| 单词 | lowly | 
| 释义 | lowlyadj.n. Now somewhat archaic.  A. adj.  1.  Humble in feeling or demeanour; meek, unassuming, self-effacing; not proud or ambitious.In later use chiefly in religious contexts, and frequently difficult to distinguish from sense  A. 2. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > humility > 			[adjective]		 heanc825 daftc1000 edmedec1000 edmodc1000 edmodeda1175 sheepishc1175 deftc1220 edmodi?c1225 lowc1225 humblec1250 beienlichc1275 buxoma1300 meekc1325 benign1377 lowlya1382 contemptiblec1384 pridelessc1395 humil1488 low-down1548 unproud1570 demiss1572 unpuffed1577 afflicted1590 unselfdelicious1605 cottagely1653 unselfvaluing1668 simplified1721 demissivea1763 stateless1844 maiden-meek1847 vanityless1854 patronizable1884 a1382    Bible 		(Wycliffite, E.V.)	 		(Douce 369(1))	 		(1850)	 Psalms vi. 10  				The Lord ful out herde my louli preȝing [L. deprecationem meam]. 1447–8    in  S. A. Moore Lett. & Papers J. Shillingford 		(1871)	  ii. 132  				Y, John Shillynford..byseke yow yn the lowlokyst wyse..that [etc.]. c1450						 (c1375)						    G. Chaucer Anelida & Arcite 		(Fairf. 16)	 		(1878)	 l. 142  				She to him so louly was and trewe. c1450						 (c1378)						    W. Langland Piers Plowman 		(Rawl.)	 		(1869)	 B.  xiv. l. 227  				For loulich he loketh and loueliche is his speche. a1475						 (?a1430)						    J. Lydgate tr.  G. Deguileville Pilgrimage Life Man 		(Vitell.)	 l. 21034  				Yiff thow do to myn Image Lowly worshepe and homage. 1488						 (c1478)						    Hary Actis & Deidis Schir William Wallace 		(Adv.)	 		(1968–9)	  ix. l. 46  				Wallace, on kne with lawly obeysance. 1535    Bible 		(Coverdale)	 Micah vi. 8  				To be lowly, and to walke with thy God. 1596    Raigne of Edward III sig. I4v  				Copland..with a lowly minde, Doth vale the bonnet of his  victory.       View more context for this quotation a1616    W. Shakespeare Twelfth Night 		(1623)	  iii. i. 98  				'Twas neuer merry world, Since lowly feigning was call'd  complement.       View more context for this quotation 1659    H. Hammond Paraphr. & Annot. Psalms (cl. 3 Annot.) 719/1  				Without the lowlyest posture of the body. 1709    R. Steele Tatler No. 18. ⁋3  				The Pope has written to the French King on the Subject of a Peace, and his Majesty has answered in the lowliest Terms. 1781    W. Cowper Truth 93  				God accounts him proud; High in demand, though lowly in pretence. 1859    Friend of Youth & Child's Mag. Aug. 256  				This evening, let us seek to bow, Almighty Father! at Thy throne, And bring a lowly heart, for Thou Acceptest that, and that alone. 1891    H. R. Haggard Eric Brighteyes vi. 93  				So Groa stayed on at Middalhof, and was lowly in her bearing and soft of speech. 1915    A. S. Neill Dominie's Log vi. 66  				I am just enough of a Nietzschean to protest against teaching children to be meek and lowly. 2000    M. H. Greene Scriptural Temple vi. 77  				Striving to feel after Him with the spiritual discipline of a lowly heart, through fasting and prayer.  2.  Humble in rank, condition, or quality; insignificant, unimportant. Also in weakened sense: unexceptional, ordinary.Sometimes with admixture of sense  A. 1.With quot. a1616, perhaps also compare low adj. 4b. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > humility > modesty > 			[adjective]		 > modest or unpretentious specifically of things modest1582 lowly1637 submiss1638 verecundiousa1639 unambitious1713 quiet1768 chastea1797 unassuminga1807 unshowy1838 low-keyed1878 low key1897 c1485						 (    G. Hay Bk. Knychthede 		(1993)	 iii. 16  				Forthy dois a king..grete wrang..quhen he makis othir schireffis baillies or prouostis of othir lawlyar men na knychtis. 