单词 | ingress |
释义 | ingressn. 1. a. The action or fact of going in or entering. Also, Capacity or right of entrance, esp. in legal phrase ingress, egress, and regress. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > going or coming in > [noun] ingangc900 infarea1175 entrya1325 enteringc1330 ingoing1340 incominga1382 coming ina1398 ingressionc1470 introit1481 ingate1496 entrance1528 ingredience1538 ingress1543 impassing1545 enterc1547 entral1642 entrada1648 entrata1656 introgression1656 entrée1692 adit1836 immergence1859 society > law > legal right > rights to do or use something > [noun] > right of egress or ingress going-outc1350 ingress1543 1543–4 Act 35 Hen. VIII c. 10 To haue free ingresse egresse and regresse in to all suche places. 1578 J. Banister Hist. Man i. f. 21v The holes ordayned for the exiture of the Nerues, and ingresse of the vessels of nourishment. 1607 T. Rogers Faith, Doctr., & Relig. Pref. sig. ¶¶¶3v Within a yeare, and little more after his happie ingresse into this kingdome. 1684 R. Boyle Exper. Porosity of Bodies vii. 111 Nor is Sulphur the only consistent Body that has this ingress into Metals; for we have found them penetrable by prepared Arsenic. 1767 W. Blackstone Comm. Laws Eng. (new ed.) II. ix. 146 The tenant shall have..free ingress, egress, and regress, to cut and carry away the profits. 1818 W. Scott Heart of Mid-Lothian v, in Tales of my Landlord 2nd Ser. I. 134 A small fee to the keepers would..procure egress and ingress at any time. 1851 S. P. Woodward Man. Mollusca i. 31 The animal has apparently occupied its shell, and prevented the ingress of mud. b. A place or means of entrance; an entrance. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > going or coming in > [noun] > means of entrance doorc825 gatec1175 coming ina1398 ingressc1420 entress1481 indraughta1626 gateway1842 c1420 Pallad. on Husb. i. 964 Honge hit in thy yatis and ingresse Of hous or toun. 1657 W. Rand tr. P. Gassendi Mirrour of Nobility iv. 13 The Tower of Buquia..stands at the ingress of the Martigian Coast. 1854 T. De Quincey Autobiogr. Sketches in Select. Grave & Gay II. 107 Running water must force an egress for itself, and, consequently, an ingress for the reader and myself. c. More fully ingress-money: A payment on entrance into a society, college, etc.; an entrance fee. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > fees and taxes > [noun] > entrance fee > for joining society, guild, or group Hanse1200 ingress1607 footing1692 livery fine1701 garnish1759 chummage1777 1607 Statutes in M. H. Peacock Hist. Free Gram. School Wakefield (1892) 66 Assigninge unto him the whole ingress money of all such as shall be entred schollers under him. 1656 in R. Willis & J. W. Clark Archit. Hist. Univ. Cambr. (1886) I. 101 Rd from Benefactors, Materials, Ingresses, &c. £3650. 10. 11. 1886 R. Willis & J. W. Clark Archit. Hist. Univ. Cambr. I. 97 From a list of ‘Ingresses received’ we learn that Mr. Watts occupied ‘the corner chamber next King's College Chapel’. 2. The action of entering upon or beginning a thing; a beginning, an attempt; also, The commencement of an action, period, etc. archaic. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > order, sequence, or succession > beginning > [noun] ordeOE thresholdeOE frumthc950 anginOE frumeOE worthOE beginninga1225 springc1225 springc1225 commencementc1250 ginninga1300 comsingc1325 entryc1330 aginning1340 alphac1384 incomea1400 formec1400 ingressc1420 birtha1425 principlea1449 comsementa1450 resultancec1450 inition1463 inceptiona1483 entering1526 originala1529 inchoation1530 opening1531 starting1541 principium1550 entrance1553 onset1561 rise1589 begin1590 ingate1591 overture1595 budding1601 initiationa1607 starting off1616 dawninga1631 dawn1633 impriminga1639 start1644 fall1647 initial1656 outset1664 outsettinga1698 going off1714 offsetting1782 offset1791 commence1794 aurora1806 incipiency1817 set-out1821 set-in1826 throw-off1828 go-off1830 outstart1844 start1857 incipience1864 oncome1865 kick-off1875 off-go1886 off1896 get-go1960 lift-off1967 c1420 Pallad. on Husb. iv. 274 Til October from thyn, gresse of this mone, Is coriaunder sowe in fatty lond. 1583 J. Foxe Actes & Monuments (ed. 4) II. 1397/1 In the ingress of this foresayd story. a1610 J. Healey tr. Cebes' Table in tr. Epictetus Manuall (1636) 141 They have forgotten the instruction that Lifes genius gave them at their ingresse. a1642 R. Callis Reading of Statute of Sewers (1647) iii. 147 Before I shall touch upon the main, I will make an Ingresse to treat of such matters whereby [etc.]. 1898 T. Hardy Wessex Poems 146 Since then she comes Oft..at the season's ingresses. 