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单词 antagonize
释义

antagonizev.

Brit. /anˈtaɡənʌɪz/, U.S. /ænˈtæɡəˌnaɪz/
Forms:

α. 1600s antigonize.

β. 1600s– antagonize, 1700s– antagonise.

Origin: A borrowing from Greek. Etymon: Greek ἀνταγωνίζεσθαι.
Etymology: < ancient Greek ἀνταγωνίζεσθαι to struggle against, to vie with < ἀντι- anti- prefix + ἀγωνίζεσθαι agonize v. In sense 2 after antagonist n. 3. Compare earlier agonize v.With α. forms compare anti- prefix.
1. transitive. To compete with, vie with, rival. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > dissent > competition or rivalry > compete with [verb (transitive)]
couple1477
envy1509
contend1577
counterscore1577
paragona1586
corrive1586
emulate1586
emule1595
corrival1601
vie1602
rival1607
vie1607
contesta1616
antagonize1634
cope with1651
to break a lance with1862
1634 T. Herbert Relation Some Yeares Trauaile 211 The Dodo, which for shape and rarenesse may Antigonize the Phœnix of Arabia.
2.
a. transitive. Physiology. Of a muscle or group of muscles: to act as an antagonist to (another muscle or group of muscles); to oppose (the action of another muscle). Cf. antagonist n. 3.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > structural parts > muscle > [verb (transitive)] > muscular movement
flexa1521
abduce1646
antagonize1694
abduct1765
1694 W. Cowper Μυοτομια Reformata xxxiii. 199 This..Antagonizeth the Precedent by turning the Foot and Toes outwards in that Position of the Leg as before Noted.
1759 M. Flemyng Introd. Physiol. xiii. 179 The reason is, the muscles on the opposite side, that antagonise those that are bending the trunk towards one side, are so much stretched, that they become, as it were, paralytic, and lose their power.
1840 Penny Cycl. XVI. 65/1 These fibres..have a constant tendency to antagonize the adductor muscle.
1860 G. H. Lewes Physiol. Common Life II. x. 280 The body is balanced by an incessant shifting of the muscles, one group antagonising the other.
1936 Amer. Jrnl. Surg. 34 201/2 The anterior one-half of the vocal cords are adducted by the lateral cricoarytenoids, antagonized by the posterior cricoarytenoids.
1968 Proc. Royal Soc. B. 170 166 The anterior adductor muscle antagonizes the action of the accessory ventral adductor.
2003 S. Vogel Compar. Biomechanics xxiii. 465 The triceps, then, operating as part of a first-class lever, antagonizes the biceps.
b. transitive. Generally, of any force: to counteract or neutralize the action of.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > operation upon something > have effect on [verb (transitive)] > neutralize or counteract
fordoc1175
counterpoisec1374
correct1578
countercheck1590
countervail1590
cancel1633
counterbalance1636
counterswaya1640
countermand1645
counter-influence1667
counteract1694
destroy1726
neutralizea1797
counterweigh1825
antagonize1833
mitigate1857
kill1858
1833 J. F. W. Herschel Astronomy viii. 285 Perpetual contest between conservative and destructive powers..so antagonizing one another as to prevent the latter from ever acquiring an uncontrollable ascendancy.
1860 R. W. Emerson Fate in Conduct of Life (London ed.) 19 If Fate follows and limits power, power attends and antagonizes Fate.
1915 J. J. Putnam Human Motives i. 15 These conditions of existence..antagonize the influence of the spirit which is immanent in all men and which keeps alive in them an ideal of brotherhood.
1974 Air Quality & Automobile Emission Control (U.S. Nat. Acad. Engin.) I. 73 Indifference, the effect produced by combination equals the effect of the single most active component; other components do not add to, enhance, or antagonize the effect of the most active component.
2011 M. M. Hurley et al. Inside Jokes xii. 257 Emotions interfere with one another when they have an opposite valence, but even here, they don't simply antagonize each other, and a state of negative affect can actually pave the way for a heightened appreciation of humor.
c. transitive. Pharmacology and Physiology. To counteract, interfere with, or inhibit the action or effect of (a drug, other physiologically active substance, or physiological process). Cf. antagonist n. 4.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > biology > substance > process stimulators or inhibitors > stimulate or inhibit [verb (transitive)]
antagonize1854
1854 Assoc. Med. Jrnl. 9 June 509/2 We were anxious to ascertain..whether opium and belladonna—or their respective active principles, morphia and atropin—would uniformly and in all circumstances antagonise, or act as antidotes to, each other.
1872 Trans. Royal Soc. Edinb. 25 581 The chief objects of the two first of these were to ascertain the maximum dose of physostigma that can be successfully antagonised by atropia, and the range of doses of atropia that can successfully antagonise lethal doses of physostigma.
1906 W. E. Dixon Man. Pharmacol. xxxii. 438 Physostigmine..is..antagonised by the atropine group of drugs.
1949 H. W. Florey et al. Antibiotics II. xxi. 812 Glutathione and thiothreonine antagonized the anti-bacterial action of penicillin.
1969 Times 7 July 5/7 Drugs known to have an effect in reducing inflammation, presumably because they antagonize various of the substances released in the lungs.
2008 Sci. Amer. (U.K. ed.) Nov. 59/2 It is now apparent that other cellular proteins—or cellular restrictions, as they are termed—actually antagonize viral replication.
3.
a. intransitive. Of two or more forces: to act in mutual opposition or antagonism; to counteract or oppose one another. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > difficulty > opposition > oppose [verb (intransitive)]
to stop one's way1338
contraryc1380
again-laya1382
traversec1400
to make obstaclec1425
warc1460
thwart1519
oppugn1591
oppose1599
