单词 | fondle |
释义 | fondlen. An act of fondling; an affectionate or sexual touch or caress. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > love > action of caressing > [noun] > instance of caressing toya1400 endearing1622 fondling1640 caressa1657 endearment1702 fondle1750 woo1937 love-up1953 1750 New Tea-table Misc. 37 The leer, the fondle, and the smile, Each pleasing trick, each artful wile. 1833 C. Lamb Pop. Fallacies xii, in Last Ess. Elia 257 It was a stranger to the patient fondle, the hushing caress. 1884 B. Nye Baled Hay 82 He also loathes those who try to go into the stable and fondle him. He isn't apparently very much on the fondle. 1900 Literary Digest 29 Dec. 814/1 'Tis not the weight of jewel or plate, Or the fondle of silk or fur. 2001 J. Harvey Gimme Gimme Gimme 185/2 A furtive fondle on your front bottom would've been fun. But, oh well. 2018 Mirror (Nexis) 3 June Kelly reached up and licked her boob then gave her other nipple a quick fondle. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2020; most recently modified version published online March 2022). fondlev. 1. transitive. To treat (a person or animal) with indulgence; to pamper. Also with up. Now Indian English. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > love > tenderness > foolish affection, excessive love or fondness > be infatuatedly fond or love to excess [verb (transitive)] > pet, indulge, or pamper daunt1303 cocker1440 cherisha1450 pomper1483 daut?a1513 to cocker up1530 pamper1530 pimper1537 tiddle1560 cockle1570 dandlea1577 cotchel1578 cockney1582 fondle1582 coax1589 to coax up1592 to flatter up1598 dainty1622 pet1629 cosset1659 caudle1662 faddle1688 pettle1719 coddle1786 sugar-plum1788 twattle1790 to make a fuss of or over (with)1814 mud1814 pamperizea1845 mollycoddle1851 pompey1860 cosher1861 pussy1889 molly1907 1582 [implied in: R. Stanyhurst in tr. Virgil First Foure Bookes Æneis 96 If she coye, that kendleth thee fondling loouer his onset.]. 1652 Trav. Diary 6 Aug. in MS Rawl. D. 76 f. 61v Wee were conducted to the butterey and there the courtiers did strive againe to fondle one according to there customes being a right mark of afection and love. 1721 N. Amhurst Terræ-filius No. 8. ⁋ 11 Where one would stand it out..twenty chose rather to be fondled up, and call'd mother's nown boys at any expence. 1732 Visct. Bolingbroke Let. 18 July in J. Swift Corr. (1965) IV. 45 You shall be nursed, fondled, & humoured. 1757 S. Johnson Rambler No. 175. ⁋5 Every day sends out, in quest of pleasure..some heir fondled in ignorance. 1789 F. Burney Diary & Lett. Apr. (1842) V. 20 I knew you would rear them, and cheer them, and fondle them [sc. poultry] like your children. 1818 L. Hunt Foliage p. liv Fondled by the ladies, With ‘What a young rogue this is!’ 1964 D. M. Murphy tr. ‘P. Dufoyer’ Maternity xi. 100 She is easily led by an excess of tenderness to spoil her child..to fondle him too much for the slightest hurt. 1999 S. N. Kurtz in T. G. Vaidyanathan & J. F. Kripal Vishnu on Freud's Desk viii. 202 Recall that in Hindu India it is thought improper to fondle or pay attention to one's child in the presence of elders. 2. transitive. To handle (a person, animal, or thing) with fondness; to caress; to toy or fiddle with (something). Also: to press fondly to (the heart). ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > love > action of caressing > caress [verb (transitive)] freeOE coy1340 daunsel1362 to fawn on, upon1477 daut?a1513 cherish1568 fona1586 minion1598 flatter1599 ingle1599 biscot1653 ningle1659 fond1676 smuggle1679 fondle1686 caress1697 nauntle1828 smudge1844 the mind > emotion > love > affection > [verb (transitive)] > display fondness fond1530 fondle1686 the mind > emotion > love > action of caressing > caress [verb (transitive)] > fondle, embrace, or caress fondle1832 neck1877 1686 T. D'Urfey Common-wealth of Women v. ii. 48 Enter Frugal, with a Monkey in's arms, follow'd by Julietta, who is fondling it. 1695 tr. Court St. Germain's 100 He could not forbear dropping some few Tears, which the Countess wip'd away, fondling him with a thousand Caresses. 1738 H. Carey Margery iii. 27 Come to my Arms, old Dad, And fondle thine own dear Honey. 1818 J. Keats Endymion i. 19 Zephyr..Fondles the flower amid the sobbing rain. 1832 W. Irving Alhambra II. 36 The prince fondled it to his heart. ‘Happy bird,’ said he. 1895 W. Winter Shadows of Stage xxvii. 303 Being left alone, she fondles the scraps of paper and confesses her passion. 