单词 | indirect |
释义 | indirectadj. Not direct. 1. a. Of a way, path, or course: Not straight; crooked, devious; also of a movement: Oblique. (Chiefly figurative, often with suggestion of b.) ΘΚΠ society > travel > means of travel > route or way > [adjective] > indirect abouta1460 indirect1474 devious1628 far-fetcheda1656 roundabout1684 circumflex1707 ungain1824 circuitous1868 1474 W. Caxton tr. Game & Playe of Chesse (1883) iv. ii. 167 The quene foloweth..to a place indirect in the maner of a rook in to the black poynt to fore the phisicien [ Cessoles (ed. 1505, h 1): Ad locum indirectum ad modum Rochi in quadro nigro ante medicum]. 1595 C. Middleton Short Introd. for to learne to Swimme 8 Unorderly labouring in the water, they by the indirect mooving of their bodyes pull downe themselves. 1600 W. Shakespeare Henry IV, Pt. 2 iv. iii. 313 God knowes..By what by-paths, and indirect crookt waies, I met this crowne. View more context for this quotation 1638 J. Suckling Aglaura i. 4 The indirect way's the nearest. 1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost xi. 631 O pittie and shame, that they..should turn aside to tread Paths indirect, or in the mid way faint! View more context for this quotation 1763 C. Churchill Ghost iv. 158 By ways oblique and indirect. b. Of actions or feelings: Not straightforward and honest; not fair and open; ‘crooked’, deceitful, corrupt. (Also of persons: see direct adj. 5b.) ΘΚΠ the mind > goodness and badness > wrongdoing > crookedness > [adjective] crooked?c1225 sinister?1455 indirect1570 undirect1594 involved1612 obliquous1614 unstraight1650 back-handed1800 tortuous1801 twistical1805 louche1819 hooky-crooky1833 underhand1842 twisty1857 underhanded1864 bent1914 society > morality > moral evil > lack of principle or integrity > [adjective] > not straightforward crooked?c1225 indirect1570 undirect1594 involved1612 unstraight1650 obliquous1757 tortuous1801 twistical1805 louche1819 hooky-crooky1833 sinuous1850 twisty1905 1570 Act 13 Eliz. c. 20 §1 Livings..may not by corrupt and indirect Dealings be transferred to other Uses. a1616 W. Shakespeare Othello (1622) i. iii. 111 Did you by indirect and forced courses, Subdue and poison this young maides affections? View more context for this quotation 1655 W. Gouge & T. Gouge Learned Comm. Hebrewes (xiii. 5) iv. 40 Whatsoever is by force or fraud, by stealing, lying, or any other indirect course gotten, is an effect of covetousnesse. 1696 E. Phillips New World of Words (new ed.) Indirect, said of a thing done by ill Practice, or under-hand Dealing, or by foul means, contrary to Law and Custom. 1708 London Gaz. No. 4422/7 One of Her Majesty's..Secretaries of State receiv'd a Letter..promising discovery of several indirect Practices. 1716 A. Pope Full Acct. E. Curll 4 I do sincerely pray Forgiveness for those indirect Methods I have pursued in inventing new Titles to old Books, putting Authors Names to Things they never saw [etc.]. c. Of a succession, title, etc.: Not descending or derived in a straight line. spec. applied to descent in certain Australian tribes. ΘΚΠ society > law > legal right > right of possession or ownership > [adjective] > type of title to possession concurrent?1530 indirect1598 representative1688 1598 W. Shakespeare Henry IV, Pt. 1 iv. iii. 105 His title, the which we find Too indirect for long continuance. View more context for this quotation 1888 Encycl. Brit. XXIII. 474/1 In the Australian tribal organization of two phratries, four subphratries, and totem clans, there occurs a peculiar form of descent... The children are born into the subphratry neither of their father nor of their mother, and that descent in such cases is either female or male, according as the subphratry into which the children are born is the companion subphratry of their mother's or of their father's subphratry. In the former case we have what may be called indirect female descent; in the latter, indirect male descent... Descent..is direct in the phratry, indirect in the subphratry. d. indirect lighting n. see quot. 1925. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > light > illumination > [noun] > indirect or diffused diffused?1570 indirect lighting1925 1925 Gloss. Terms Illum. & Photom. (B.S.I.) 8 Indirect lighting, a system of lighting in which the greater part of the luminous flux reaches the area to be illuminated only after reflection from a ceiling or other object external to the fitting. 