oppone1640
throwa1700
antagonize1707
1707 J. Drake Anthropol. Nova II. iv. 686 The two extremes antagonising, the middle is only at liberty.
1800 J. Reeves Thoughts Eng. Govt. IV. 42 The three powers [sc. the King, Lords, and Commons] do not antagonise, but are supposed to move in different, yet crossing lines, so as to strike the machine of Government and impel it in a direction compounded of all the three.
1861 R. T. Hulme tr. C. H. Moquin-Tandon Elements Med. Zool. ii. vi. i. 318 These organs..act from above downwards, but without antagonizing [Fr. sans antagonisme].
1894 J. Schouler in J. Hawthorne et al. United States VI. xx. 205 Congress..expressly abnegated its rights of guardianship and left freedom and slavery to antagonize to the end.
2011 J. A. Byrd Transit of Empire i. 30 Žižek's discussion of how ontological and dialectical differences antagonize and oscillate between viewing locations in the gap of the Real.
b. intransitive. Of a single force: to act in antagonism against or with another force, process, etc.
ΚΠ
1798 in A. Young Ann. Agric. 30 472 Terms of dealing sufficiently advantageous to the customer. This property antagonizes with, and forms the limit of, the more important property of solidity [sc. that of being proof against the causes of failure].
1833 Weekly Visitor 19 Nov. 418/1 To render this organ [sc. the trunk of an elephant] yet more perfect, it is armed at its extremity with a kind of muscular finger, antagonizing against the division, or wall of partition, between the two canals.
1871 A. J. Davis Fountain (ed. 3) 76 Arminianism may antagonize with Arianism.
1913 Musical Times 54 758/1 Typewriting may develop certain muscles at the expense of others in a way that antagonizes with the proper development of an organist's or pianist's hand.
2009 P. Tertzakian & K. Hollihan End of Energy Obesity ii. viii. 133 Seeking to solve the problem by going bottom-up from emissions..doesn't necessarily mitigate the urgency of our prosperity and security issues; in fact, in some cases, it can actually antagonize against them.
4. To act in antagonism to, struggle against, contend with, oppose actively. Now rare.
a. transitive. With similar forces as subject and object.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > difficulty > opposition > oppose [verb (transitive)] > strive against
to stand with ——OE
warc1230
contrast1489
gainstrive1549
oppugn1591
warsle1606
combat1627
stickle1627
reluctate1668
antagonize1742
to fight up against1768
1742 N. Bailey Universal Etymol. Eng. Dict. Antagonize, to act the Part of an Opponent in arguing, to oppose, to contradict.
1755 S. Johnson Dict. Eng. Lang. To Antagonize, to contend against another.
1818 J. Keats Endymion iii. 131 Like one huge Python Antagonizing Boreas.
1865 D. Masson Recent Brit. Philos. 48 A so-called Scottish Philosophy of Common Sense to antagonize all this mass of English and imported Sensationalism.
1874 Biogr. Encycl. Pennsylvania 19th Cent. 55/2 The other [party] antagonized him because he was opposed to the Bank of the United States upon constitutional grounds.
2001 D. N. Chorafas Integrating ERP, CRM, Supply Chain Managem., & Smart Materials ii. viii. 144 Their only hope to survive is greater efficiency, which capitalizes on universal visibility of information rather than antagonizing the wave of change.
b. transitive. Originally U.S. With a person as subject and a proposal, idea, etc., as object. Also in weakened sense: to disagree with, criticize.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > difficulty > opposition > oppose [verb (transitive)] > set in opposition
set1297
gain-set1435
matchc1440
oppone1463
to set upa1586
oppose1600
counterpone1629
antipose1631
antipathize1667
pit1754
antagonize1849
1849 R. S. Foster Objections to Calvinism as it Is viii. 246 Is the view we have antagonized true or false?
1860 Congr. Globe 5 Apr. 1550/3 So far as I know, there is no disposition among Senators on this side to antagonize this bill with the favorite project of the friends of the homestead bill.
1891 Daily News 20 Oct. 3/5 You recently permitted me to offer some comments on a letter addressed to you by Mrs..Snoad, in which I antagonised her views.
1904 L. O. Brastow Repr. Mod. Preachers 148 He antagonized theology and denied the rational possibility of it.
1972 Kenya Nat. Assembly Official Rec. 13 July 968/2 This Bill is very important and I think it is a very good thing that the Attorney-General has agreed to compromise with the House, and we should try to do everything possible to ensure that the Bill is not antagonized.
5. transitive. To cause to be antagonistic; to make an antagonist of; to rouse to annoyance.Now the most common sense in non-technical use (cf. senses 2a, 2c).
ΚΠ
1882 Echo 20 Feb. 2/4 The very doing of this work..antagonises certain sections of the people whose interests are supposed to be prejudiced by legislative changes.
1918 Internat. Steam Engineer Jan. 378 The Socialist political party has antagonized the workers of America in every movement.
1937 Probl. Internat. Investm. (Royal Inst. Internat. Affairs) (1965) ii. xii. 218 These conditions..were not accepted because Dr. Brüning believed that they would seriously antagonize public opinion in his country.
1973 R. H. Williams Democratic Party & Calif. Politics v. 129 Voters in the first district ousted Congressman Thomas L. Thompson, whose support of the Mills bill had antagonized wool growers there.
2006 R. B. Brown Doing your Diss. in Bus. & Managem. v. 61 The thing that is likely to antagonise your supervisor the most is leaving things to the last minute.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2016; most recently modified version published online December 2021).
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