单词 | inn |
释义 | innn. a. A dwelling place, either temporary or permanent; a home, lodging; (also) a nest, den, or burrow. (a) In singular, or in plural with plural reference. Obsolete (historical in later use). ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > dwelling place or abode > a dwelling > [noun] earneOE wickc900 bottleeOE innOE boldOE wonningc1000 wanea1225 wonea1250 bidea1300 dwelling1340 habitaculec1374 habitaclec1384 habitationc1384 mansionc1385 placea1387 manantie?a1400 dungeonc1460 longhousec1460 folda1500 residencea1522 abode1549 bield1570 lodgement1598 bidinga1600 sit-house1743 location1795 wigwam1817 address1855 yard1865 res1882 nivas1914 multifamily1952 OE Ælfric Catholic Homilies: 1st Ser. (Royal) (1997) vii. 236 Þa ða se steorra glad, & þa tungelwitegan gelædde, & him ðæs cildes inn gebicnode. OE West Saxon Gospels: Matt. (Corpus Cambr.) xiii. 36 He forlet þa ða mænegeo & com to his inne. c1230 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Corpus Cambr.) (1962) 133 Þus poure he wes of in. c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1963) l. 7118 Hengest..seide þat he hafde an in iȝarked to-ȝeines him. c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1978) l. 14610 Þa sparwen heore flut nomen & fluȝen to heore innen ȝeond þare burȝen. a1325 (c1280) Southern Passion (Pepys 2344) (1927) l. 134 To þe temple he wente..and to his yn aȝen a-niȝt. a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1865) I. 115 (MED) In þe side of þe hille was þe yn of Lazarus, of Martha, and of Marie Mawdeleyn; þat toun hiȝt Bethania. 1447 O. Bokenham Lives of Saints (Arun.) (1938) l. 9053 Whan yche man hym dede hye Hoom to hys yn, hym to counforte. a1500 (?a1475) Guy of Warwick (Cambr. Ff.2.38) l. 189 (MED) To hys inne ȝede Gye. 1546 J. Heywood Dialogue Prouerbes Eng. Tongue i. v. sig. Bii Resty welth wylth me this wydow to wyn, To let the worlde wag, and take myne ease in myne yn. 1569 R. Grafton Chron. II. 516 They came to my sayd Lorde of Gloucester to his Inne. 1657 J. Howell Londinopolis 339 Queen Mary gave this House to Nicholas Heth, Archbishop of York, and his successors for ever, to be their Inne or Lodging for their repair to London. 1707 in Rec. Parl. Scotl. to 1707 (2007) A1706/10/5 We are put to a great annual charge in quartering of the souldiers and by their taking up inns. 1822 R. Nares Gloss. Inn, for a house or lodging in general. (b) In plural form, with singular or plural agreement, with singular reference. Obsolete.Quot. c1275 could instead be interpreted as showing the singular (with innen showing nunnation). ΚΠ c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1963) l. 6990 Þe king..sende to þan innen after al his monnen [c1300 Otho to þeos cnihtes hinne]. a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 15407 Quar his innes ar [Gött. innes is, Trin. Cambr. in is] to night wel i can yow bring. a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Coll. Phys.) l. 19829 Þai saȝ þaim fra, Þat innis þare saint petir lai. c1450 (?a1400) Wars Alexander (Ashm.) l. 2920 Þis..berne..Þat here þus hyndly be þe hand ledis to his Innes. 1488 (c1478) Hary Actis & Deidis Schir William Wallace (Adv.) (1968–9) iv. l. 381 For him he gert ane Innys graithit be. 1568 in W. T. Ritchie Bannatyne MS (1928) III. 82 Ffor to by hennis reidwod he rynnis He lokis thame vp in to his Innis. 1603 R. Knolles Gen. Hist. Turkes 1052 He..came suddenly vpon the Turkes..compassed about the Innes wherein they lay. 1638 R. Baillie Let. 22 July (1841) I. 97 At last all three..went to Newcastle, and there lives as they may in ane common innes. a1722 J. Lauder Jrnls. (1900) 38 Some Flamans had come to the toune and had taken up quarters in a certain innes. b. figurative and in figurative contexts. Something resembling a dwelling place, esp. in being a place where a person, corpse, soul, etc., can rest, sleep, or lie. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > dwelling place or abode > [noun] resteOE worthineeOE settlea900 wickc900 houseOE erdinga1000 teld-stedec1000 wonningc1000 innOE bewistc1200 setnessc1200 wanea1225 i-holda1250 wonec1275 wunselec1275 wonning-place1303 bigginga1325 wonning-stede1338 tabernaclea1340 siegec1374 dwelling-placec1380 lodgingc1380 seea1382 tabernaclea1382 habitationc1384 mansionc1385 arresta1400 bowerc1400 wonning-wanec1400 lengingc1420 tenementc1425 tentc1430 abiding placea1450 mansion place1473 domicile1477 lendingc1480 inhabitance1482 biding-place?1520 seat1535 abode1549 remainingc1550 soil1555 household1585 mansion-seata1586 residing1587 habitance1590 fixation1614 situation?1615 commoratorya1641 haft1785 location1795 fanea1839 inhabitancy1853 habitat1854 occupancy1864 nivas1914 downsetting1927 OE Rule St. Benet (Tiber.) (1888) Prol. 4 Audiamus dominum respondentem et ostendentem nobis viam ipsius tabernaculi : uton gehyran andswariende & gesutuliende his healle oððe innes. c1300 St. Michael (Laud) l. 723 in C. Horstmann Early S.-Eng. Legendary (1887) 320 Al round it lith in þe wombe, and i-bouwed ase an hare Ȝwane þat heo in fourme lith, for is In is sumdel nare. a1350 Body & Soul (Harl. 2253) l. 102 in A. S. M. Clark Seint Maregrete & Body & Soul (Ph.D. diss., Univ. of Michigan) (1972) 142 Wen he is graued vnder mold, al cold ys hys yn. a1425 (?a1400) G. Chaucer Romaunt Rose (Hunterian) (1891) l. 5107 A sory geste..Thou herberest hem in thyne Inne The god of loue whanne thou let Inne. a1450 in J. Kail 26 Polit. Poems (1904) 97 (MED) In helle þey purchas here ynne. c1451 J. Capgrave Life St. Gilbert (1910) 76 (MED) Þe tyme was come in whech þat holy soule schuld leue þe In of his body. a1500 in C. Brown Relig. Lyrics 15th Cent. (1939) 277 Þe blis of heuen þan may ȝe wyn; god bryng vs al to his In. 1535 Bible (Coverdale) Isa. xxxii. C My people shal dwel in the ynnes of peace. 