1598    Bp. J. Hall Virgidemiarum: 3 Last Bks.  v. iii. 74  				The red Hat that tries the lucklesse mayne, For welthy Thames to change his lowly Rhene. a1616    W. Shakespeare Henry VI, Pt. 1 		(1623)	  iii. vii. 47  				As lookes the Mother on her lowly Babe, When Death doth close his tender-dying  Eyes.       View more context for this quotation 1637    J. Milton Comus 12  				Courtesie..Is sooner found in lowly sheds.., Then in tapstrie halls. 1658    W. Davenant Cruelty of Spaniards in Peru 14  				Kings who move Within a lowly sphear of private love, Are too domestick for a Throne. 1713    Countess of Winchilsea Misc. Poems 77  				A lowly Cottage..Fenc'd by a Stubble-roof, from Rain and Heat. 1785    W. Cowper Task  iv. 141  				All the comforts that the lowly roof Of undisturbed retirement..knows. 1791    J. Learmont Poems Pastoral 278  				I'd sit fu' happy i' my lowly ben. 1807    W. Wordsworth Poems I. 140  				Thy heart The lowliest duties on herself did lay. 1860    J. Tyndall Glaciers of Alps  i. iii. 23  				I put up at a very lowly inn. 1871    G. V. Smith Bible & Pop. Theol. xi. 116  				They remembered the origin of Jesus and saw his lowly condition. 1871    E. A. Freeman Hist. Norman Conquest IV. xviii. 143  				The sons of Harold who were within the walls of Exeter came of a lowlier and doubtful stock. 1904    Westm. Gaz. 25 Mar. 1/3  				Four of the cannon..now fill the lowly if useful rôles of kerb-posts and lamp-posts. 1994    Catech. Catholic Church 569  				Two movements usually alternate with one another: the first ‘magnifies’ the Lord for the ‘great things’ he did for his lowly servant. 2000    Scotsman 		(Nexis)	 5 Sept. 10  				A lowly PC with Celeron processor, 64 megabytes of RAM. That's enough to word process, do spreadsheets, run databases, finance and office matters.  3.  Situated not far above the ground, low-lying; (of a plant) low-growing. Cf. humble adj. 2. Now rare.Often with admixture of sense  A. 2. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > low position > 			[adjective]		 lowc1225 base?a1425 howea1500 low-down1548 humble1579 lowly1579 low-lying1809 low-level1845 the world > space > extension in space > measurable spatial extent > vertical extent > lack of height > 			[adjective]		 shortc888 lowc1175 base1590 lowly1695 unlofty1729 squat1757 strunty1808 unhigh1811 dwarf1880 1579    E. Spenser Shepheardes Cal. July f. 26  				What ho, thou iollye shepheards swayne, come vp the hyll to me: Better is, then the lowly playne, als for thy flocke, and thee. 1597    W. Shakespeare Richard II  ii. iv. 21  				Thy sunne sets weeping in the lowly  west.       View more context for this quotation 1613    S. Purchas Pilgrimage  v. xvii. 458  				The Earth diuersified in aspiring Hills, lowly Vales, equall and indifferent Plaines. 1695    W. Congreve Mourning Muse Alexis 5  				As lofty Pines o'ertop the lowly Reed, So, did her graceful Height, all Nymphs exceed. 1697    J. Dryden tr.  Virgil Pastorals  iv, in  tr.  Virgil Wks. 17  				Lowly Shrubs and Trees that shade the Plain, Delight not all. 1715    A. Pope tr.  Homer Iliad I.  ii. 638  				Those who dwell..where Boägrius floats the lowly Lands. 1744    J. Thomson Spring in  Seasons 		(new ed.)	 21  				Where purple Violets lurk, With all the lowly Children of the Shade. 1785    T. Martyn tr.  J.-J. Rousseau Lett. Elements Bot. xxv. 355  				Restharrows are lowly kinds of shrubs, or rather undershrubs, with purple flowers. 1853    J. G. Whittier Chapel of Hermits & Other Poems 34  				In lowliest depths of bosky dells The hermit Contemplation dwells. 1853    E. K. Kane U.S. Grinnell Exped. xxvii. 225  				And the sun, albeit from a lowly altitude, shone out in full brightness. 1917    Harvard Illustr. 20 Mar. 322  				The American eagle..is roosting on the lowly supine tree.  4.  