1933 Archit. Rev. 74 214 Indirect lighting is housed in a specially designed reflector abutting against a mirror which reflects and doubles it. 1969 Bodl. Libr. Rec. VIII. 117 This lighting is not only sufficient for reading, but is diffused to give adequate indirect lighting to the immediate surroundings. 2. a. Not taking the straight or nearest course to the end in view; not going straight to the point; not acting or exercised with direct force; round-about. spec. indirect aggression, aggression by one nation by other than military means; so indirect aggressor; indirect evidence = circumstantial evidence at circumstantial adj. 1a; indirect rule, a system of governnment in which the governed people retain certain administrative and legal, etc., powers. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > [adjective] > operating or acting indirectly oblique?a1475 indirect1584 the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > hiding, concealing from view > keeping from knowledge > indirect action or process > [adjective] collateralc1374 ambagious?1532 indirect1584 circular1617 squint1619 squinting1648 sidelong1654 circumferentiala1661 circuitous1664 side wind1672 side-winded1696 roundabout1701 side-handed1828 society > leisure > the arts > literature > style of language or writing > obscurity > [adjective] > vague or inexplicit oblique?a1475 overthwart1545 indirect1584 slenting1642 undeterminate1649 vaguea1661 wide1662 indeterminate1773 unexplicit1775 nebulose1799 imprecise1805 misty1816 nebulous1817 inexplicit1827 fuzzy1937 soft-focused1942 wifty-wafty1943 the mind > attention and judgement > testing > attestation, witness, evidence > [noun] > evidence given, testimony > based on probability or circumstances likelinessc1450 likelihood1541 presumption1592 circumstantial evidence1736 presumptive evidence1766 indirect evidence1824 society > authority > rule or government > a or the system of government > direct rule, devolution, or trusteeship > [noun] > indirect rule indirect rule1922 society > armed hostility > attack > [noun] > military aggression > non-military aggression indirect aggression1939 1584 R. Scot Discouerie Witchcraft ii. iii. 24 All maner of waies are to be vsed, direct and indirect. 1665 R. Boyle Occas. Refl. Introd. Pref. sig. b2v To condemn Figurative and Indirect ways of conveying ev'n Serious and Sacred matters, is to forget How often Christ himself made use of Parables. 1720 D. Waterland 8 Serm. Divinity of Christ 237 The implicite or indirect proofs I shall but briefly mention. 1783 R. Watson Hist. Philip II (1793) I. iii. 381 To agree to such an indirect form of expression, as might not alarm the pride..of the Spaniards. 1824 T. Starkie Pract. Treat. Law of Evidence I. iii. 478 These positions lead immediately to an inquiry into the nature and force of indirect or circumstantial evidence. 1833 T. Starkie Pract. Treat. Law Evid. (ed. 2) I. 17 Indirect or inferential evidence, where an inference is made as to the truth of the disputed fact, not by means of the actual knowledge which any witness had of the fact, but from collateral facts ascertained by competent means. 1865 E. B. Tylor Res. Early Hist. Mankind i. 4 The place of direct records has to be supplied, in great measure, by indirect evidence. 1922 F. D. Lugard Dual Mandate Brit. Trop. Afr. x. 199 The Governor of the Gold Coast..observed: ‘The chiefs are keenly appreciative of our policy of indirect rule, and of the full powers they retain under their native institutions.’ 1928 F. D. Lugard (title) Representative forms of government and ‘indirect rule’ in British Africa. 1928 F. D. Lugard 19 I propose in this chapter to discuss..‘Indirect Rule’—though ‘Dependent Rule’ would seem a more suitable term,—more especially in..the conditions of tropical Africa. 1931 Economist 28 Mar. 667/2 He [sc. Sir Donald Cameron]..submitted that this dream would be shattered if the policy, inaugurated in Tanganyika in 1925, of developing that territory on the lines of indirect rule by the mandatory and direct economic production by the natives were allowed to develop. 1939 H. Nicolson Diary 20 July (1966) 406 The Ambassador is..so interested in convincing them how right is the Soviet definition of ‘indirect aggression’ that he forgets to offer them any tea. 1940 B. Ward Russian Foreign Policy 28 Mutual guarantees, the definition of indirect aggression—all these were trivial points compared with the principal obstacle, the Polish guarantee. 1957 P. Worsley Trumpet shall Sound 261 This became particularly urgent, when..the growing inadequacy of direct methods of rule..brought about the introduction of Indirect Rule in many territories. 