennyson Will Waterproof's Monologue in Poems (new ed.) II. 182 Such [port] whose father-grape grew fat On Lusitanian summers.
1843 Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. May 637 Love, only Love, can guide the creature Up to the Father-fount of Nature.
1845 C. Norton Child of Islands 132 The Father-widower..Strokes down his youngest child's long silken hair.
1862 H. Marryat One Year in Sweden I. 459 The father-dog was kept tame.
1871 B. Taylor tr. J. W. von Goethe Faust (Boston ed.) II. iii. 283 The child in that bright season gaineth The father-strength.
1875 W. P. Mackay Grace & Truth (rev. ed.) 213 Christians have been made sons of such a Father-God.
1913 N. Y. State Hospitals Bull. (State Hospital Commission) 6 243 His defiance of his father is perhaps best expressed in his remarks about the sun (an archaic father symbol).
1920 T. P. Nunn Education xii. 146 The mother-sentiment appears, to be followed..by the father-sentiment.
1922 Internat. Jrnl. Psycho-anal. 3 206 A totem is, of course, as we know from Freud, a father-symbol.
2004 S. E. Linville Hist. Films, Women & Freud's Uncanny i. 38 This father-widower, haunted by the memory of his dead wife.
2010 N. Smith in P. Hardie & H. Moore Classical Literary Careers xii. 226 Marvell..did not murder his father poets in order to find his own voice so much as echo them within his own voice.
2011 T. Patterson Home Winemaking for Dummies ii. 31 This relative of Cabernet Sauvignon (genetically, Cabernet Franc is the father grape) has a similar flavor profile.
(b) Appositive (in sense 7).
father abbot n.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > church government > monasticism > religious superior > abbot > [noun]
abboteOE
fatherOE
Pater Abbasc1400
father abbot1479
abbas1550
abbot-presbyter1641
abbate1750
1479 Earl Rivers tr. Cordyal (Caxton) ii. iii His brethren seyng hym so liyng, pusshed hym, seiyng vnto hym. Fadre abbot where art thou.
1797 A. Radcliffe Italian I. xi. 308 The ceremony began with the exhortation of the Father-Abbot.
2000 Gloucester Citizen (Nexis) 26 Jan. 6 The Father Abbot of Prinknash community welcomed the congregation to a service of evening prayer.
father confessor n. [compare post-classical Latin pater confessionum, literally ‘father of confessions’ (12th century in a British source)]
ΚΠ
1541 R. Whitford Dyuers Holy Instrucyons & Teachynges xx. f. 47 Our reuerende father confessour mayster Iohn Fewterer.
1756 tr. J. G. Keyssler Trav. I. 239 The admonitions of his father-confessor [Ger. Beichtvaters] might concur.
2007 A. Flacco Last Nightingale vi. 61 Moses' line of work made him the custodian of a world of secrets, rather like a father confessor.
father director n. [director n. 1d]
ΚΠ
1691 A. Gavin Frauds Romish Monks v. 234 The Father Director of the Confraternity.
1797 A. Radcliffe Italian I. x. 295 He, who appeared to be the Father-director of the pilgrimage.
2011 P. McNamara Spirit Possession & Exorcism I. ix. 131 Sister Jeanne confessed to the father director of the convent, a Father Mignon, that she had been bewitched by Grandier.
father Jesuit n.
ΚΠ
1583 W. Travers Answer Supplicatorie Epist. 34 Some of them annoynted Priestes, and father Iesuites.
1630 J. Wadsworth Eng. Spanish Pilgrime (new ed.) iii. 14 Obedience the Students are bound to bestow vpon Father Iesuites.
2006 A. R. Enriquez Samboangan iii. v. 103 The good Father Jesuit had become nervous and jittery.
father-preacher n.
ΚΠ
1691 A. Gavin Frauds Romish Monks vi. 277 The one half of the Alms that are gathered in the Church, as well as at the Church-Door, during the Sermon, belongs to the Father-Preacher.
1772 T. Nugent tr. J. F. de Isla Hist. Friar Gerund II. iv. ii. 21 There had died lately in the convent a jubilated father preacher, a man of great consideration in the order.
2010 W. Brueggemann Word Militant p. ix I have been thinking about preaching since I first sat and listened to my father-preacher.
father saint n.
ΚΠ
1633 T. Bancroft Gluttons Feauer sig. Fv No more, reply'd the Father-saint againe.
1842 A. T. de Vere Song of Faith 108 Hear holy lessons from the Father-Saints.
1996 J. R. Gillis World of Their Own Making (1997) ii. 29 The mother and father saints who populated the late medieval Catholic imagination.
b. Objective.
father slayer n. [after classical Latin patricīda patricide n.2 and parricīda parricide n.1; compare Old English fæderslaga]
ΚΠ
a1425 Medulla Gram. (Stonyhurst) f. 47v Paricida, a fadur sleer.
?c1475 Catholicon Anglicum (BL Add. 15562) f. 43v A fadyr slaer, patricida.
1854 J. A. Heraud Videna v. iii. 78 I marvel at ye, ye can plead for him, The brother-slayer and the father-slayer.
2013 T. Stoller Tales of Tricycle Theatre 35 Ken, the supposed father slayer, finds his way to a rum shop where he seeks refuge.
c. Preceding and in apposition to other familial terms, forming attributive phrases with the sense ‘of or relating to both persons’, as father–child, father–daughter, father–son.