1549 M. Coverdale et al. tr. Erasmus Paraphr. Newe Test. II. (1 Thess. iv.) f. vv The body is the dwelling house of the soule and the soule is the Inne of God. 1607 T. Walkington Optick Glasse ii. f. 12 Plotin..blushed often that his soule did harbour in so base an Inne as his Body was. 1615 G. Sandys Relation of Journey 180 Seest thou this tombe hewne in the growing stone? Tis Paula's Inne. 2. a. (a) An establishment which provides accommodation, refreshment, and hospitality for paying guests, esp. travellers; (also) the building in which such an establishment is based. Now also: a pub or tavern. ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > dwelling place or abode > accommodation or lodging > public lodging-places > [noun] > inn guest housec1000 innc1230 hostry1377 host1382 harbergeryc1384 hostelc1384 hostelryc1386 harbergagea1400 hostelar1424 hostagec1440 innsc1550 host-house1570 fondaco1599 change1609 auberge1615 sporting house1615 albergo1617 rancho1648 change-housea1653 posada1652 public house1655 inn-house1677 funduq1684 locanda1770 fonda1777 livery tavern1787 roadhouse1806 meson1817 tambo1830 gasthaus1834 estalagem1835 caravanserai1848 temperance inna1849 sala1871 bush-inn1881 ryokan1914 B & B1918 pousada1949 minshuku1970 c1230 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Corpus Cambr.) (1962) 133 I stude of in, his cradel herbearhede him. c1300 (c1250) Floris & Blauncheflur (Cambr.) (1966) l. 88 Þe lord of þer inne [a1400 Egerton þat ynne] nas non his liche. 1389 in J. T. Smith & L. T. Smith Eng. Gilds (1870) 30 (MED) And qwan ye messe is don, be here aldermannes asent yey schal alle to-gedere gon to an In. ?a1425 (c1400) Mandeville's Trav. (Titus C.xvi) (1919) 160 Þorgh the desertes..þere ben jnnes ordeyned be euery iorneye to resceyue bothe man & hors. Promptorium Parvulorum (Harl. 221) 260 In, of herboroghe, hospicium, diversorium. 1534 Bible (Tyndale rev. Joye) Luke ii. 7 She..layed him in a manger, because ther was no roume for them within in the ynne. 1573 G. Harvey Let.-bk. (1884) 33 Thai carri your letters abroid to the Bear and other commun ins. 1615 Bp. J. Hall Imprese of God i, in Recoll. Treat. 657 Like some Inne, that hath a crowne for the signe without. 1659 H. Hammond Paraphr. & Annot. Psalms (cx. 7 Annot.) 566/1 Souldiers..that are thirsty, but will not make stay at an Inne. 1700 T. Brown et al. tr. P. Scarron Comical Romance i. iii. 7 in tr. P. Scarron Whole Comical Wks. He would not suffer the miserable remains of a scatter'd Company of Strollers to lodge in an Inn. a1763 W. Shenstone Wks. Verse & Prose (1764) I. 228 Whoe'er has travell'd life's dull round..May sigh to think he still has found The warmest welcome, at an inn. 1845 R. Ford Hand-bk. Travellers in Spain I. i. 21 The Spanish inns..are very much in the same condition as they were in the time of the Romans. 1885 J. Ruskin Præterita I. vi. 173 We stayed several weeks in Paris, in a quiet family inn. 1903 Westm. Gaz. 29 Dec. 2/1 The shepherds guarding their flocks, the star, and the stable of the inn at Bethlehem are all represented by toy scenery. 1953 E. O'Neill Moon for Misbegotten iv. 140 Sure, I got so blind drunk at the Inn I forgot all about our scheme. 2006 Independent 24 July 31/3 What is the inducement to go and eat at your local inn? (b) In plural form, with singular or plural agreement, with singular reference. Scottish and Irish English (northern). An establishment which provides accommodation, refreshment, and hospitality for paying guests, esp. travellers; a pub or tavern; (also) the building in which such an establishment is based. Now rare. Sc. National Dict. (at cited word) records this use as still current in Ayrshire, Kirkcudbrightshire, and Selkirkshire in 1958. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > drink > drinking > drinking place > [noun] > tavern or public house houseOE tavern1297 tavern-housea1400 sunc1400 tap-house1500 tippling-housea1549 innsc1550 bousing-inn1575 ivy-bush1576 osteria1580 ordinary1590 caback1591 taberna1593 bousing-house1594 pothouse1598 red lattice1604 cupping-house1615 public house1617 busha1625 Wirtshaus1650 bibbery1653 cabaret1656 gaming ordinary1667 public1685 shop1695 bibbing-housea1704 dram-shop1725 gill house1728 rum shop1738 buvette1753 dram-house1753 grog-shop1790 wine-vault1791 pub1800 pulperia1818 pulqueria1822 potation-shop1823 rum hole1825 Wirtschaft1834 drunkery1836 pot shop1837 drinkery1840 rum mill1844 khazi1846 beer-shop1848 boozer1895 rub-a-dub1898 Weinstube1899 rubbity-dub1905 peg house1922 rub-a-dub-dub1932 rubbity1941 Stube1946 superpub1964 society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > dwelling place or abode > accommodation or lodging > public lodging-places > [noun] > inn guest housec1000 innc1230 hostry1377 host1382 harbergeryc1384 hostelc1384 hostelryc1386 harbergagea1400 hostelar1424 hostagec1440 innsc1550 host-house1570 fondaco1599 change1609 auberge1615 sporting house1615 albergo1617 rancho1648 change-housea1653 posada1652 public house1655 inn-house1677 funduq1684 locanda1770 fonda1777 livery tavern1787 roadhouse1806 meson1817 tambo1830 gasthaus1834 estalagem1835 caravanserai1848 temperance inna1849 sala1871 bush-inn1881 ryokan1914 B & B1918 pousada1949 minshuku1970 c1550 Clariodus (1830) iv. l. 2315 Into ane lustie Innis ludgit thay. 1616 in J. S. Dobie Munim. Irvine (1891) II. 48 That in everrie burgh..thair may be according to the..frequencie of travellouris a mor sewer Innes buldit. a1784 A. Ross Fortunate Shepherd 131 in Sc. National Dict. at Inn Sir, I suppose, Ken says, you're Landlord here, I am, Sir, Says he, tho' my inns look poor. 1822 J. Galt Provost xv. 116 When they put up at the inns, two of them came to me, as Provost, to remonstrate on the shameful condition of the pavement. 