Of disreputable moral character; despicable; base. ΘΚΠ society > morality > moral evil > evil nature or character > lack of magnanimity or noble-mindedness > 			[adjective]		 > base or vile low?c1225 lechera1300 vilea1300 feeblea1325 unfreec1330 villain1340 wrackc1375 villains1390 noughty1443 slovenly?1518 peasant1550 sluttish1561 vild1567 knaifatic1568 scallardc1575 base1576 tinkerly?1576 beggarly?1577 cullion-like1591 brokerly1592 broking1592 ignoble1592 cullionly1608 disnoble1609 unsolid1731 lowly1740 blackguard1751 blackguardly1779 menial1837 low-flung1841 caddish1868 basilar1884 bounding1904 bounderish1928 1740    S. Richardson Pamela II. 55  				This proud Letter, of the lowly Lady Davers..Lowly, I say, because she could stoop to such vain Pride. 1803    Poet. Reg. 1802 		(ed. 2)	 98  				You shall not need to join the reptile brood, Of aims as base and lowly as their blood. 1843    G. P. R. James Forest Days III. iv. 68  				His name was never stained with any lowly act. 1908    Contemp. Rev. Sept. 329  				Alas! the theatre's pedigree is base and lowly. 1977    J. Fuchs tr.  Horace Satires & Epist. i. 4  				When lowly lust has swollen up their veins, young men do right in coming here instead of grinding wives not theirs. 2008    K. Bowden-Cox Honorable Deception i. 18  				He had never done such a lowly deed before.  5.  Of a species, genus, etc.: considered to be relatively simple or undeveloped. ΘΚΠ the world > life > biology > organism > 			[adjective]		 > of level of organization > lower lowa1387 lowly1851 the world > plants > 			[adjective]		 > lowly or humble grovelling1750 humble1860 lowly1886 1851    Chambers's Papers for People No. 62. 5  				Man he supposed to be produced from minute and lowly forms of life, spontaneously generated in the moist earth when exposed to the heat of the sun. 1869    C. Darwin Origin of Species 		(ed. 5)	 iv. 145  				The continued existence of lowly organisms offers no difficulty. 1876    City-Road Mag. Jan. 44/2  				There can be very little doubt that lowly forms can exist..at temperatures not much below 150° Fahr. 1886    A. Geikie Class-bk. Geol. xv. 293  				The progress of life from its earliest appearance in lowly forms of plant or animal has been continuous. 1912    Q. Rev. Apr. 528  				The most conspicuous physical features in Europe..had no existence when these lowly organisms lived and died. 1927    H. Peake  & H. J. Fleure Apes & Men 13  				Birds first appear in the Jurassic system, while traces of lowly mammals have been found from the Trias onwards. 2009    I. James in  J. M. Smith  & J. Quenby Intelligent Faith 282  				If an oxygen rich atmosphere was toxic to certain lowly species, it made possible a huge range of new species.  B. n. With the and plural agreement.  1.  Meek or humble people as a class.In later use chiefly in religious contexts, and often difficult to distinguish from sense  B. 2. ΚΠ 1534    G. Joye tr.  U. Zwingli Dauids Psalter xxii. f. 31  				The lowely [L. mites] shal ete and be satisfied, thei shal prayse the Lorde and seke him, thei mought lyue for euer. 1611    Bible 		(King James)	 Prov. iii. 34  				Surely he scorneth the scorners: but he giueth grace vnto the lowly .       View more context for this quotation 1670    R. Baxter Life of Faith 		(new ed.)	  iii. xv. 461  				Nothing is avoided by the lowly as a shame, but that which is displeasing to God, and disagreeable to his Christian duty. 1785    T. Dwight Conquest of Canäan  v. 116  				For know, fair Prince! in Truth's unbiass'd state, The proud are little, and the lowly great. 1847    Church Eng. Mag. 20 Nov. 329/2  				To the penitent, the lowly, and the believing are forgiveness and salvation promised. 