ΚΠ
1904 H. W. Dresser Power of Silence (rev. ed.) vi. 136 Only by taking account of both factors may one be true to the Father-son relationship.
1949 M. Mead Male & Female xvi. 326 A father-daughter household is not as disapproved [etc.].
1960 C. Day Lewis Buried Day vii. 142 Pathetic attempts to revive the old father-child relationship.
1989 E. Menaker Misplaced Loyalties (1995) 32 The strength of the father-daughter bond precluded the existence of any other significant relationship with a man.
2012 Herald-Sun (Durham, N. Carolina) (Nexis) 16 June b1 Strong father-child relationships come from dads being around for their kids.
C2.
a.
father-better adj. Scottish Obsolete better than one's father. [Compare earlier father-waur adj., and also Old Icelandic fǫður-betringr (noun) a man who is better than his father.]
ΚΠ
1645 R. Baillie Let. 1 July (1841) II. 295 Her glowming sonne, whom I pray God to bless, and make father-better.
1705 A. Symson Tripatriarchicon 44 Though therefore some..Are Father-worse, yet, some are Father-better.
Father-breeder n. Obsolete rare a person who counterfeits writings of the Christian Fathers (see sense 8b); = Father-forger n.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > deceit, deception, trickery > forgery, falsification > faking of documents > [noun] > forger, falsifier > of writings of the fathers
Father-breeder1624
Father-forger1624
1624 T. Gataker Discuss. Transubstant. 103 Under his name our Popish Father-breeders have of late set out a many of Sermons and Treatises.
Father Christmas n. (also †old Father Christmas) chiefly British a personification of Christmas, now conventionally pictured as a benevolent old man with a long white beard and red clothes trimmed with white fur, who brings presents for children on the night before Christmas Day.Father Christmas is now largely synonymous with the figure of Santa Claus (see Santa Claus n. a).
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > supernatural being > mythical creature or object > [noun] > imaginary persons or creatures > Father Christmas
Father Christmas1646
Santa1773
Kris Kringle1830
1646 Arraignm. Christmas 2 Honest Crier, I know thou knewest old Father Christmas; I am sent to thee from an honest scholler of Oxford..to cry Christmas, for they hear that he is gone from hence, and that we have lost the poor old man.
1652 J. Taylor Christmas In & Out 14 Alas Father Christmas (quoth he) our high and mighty Ale..is lately strook into a deep consumption.
1711 W. Oldisworth Dial. Timothy & Philatheus III. 140 We may look long enough e'er a Canon will be made against Plumb-broth and Porridge..because it was ever pour'd out in Sacrifice to old Father Christmas.
1773 London Mag. 42 App. 654/2 Old father Christmas now in all his glory, Begs with kind hearts, you'll listen to his story.
1813 F. Douce tr. in H. Ellis Brand's Observ. Pop. Antiq. (rev. ed.) I. 373 Lordings, in these realms of pleasure Father Christmas yearly dwells.
1860 Christmas Tree 190 Hail, Father Christmas! Come, and bring Thine ancient merriment and glee.
1864 R. Chambers Bk. of Days II. 740/2 Old Father Christmas, bearing, as emblematic devices, the holly bough, wassail-bowl, &c.
1919 Punch 24 Dec. 538 Uncle James (who after hours of making up rather fancies himself as Father Christmas).
1927 A. A. Milne Now we are Six 4 And oh! Father Christmas, if you love me at all, Bring me a big, red india-rubber ball!
1992 R. Graef Living Dangerously i. 39 I felt badly at having dented his excitement, as though I'd told him there was no Father Christmas.
2009 N. Devon Jrnl. (Nexis) 23 Dec. 31 You couldn't have everything you asked for, darling. How would Father Christmas fit it all down the chimney?
father complex n. [after German Vaterkomplex (1909 or earlier in Freud)] Psychology a complex (complex n. 3) which centres on a person's father.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > psychology > theory of psychoanalysis > libido > obsession > [noun] > with father
father complex1910
father fixation1916
1910 Amer. Jrnl. Psychol. 21 602 It may, perhaps, be surprising to some readers that nothing has been said about any of the specifically Freudian complexes, such as the wish-complex, the sexual-complex, or the father-complex.
1922 D. H. Lawrence England my England 20 Let the psychoanalysts talk about father complex. It is just a word invented.
1950 J. Strachey tr. S. Freud Totem & Taboo iv. 143 The same contradictory feelings which we can see at work in the ambivalent father-complexes of our children and of our neurotic patients.
2002 B. Harris Sacred Selfishness xi. 325 In the case of a father complex, a man or woman has trouble believing in his or her own strength, competence, and importance.
father-dust n. rare (chiefly literary) pollen.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > part of plant > reproductive part(s) > flower or part containing reproductive organs > [noun] > parts of > stamen or pistil > pollen and related parts
sandarac1623
globulet1671
powder1672
bread1682
farina1721
pollen1723
father-dust1728
rough wax1744
yellow rain1755
dust1776
fovilla1793
anther dust1797
pollen mass1828
pollen tube1830
intextine1835
pollen grain1835
pollen granule1835
exine1839
exintine1839
intine1839
pollinium1849
sulphur shower1854
pollinic mass1857
pollen chamber1863
smoke1868
pollen sac1872
pollinarium1881
sulphur rain1882
pollinic chamber1885
perine1895
pollen content1926
sculpturing1943
monad1947
nexine1948
sexine1948
1728 J. Thomson Spring 27 From Family diffus'd To Family, as flies the Father-Dust, The varied Colours run.
1893 Ann. Rep. Nebraska State Hort. Soc. 125 When the pollen is ripe, ready for proper fertilization, nature places a tiny drop of nectar just at the base of the petals, on which the pollen or father dust is grown.