1877 Notes & Queries 10 Feb. 107/2 In parts of the county of Down the word inns was used for an inn, e.g. ‘I put up at the heed inns’. 1932 W. D. Cocker Spring o' the Year 14 My trunk's ower-by at the inns. b. figurative and figurative contexts. Something resembling an inn (sense 2a(a)), esp. in offering temporary accommodation, refreshment, or hospitality.In early use frequently difficult to distinguish from sense 1b. ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > dwelling place or abode > accommodation or lodging > [noun] > lodging-place > temporary harbourc1300 sojourna1375 restinga1382 resting placea1382 sojourninga1400 diversoryc1410 deversaryc1485 inn1529 roost1607 peregrination1610 roosting place1643 harbourage1651 séjour1769 pied-à-terre1823 hoochie1952 1529 T. More Dyaloge Dyuers Maters xviii. f. xxiiiv/2 Our Lorde in the parable of the Samarytane, beryng ye woundyd man into yeinne of hys church. 1613 S. Purchas Pilgrimage 566 That Egyptian opinion, esteeming their houses their Innes, and their Sepulchres their eternal habitations. 1647 N. Bacon Hist. Disc. Govt. 5 To make this Isle to be onely as an Inne for him to whom it was formerly given for a possession. 1663 R. Boyle Some Considerations Usefulnesse Exper. Nat. Philos. i. ii. 29 The world is wont to be stiled not unfitly by Divines, The Christian's inne. a1668 W. Davenant Man's the Master (1669) i. 1 Yes, to the last Inn of all Travailers, where we shall meet Worms instead of Fleas; Lovers never rest quietly till they lodge at the sign of the Grave. 1776 W. J. Mickle tr. L. Ariosto in tr. L. de Camoens Lusiad vii. 273 Slavish Italy, the Inn of dolour, a ship without a pilot in a horrid tempest, not the mistress of provinces, but a brothel. 1815 W. Scott Lord of Isles vi. xxvi. 260 The noble and the slave..the same wild road..trode, To that dark inn, the Grave! 1899 F. Sherman Deserted City 7 When age knocks at the inn of youth's desire, Shall the new growth, now worthier of the goal, Find still untenanted the chosen room? 1915 S. Teasdale Rivers to Sea 68 I Came to the crowded Inn of Earth, And called for a cup of wine, But the Host went by with averted eye From a thirst as keen as mine. 1993 L. Ferlinghetti These Are My Rivers 303 A woman walks on the shore Life still an inn of joy and sorrow. 3. Any of four sets of buildings in London (known collectively as the Inns of Court) owned by the legal associations to which all barristers in England and Wales must belong; any of the four legal associations which own these buildings. Also (esp. in earlier use): any of a number of buildings in London (known collectively as the Inns of Chancery) formerly used as a place of residence, work, and study by clerks of chancery and students of law, and (in later use) by solicitors and attorneys.Earliest in Inn of Court n. at Phrases 2a(a). See also Inn of Chancery n. at Phrases 2b.In earlier use sometimes used indiscriminately to refer to any of either the Inns of Court or the Inns of Chancery.The Inns of Court comprise the Inner Temple, the Middle Temple, Lincoln's Inn, and Gray's Inn, and were established in the early 14th cent. Formerly they were the place where barristers lodged, trained, and conducted their work. They no longer provide all the training required by prospective barristers, but continue to be a centre of the legal profession. The sites now consist largely of offices, as well as providing libraries, dining facilities, and temporary accommodation for their members.The Inns of Chancery are thought to have developed around the Inns of Court. The name reflects their early use by clerks of chancery. Until the mid 17th cent., trainee barristers would begin their education at an Inn of Chancery before moving to an associated Inn of Court. After that period, the Inns of Chancery served primarily as accommodation and offices for solicitors and attorneys. From the mid 18th cent. onwards their importance declined, and all the buildings have now been sold for other purposes or demolished.Recorded earlier in the names of each of the Inns, e.g.: 1396 Inquisition Post Mortem (P.R.O.: C 136/88/29) m. 8 De Manerio suo de Portpole in Holburne vocato Greysyn. 1427 in W. P. Baildon Black Bks. (Rec. Soc. Lincoln's Inn) (1897) I. 2 Lyncolnesyn. 1436 in W. P. Baildon Black Bks. (Rec. Soc. Lincoln's Inn) (1897) I. 6 The felaweshippe of Lyncoll' Ynne. 1548 Hall's Vnion: Edward IV f. ccxliiv At whiche feast wer made ten Serieauntes, three out of Greyes Inne, and three out of Lyncolnes Inne, and of euery of the Temples twoo. 1663 J. Heath Hist. Cromwell ii. 5 He was presently removed..to Lincolns-Inne; where he might with lesse imputation..royster it out.] ΘΚΠ society > law > legal profession > [noun] > Inns of Court inn?1435 Inn of Court?1435 ?1435 in C. L. Kingsford Chrons. London (1905) 82 (MED) My seyde lorde off Gloucestre sent vnto the Innes of Courte at London. a1500 (c1465) in J. Gairdner Three 15th-cent. Chrons. (1880) 71 This yere [Anno xxxvij] was a grete fraye be twene the Cite of London and men of Cowrte, which were drevyn with the Archeres of the Cite from the Standarde in Flete strete to ther innes, the xiij day of Apreill. 1607 T. Middleton Michaelmas Terme ii. sig. Ev My two hundred poundes worth a cloath agen for three-score pound: admire me all you studyents at Innes for cousenage. 1699 G. Farquhar Love & Bottle i. 7 You were once an honest Fellow; but so long study in the Inns may alter a Man strangely, as you say. 1746 Ess. Amendment & Reduction Laws (ed. 2) II. 64 The Head of the said Inn shall admit him or them accordingly, and grant a Certificate to enable them to practice. 