3. a. Astrology. The arrival of a planet at that part of the heaven occupied by another planet, or at the ascendant, or the mid-heaven. ΘΚΠ the world > the universe > planet > planetary movement > [noun] > other movements translation of (the) light and nature?1583 separation1595 ingress1603 transit1644 libration1670 1603 P. Holland tr. Plutarch Morals 1304 They solemnize a feast in the new Moone of the moneth Phamenoth, which they call The ingresse or entrance of Osiris to the Moone. 1819 J. Wilson Compl. Dict. Astrol. 359–60 Active ingresses are those wherein the active stars operate by coming to the places of the significator; and passive ingresses are those wherein the passive stars come to the places of the promittors. b. Astronomy. The entrance of the sun into a sign of the zodiac. ? Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > the universe > sun > solar movement > [noun] > ingress ingress1652 1652 J. Gaule Πυς-μαντια xxvi. sig. i4 It is unpossible to finde out the true ingresse of the Sunne into the æquinoctiall points. 1705 T. Hearne Ductor Historicus (ed. 2) I. i. v. 54 At the Suns ingress into the Sign Leo. 1715 tr. D. Gregory Elements Astron. I. ii. §6. 225 The beginning of the Day and Night falls upon the Sun's ingress into the Equinoctial Points. c. The first contact of an inferior planet with the sun, or of a satellite with its planet, at a transit. ΘΚΠ the world > the universe > heavenly body > movement of heavenly bodies > [noun] > transit > first contact at ingress1753 1753 Philos. Trans. 1751–2 (Royal Soc.) 47 160 The whole matter was..to find her [sc. Venus] out a little before her ingress. 1812 R. Woodhouse Elem. Treat. Astron. xxxviii. 378 Instead of observing the mere ingress, they observe the duration of the transit. 1867 G. F. Chambers Descr. Astron. 916. 1868 W. Lockyer & J. N. Lockyer tr. A. Guillemin Heavens (ed. 3) 479. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1900; most recently modified version published online March 2022). ingressv. rare. 1. intransitive. To enter, go in. Now U.S. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > going or coming in > go or come in [verb (intransitive)] to go ineOE ingoc900 to come inOE incomec1000 infarec1000 enterc1325 enderc1330 ingressc1330 entera1382 to fall inc1384 usha1400 to get ina1425 to step in1534 to set (or put) (a) footing1567 invade1590 to take in1595 to hop in (also out)1914 c1330 Arth. & Merl. 7982 So lyoun doth on dere ingress. a1817 Dwight cited by Worcester. 1963 V. Nabokov Gift iii. 178 Boris Ivanovich, horribly smiling, squeezed sideways into the room..then, ingressing entirely, he would shut the door tightly behind him and sit by Fyodor's feet. 1970 N. Armstrong et al. First on Moon Gloss. p. xii Ingress, to enter the spacecraft. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > going or coming in > go or come into [verb (transitive)] i-goc1275 entera1325 to step into ——c1380 enterc1400 get1585 invade1590 ingressa1631 the world > physical sensation > sexual relations > sexual activity > engage in sexual activity with [verb (transitive)] > have sexual intercourse with mingeOE haveOE knowc1175 ofliec1275 to lie with (or by)a1300 knowledgec1300 meetc1330 beliea1350 yknowc1350 touchc1384 deala1387 dightc1386 usea1387 takec1390 commona1400 to meet witha1400 servea1400 occupy?a1475 engender1483 jangle1488 to be busy with1525 to come in1530 visitc1540 niggle1567 mow1568 to mix one's thigh with1593 do1594 grind1598 pepper1600 yark1600 tumble1603 to taste of1607 compressc1611 jumble1611 mix?1614 consort?1615 tastea1616 bumfiddle1630 ingressa1631 sheet1637 carnal1643 night-work1654 bump1669 bumble1680 frig?c1680 fuck1707 stick1707 screw1719 soil1722 to do over1730 shag1770 hump1785 subagitatec1830 diddle1879 to give (someone) onec1882 charver1889 fuckeec1890 plugc1890 dick1892 to make a baby1911 to know (a person) in the biblical sense1912 jazz1920 rock1922 yentz1924 roll1926 to make love1927 shtupa1934 to give (or get) a tumble1934 shack1935 bang1937 to have it off1937 rump1937 tom1949 to hop into bed (with)1951 ball1955 to make it1957 plank1958 score1960 naughty1961 pull1965 pleasurea1967 to have away1968 to have off1968 dork1970 shaft1970 bonk1975 knob1984 boink1985 fand- a1631 J. Donne Poems (1633) 89 Yet he as hee bounds seas, will fixe your houres, [Which] pleasure, and delight may not ingresse. a1631 J. Donne Poems (1633) 11 Men, till they tooke laws which made freedome lesse, Their daughters, and their sisters did ingresse, Till now unlawfull, therefore ill. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1900; most recently modified version published online June 2019). < n.c1420v.c1330 |
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