1945 A. Young Prospect of Flowers xiii. 91 For this refreshment the flower asks no payment; it hopes the insect will not be too tidy at its meal, but smeared with the fertilizing pollen, the ‘Father-Dust’, convey it to another flower of the same kind.
father figure n. [compare German Vaterfigur (1865 or earlier)] a person who is regarded as having some of the characteristics, esp. benevolence or authority, thought to be typical of a father, spec. one who acts as an emotional substitute for a father.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > kinsman or relation > parent > father > [noun] > father-figure
father figure1916
1916 C. V. Vechten Music & Bad Manners 138 We are all familiar with the Bayreuth version of Wotan in Die Walküre which makes of that tragic father-figure a boisterous, silly old scold.
1957 Ann. Reg. 1956 168 President Eisenhower..was also something of a ‘father figure’ whose personality inspired such confidence as often to serve as a substitute for a policy.
1996 Big Issue 2 Dec. 5/1 Thompson is remembered as a father figure to the young people who flood in to the cardboard city beneath Waterloo's Bullring.
2007 Voice 16 Apr. 30/2 I honestly do feel that my boys are missing out big time on that father figure.
father fixation n. [compare German Vaterfixierung (1922 or earlier in Freud)] Psychology a fixation (fixation n. 3b) on one's father.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > psychology > theory of psychoanalysis > libido > obsession > [noun] > with father
father complex1910
father fixation1916
1916 Amer. Jrnl. Psychol. 27 380 He preserved his infantile mother-fixation just as Sophie preserved her father-fixation, and therefore each fulfilled the other's ideal.
1939 G. Greene Confidential Agent i. ii. 86 I'm not romantic. This is what's called a father-fixation.
2008 Herald Sun (Austral.) (Nexis) 15 Feb. 5 ‘Since this is partly about sex appeal,’ I began, ‘I think it's important that you pick someone who registers with the many young women who have a father fixation.’
father-fixated adj. Psychology fixated on one's father (see fixate v. 3b).
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > psychology > theory of psychoanalysis > libido > obsession > [adjective] > obsessed with > father
father-fixated1934
1934 Calif. & Western Med. 40 95/1 A father-fixated woman usually finds it much easier to place her confidence in a middle-aged, fatherly appearing male.
1961 Times 20 Sept. 16/5 The father-fixated daughter.
2008 A. Auster & L. Quart Thirtysomething p. xxiii His [sc. Blake Carrington's] daughter, the father-fixated Fallon.
Father-forger n. Obsolete rare a person who counterfeits writings of the Christian Fathers (see sense 8b); = Father-breeder n.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > deceit, deception, trickery > forgery, falsification > faking of documents > [noun] > forger, falsifier > of writings of the fathers
Father-breeder1624
Father-forger1624
1624 T. Gataker Discuss. Transubstant. 64 Our Popish Father-forgers have set out divers things.
Father General n. (also with lower-case initials) the head of a religious order or community, esp. the Society of Jesus (Jesuits).
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > church government > monasticism > religious superior > [noun] > Jesuit
Father General1581
black pope1851
1581 E. Campion in M. Hanmer Great Bragge & Challenge Confuted f. 8 I toke my voyage from Prage to Rome where our sayde Father Generall is alwaye resident.
1587 A. Fleming et al. Holinshed's Chron. (new ed.) III. Contin. 1326/1 Their father generall deliuering them what he hath in office.
1679 I. Bargrave tr. F. Micanzio Exact Discov. Myst. Iniquity 16 All these..do serve as Intelligencers to the Father General.
1762 T. Flloyd tr. N. L. Dufresnoy Chronological Tables I. p. lxvii It happened sometime before, the father-general of the jesuits had obliged him to go into the world.
1885 Franciscan Ann. 9 380 The Father General of the Franciscan Capuchins in the East.
1996 M. D. Russell Sparrow xiii. 114 The Father General..was a man of great spirituality and almost no business sense.
father image n. Psychology = father-imago n.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > psychology > theory of psychoanalysis > libido > obsession > [noun] > influential image > of parent > of father
father image1912
father-imago1913
1912 Jrnl. Abnormal Psychol. 7 210 The uncle in the dream probably had a triple determination: first, through a decomposition of the father image as in myth production.
1956 E. L. Mascall Christian Theol. & Nat. Sci. vi. 217 As soon as he [sc. Freud] had convinced himself that the idea of God was the projection of a father-image in a wish-fulfilment.
2002 Jrnl. Palestine Stud. 31 72 So all these are different meanings of power, especially in light of the demolition of the father image in the eyes of the children.
father-imago n. Psychology an imago (imago n. 2) of one's father.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > psychology > theory of psychoanalysis > libido > obsession > [noun] > influential image > of parent > of father
father image1912
father-imago1913
1913 Proc. Amer. Medico-psychol. Assoc. 69th Ann. Meeting 157 But we must remember that we are, in this, dealing with an infantile attachment..and that love, with the attributes which belong to it, is more or less centered upon the father imago.