1780 J. Rayner in W. Dugdale Hist. & Antiq. Pref. p. iv. A number of dinners which the candidate for the bar is obliged to eat in the hall of the inn he is a member of. 1874 Law Times 2 May 291/2 In the colonies a man may practise as a barrister without being a member of an inn. 1883 Chambers's Encycl. V. 584 Each inn has also a local habitation, consisting of a large tract of houses or chambers which are in general occupied by barristers..and are a source of great wealth. 1893 Law Student's Jrnl. 1 May 113/2 Each candidate must enter his name, in full..at the Treasurer's or Steward's Office of his Inn. 1904 Westm. Budget 12 Feb. 28/1 He was a frequent..guest at the Bench table of both Inns. 1949 Cambr. Law Jrnl. 10 179 Up to some seventy years ago, when a man became a judge he was drummed out of his Inn, and became a member of a society called Serjeants' Inn, composed solely, or almost solely, of other judges. 1996 Ann. Rep. Gen. Council of Bar 1995 1/1 The agreement of the Inns to relinquish, through the Council of Legal Education, their equal say in the direction of educational policy. 4. In the Medieval period: a lodging house or residence for students at Oxford or Cambridge universities. Now historical.Recorded earlier in the names of such residences, e.g.: 1346 Patent Roll, 20 Edward III, Part 2 5 Aug. (P.R.O.: C 66/217) m. 7 Preposito & scholaribus domus beate Marie Oxon...de quodam mesuagio suo vocato Takeleysyn. 1438 in H. Anstey Munimenta Academica Oxf. (1868) II. 521 Hæc sunt nomina Principalium aularum..Principalis aulæ Bekys-yne,..Newels-yne,..Pekwater-yne,..Takleys-yne. 1577 W. Harrison Hist. Descr. Islande Brit. ii. vi. f. 80v in R. Holinshed Chron. I There are also in Oxforde certayne Hostelles or Halles..Brodegates. Hart hall..S. Mary hall. White hall. New Inne. Edmond hall.] ΘΚΠ society > education > place of education > educational buildings > [noun] > college or university buildings > students' residence hospital1536 hostel1536 pensionary1583 inn1655 hotel1748 residence1828 bursa1831 residence hall1857 dormitory1865 hall1879 hospice1895 hospitium1895 1655 T. Fuller Hist. Univ. Cambr. ii. 27 in Church-hist. Brit. Know also that Inns (whereof onely two, Ovings and St. Pauls) differed onely gradually from Hostles, as being less. a1695 A. Wood Surv. Antiq. City of Oxf. (1899) I. 141 That this inne, which was afterwards, from the said Richard, called Hunsingore Inne, was an eminent receptacle for schollers. 1714 J. Ayliffe Antient & Present State Univ. Oxf. I. i. iii. 38 There arose a sharp and dismal Conflict between the Scholars and the Townsmen, insomuch that the latter, thro' Violence, broke into the Scholars Houses and Inns. 1759 New Oxf. Guide 70 Of the numerous Halls, Hostels, or Inns, which were the only academical houses originally possessed by the Students of Oxford, only five subsist at present. 1907 C. Headlam Story of Oxf. (new ed.) v. 202 Halls..were known also by the name of entries and inns or..hostels. And that is in fact what they were. 1963 A. R. Woolley Clarendon Guide to Oxf. 7 In the interests of discipline and security most [students] became members of halls or hospitia (sometimes called inns or entries). Phrases P1. a. ΚΠ OE Ælfric Catholic Homilies: 1st Ser. (Royal) (1997) xxvi. 393 Symon..getigde ænne ormætne ryððan innon þam gete þær Petrus in hæfde. OE Ælfric Catholic Homilies: 1st Ser. (Corpus Cambr. 188) xvi. 535 Ic nelle furðon nu faran ofer land..butan ic hæbbe beðoht hwær ic..gehwiss inn hæbbe to ðam lytlan fyrste þæs hwilwendlican færeldes. c1300 (c1250) Floris & Blauncheflur (Cambr.) (1966) l. 20 Fort to þe hauene hi beoþ icume, And þer habbeþ here in inome. 1340 Ayenbite (1866) 195 He zent his messagyers bo-uore [read be-uore] uor to nime guod in. a1450 Generides (Pierpont Morgan) (1865) l. 1472 Here ynnes ther ful sone thei nam. ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > [verb (intransitive)] wonc725 erdec893 siteOE liveeOE to make one's woningc960 through-wonOE bigc1175 walkc1225 inwonea1300 lenda1300 lenga1300 lingera1300 erthec1300 stallc1315 lasta1325 lodge1362 habit?a1366 breeda1375 inhabitc1374 indwella1382 to have one's mansionc1385 to take (up) one's inn (or inns)a1400 keepc1400 repairc1400 to have (also hold, keep, make) one's residencec1405 to hold (also keep, make, take, etc.) one's mansiona1425 winc1425 to make (one's) residence1433 resort1453 abidec1475 use1488 remaina1500 demur1523 to keep one's house1523 occupy1523 reside1523 enerdc1540 kennel1552 bower1596 to have (also hold, keep, make) residence1597 subsist1618 mansiona1638 tenant1650 fastena1657 hospitate1681 wont1692 stay1754 to hang out1811 home1832 habitate1866 society > inhabiting and dwelling > [verb (intransitive)] > establish residence wickc897 telda1325 buildc1340 nestlea1382 to take (up) one's inn (or inns)a1400 to hold (also keep, make, take, etc.) one's mansiona1425 to take one's lodgec1475 reside1490 inhabit1548 to settle one's rest1562 to sit down1579 to set up (or in) one's staff (of rest)1584 to set (up) one's rest1590 nest1591 to set down one's rest1591 roost1593 inherit1600 habituate1603 seat1612 to take up (one's) residencea1626 settle1627 pitch1629 fix1638 locate1652 to marry and settle1718 domesticate1768 domiciliate1815 to hang up one's hat1826 domicile1831 to stick one's stakes1872 homestead1877 to put down roots1882 to hang one's hat1904 localize1930 a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 17650 Wit nichodeme he tok his hin. a1475 Bk. Curtasye (Sloane 1986) l. 309 in Babees Bk. (2002) i. 308 In no kyn house þat rede mon is..Take neuer þy Innes for no kyn nede. 1540 J. Palsgrave tr. G. Gnapheus Comedye of Acolastus ii. iii. sig. Mii Where shall we become, or whither shal we go to take vp our inne? 1581 R. Mulcaster Positions xlii. 260 If the imperfections which come..from the Elementary schoole would take vp their Inne there, and raunge no further. 