1862    E. B. Ramsay Christian Life 253  				Sincere followers of the Lord Jesus Christ—the pure in heart—the humble and the lowly who fear God. 1916    Vanity Fair May 81/2 		(heading)	  				Parking Spaces for the Meek and Lowly. 2006    N. S. Muyskens Curtain is Torn xii. 127  				You will have..experienced the miracle of gentleness and lowliness of heart. The lowly have nothing to boast about.  2.  People of low rank or importance, as a class. Also occasionally as a count noun: a person of low rank or status; an unimportant person. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > social class > the common people > low rank or condition > 			[noun]		 > collectively smalla1325 simplea1375 riff-raffc1475 lowly1547 little folk1580 little people1699 lowlife1820 1547    W. Baldwin Treat. Morall Phylos.  i. x. sig. C.viiv  				When Esop..asked hym what Iupiter dyd, he answered: he mekeneth the myghty and exalteth the lowelye. 1609    J. Davies Humours Heau'n on Earth 14  				O! how it rapts the Eie of Maiestie, To see all downe-cast vnderneath her feete; That may, if please her, march vpon the Hie, Till she with none, but with the Lowly meete. 1662    Duchess of Newcastle Orations Divers Sorts  xiv. 276  				We that have Pull'd down the Nobles, and have Advanc'd the Lowly, Inriched the Poor, and Impoverished the Rich. 1725    W. Broome in  A. Pope et al.  tr.  Homer Odyssey II.  viii. 600  				Say..what the name you bore..(For from the natal hour distinctive names, One common right, the great and lowly claims..). 1773    H. Mackenzie Man of World II. v. 43  				A young lady, of her figure, did not disdain to visit affliction, even amongst the poor and the lowly. 1852    H. B. Stowe 		(title)	  				Uncle Tom's cabin; or, life among the lowly. 1880    S. G. Cooke Politics & Schools 15  				The lowly are raised toward the refinement of the wealthy, while they in turn are saved from overweening vanity and pride of position by discovery that the lowly are intellectually, and may become socially, their equals. 1913    Survey 9 Aug. 612/1  				In the dark and filthy hovels of the poor and lowly, crime and disease enter unafraid and unchallenged. 1980    Signs 5 557  				A correspondent with notables and lowlies. 2009    I. Thomson Dead Yard v. 66  				He made himself champion of Jamaica's dispossessed: the lowly sweating out their lives on the cane fields, at the Kingston docks,..on banana farms, without rights, without tenure. Compounds C1.   Chiefly parasynthetic . ΚΠ 1809    P. B. Shelley in  K. N. Cameron Shelley & his Circle 		(1970)	 IV. 1018  				Over thy lowly built sepulchre bending.   lowly-hearted adj. ΚΠ ?1546    Godly Medit. sig. C.viiv  				That I maye bee lowlye hearted, humble minded, gentyl spyryted, and to all vertues obedyente. 1660    S. Patrick Jewish Hypocrisie xxiii. 350  				They account it a greater attainment to be a speaker in a congregation, then to be humble and lowly-hearted. 1790    G. Wakefield Addr. to Right Rev. Dr. Samuel Horsley 21  				The lowly-hearted imitator..of his Master, the Son of God. 1850    Harper's Mag. Aug. 325/1  				Wish rather, Esbern, that Heaven may make her a pious, lowly-hearted maid. 1990    Port Neches 		(Texas)	 Midcounty Chron. 14 Apr. 2 a/4  				They found a meek and lowly-hearted Nazarene who seemed to be more interested in giving the blind their sight.   lowly-minded adj. ΚΠ 1565    B. Googe tr.  ‘M. Palingenius’ Zodiake of Life 		(new ed.)	  ix. sig. KK.viiiv  				No proude man loues the Gods aboue, nor is beloued of them: For God estemes the humble sort and lowly minded men. a1662    H. Lawes Treasury of Music 		(1669)	 36  				Though lowly minded, I will stand With such for place, and at no rate Give Rebell Lovers th'upper hand. 1787    J. Berington Hist. Lives Abeillard & Heloisa  i. 47  				When all that was great and elegant in the provinces was seen hurrying into arms, he must have been lowly-minded, truly, who could have been contented to have staid at home. 1888    Scots Observer 8 Dec. 72/2  				What place but Kirktown has a provost at once so high-souled and so lowly-minded that his recent knighthood does not make him despise the shop? 1993    R. Rambuss Spenser's Secret Career 		(1999)	 i. 13  				While it is true that the highly-placed Algrin has been ‘shamed’, even the lowly-minded Thomalin avoids condemning him for his careerist aspirations.   lowly-mindedness  n. ΚΠ 1627    H. Scudder Christians Daily Walke  i. xii. 268  				The Graces are..Selfe denyalle, Humility, and lowly mindednesse. 1721    J. Perry Glory Christ's Visible Kingdom 233  				Valleys are Low Places, and so may signifie the Humility and Lowly-mindedness that the People of God will be filled with at that time. 1859    T. P. Thompson Audi Alteram Partem II. lxxxvii. 57  				The stamp of lowly-mindedness. 1902    J. L. Spalding Socialism & Labor iv. 77  				The virtues of mildness, mercy, serviceableness, chastity, and lowly-mindedness were considered weaknesses and defects. 2010    L. T. Johnson Writings of New Test. 		(ed. 3)	 xv. 330/2  				They are, rather, to have toward each other an attitude of humble- or lowly-mindedness.  C2.   ΚΠ 1797    R. Southey Poems 78  				Even now I see The lowly lovely dwelling!]			 1864    Ld. Tennyson Aylmer's Field in  Enoch Arden, etc. 60  				She—so lowly-lovely and so loving. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2013; most recently modified version published online March 2022). † lowlyv. Scottish. Obsolete.   transitive. To humble or lay low. Also reflexive: to lower oneself, condescend. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > humility > make humble			[verb (transitive)]		 edmodienc1175 lowc1175 meekc1175 lessa1382 abatec1390 abasea1393 belowc1400 meekenc1400 disadvance?c1425 simplec1450 lowlyc1485 humilea1492 chasten1526 to pare the nails ofa1549 lessen1579 vail1582 to take (something) a hole lower1591 destate1615 humblea1616 thorough-humblea1617 humiliate1656 level1712 unnichea1751 to level up, down1791 unpedestal1821 to take the starch out of1830 the mind > emotion > humility > self-abasement > humble oneself			[verb (reflexive)]		 meekc1175 humblec1380 meekenc1450 lowlyc1485 humiliate1533 abase1539 demean1659 c1485						 (    G. Hay Bk. Knychthede 		(1993)	 vii. 46  				Quhen ony knycht has his hert failit, and his corage lawlyit. 1535    W. Stewart tr.  H. Boethius Bk. Cron. Scotl. 		(1858)	 I. 512  				Louyng to God Almycht, Hes lawleit him so far to schaw the rycht Of this tirrane quhilk wes oure prince and king. 1577    R. Holinshed Chron. II. 1848/2  				[Ld. John Fleming] Were not the charge I present,..I should lowly my person to meet you sixe English miles from any other person. 1583    A. Golding tr.  J. Calvin Serm. on Deuteronomie xxi. 125/1  				Wee see howe God lowlieth himselfe and stoopeth to our rudenesse. 1860    H. Keddie Wearing Willow xii. 239  				You ken my mother was lowlied, and took up her head with a schoolmaster—he was not a gentleman. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2013; most recently modified version published online March 2022). lowlyadv. 1.  In a low position or posture; along the ground.Sometimes with admixture of sense  2a. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > low position > 			[adverb]		 netherOE downlOE downwardc1225 lowlyc1330 downwards?a1425 low-downc1425 abasea1450 lowera1475 baselya1500 humbly1746 c1330						 (?c1300)						    Guy of Warwick 		(Auch.)	 l. 1384 (MED)  				So wele his strok he sett Þat his heued fram þe bodi flei; He ȝede him laweliche neye. 1590    E. Spenser Faerie Queene  ii. i. sig. N2  				A pleasant dale, that lowly lay Betwixt two hils. 1642    H. More Ψυχωδια Platonica sig. B5v  				Make their brisk sprights to lout and lowly lowr? 1667    J. Milton Paradise Lost  v. 200  				Yee that in Waters glide, and yee that walk The Earth, and stately tread, or lowly  creep.       