1943 Horizon Oct. 252 Dramas of the soul which aspired either to destroy or reach beyond the traditional father-imago.
2001 D. Mathers Introd. Meaning & Purpose Analyt. Psychol. 81 A persecuting internal object (father-imago) was projectively identified into men.
father-queller n. [originally after classical Latin patricīda patricide n.2; compare also classical Latin parricīda parricide n.1] Obsolete a person who kills a father; a parricide.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > death > killing > killer for specific reason or type of person > [noun] > of relatives > of parent > of father
father-queller1440
patricide1593
Promptorium Parvulorum (Harl. 221) 145 Fader qwellare, patricida.
1561 J. Daus tr. H. Bullinger Hundred Serm. vpon Apocalips f. 22v A most arrant father queller.
a1641 R. Montagu Acts & Monuments (1642) 280 They would never endure Father-quellers to rule over them.
father right n. [after German Vaterrecht (1856 or earlier in this sense); compare mother-right n. 2] chiefly Anthropology and Sociology the custom by which descent and inheritance follows the male line in a family or dynasty.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > rule or government > rule or government of family or tribe > [noun] > patriarchy or patriarchalism
paternity1614
patriarchya1626
patriarchate1727
patriarchalism1841
father-rule1888
father right1899
1899 F. W. Moore tr. L. Gumplowicz Outl. Sociol. i. 53 He [sc. J. Lippert] goes on to show the rising ‘father right’ [Ger. ‘Vaterrecht’].
1907 Folk-lore June 245 The passage from motherright to fatherright.
1955 M. Gluckman Custom & Confl. Afr. iii. 73 The two contrasting types of kinship system, extreme father-right and extreme matriliny, are built up on the same principle: the link of mother to child.
2002 Econ. & Polit. Weekly 20 Apr. 1546/1 The idea of the struggle between the sexes—where the ‘mother right’ eventually ceded to the ‘father right’.
father-rule n. [perhaps after German Vaterherrschaft (1883 or earlier in this sense)] chiefly Anthropology and Sociology the rule of the father of a family as distinguished from the rule of the male relatives of the mother where descent follows the female line; patriarchy.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > rule or government > rule or government of family or tribe > [noun] > patriarchy or patriarchalism
paternity1614
patriarchya1626
patriarchate1727
patriarchalism1841
father-rule1888
father right1899
1888 Current Lit. Oct. 303/2 The changes relating to property which the establishment of father-rule brought about.
1899 F. W. Moore tr. L. Gumplowicz Outl. Sociol. iii. 112 It is recognized that mother-rule everywhere gave place to father-rule.
2002 R. A. Schoenherr Goodbye Father xiv. 207 As a social institution, father-rule is a massive structure, solidly based on the millennia-deep, worldwide bedrock of patriarchy.
fathersick adj. [after homesick adj.] Obsolete pining for or missing one's father.
ΚΠ
1748 S. Richardson Clarissa III. lix. 281 So father-sick! so family-fond!
1923 L. M. Montgomery Emily of New Moon vi. 60 I guess I'm Fathersick, Aunt Elizabeth. Didn't you feel awfully lonely when your father died?
father-substitute n. [after German Vatersurrogat (see father-surrogate n.)] originally Psychology a person who becomes the object of emotions which are usually directed towards a father; a person who stands in for, or assumes the emotional role of, a father.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > kinsman or relation > parent > father > [noun] > father-substitute
father-surrogate1916
father-substitute1917
1917 C. R. Payne tr. O. Pfister Psychoanalytic Method x. 250 Heine's distinguished father-substitute [Ger. Vatersurrogat], the uncle,..would have preferred to behave as a stranger toward the poorly clad poet.
1938 F. L. Lucas Delights of Dictatorship ii. 46 The hysteria that can find in the Head of that State [sc. the U.S.S.R.] a dream-husband, a father-substitute,..a God.
1949 E. Coxhead Wind in West vi. 156 He had almost detached himself from Mother... Transference to a father-substitute was plainly the next stage.
2008 J. Updike Widows of Eastwick i. 4 The four stepchildren..she saddled him with couldn't have asked for a calmer, more soothingly taciturn father-substitute.
father-surrogate n. originally Psychology a person who becomes the object of emotions which are usually directed towards a father; a person who stands in for, or assumes the emotional role of, a father; = father-substitute n. [Partly after German Vatersurrogat (1909 in the passage translated in quot. 1916, or earlier), and partly (in later use) after German Vaterersatz (1910 or earlier in Freud).]
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > kinsman or relation > parent > father > [noun] > father-substitute
father-surrogate1916
father-substitute1917
1916 C. E. Long tr. C. G. Jung Coll. Papers Analyt. Psychol. iii. 162 The sexuality which announced itself so late and so drastically, even here only led to a deteriorated edition of the father-surrogate [Ger. des Vatersurrogates].
1950 J. Strachey tr. S. Freud Totem & Taboo iv. 148 The totem may be the first form of father-surrogate [Ger. die erste Form des Vaterersatzes].
1957 N. Frye Anat. Crit. 165 The fury with which these characters are baited..shows that they are father-surrogates.
2009 Star Tribune (Minneapolis) (Nexis) 12 June e10 Gruff, good-hearted Sasaki becomes a sort of father-surrogate to the younger man.
father-waur adj. Scottish Obsolete worse than one's father; degenerate. [Compare father-better adj., and also Old Icelandic fǫður-verringr (noun) degenerate son.]
ΚΠ
a1500 R. Henryson tr. Æsop Fables: Trial of Fox l. 801 in Poems (1981) 34 Ane sone, the quhilk..till his name was callit Father-war.