1958 Hansard Commons 16 July 1245 The question is one of perverting nationalist feelings and perverting those who wish to overthrow the established order of society so that they serve to further indirect aggression. 1958 Listener 7 Aug. 185/1 Much has been said about President Nasser's propaganda machine, which has given rise to a new term, ‘indirect aggression’, which in Western eyes, it seems, may now be held as justification for military intervention. 1958 Spectator 8 Aug. 184/3 Nor was this member of the Baghdad Pact the only indirect aggressor against France. 1959 Earl Jowitt & C. Walsh Dict. Eng. Law II. 960/1 Indirect evidence, proof of collateral circumstances from which a fact in controversy, not directly attested by witnesses or documents, may be inferred. 1959 Spectator 21 Aug. 236/2 The invention of ‘indirect rule’, the system of governing a territory by allowing the existing tribal authorities to continue to administer tribal law under the restraint of a British Resident. 1962 Listener 18 Oct. 593/2 The legacy of Britain's policy of indirect rule in this Region of Nigeria is clearly visible in the comparatively static nature of these societies. b. Logic. (See quots., and direct adj. 4c.) indirect reduction n. the process of establishing the validity of a syllogism by showing that the contradictory of its conclusion is inconsistent with its premises. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > logic > logical syllogism > [adjective] > of types of syllogism modal1569 hypothetical1588 prosyllogistical1588 contract1605 prosyllogistic1652 monstrative1653 enthymematic1654 epicheirematic1656 hypothetica1680 pure1697 indirect1728 dialectal1767 tollent1770 conjunctivea1856 hypothetico-disjunctivea1856 schematica1856 unfigureda1856 subsumptive1884 episyllogistic1886 1671 J. Newton Introd. Art Logick ii. iv. 100 Indirect reduction, or reduction by bringing the adversary to some absurdity hath play only in these two Moods. 1728 E. Chambers Cycl. Indirect Modes, of Syllogisms in Logic, are the five last Modes of the first Figure... 'Tis the Conversion of the Conclusion which renders the Modes indirect. 1828 R. Whately Rhetoric i. ii. §1 in Encycl. Metrop. 258/1 Either the Premiss of an opponent or his Conclusion may be disproved, either in the Direct or in the Indirect Method; i.e. either by proving the truth of the Contradictory, or by showing that an absurd Conclusion may fairly be deduced from the Proposition in question. 1858 H. Coppée Elements of Logic 135 Indirect redcution consists in proving, not that the original conclusion is true, but that its contradictory is false. 1860 W. Thomson Outl. Laws of Thought (ed. 5) §127. 271 Showing that something impossible or absurd follows from contradicting our conclusion is called indirect demonstration. 1864 F. C. Bowen Treat. Logic v. 141 Indirect..predication was..that..in which the species was predicated of the genus [etc.]. 1864 F. C. Bowen Treat. Logic vii. 201 If we exclude the Fourth Figure altogether, considering Bramantip, Camenes, &c. as indirect Moods of the First, there are but fourteen direct Moods. 1891 J. Welton Man. Logic I. iv. iv. 426 This indirect process is not reduction in the same sense as the direct method is. 1896 J. Welton Man. Logic (ed. 2) I. iv. iv. §128. 358 Reduction is indirect when a new syllogism is formed which establishes the validity of the original conclusion by showing the illegitimacy of its Contradictory. 1908 G. H. Joyce Principles of Logic i. xi. 185 Indirect Reduction is the only method employed by Aristotle for dealing with Baroco and Bocardo. 1989 Encycl. Brit. XXIII. 265/2 Indirect reduction can be used not only for Baroco and Bocardo but for all moods of the second and third figures. c. Political Economy. Of taxation: Not levied directly upon the person on whom it ultimately falls, but charged in some other way, esp. upon the production or importation of articles of use or consumption, the price of which is thereby augmented to the consumer, who thus pays the tax in the form of increased price. Cf. direct adj. 6e. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > fees and taxes > impost, due, or tax > tax > taxation > [adjective] > types or schemes of taxation ad valorem1772 progressive1792 discriminative1797 indirect1801 progressional1883 degressive1886 regressive1888 soak-the-rich1935 wraparound1968 1801 A. Hamilton Addr. to Electors N.Y. 21 That which is called the direct tax..was always insisted upon by them as preferable to taxes of the indirect kind. 1845 J. R. McCulloch Treat. Taxation Introd. 