1590 E. Spenser Faerie Queene i. i. sig. A7v With me ye may take vp your In For this same night. 1633 H. Hawkins Partheneia Sacra 151 (T.) The phenix will lightly take up his inne no where els. 1690 W. Winstanley Essex Champion xi. 53 He had taken up his Inn with an intent to be gone the next morning betimes. 1822 R. Nares Gloss. Inn, for a house or lodging in general. Used particularly in the phrase ‘to take up his inn.’ ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabiting temporarily > [adverb] at inn (also inns)c1175 c1175 Ormulum (Burchfield transcript) l. 13088 To lokenn whære he wass att inn. c1300 St. Clement (Laud) l. 93 in C. Horstmann Early S.-Eng. Legendary (1887) 325 So heo confortede þis guode wijf þat heo bi-lefte þare at Inne. c1325 (c1300) Chron. Robert of Gloucester (Calig.) l. 5998 Wanne at an gode monnes house is men were at inne. c1400 (a1376) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Trin. Cambr. R.3.14) (1960) A. ix. l. 4 Ȝif any wiȝt wiste where dowel was at Inne. 1428 in C. Innes & P. Chalmers Liber S. Thome de Aberbrothoc (1856) II. 58 The said John Vernour..als lang as the forsaid abbot beis within hym at innys sal be on the abbotis cost. 1448 (?a1300) Richard Coer de Lyon (Arms) l. 49 in K. Brunner Mittelengl. Vers-roman über Richard Löwenherz (1913) 115 (MED) Ho is at jnne here? a1555 J. Bradford Two Notable Serm. (1574) sig. Hvv The deuyl is at Inne with you, you are his birdes: whom when he hath well fed, he wyll broch you and eate you. 1592 J. Dee 7 Sept. in Private Diary (1842) 41 I sent a letter..by the wagon-man who is at ynn at the George in Lombard Streete. 1646 J. Trapp Brief Comm. John viii. 46 If the fruits of the flesh..grow out of the trees of your hearts, surely, surely, the devil is at Inne with you. 1681 J. Waite Parents Primer 101 When he eats the Sweet in Secret, the Devil is at Inn in his Heart. P2. a. (a) Inn of Court n. (also †Inn of the Court, †Inn a Court) Any of four sets of buildings in London (known collectively as the Inns of Court) owned by the legal associations to which all barristers in England and Wales must belong. Also: any of the four legal associations which own these buildings.See note at sense 3. ΘΚΠ society > law > legal profession > [noun] > Inns of Court inn?1435 Inn of Court?1435 ?1435 in C. L. Kingsford Chrons. London (1905) 82 (MED) My seyde lorde off Gloucestre sent vnto the Innes of Courte at London. a1513 R. Fabyan New Cronycles Eng. & Fraunce (1516) II. f. clxxxxviii This yere..was a great Affray in Fletestrete atwene ye Getters of the Innys of Court, and the Inhabytauntes of the same strete. 1548 Hall's Vnion: Henry VIII f. ccxli The .xxiii. daie of February, wer foure readers sent for to the Starre Chamber, of euery house of the foure principall Innes of Courte one. 1581 I. B. Dialogue Vertuous Gentleman & Popish Priest sig. B.ii His eldest sonnes he had great care to bring them vp in learning, some at the vniuersitie, and some at the Innes of the Courte. 1588 A. Fraunce Lawiers Logike Ded. sig. ¶2v Surely Sir..it seemeth you came abruptly from a countrey schoole to an Inne of court. 1600 W. Shakespeare Henry IV, Pt. 2 iii. ii. 12 He is at Oxford stil, is he not?.. A must then to the Innes a court shortly: I was once of Clements Inne. 1666 W. Dugdale Origines Juridiciales 141/2 These Hostells being Nurseries or Seminaries of the Court, taking their denomination of the end wherefore they were so instituted, were called therefore the Innes of Court. 1710 R. Steele Tatler No. 186. ⁋3 Walking the other Day in a neighbouring Inn of Court. 1795 J. Trusler Habitable World Described XVII. ii. ii. 186 On each side of the large square are, what they call, the procuraties; a pile of buildings, like our inns of court, and inhabited by lawyers. 1824 Blackwood's Mag. Oct. 460 (note) The rooms in College are like the chambers in the Inns of Court, having an outer-door and an inner one. 1892 Nation 55 480/1 The Inns of Court and of Chancery..have been..an immemorial rookery for authors. 1932 E. Waugh Black Mischief iii. 104 When you're convinced he's steadied up a bit, let him have chambers of his own in one of the Inns of Court. 2004 Times Lit. Suppl. 28 May 28/1 Such pleasantries and prohibitions survive in the Inns of Court. (b) attributive. With the sense ‘belonging to or associated with the Inns of Court,’ as Inns of Court man, Inns of Court reveller, Inns of Court student, etc. ΚΠ 1605 J. Marston Dutch Courtezan ii. sig. C2v Who helped thee to thy custome not of swaggering..Captaines, nor of 2. s. Innes a court men, but with honest atte-cappes, wealthy flat-caps, that pay for their pleasure the best of any men in Europe. 1606 Returne Knight of Poste from Hell sig. D4v An Innes of Court Reueller, why hee shall not be accounted worthie of a trade, if hee will not aduenture more then halfe his cleare profites, to adorne his bodie. 1631 F. Lenton Characterismi xxix. sig. F4 A yong Innes a Court Gentleman. a1661 W. Brereton Trav. (1844) 156 The mayor, a well-bred gentleman, an inns-of-court man. 1702 Death & Burial John Asgill 11 Why shou'd He think that Inns of Court Men will Ever Assent to His Pernici'ous Bill? 1862 A. J. Munby Diary 23 June in D. Hudson Munby (1972) 62 The Volunteer Review..the Inns of Court Corps dropped by in groups. 1915 G. Lee Diary 25 May in Home Fires Burning (2006) 113 We walked up to the town together, Granny and I and the two Inns of Court Reservists. 