1581 J. Hamilton Catholik Traictise f. 147v Luther the eldest sone of sathan..and his sone naturall fatheruar Iohne Caluine.
a1600 ( W. Stewart tr. H. Boece Bk. Cron. Scotl. (1858) I. l. 6669 Think on oure fatheris and thair nobill deidis, And lat ws nocht be cawit fader war.
b. Compounds with simple unmarked genitive father.Compare discussion in etymology section.
father-brother n. [compare Middle Low German vāderbrōder, German Vaterbruder (beginning of the 16th century)] Obsolete (Scottish in later use) a paternal uncle; cf. father-sister n. and also mother brother n.
ΚΠ
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) (1961) Lev. xx. 20 He þat gooþ to gedere wiþ þe wife of his fader broþer [L. patrui] or of his vncle & openeþ þe sheenscheep of his kynredene boþe þei shal bere þer synne.
a1522 G. Douglas tr. Virgil Æneid (1959) vi. vi. 37 We stand content..That ay remane the chaste Proserpina Within hir fader broderis boundis and ryng.
1609 J. Skene tr. Regiam Majestatem 33 The father brother of the fathers side.
1644 in J. Stuart Extracts Council Reg. Aberdeen (1872) IV. 34 Mr James Reid..hade caused lay his vmquhill father and..his father brother, vnder the said stane.
1681 J. Dalrymple Inst. Law Scotl. xxx. §32. 170 Our Custom hath according to the course of the Law of Nature, found the Father to be Heir to his Son, and not the Father-brother, or any of his Descendents.
father-sister n. [compare Middle Low German vādersüster] Obsolete (Scottish in later use) a paternal aunt; cf. father-brother n. and also mother-sister n. at mother n.1 Compounds 5a.
ΚΠ
a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1872) IV. 399 Nero slouȝ meny noblemen and Livia Octavianus his wif, his owne moder Agrippina, and his fadir suster [L. soror patris sui] and his wif.
1563 in J. S. Clouston Rec. Earldom of Orkney (1914) 13 The..dewiding of thayre fathyre-systyre lands.
1597 J. Skene De Verborum Significatione at Eneya The father sister and her bairnes suld succeede.
c1650 J. Spalding Memorialls Trubles Scotl. & Eng. (1851) II. 296 Ye hard befoir..how the Lord Gordoun rode to Lessmoir to viseit his father-sister.
1672 in M. P. Brown Suppl. Dict. Decis. Court of Session (1826) II. 160 At the time of the daughter's decease, the late President, and the relict of William Baillie, being father-brother and father-sister to the daughter, were nearest of kin.
c. Compounds with the marked genitive form father's.
Father's Day n. originally U.S. a day on which fathers are particularly honoured: in North America, South Africa, and Britain, usually the third Sunday in June, in Australia, the first Sunday in September; cf. Mother's Day n. 1.The idea of having a national day on which to honour fathers was first proposed by Mrs. John Bruce Dodd of Spokane, Washington (see, e.g., quot. 1911), although it wasn't widely observed in the United States until the 1930s.
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > period > year > [noun] > specific days of the year
Candlemas1014
May Day1267
All Souls' Dayc1300
midsummer evena1400
firstc1400
Beltane1424
midsummer eve1426
quarter day1435
Beltane1456
mid-Sundaya1475
madding-day1568
Lord Mayor's day1591
Barnaby bright1595
Lammas-eve1597
All Saints' Night1607
Handsel Monday1635
distaff's day1648
long Barnabya1657
St. Valentine's eve1671
leet-day1690
All Fools' Day1702
Boxing Day1743
April Fool's Day1748
Royal Oak Day1759
box day1765
Oak-apple Day1802
All Souls' Eve1805
mischief night1830
Shick-shack Day1847
chalk-back day1851
call night1864
Nut-Monday1867
Arbor Day1872
April Fool's1873
Labour Day1884
Martinmas Sunday1885
call day1886
Samhain1888
Juneteenth1890
Mother's Day1890
Father's Day1908
Thinking Day1927
Punkie night1931
Tweede Nuwejaar1947
1908 Boston Daily Globe 19 May 10/3 Why doesn't somebody suggest the idea of having a ‘Fathers' day’, when everybody in the country shall wear a modest violet in honor of poor Father?
1911 Med. Sentinel May 275 The churches of Spokane, at the suggestion of Mrs. John Bruce Dodd, of that city, have appointed the third Sunday of every June as ‘Fathers Day’.
1936 N.Y. Times 14 June f9/4 Last year the promotion of Father's Day alone was credited with jumping sales volume on an average of about 35 per cent over the preceding week.
1963 New Yorker 15 June 82 What an inspired idea for Father's Day!
2001 Independent 13 June ii. 7/2 We all know the items that get..dusted down again for Father's Day. Yes: gardening gloves, slippers, home-brewing kits and novelty golf memorabilia.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2016; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

fatherv.

Brit. /ˈfɑːðə/, U.S. /ˈfɑðər/
Forms: see father n.
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: father n.
Etymology: < father n.
1.
a. transitive. To be or become the father of; to beget. Also with †of, on, specifying the mother of the child so fathered.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > biology > biological processes > procreation or reproduction > multiply or reproduce [verb (transitive)] > beget
sowc1250
getc1300
begeta1325
engenderc1330
conceivec1350
makea1382
wina1400
fathera1425
rutc1450
tread1594
sirea1616
engraff1864
a1425 Medulla Gram. (Stonyhurst) f. 47v Parento, to fadren & modren.