1 A tax..is said to be direct when it is immediately taken from property or labour; and indirect when it is taken from them by making their owners pay for liberty to use certain articles, or to exercise certain privileges. 1868 J. E. T. Rogers Man. Polit. Econ. (1876) xxii. 287 The greater part of the taxes raised in this and in most other civilised countries are known as indirect. They consist in the levy of imposts on articles of consumption [etc.]. 1884 J. Rae Contemp. Socialism i. 37 Customs and indirect taxation of different kinds. d. Metallurgy. Designating a process by which wrought iron or steel is obtained from the ore through the intermediate stage of pig iron (the usual method). ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > working with specific materials > working with metal > [adjective] > separating or refining processes calcinatory1611 calcining1651 liquative1657 indirect1869 1869 H. S. Osborn Metall. Iron & Steel ii. ii. 274 In ancient times iron was extracted from the ore as malleable iron. This is called the direct, in contra-distinction to the present method of producing cast iron and afterward malleable, which latter is called the indirect method. 1967 W. H. Dennis Found. Iron & Steel Metall. i. 13 Gradually a technique was developed of removing the derived impurities... This process was designated fining..and resulted in wrought iron... The method involved a two-stage process: (a) Reduction of iron ore to make pig iron, and (b) remelting and purifying the pig iron to make wrought iron and hence was an indirect process in contrast to the former direct process of producing iron blooms from the ore in one stage. e. indirect address n. Computing an address (address n. 6b) which specifies the location of information about the address of an operand, rather than the location of the operand itself; cf. direct address n. at direct adj. and adv. Compounds; so indirect addressing n. ΘΚΠ society > computing and information technology > programming language > program or code > [noun] > address > type of absolute address1951 relative address1951 symbolic address1953 base address1958 indirect address1959 pointer1963 direct address1964 immediate address1964 vector address1975 referrer1995 society > computing and information technology > programming language > program or code > [noun] > address > systems of indirect address1959 absolute addressing1960 relative addressing1960 direct addressing1963 immediate addressing1964 symbolic addressing1977 multi-addressing1982 1959 Jrnl. Assoc. Computing Machinery Apr. 130 The 709 has built-in indirect addressing; i.e., the address field can specify the location of a location rather than the location of an operand. 1960 Datamation Sept. 33/1 Whenever an indirect address is specified, it selects another half-word in which is contained another address. 1970 O. Dopping Computers & Data Processing vi. 105 One can say that the contrary of immediate addressing is indirect addressing, which can be used in certain computers and denoted by a tag in the instruction. 1979 Sci. Amer. Apr. 75/3 In another method, called indirect addressing, the address given in a program specifies not the actual location of the desired data but a register or a memory cell where the address will be found. 1980 C. S. French Computer Sci. xxiv. 181 If the second address is yet a further indirect address then the address is called a multi-level address. 3. Grammar. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > linguistics > study of grammar > syntax or word order > syntactic relations > [noun] > concord or agreement > indirect indirect relation1393 1393 W. Langland Piers Plowman C. iv. 344 Quaþ þe kynge to conscience, ‘knowen ich wolde What is relacion rect and indyrect after..for englisch was it neuere’. 1393 W. Langland Piers Plowman C. iv. 365 Thus is relacion rect ryht as adiectif and substantif A-cordeþ in alle kyndes with his antecedent. Indirect þyng ys as ho so coueited Alle kynne kynde to knowe and to folwe, With~oute [case] to cacche [to] and come to boþe numbres. b. Of speech or narration: Put in a reported form, not in the speaker's own words, but with the changes of pronouns, persons, tenses, etc. which conform it to the point of view of the reporter; oblique: opposed to direct adj. 6b.The idioms of different languages differ widely in respect to indirect construction. In English, indirect sentences are usually introduced by that or if, expressed or understood. Thus, a speaker's actual words ‘I will not go unless you use force’, are reported indirectly, by the person addressed, as ‘he said [that] he would not go unless I used force’, by a third party as ‘he told X. [that] he would not go, unless he (X.) used force’. The question ‘Do you know me?’ becomes, in indirect narration, ‘He asked me if I knew him’, and ‘he asked X. if he knew him’. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > speech > narration > direct speech > [adjective] > indirect oblique1860 indirect1866 verbatim1892 reportative1953 1866 C. P. Mason Eng. Gram. (ed. 7) 111 In such sentences..the dependent clauses are indirect questions. 1866 W. E. Jelf Gram. Greek Lang. (ed. 4) §886 II. 627 Indirect interrog. sentences. 1870–7 W. F. Moulton tr. Winer Gram. N.T. Greek iii. §60. 9 When words spoken by others are quoted, they are not, as a rule, brought into the structure of the sentence in the indirect construction. 1879 H. J. Roby Gram. Latin Lang. II. 342 When a statement, question [etc.] is reported in a form which makes it dependent in construction on some such words as said, the language is said to be oblique or indirect. c. indirect object n. see quots. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > linguistics > study of grammar > syntax or word order > syntactic unit or constituent > [noun] > object > specific dative object1831 cognate object or accusative1874 retained object1875 direct object1879 indirect object1879 recipient1899 person-object1928 1879 H. J. Roby Gram. Latin Lang. II. 54 The indirect object is the person (or thing) affected by the occurrence of an action..although not directly or primarily acted on. 1881 C. P. Mason Eng. Gram. (ed. 24) 149 The Indirect Object of a verb denotes that which is indirectly affected by an action, but is not the immediate object or product of it, as ‘Give him the book’, ‘Make me a coat’. Categories » d. indirect passive phr. a passive verb having for its subject the indirect object of the active voice, as I was told it; he was refused admittance; the mayor is given power and authority (see give v. 2); also, a passive voice formed on an intransitive verb construed with a preposition, the prepositional object becoming the subject of the passive verb, while the preposition becomes adverbial, as they have spoken to him, he has been spoken to; many run after her, she is much run after. 4. a. Not directly aimed at or attained; not immediately resulting from an action or cause. indirect damages: (see quot. 1880). ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > causation > effect, result, or consequence > [adjective] > consequential or indirect oblique1528 consequential1627 deductory1655 indirect1823 spillover1953 ripple-through1962 1823 W. Scott Peveril IV. iv. 88 He is one who will neither seek an indirect advantage by a specious road, or take an evil path to gain a real good purpose. 1849 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. II. vi. 95 He could not bring himself to sacrifice..his salary of eight thousand pounds a year, and the far larger indirect emoluments of his office. 1871 B. Jowett in tr. Plato Dialogues II. 8 Happiness is not the direct aim, but the indirect consequence of the good government. 1880 T. E. Holland Elem. Jurispr. xiii. 220 ‘Direct’, or ‘general’, damages are those which are the necessary and immediate consequence of the wrong, while ‘indirect’, or ‘special’, damages are sometimes granted in respect of its remoter consequences. b. Biology. Of nuclear or cell division: mitotic. ΘΚΠ the world > life > biology > biological processes > genetic activity > [adjective] > mitosis merismatic1849 indirect1880 karyokinetic1885 karyomitoic1885 mitotic1888 mitosic1890 kinetic1894 polymitotic1931 intermitotic1942 postmitotic1942 1879 W. Flemming in Arch. f. path. Anat. u. Physiol. LXXVII. 3 Bei anderen..Fällen..lassen sich Bilder, die anscheinend einer directen Kerntheilung entsprachen, einer indirecten (s.u.) zudeuten.] 1880 Jrnl. Royal Microsc. Soc. 3 51 In discussing the changes undergone by the nucleus in cell-division, Professor W. Flemming distinguishes two methods of division which have been described by various observers, the direct and the indirect. 1888 G. Rolleston & W. H. Jackson Forms Animal Life (ed. 2) Introd. p. xxii The..division of the nucleus..may be direct or amitotic... Or it may be indirect or mitotic. 1909 J. R. Green Hist. Bot. ii. i. 181 The terms indirect, and direct, nuclear division were introduced by Flemming in 1879, and were long in favour. 1925 E. B. Wilson Cell (ed. 3) ii. 116 Mitosis (indirect division). 