2007 A. Bailey Flaunting i. 6 The fussiness of those garments modelled by the ‘Termers’, the Inns of Court students who regularly attended their plays. b. Inn of (the) Chancery n. Now historical Any of a number of buildings in London (known collectively as the Inns of Chancery) used as a place of residence, work, and study by clerks of chancery and students of law, and (in later use) by solicitors and attorneys.See note at sense 3. ΘΚΠ society > law > legal profession > [noun] > Inns of Court > specific templec1405 Middle Inn1450 Middle Templea1524 Inn of Chancery1562 Serjeants Inn1565 1562–3 Act 5 Elizabeth I c. 1 §4 in Statutes of Realm (1963) IV. 403 Suche as bee of the Grande Company in every Inne of Chauncerye. 1567 R. Mulcaster tr. J. Fortescue Learned Commendation Lawes Eng. f. 113v Ten lesser houses or Innes..which are called Innes of the Chancery..The greater Innes of the same study called the Innes of Court. 1637 P. Heylyn Briefe Answer Burton 9 I..marveile that you have not mooted all this while in some Inne of Chancery. 1670 T. Blount Νομο-λεξικον: Law-dict. Innes of Court,..these, with the Two Serjants Inns, and Eight Inns of Chancery, do altogether..make the most famous University, for Profession of Law. 1706 Phillips's New World of Words (new ed.) (at Principal) The chief person in some of the Inns of Chancery is also called Principal of the House. 1797 Encycl. Brit. XII. 271/2 There is a bailiff, or surveyor of the moots, annually chosen by the bench, to appoint the moot-men for the inns of chancery. 1832 G. A. Cooke Walks through London xiv. 236 Wych-street..contains New Inn, an Inn of Chancery, and the only one that remains belonging to the Middle Temple. 1848 J. J. S. Wharton Law Lexicon 323/1 Inns of Chancery,..were formerly preparatory colleges for younger students, and many were entered in them before they were admitted into the inns of court. 1903 Burlington Mag. 1 239/2 The house [sc. Clifford's Inn] continued to belong to the de Clifford family, being however, it is thought, always used as an Inn of Chancery after the original demise of Isabel de Clifford. 1955 Solicitors' Jrnl. 11 June 395/1 It would take a very long time to explain..precisely what Staple Inn was and is and by what concatenation of accidents it has come to be so meticulously restored when all its sister Inns of Chancery..have been so ruthlessly swept away. 2001 N.Y. Times (Nexis) 25 Feb. vi. 8/1 A visit to Legal London can also take in..Staple Inn and Barnard's Inn (the two surviving Inns of Chancery). c. Serjeants Inn n. (also Serjeants' Inn) Now historical. Any of three buildings in London owned by and accommodating the society of Serjeants-at-Law; (in later use esp.) the building of this kind located on Chancery Lane. Occasionally also: the society of Serjeants-at-Law.The society consisted chiefly of judges, who transferred from an Inn of Court. It dates from the early 15th cent. and formerly had three sites, on Chancery Lane, on Fleet Street, and in Holborn. In 1730 the building on Chancery Lane became the single premises, and in 1877 this was sold and the assets distributed among the members. The society was not formally dissolved, but its last member died in 1921; the building was destroyed in the Second Word War. ΘΚΠ society > law > legal profession > [noun] > Inns of Court > specific templec1405 Middle Inn1450 Middle Templea1524 Inn of Chancery1562 Serjeants Inn1565 1565 T. de la Peend in tr. Ovid Pleasant Fable Hermaphroditus & Salmacis To N. Sentleger sig. A.iiv From my Chamber ouer agaynst Sergeants Inne in Chancery lane. 1645 Ordinance Lords & Commons conc. Suspention from Lords Supper 20 Oct. 14 The Classis of the two Serjants Innes. 1702 Tryal of William Fuller (title page) Printed for Isaac Cleave next to Serjeants Inn in Chancery Lane, 1702. 1799 Public Characters of 1798 26 The place of abode of the former gentlemen are so little known, even in Chancery-lane, Lincoln's-inn, Gray's-inn, Serjeant's-inn, or the Temple, that none..know where they lodge. 1841 Penny Cycl. XXI. 271/2 The serjeants..have now no other building than Serjeants' Inn, Chancery Lane, which has been lately rebuilt. 1877 Law Jrnl. 3 Mar. 117 Serjeants' Inn was sold on Friday, February 23, for 57,100l., to Mr. Serjeant Cox..The determination of the judges and serjeants to sell the ancient home of a moribund order was not taken lightly. 1949 Cambr. Law Jrnl. 10 179 Up to some seventy years ago, when a man became a judge he was drummed out of his Inn, and became a member of a society called Serjeants' Inn, composed solely, or almost solely, of other judges. 2005 Eng. Hist. Rev. 120 899 The Great Yarmouth assembly made arrangements for their recorder..to travel to London to meet with the chief justice at his quarters in Serjeants Inn, Fleet Street, on 13 April 1630. Compounds C1. General attributive in sense 2a(a). ΚΠ 1553 J. Bradford Let. 19 Nov. in M. Coverdale Certain Lett. Martyrs (1564) 282 The deuil standeth now at euery Inne dore.., cryeng vnto vs to tarye and lodge in thys or that place. 1600 W. Kemp Nine Daies Wonder sig. Bv It was more than an houre ere I could recouer my Inne gate, where I was faine to locke my selfe in my Chamber. 1750 W. Lucas Five Weeks Tour to Paris 6 They will be tied to the Chaise whilst you are paying the Porters and your Inn Bill. 1838 C. Dickens Oliver Twist II. xxxii. 232 Oliver hurried up the inn-yard, with a somewhat lighter heart. 1931 Country Life 8 Aug. 166/2 Sand..was sold in bags to be spread upon the stone floors of inn kitchens and cottage houses. 2014 D. Wingrove Empire of Time xxxii. 