?c1475 Catholicon Anglicum (BL Add. 15562) f. 43v To ffadyr, genitor.
1591 F. Sparry tr. C. de Cattan Geomancie 81 If the childe be right fathered.
1606 J. Sylvester tr. G. de S. Du Bartas Deuine Weekes & Wks. (new ed.) ii. iii. 34 Ismael..lives to father mighty Progenies.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Cymbeline (1623) iv. ii. 26 Cowards father Cowards, & Base things Syre Bace.
1706 E. Ward Rambling Fuddle-caps 20 Sure never poor Mortal e'er father'd before, Such a Rakehelly Rogue.
1779 Mirror No. 23. (1786) 167 Having made an elopement with his mother's maid, and fathered three children of other people, he got the appellation of a dissipated dog.
1877 S. Lanier Florida Sunday in Poems 103 I am one with all the kinsmen things That e'er my Father fathered.
1884 Ld. Tennyson Becket iii. iii. 136 Had I fathered him I had given him more of the rod than the sceptre.
1939 J. Steinbeck Grapes of Wrath xvii. 266 A man might have a willing girl if he stayed with her, if he fathered her children and protected them.
1960 G. T. Wright Poet in Poem iv. 150 Sigismondo fathered his children on other women, notably on Isotta degli Atti, a lady of Rimini.
1978 J. A. Sanford Dreams & Healing xx. 150 The Christ child is fathered by the Holy Spirit and not by an ordinary mortal man.
2012 Independent 25 Apr. 17/3 The woman who accused him of fathering her child.
b. transitive. figurative. To originate, bring into existence; to be the author of (a doctrine, statement, etc.).
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > perception or cognition > faculty of imagination > inventive or creative faculty > contrive, devise, or invent [verb (transitive)]
findeOE
conceive1340
seek1340
brewc1386
divine1393
to find outc1405
to search outc1425
to find up?c1430
forgec1430
upfindc1440
commentc1450
to dream out1533
inventa1538
father1548
spina1575
coin1580
conceit1591
mint1593
spawn1594
cook1599
infantize1619
fabulize1633
notionate1645
to make upc1650
to spin outa1651
to cook up1655
to strike out1735
mother1788
to think up1855
to noodle out1950
gin1980
1548 E. Gest Treat. againste Masse sig. Diii The true meanyng of them, who fathered the Canon.
a1576 W. Bullein Dial. Sorenes f. xxiiijv, in Bulwarke Def. (1579) Some [sc. vlcers] bee fathered of an hotte, and some of a colde humour.
1601 P. Holland tr. Pliny Hist. World I. 91 When some grave personage fathereth a lie.
1685 T. Mills Hist. Holy War 14 To..render himself the more capable of fathering a Plot of his own begetting.
1734 H. Carey Trag. Chrononhotonthologos 11 Thou Counsell'st well, my Rigdum Funnidos, And Reason seems to father thy Advice.
1759 Conduct & Treatm. J. Crookshanks 121 He very well knew that Lieutenant had fathered a Letter, which,..had fallen into his Lordship's Hands.
1842 Ld. Tennyson Love & Duty in Poems (new ed.) II. 83 Shall Error in the round of time Still father Truth?
1850 C. Kingsley Alton Locke I. vii. 117 As wild Icarias..as ever were fathered by a red Republic.
1931 R. E. Finley Lady of Godey's iii. 42 Phineas Taylor Barnum fathered the American circus.
1958 J. K. Galbraith Affluent Society xi. 126 The urge to consume is fathered by the value system which emphasizes the ability of society to produce.
2014 P. C. Godfrey More than Money ix. 159 Watt fathered the engine and Boulton acted as midwife.
2. transitive. To act as a father to; to look after.In quot. 1577: to carry out (a law).
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > carrying out > execute, perform, or carry out [verb (transitive)] > a command or law
fulfila1225
servea1325
fathera1425
practisea1464
actuate1594
the world > action or operation > safety > protection or defence > care, protection, or charge > care for, protect, or have charge of [verb (transitive)] > affectionately or tenderly > like a father or mother
fathera1616
mother1863
a1425 (?a1387) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Cambr. Ff.5.35) (1873) C. i. l. 120 (MED) I seye, ȝe prestus..ȝe schul fader hem fro þe fende to folwe goddus wille.
1549 M. Coverdale et al. tr. Erasmus Paraphr. Newe Test. II. Rom. xi. f. xxxii For God doth not in suche sorte promise to do any thyng, nor in suche sorte fathereth his children.
1577 H. I. tr. H. Bullinger 50 Godlie Serm. I. ii. viii. sig. M.viijv/1 Suppose..there were no magistrate to execute and as it were to father those lawes.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Cymbeline (1623) iv. ii. 397 I good youth, And rather Father thee, then Master thee. View more context for this quotation
1648 Mercurius Britanicus No. 7. 53 People that had children at home to father, and which were unwilling to suffer under any other Character then what their Divinity-men told them was fit for them.
1721 in W. M. Myddelton Chirk Castle Accts. 7 July (1931) II. 433 Pd Jane Smith for Fathering ye Cattle all winter at her Barn being 5 Cows.
1783 R. Cumberland Mysterious Husband i. i. 13 I chose my Lord Davenant here, a man of a certain age, a widower, d'ye see; not only fit to husband you, Louisa, but to father you.
1892 Pall Mall Gaz. 3 May 3/1 The way in which Khama fathers his people.
1903 ‘S. G. Tallentyre’ Life Voltaire II. xxxix. 223 He worked with them, corrected them, praised them,..financed them, fathered them, housed them, and in the desire for their fame quite forgot his own.