5. Of or pertaining to the work and expenses which cannot be apportioned to any particular job or undertaking, pertaining to overhead charges and subsidiary work. (Cf. direct adj. 6f.) ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > management of money > expenditure > [adjective] > types of cost or expenditure incident1652 incidental1740 sunk1771 sumptuary1796 indirect1903 oncost1908 overhead1909 all-up1942 pass-through1952 internalized1971 society > occupation and work > worker > workers according to conditions > [adjective] > employed directly > not indirect1974 1903 Encycl. Accounting II. 263 These ‘expenses’ or charges are broadly divisible into ‘direct’ and ‘indirect’. 1922 Managem. Engineering Feb. 86/2 Absence, such as is being considered here, applies mainly to direct or ‘productive’ labor and not to indirect or ‘non-productive’ employees. 1923 Managem. Engin. May Indirect Labor, subsidiary work done in connection with the manufacture of a product. 1925 R. J. H. Ryall Primer of Costing 49 Labour may be employed in..repairing machinery..or in supervising the direct workers... Such labour is classified as Indirect Labour. 1966 New Statesman 19 Aug. 256/1 The Americans..are more inclined to lay down precise standards for the number of indirect workers who ought to be employed in a particular location. 1974 Times 4 Feb. 15/4 Its first offer..covers..some 4,300 ‘indirect’ workers—men who service the production areas—in the body plant. 6. indirect fire n. gunfire aimed at a target which cannot be seen (see quot. 1918). ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > military equipment > operation and use of weapons > action of propelling missile > discharge of firearms > [noun] > type of firing point and blank1590 false fire1602 potting1613 point-blank1614 running fire1629 pounding1633 bulleting1635 platooning1706 sharp-shot1725 street firing1727 ricochet1740 fire curtain1744 plunging fire1747 reverse fire1758 sniping1773 enfilade1796 rapid fire1800 line-firing1802 concentric1804 sharpshooting1806 rake1810 sniping fire1821 cross-firing1837 file-firing1837 curved fire1854 night firing1856 file-fire1857 volley-firing1859 cross-fire1860 joy-firing1864 snap-shooting1872 stringing1873 pot-shooting1874 indirect fire1879 sweeping1907 rapid1913 curtain of fire1916 ripple1939 ripple-firing1940 ripple fire1961 1879 Man. Siege & Garrison Artillery Exercises i. 23 Indirect or curved fire from guns or howitzers. 1879 Man. Siege & Garrison Artillery Exercises i. 24 Breaching by indirect fire would, as a rule, be by demolition and not by the formation of regular cuts. 1918 E. S. Farrow Dict. Mil. Terms 309 Indirect Fire, when the target cannot be seen, and guns are aimed by means of calculations, from map, or by bearings. Indirect Laying Fire, when the gun is laid for direction on an aiming point or on aiming points and elevation adjusted by sight clinometer. 1962 Ordnance Techn. Terminol. (U.S. Army Ordnance School) 162/2 Indirect fire, gunfire delivered at a target that cannot be seen from the gun position or firing ship. 7. Designating a process by which wrought or malleable iron is obtained from the ore through the intermediate stage of cast iron. ΚΠ 1884 W. H. Greenwood Steel & Iron (ed. 2) xii. 288 By the more modern or indirect processes, cast-iron is first produced by the smelting of iron ores, and the cast-iron so obtained is subsequently subjected to a series of operations by which its conversion into wrought iron is effected. Draft additions December 2007 Association Football. Designating a free kick from which a goal may not be scored until the ball has been touched by a player other than the one taking the kick. Cf. direct adj. and adv. Additions. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > football > association football > [adjective] > type of shot raking1929 indirect1938 sidefoot1945 side-footed1955 1938 Football Assoc. Referees' Chart & Players' Guide (rev. ed.) 22/1 An indirect free-kick shall be taken by a player of the opposite team from the place where the infringement occurred. 1969 F.A. Guide to Laws of Game 197 Indirect free-kick for obstruction. 1994 Independent (Nexis) 23 June 42 Stoichkov had a superbly-struck free-kick ruled out because the referee had awarded an indirect kick. 2006 Laws of Game 2006 July i. 18 If play is stopped by the referee to administer a caution: the match is restarted by an indirect free kick. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1900; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < |
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