View more context for this quotation a1729    E. Taylor Metrical Hist. Christianity 		(1962)	 432  				Thou..didst account Thy fellow Hell-Hounds did to lowly mount Their Murdering Pieces. 1785    W. Cowper Task  iii. 663  				Some clothe the soil that feeds them, far diffused And lowly creeping. 1795    R. Burns Poems & Songs 		(1968)	 II. 788  				Where the blue-bell and gowan lurk, lowly, unseen. 1811    A. Scott Poems 		(new ed.)	 144  				Auld Reekie stands sweet on the east sloping dale,..An' leuchly lurks Leith, where the trading ships sail. 1870    R. R. Coverdale Poems 		(new ed.)	 39  				'Neath towery trees that lowly bent. 1946    T. H. White Mistress Masham's Repose xxvii. 220  				The time was nearly one o'clock in the morning, so that Sagittarius the Archer was lowly crossing the meridian. 2007    J. R. Chiles God Machine xv. 252  				The daily challenge was to fly lowly and slowly enough that he and his observer..could see what they needed to see without getting shot down.  2.   a.  Humbly, modestly; reverently; = lowlily adv.   Now rare.Frequently with reference to bowing, curtsying, etc., overlapping with sense  1. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > humility > 			[adverb]		 edmodlichec1175 meeklyc1175 low1340 lowlyc1350 humblyc1374 humilyc1380 meeka1382 poorlyc1385 benignlyc1386 lowlily1415 sheep-like1582 demissly1598 squire-like1608 demissively1622 forma pauperisa1627 under favour1699 daftly1724 abasedly1830 the mind > emotion > humility > modesty > 			[adverb]		 lowlyc1350 demurelyc1400 lowlily1415 simplyc1430 murely1474 littlya1500 modestly1569 unpretendingly1701 unambitiously1746 meeverly1757 unpresumptuously1758 unostentatiously1771 unconceitedly1812 unpretentiously1852 unassertively1981 c1350    Psalter 		(BL Add. 17376)	 in  K. D. Bülbring Earliest Compl. Eng. Prose Psalter 		(1891)	 cxxx. 3  				Ȝif y ne feld nouȝt lowelich [L. humiliter], bot haue heȝed mi soule. c1400						 (?a1387)						    W. Langland Piers Plowman 		(Huntington HM 137)	 		(1873)	 C.  x. l. 141  				Lewede eremytes, That loken ful louheliche to lacchen mennes almesse. c1430						 (c1386)						    G. Chaucer Legend Good Women 		(Cambr. Gg.4.27)	 		(1879)	 l. 2062  				But I ȝow serve as louly In that place. c1475    in  F. J. Furnivall Early Eng. Poems & Lives Saints 		(1862)	 142  				I, as lowly as I can, Wolle do yow servyse nyȝt and day. 1513    G. Douglas tr.  Virgil Æneid  i. ii. 24  				To quham as than lawle thus Juno said [etc.]. 1529    J. Frith Pistle Christen Reader iii. sig. M.i  				Christ full lowlye and meakly, wasshed his disciples feate. 1588    A. King tr.  P. Canisius Cathechisme or Schort Instr. f. 79  				We maist humblie, and laulie prosterne our selfs. 1645    J. Milton On Christ's Nativity: Hymn iv, in  Poems 2  				O run, prevent them with thy humble ode, And lay it lowly at his blessed feet. 1667    J. Milton Paradise Lost  v. 144  				Lowly they bow'd adoring, and began Thir  Orisons.       View more context for this quotation 1789    Hibernian Mag. Apr. 195/2  				Here the Griskins lowly bowed. 1815    W. Wordsworth Poems I. 118  				A gentle Maid, whose heart is lowly bred. 1844    B. Disraeli Coningsby I.  iii. ii. 268  				As he bowed lowly before the Duchess. 1857    J. A. Sargant Fireside Tales II. 243  				She curtsied lowly, and respectfully offered him a seat. 1903    Law Times 8 Aug. 349/1  				The court seems to have proceeded gaily upon its way, punishing with a free hand, as heretofore, those who did not behave lowly and reverently to all their betters. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > importance > unimportance > 			[adverb]		 > in a paltry, mean, or contemptible manner lowly1440 peltingly1555 meanlyc1561 miserablya1586 scurvily1616 mean1719 pettily1791 peddlingly1892 1440    J. Capgrave Life St. Norbert 		(1977)	 l. 480  				He..sey a man, ful pore and louly arayde. a1616    W. Shakespeare All's Well that ends Well 		(1623)	  ii. ii. 3  				I will shew my selfe highly fed, and lowly  taught.       View more context for this quotation 1848    A. Somerville Autobiogr. Working Man xxii. 312  				If I had set my heart upon any trade, he would pinch himself down a little lower in living (heaven knows he lived lowly enough!) to get me through my apprenticeship. 1856    E. K. Kane Arctic Explor. II. xxi. 212  				That apathetic fatalism which belongs to all lowly-cultivated races. 1973    P. L. van den Berghe Power & Privilege at Afr. University v. 163  				The children of traditionally-oriented and lowly-educated but prominent and moderately well-off families.  3.  With a low voice or sound. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > speech > manner of speaking > 			[adverb]		 > in an undertone smalleOE softlya1375 alowc1400 lowly1440 in mutec1530 inwardly1530 inward1644 sotto voce1737   Promptorium Parvulorum 		(Harl. 221)	 314  				Lowely, or softe yn voyce, submisse. 1548    N. Udall et al.  tr.  Erasmus Paraphr. Newe Test. I. John xxi. 117  				He aunswereth sincerely..but timerously and very lowlye withal. 1585    J. Dee Jrnl. in  True & Faithful Relation Spirits 		(1659)	  i. 365  				I hear..a whistling very basely or lowly. 1605    A. Munday tr.  G. Affinati Dumbe Divine Speaker 228 		(note)	  				Of such as knowe not how to speake lowlie. 1678    I. Brown Vnerrable Church xii. 181  				They relent in this attack, and speak but lowly of it in corners. 1719    G. Sewell Epist. from Hampstead 6  				Lowly I sing in legendary Lays..'Till Fortune shall our social Nights renew. 1810    P. B. Shelley Zastrozzi iv. 32  				He sometimes spoke lowly to himself. 1813    Fingal  i. 14  				Many a lowly-breathed sigh Spake many a vanquished soul. 1839    P. J. Bailey Festus 133  				A maiden sat in her lonely bower, Sadly and lowly singing. 1863    T. Woolner My Beautiful Lady 95  				What are thou whispering lowly to thy babe, O wan girl-mother? 1904    Donahoe's Mag. Nov. 466/1  				The lowly-breathed prayers of those about you..inspire you to greater devotion. 1913    Boys' Life July 16/3  				He even spoke lowly, so as not to waken others. 2010    J. O'Connor Ghost Light 		(2011)	 vii. 120  				‘Way to God, you gowl,’ scoffed another lad, whispering lowly to his girl.  4.  To a low degree or extent; at a low rate or level. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > smallness of quantity, amount, or degree > 			[adverb]		 > to a small extent or slightly lightlyeOE liteOE littleOE a litec1290 smallc1300 softc1390 smally?a1425 slenderlya1513 hoverly1549 remissly1557 slender1581 not half1583 faintly1590 slightly1594 lankly1611 lowly1655 slight1671 nicely1698 weakly1775 sparingly1796 jimply1816 feebly1830 slightually1859 marginally1960 1655    T. Fuller Church-hist. Brit.  vi. 344  				The Pensions were but bare Penny-Rent, whilst Abbey-Lands were lowly rated farre beneath their true valuation. 1773    J. B. Becket Ess. on Electr.  ii. 64  				One of the chains fixed to the outside the phial, the other to the electrometer—the phial being but lowly charged. 1839    Penny Mag. 14 Sept. 355/2  				A loss which was lowly estimated at 1,320,000l. sterling. 