1960 A. S. Neill Summerhill vii. 358 There is no reason at all why parents should not fondle their children, tickle them, stroke them, pat them. 2003 Washington Post 10 July (Home ed.) c7/3 Some newsmen in traditional head scarves and dishdashas, some fondling worry beads, a few taking timeouts to pray toward Mecca. 3. intransitive. To behave or treat in a fond manner; to toy or fiddle with; (also) †to bestow caresses on (obsolete). ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > love > affection > [verb (intransitive)] fondle1720 smoodge1906 1720 J. Gay Poems Several Occasions II. 319 He..fondled on her like his child. 1773 O. Goldsmith She stoops to Conquer iv. 77 Fondling together, as I'm alive. 1841 C. Dickens Old Curiosity Shop i. i. 42 ‘Foolish Nell!’ said the old man fondling with her hair. 1880 G. Meredith Tragic Comedians I. v. 90 Unable to take such services without rewarding him, she fondled. 1958 J. Heath-Stubbs Triumph of Muse in Coll. Poems (1988) 339 When spring airs fondle And the nightingale In the olivaster Harbours and sings. 2014 Financial Express (Bangladesh) (Nexis) 1 Sept. There is a man or a woman not far from your home who is perhaps licking the edge of a knife, fondling with a loaded gun or planning a scheme to make you vanish into thin air. 4. transitive. To touch or caress (a person or part of the body) intimately or sexually, esp. in an unwelcome or inappropriate way. Also intransitive. ΚΠ 1745 Proc. Assizes Surry 21 Mar. 16/2 She told me the prisoner lay with her. I observed that he had fondled and kissed the child several times. 1828 Observer 20 July 1/2 He having..taken Mrs. Marsh to his knee, and kissed and fondled her in a way that told too plainly the nature of the intercourse between them. 1888 Rep. Court of Appeals Texas 25 729 He, defendant..fondled her private parts with his hand. 1993 M. Gee Going West (1994) 66 They..found a place (the dunes accommodated dozens of couples), and there, for a long while, they kissed and stroked and fondled. 2019 Aberdeen Evening Express (Nexis) 31 May 4 Another child..described how he was abused by a man or older boy who fondled him in the television room and in the toilets at the home. Derivatives ˈfondled adj. (a) pampered, cherished (now chiefly Indian English); (b) caressed; handled affectionately or sexually. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > love > tenderness > foolish affection, excessive love or fondness > [adjective] > indulging or pampering > pampered or petted pomped1509 pampereda1529 cockereda1586 smoothed1600 dauted1636 fondled1680 petted1724 coaxed1829 the mind > emotion > love > tenderness > foolish affection, excessive love or fondness > [adjective] > cherished with unreasoning affection > treated with fond indulgence fondled1680 1680 T. Otway Poet's Complaint of his Muse 3 Alone I liv'd their much-lov'd fondled Boy. 1788 C. Reeve Exiles III. 169 Those fondled and spoiled children, who are disagreeable to all others. 1962 Bhavan's Jrnl. 24 June 7/1 Being the fondled child born to an aging father late in life..he had been allowed to grow self-willed, naughty and obstinate. 1975 New York 13 Oct. 40/1 The speech of American clichés, the hearty laugh, the wave, the slap on the back, the fondled bicep. 2003 T. K. Hubbard Homosexuality Greece & Rome x. 486 The fondled breast, too, is not without its special pleasure. ˈfondler n. a person who fondles (in various senses), now esp. in a sexual way.The sense in quot. 1720 is not entirely clear, and may instead mean ‘an object of affection’. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > love > affection > [noun] > one who feels affection (for) minderc1450 affecter1568 affectator1610 carer1691 fondler1720 the mind > emotion > love > action of caressing > [noun] > one who caresses or fondles fondler1720 caresser1822 faddler1888 canoodler1903 necker1920 1720 J. B. Poem Rise & Fall South-Sea Stock 17 But little does the pretty Fondler know, 'Tis out of Kindness that she serves him so. 1876 C. M. Yonge Womankind xviii. 135 Whether the elder brother starts as the tyrant and tormentor, or the champion and fondler. 2015 Sun (Nexis) 12 Feb. 3 Groping a woman's breasts at work is OK—so long as it's just the once, a court has ruled. But serial fondlers should be sacked. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2020; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.1750v.1582 |
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