95 Three open wooden steps led up to the inn door. C2. See also innholder n., innkeeper n. inn-house n. now rare an establishment which provides accommodation, refreshment, and hospitality for paying guests, esp. travellers; (also) the building in which such an establishment is based (cf. sense 2a(a)). ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > dwelling place or abode > accommodation or lodging > public lodging-places > [noun] > inn guest housec1000 innc1230 hostry1377 host1382 harbergeryc1384 hostelc1384 hostelryc1386 harbergagea1400 hostelar1424 hostagec1440 innsc1550 host-house1570 fondaco1599 change1609 auberge1615 sporting house1615 albergo1617 rancho1648 change-housea1653 posada1652 public house1655 inn-house1677 funduq1684 locanda1770 fonda1777 livery tavern1787 roadhouse1806 meson1817 tambo1830 gasthaus1834 estalagem1835 caravanserai1848 temperance inna1849 sala1871 bush-inn1881 ryokan1914 B & B1918 pousada1949 minshuku1970 1677 R. Izacke Antiq. Exeter 173 There happened on Midsomer-Eve about midnight, a grievous Fire in the stable belonging to an Inn-house, called the Blew Anchor in the High-street of this City. 1770 R. Brookes in Copies Depositions of Witnesses in Divorce Lord Grosvenor (1771) 74 They..told him to take them to an inn-house, in order to get a chaise. 2017 Irish Independent (Nexis) 3 Mar. 15 A thatched pub and restaurant on the Naas Road in Rathcoole, built on the site of an inn house that dated back to 1649. inn law n. now historical a law or custom typical of or prevailing at an inn (sense 2a(a)). ΘΚΠ society > law > [noun] > a law > other general types of law judicialc1400 proper law1609 antinomy1644 cobweb law1649 post-law1663 overlaw1883 inn law1930 loi-cadre1953 society > authority > control > [noun] > regulation > a regulation or rule > for corporate body rule1438 inn law1930 1930 Northern Star (Lismore, New S. Wales) 9 July 6/4 (headline) Curious inn law as to horses. 2008 Times (Nexis) 23 Feb. (Mag.) 23 A hangover from the old highways and inn laws, which said water had to be given out free to thirsty travellers. inn-phrase n. now rare and historical a phrase or expression typical of or likely to be heard at an inn (sense 2a(a)). ΘΚΠ the mind > language > linguistics > linguistic unit > phrase > [noun] > other specific types of phrase et cetera1600 chreia1612 inn-phrase1631 hob-nob1761 phraseograph1847 snapper1857 humilific1892 frame1943 1631 B. Jonson New Inne i. iii. sig. B3 A wench, i'the Inn-phrase, is al these. 1983 Stud. Eng. Lit. 23 319 In place of a modern education by the Inn and Inn-phrase, he [sc. the character Lovel in Jonson's New Inne] would reinstitute in his generation the old relationship of master and page. inn stable n. now somewhat archaic a stable belonging to an inn (sense 2a(a)). ΚΠ 1679 S. Woodford Paraphr. upon Canticles 116 An Ox, and Ass were company..In an Inns-Stable fit for God Most High. 1783 Jackson's Oxf. Jrnl. 7 June 1/3 The Gentleman..in the Inn Stable, saw the Horse, that was rode by Man who robbed him. 1853 H. W. Herbert Chevaliers of France iv. 54 He fell upon a heap of horse-litter, which had been swept out from the inn-stables. 2002 Independent (Nexis) 24 Dec. (Features section) 3 It wasn't too bad an inn stable, as inn stables go, writes St Joseph. Derivatives inn-like adj. (and adv.) typical or reminiscent of an inn (sense 2a(a)); likely to be found or experienced in an inn; (also) in the manner of an inn. ΚΠ a1739 C. Jarvis tr. M. de Cervantes Don Quixote (1742) I. iii. ii. 76 So, thanking him with inn-like phrase for his offers, they left him. 1751 Lady M. Vere Let. 19 Oct. in Countess of Suffolk Lett. (1824) II. 219 A prodigious large house, and furnished inn-like, two beds in each room. 1867 St. James's Mag. 358 The unavoidable inn-like characteristics of a dwelling in which several families or individuals reside, who are unconnected in any way with each other. 1937 Ames (Iowa) Daily Tribune 4 May 2/6 Appetizers served before dinner in the castle ancient kitchen, no longer used as such but converted into an inn-like room with an American bar. 2006 Washington Post (Nexis) 26 Nov. (Travel section) 3 Many people are surprised to know that hotels and innlike lodging exist in the Galapagos. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2021; most recently modified version published online March 2022). innv. Now rare. a. transitive. To lodge, house, find lodging for (a person). Occasionally with it. Also reflexive: to lodge oneself, find oneself a lodging. Obsolete (archaic in later use). ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > providing with dwelling > [verb (transitive)] > provide with temporary accommodation innOE harbourc1150 gestena1300 guestc1330 hostelc1330 receivec1384 sojourn1390 harbry14.. shroudc1450 bestow1577 accommodate1592 board1600 quarter1603 stow1607 to put up1635 billet1637 lodge1741 room1840 to fix (a person) up1889 summer-board1889 shack1927 OE Ælfric Catholic Homilies: 2nd Ser. (Cambr. Gg.3.28) xxxii. 276 Þæs cynges cniht ða se ðe hæfde geinnod [c1175 Bodl. 343 iinnod] þone godspellere Matheum æt his huse, sæde ðære cwene be him. lOE Anglo-Saxon Chron. (Laud) anno 1048 Þa woldon hi innian hi þær heom sylfan gelicode. c1300 St. Clement (Laud) l. 231 in C. Horstmann Early S.-Eng. Legendary (1887) 329 Þis guode wyf heom tolde of hire hostesse þat Innede hire bi nyȝte. a1375 (c1350) William of Palerne (1867) l. 2479 But eche man al niȝt inned him where he miȝt. c1405 (c1385) G. Chaucer Knight's Tale (Hengwrt) (2003) l. 1334 Whan he hadde broght hem in to his Citee And Inned hem euerich at his degree. c1430 N. Love Mirror Blessed Life (Brasenose e.9) (1908) 313 (MED) Seynt hughe goyng thoruȝ Fraunce was ynned for the tyme in a towne that is cleped Joye. a1525 (?1421) Coventry Leet Bk. (1907) I. 33 (MED) Fyschers þat bryng See fysche in-to this cite be not Osted ne Inned at any fischers housz of this cite. 1607 J. Davies Summa Totalis sig. C4v Then sith thou sinn'st in thine eternity It's iust thou should'st in Gods, in Hell be Inn'd. a1649 W. Drummond Poems (1656) 106 In a poore Cottage Inn'd, a Virgin Maid, A weakling did him beare who all upbeares. 