1998 J. W. Lango in J. G. Haber & M. S. Halfon Norms & Values xix. 253 When Prospero feels pleasure in fathering Miranda, he has a subjective experience. And when she feels pleasure in being fathered by him, she has a subjective experience.
3.
a. transitive. To appear to be, or acknowledge oneself as, the father of (a child). Also: to adopt (a child). Also figurative. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > kinsman or relation > parent > father > fatherhood > be a father [verb (transitive)] > appear as father of
father?a1425
?a1425 Mandeville's Trav. (Egerton) (1889) 142 (MED) On þis wise may þai fader anoþer mannez childe.
a1500 (a1460) Towneley Plays (1994) I. x. 98 Godys and myn, she says it is! I wyll not fader it!
1589 W. Warner Albions Eng. (new ed.) vi. xxx. 132 Who so the Childe shall git..Vulcan..shall father it.
1678 J. Dryden in T. Shadwell True Widow sig. A3v He's a Sot, Who needs will Father what the Parish got.
1723 D. Defoe Hist. Col. Jack (ed. 2) 252 I would Father no Brats that were not of my own getting.
1737 A. Pope Epist. of Horace ii. ii. 12 Use will father what's begot by Sense.
1764 F. C. Sheridan Dupe v. v. 63 And pray whose is this child, Sir John, that you are to father?
1855 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. III. 8 The charge of..fathering a supposititious child.
2013 Afr. News (Nexis) 14 Sept. Personally, I advise childless couples to consider adoption but in my home town adoption is actually a taboo. My people believe it is wrong to father another man's child.
b. transitive. To acknowledge oneself as the originator or author of; to take responsibility for; to adopt. Also: to represent oneself as the owner of. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > causation > source or origin > originate or be a source of [verb (transitive)] > attribute to an author or source > acknowledge oneself as the author or source of
father1556
1556 J. Ponet Shorte Treat. Politike Power sig. Iv For whan he had wrought and made sure the great mariage to auoide the hatred of the people, he made his scholar to father it, and to haue the outwarde thankes.
1589 tr. Tsar Feodor I Let. in R. Hakluyt Princ. Navigations 824 They shal not..father any other mens goods, but their owne.
1634 J. Canne Necessitie of Separation v. 217 The report goes, that he was not the..author of it, but another did it, and gott him to father it.
1663 J. Birkenhead Assembly-man To Rdr. Unwilling to father other mens sins.
1713 J. Swift Part of 7th Epist. Horace Imitated 5 Men of Wit, Who often father'd what he writ.
1764 E. Seymour Compl. Hist. Eng. II. 365/2 With regard to the sinking fund, Sir Robert Walpole observed, that he remembered the time, when the establishment of that scheme was treated as a ridiculous project, and then he was obliged to father it.
1855 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. IV. xx. 498 By these two distinguished men Paterson's scheme was fathered. Montague undertook to manage the House of Commons, Godfrey to manage the City.
1871 C. H. Spurgeon Treasury of David II. Ps. xliv (heading) No other writer should be sought for to father any of the Psalms, when David will suffice.
4. transitive. With complement: to assert (something) to have the origin specified; to declare to have been originally. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > statement > assertion or affirmation > [verb (transitive)] > assert to be something in origin
father1471
to grandfather (a thing) on1888
1471 J. Paston in Paston Lett. & Papers (2004) I. 567 I am sory that ye haue fadyrd my hors..to be my brodyr Edmundys.
1606 W. Warner Continuance Albions Eng. xiv. lxxxiii. 346 The Scots..do father it The Stone that Iacob..Did sleepe vpon.
a1652 I. Jones Most Notable Antiq. called Stone-Heng (1655) 19 Geffrey Monmouth's Authority..was the first,..that father'd Stoneheng their monument.
5.
a. transitive. With on, upon. To ascribe (a thing) to a specified person as his or her production or work; to attribute the authorship of (something) to a specified person. Also formerly with of, specifying the person. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > causation > source or origin > originate or be a source of [verb (transitive)] > attribute to an author or source
refera1398
reducec1454
father?1499
entitle1550
intitule1559
foist1598
attribute1599
mother1645
authoridate1652
accredit1864
?1499 (?a1440) S. Winter tr. St. Ierom (de Worde) sig. Ciiv The said herytyke aledged ayenst vs the said tretice that he fadred vpon gloryous Ierome Siluayn.
1542 N. Udall tr. Erasmus Apophthegmes i. xxii. f. 11 This saiying..is fathered on Socrates.
1548 E. Gest Treat. againste Masse sig. Iviii The canones whiche the catholiques father of ye apostles.
1641 Naunton's Fragmenta Regalia sig. D It is a likely report, that they Father on him.
1696 W. Nicolson Eng. Hist. Libr. I. 122 He might possibly have been impos'd upon by those that had given the Name of that Author to such Anonymous Collections as they knew not how truly to Father.
a1722 J. Toland Coll. Several Pieces (1726) I. 42 It is difficult to know certainly what were his real atchievments, or what were fabulously father'd upon him.
1764 B. Franklin Narr. Massacres Lancaster County 13 To father the worst of Crimes on the God of Peace.
1865 D. Livingstone & C. Livingstone Narr. Exped. Zambesi xix. 398 And coolly fathered the traffic on the Missionaries.
1910 Trans. & Proc. Amer. Philol. Assoc. 41 11 I call your attention for a moment to the jest of Anacharsis, or rather, of the unknown Greeks who fathered it on Anacharsis.