1870    G. Rolleston Forms Animal Life 30  				The walls of the lung are but very lowly vascular. 1920    G. A. Schreiner Craft Sinister xv. 360  				Nine crackers were not to be valued lowly in those days. 1933    Chicago Tribune 15 Mar. 15/4  				New ways to glorify the most homely and lowly priced of them [sc. cuts of meat] into company dishes. 1954    Sat. Rev. 		(U.S.)	 17 Apr. 57 		(advt.)	  				Rare records sold, lowly priced. 2010    M. Baas Imagined Mobility i. 4  				They were all taking up lowly-paid jobs.  5.  With low esteem or a low opinion. Chiefly in  to think lowly of. ΚΠ 1741    S. Richardson Pamela III. xiv. 63  				They always think highly of the beloved Object, and lowly of themselves. 1796    Parochial Disc. xix. 262  				Each individual..is admonished in the gospel to think lowly of his own merits. 1852    H. Newland Lect. Tractarianism ii. 68  				‘Why,’ said he [sc. Robert South], ‘the High Church are those who think highly of the Church, and lowly of themselves; the Low Church are those who think highly of themselves, and lowly of the Church.’ 1890    Dublin Rev. 24 238  				When we read of the daring deeds of Frobisher and Cavendish..we feel proud of them and think lowly of ourselves. 1906    Outing Jan. 470/1  				The man who cannot kill quail sent out over broom-sedge, has cause to speak lowly of his skill. 1987    Financial Times 28 May 48/8  				As a means of diversifying out of such a lowly-rated core business, financial services has certainly justified itself in terms of profits. 2003    N.Y. Times 		(National ed.)	 8 Aug.  a10/4  				I think very highly of Billy Bulger and very lowly of the guy who gave him the business, the governor. Compounds  lowly born adj. of humble birth; cf. low-born adj. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > social class > the common people > low rank or condition > lowness of birth > 			[adjective]		 low-bornc1275 ungentlec1374 unnoblea1382 bastardly1552 baseborn1553 ingenerous1621 lowly born1623 earth-born1630 unpedigreed1787 birthless1817 unaristocratic1841 disconnected1847 pedigreeless1859 1623    W. Shakespeare  & J. Fletcher Henry VIII  ii. iii. 19  				Tis better to be lowly borne, And range with humble liuers in Content, Then to be perk'd vp in a glistring griefe, And weare a golden  sorrow.       View more context for this quotation 1742    P. Francis  & W. Dunkin tr.  Horace Odes  ii. xx. 285  				For know, ye Rivals of my Fame, Though lowly born, a vulgar Name, I will not condescend to die. 1872    E. W. Robertson Hist. Ess. 234  				We may long look in vain for the name of a lowly-born man amongst the Roman magistracy. 1963    M. I. Gerhardt Art of Story-telling iv. 136  				She reminds us somewhat of the European Griselda, but without the cowering humility of the lowly-born wife. 2005    Daily Tel. 		(Nexis)	 13 May 21  				Jonathan Rhys-Meyers plays a lowly-born tennis coach who gets in with a group of nice aristos.   lowly organized  adj. (chiefly in biological contexts) without complex organization or structure. ΚΠ 1833    Trans. Provinc. Med. & Surg. Assoc. 1 341  				The anatomical qualities of the cornea may sometimes interfere with, and impede the development of the small-pox pustule, when it takes place in that lowly organized part. 1919    Forest & Stream Jan. 26/1  				A luxuriant growth of tussock grass, which was swarming with those minute and lowly-organized insects, the ‘springtails’ or Collembola. 2001    Utopian Stud. 12 146  				Inevitable evolutionary slant..led him to regard a highly organized system as overcoming a number of lowly organized ones along the way. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2013; most recently modified version published online March 2022). <  | 
	
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