1710 New Map Trav. High Church Apostle 7 These Inn'd themselves all Night in Knights-bridge fields. 1733 W. Ellis Chiltern & Vale Farming 210 That gave us an Opportunity of Inning it in very good Order. 1904 Eng. Illustr. Mag. May 118/1 Equally disappointing is it..to find yourself ‘inned’ for the night in an undoubtedly Charles the First house, but with no further appliances for comfort. b. transitive. In passive. figurative. To be lodged or housed. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > space > place > position or situation > be positioned or situated [verb (intransitive)] resteOE standOE sitOE liec1121 inhabitc1384 settlea1400 couchc1400 biga1425 loutc1460 residea1475 innc1475 contain1528 consist1542 seatc1580 situate1583 lodge1610 site1616 subsist1618 station1751 c1475 (c1399) Mum & Sothsegger (Cambr. Ll.4.14) (1936) iii. l. 135 But here wey is all wronge þer wisdom is ynned. 1633 P. Fletcher Piscatorie Eclogs vi. xv. 39 in Purple Island A firie beam, And pleasing heat (such as in first of Spring From Sol, inn'd in the Bull, do kindly stream). 2. a. intransitive. To lodge, find lodging, stay temporarily. In later use also: to stay, put up at an inn or hostelry. Now rare and archaic. ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabiting temporarily > [verb (reflexive)] innc1390 lodgec1400 bestow1577 society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabiting temporarily > [verb (intransitive)] > at the house of another, an inn, etc. gesten?c1225 innc1390 host?c1450 bait1477 to be (or lie) at hosta1500 hostela1500 sojourn1573 to take up1607 guest?1615 to set upa1689 to keep up1704 to put up1706 lodge1749 room1809 hotel1889 dig1914 motel1961 c1390 (?c1350) Joseph of Arimathie (1871) l. 166 I haue felauschupe wiþ-outen..wel aboute fifti, Boþe wymmen and men þat mote wiþ me Inne. a1555 R. Glover in Certain Lett. Martyrs (1564) 537 We Inned at the signe of the Swanne. 1582 G. T. tr. R. Parsons Epist. Persecution Catholickes in Eng. 83 So dyd they now put Maister Campian to the racke and to extreme torments, and therby wold haue wrested owte of hym,..where he had bated or inned. a1647 T. Hooker Applic. of Redempt.: 9th & 10th Bks. (1657) ix. 3 That's the difference between Inning and Dwelling; we Inn at a place in our passing by, when we take repast only, and bait, but depart presently, intending not to stay. a1667 G. Hughes Analyt. Expos. Bk. Moses (1672) 325/2 He pitched camp in the valley of Gerar.—And he inned in the valley of the Gerarims. 1726 Brice's Weekly Jrnl. 18 Feb. 3 John Welch, Cornish Carrier, who formerly Inn'd at the Mermaid in Exon, is now removed to the Bear-Inn. a1798 T. Pennant Tour on Continent (1948) 165 Inn'd at the Ville de Brussels in the Meer Straat. 1811 R. Fenton Tour Quest Geneal. 311 Two or three large hotels, the most frequented of which is the Corsygedol Arms, where we inned for that night. 1885 M. J. Colquhoun Primus in Indis I. xiv. 217 I inned at the best house, the Star and Garter. 1948 G. O. Rickword Constable's Country 14 He reached the ‘Anchor’ on the third day, and after collecting stock inned that night at Colchester. ΚΠ 1601 Marie Magdalens Lament. i. sig. Bij My Iesus Tombe my mansion is become, My wearie soule hath there made choise to inn. 1605 J. Sylvester tr. G. de S. Du Bartas Deuine Weekes & Wks. i. ii. 46 So soone as Sol, leauing the gentle Twinns, With Cancer, or thirst-panting Leo Innes. a1626 L. Andrewes XCVI Serm. (1629) 393 He..dwelleth in Christ, and Christ in him: not inneth, or sojourneth for a time; but dwelleth continually. 1640 F. Quarles Enchyridion iii. 77 If Feare depart from Hope, it travels to Infidelity, and Innes in Despaire. 1848 P. J. Bailey Festus (ed. 3) 86 Wisdom sometimes inns with ignorance. a. transitive. To put up (a horse, chariot, etc.) at an inn or hostelry. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > providing with dwelling > [verb (transitive)] > provide with temporary accommodation > a horse inn1607 1607 T. Middleton Michaelmas Terme i. sig. A4 I haue but Inn'd my horse. 1690 W. Winstanley Essex Champion x. 48 She used every Evening at such time as Phoebus was Inning his Chariot in the glooming West, to Walk in a Meadow near adjoyning to their Castle. b. intransitive. Of a coach: To put up at an inn; to stop or stay between journeys. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ society > travel > transport > transport or conveyance in a vehicle > public passenger transport > travel on (public vehicle) [verb (intransitive)] > ply on a certain route (of vehicle) > of stagecoach > stop at an inn inn1723 1723 J. Barker Patch-work Screen for Ladies Introd. sig. a3v She..took Leave of her Landlord and departed, directing her Steps and Intentions towards the Town w[h]ere the Stage-Coach'd [sic] Inn'd. 1748 S. Richardson Clarissa VI. xxxiv. 125 The Reading stage-coach, which inns somewhere in Fleet-street. 1775 H. Walpole Let. 25 Apr. (1866) VI. 205 You had better send for them where the machine inns. 1834 New Monthly Mag. June 175 A Bristol coach which inned at the Red Lion. 1879 E. Walford Londoniana II. 61 An account of all the stage coaches..where they ‘inn’ and where they ‘go out’. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2021; most recently modified version published online June 2022). < |
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