1970 L. R. N. Ashley George Peele ii. 42 Many critics, while admitting that the Jests are facetiæ of very ancient vintage, think it significant that they were fathered on Peele.
b. transitive. With on, upon. To attribute (something) to a specified source or origin; to trace the origin of (something) to a specified source. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > causation > source or origin > originate or be a source of [verb (transitive)] > derive, come from, or originate in
fet1393
to take one's spring from (also out of)c1440
to come out of ——1481
extract1490
deduct1530
fetch1552
desume1564
deduce1565
father1577
derive1600
traduce1615
raisea1631
originate1653
to be sourced in1941
1577 A. Golding tr. J. Calvin Serm. Epist. Ephesians v. f. 31 But S. Paule in that place speaketh alonely of the forgiuing of our sinnes, and of our imbracing of Gods grace by fayth: which things he sheweth cannot bee fathered vppon any other cause, than onely Gods pitying of vs.
1608 Yorkshire Trag. sig. B3 Fathering his ryots one his youth.
1680 R. Boyle Sceptical Chymist (new ed.) vi. 433 Such Phantastick and Un-intelligible Discourses..father'd upon such excellent Experiments.
1702 Eng. Theophrastus 270 We father upon love several dealings and intercourses in which it is not concerned.
1775 J. W. Fletcher in R. Hill & J. W. Fletcher Fictitious & Genuine Creed Pref. p. vi The principle, on which such a doctrine might be justly fathered.
c. transitive. With on, upon. To impose (something) on something else; to attach to. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > existence > extrinsicality or externality > be extrinsic or external [verb (intransitive)] > attach or be added to something or intervene
knit1571
intervene1605
advene1651
father1760
accrete1821
1760 T. Flloyd Bibliotheca Biographica III. at Hutchinson (John) He taught our author..as much as he could see there was any use for either upon the earth or in the heaven, without poisoning him with any false notions fathered upon the mathematics.
1817 W. Kirby & W. Spence Introd. Entomol. II. xvii. 47 This interpretation has been fathered upon them.
1874 H. R. Reynolds John the Baptist iii. §1. 147 (note) Some attempt to father on the Christian Church the limitations and orders of the Jewish priesthood.
1885 Law Times 79 190/2 The word ‘land’ is to bear the meaning which is fathered upon it by sub-sect. 10 (i.).
6.
a. transitive. To fix or pin the paternity of (a child) on (also upon) a person. Also (without construction): to name or declare the father of (a child). Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > kinsman or relation > parent > father > fatherhood > be a father [verb (transitive)] > fix paternity
father1570
affiliate1798
filiate1824
1570 P. Levens Manipulus Vocabulorum sig. Gi/1 To Father, patrem nominare.
1612 J. Speed Theatre of Empire of Great Brit. i. i. 2/1 Brute should haue had more sons fathered on him.
1625 K. Long tr. J. Barclay Argenis ii. xxii. 141 Neptvne, vpon whom..our Ancestors haue fathered all the men of extraordinary huge stature.
1679 ‘Democritus Junior’ Versatile Ingenium 65 A Strumpet would have fathered a child on Aristippus.
1768 R. Hill Pietas Oxoniensis 16 Both young and old have had lewd women come to them in college, who have fathered children on them.
1780 in W. E. Tate Parish Chest (1969) ii. viii. 219 A Journey with Ann fox to Father her Childe her examination a Warrant and Expenses 0. 5. 0.
1803 in W. Scott Minstrelsy Sc. Border (ed. 2) II. 248 Father my bairn on whom I will, I'll father nane on thee.
1885 Daily News 13 Mar. 7/3 He advised her to father her child.
1918 J. G. Frazer Folk-lore in Old Test. II. iii. i. 447 In due time she gave birth to twin boys. She fathered them on the god Mars, but her hard-hearted uncle refused to admit the plea.
b. transitive (reflexive). To indicate or reveal who one's father is. Frequently figurative: to indicate one's origin or authorship. Obsolete (regional in later use).
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > kinsman or relation > parent > father > fatherhood > be a father [verb (reflexive)] > indicate one's paternity
father1600
1600 W. Shakespeare Much Ado about Nothing i. i. 104 The Lady fathers her selfe: be happy Lady, for you are like an honourable father. View more context for this quotation
1707 M. Henry Expos. Five Bks. Moses Pref. sig. A2v The Image of his Holiness is in the unspotted Purity of its Precepts;..in short, 'tis a work that fathers it self.
1808 W. Scott Let. 15 Dec. in J. G. Lockhart Mem. Life Sir W. Scott (1837) II. vi. 219 This spirited composition, as we say in Scotland, fathers itself in the manliness of its style.
1878 W. Dickinson Gloss. Words & Phrases Cumberland (ed. 2) at Fadder A child having features resembling those of its father ‘fadders it sel’.
1894 R. R. Michaux Sketches Life N. Carolina i. 60 It [sc. another letter of Christ] claims to have been found originally in the Holy Sepulchre at Jerusalem... It fathers itself in the following paragraph.
c. transitive. To trace the father of. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > kinsman or relation > parent > father > fatherhood > be a father [verb (transitive)] > trace father of
father1680
1680 Bp. G. Burnet Some Passages Life Earl of Rochester 14 A Child is fathered sometimes by its resemblance.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2016; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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