请输入您要查询的英文单词:

 

单词 magazine
释义

magazinen.

Brit. /maɡəˈziːn/, /ˈmaɡəziːn/, U.S. /ˈˌmæɡəˈˌzin/
Forms: 1500s magason, 1500s magosine, 1500s–1600s magasin, 1500s–1600s magasine, 1500s–1700s magazin, 1500s– magazine, 1600s magaseine, 1600s magazen, 1600s maggazeene, 1600s maggazin, 1600s maggezzine, 1600s magisine (Scottish), 1600s magozin, 1600s megasine, 1600s megazin, 1600s megazine, 1600s–1700s magazeen, 1600s–1700s magazeene.
Origin: A borrowing from French. Etymon: French magasin.
Etymology: < Middle French magasin (1409; 1389 as maguesin) < Italian magazzino (1348; compare post-classical Latin magazinus (1214 in an Italian source)), ultimately < Arabic maḵzan, maḵzin storehouse < ḵazana to store up. Compare post-classical Latin magazenum (1228 in a document from Marseilles), Italian regional magazeno, magazzeno (from 14th cent.), Spanish †magazén. The Arabic word, with prefixed article al-, appears also as Spanish almacén (1225), Portuguese armazém warehouse (16th cent.).Sense 6 is an innovation in English (perhaps compare post-classical Latin thesaurus thesaurus n.), subsequently borrowed (1650 as magasin , 1776 as magazine ) into French; sense 7 is also not attested in French before 1873.
I. Senses denoting a storehouse or repository, and closely allied uses.
1.
a. A place where goods are kept in store; a storehouse for goods or merchandise; a warehouse or depot. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > supply > storage > [noun] > place where anything is or may be stored
aumbry1356
promptuary?a1425
repository1485
staple1523
magazine1583
reposement1592
repertory1593
rendezvous1608
reserve1612
conservatory1624
reconditory1633
dormerc1640
stowagea1641
depositum1646
repositary1650
magazine storehousea1654
deposit1719
reservoir1739
battery1748
depository1750
storage1775
depot1795
depositary1797
repertorium1797
rua1831
stowaway1913
1583 J. Newbery Let. in Purchas Pilgrims (1625) II. 1643 That the Bashaw, neither any other Officer shall meddle with the goods, but that it may be kept in a Magosine.
1588 T. Hickock tr. C. Federici Voy. & Trauaile f. 27 The merchants haue all one house or Magason..and there they put all their goods of any valure.
1613 S. Purchas Pilgrimage vi. x. 511 Vnder which Porches or Galleries [of the Church] are Magazines or Store-houses, wherein are kept lampes, oile, mats, and other necessaries.
1704 Duke of Marlborough Let. 20 July in H. L. Snyder Marlborough–Godolphin Corr. (1975) I. 339 The two days we have been here has been spent in endeavoring to make a magazin of corn in this town, that we might not want bread.
1731 Gentleman's Mag. 1 Introd. This Consideration has induced several Gentlemen to promote a Monthly Collection to treasure up, as in a Magazine, the most remarkable Pieces on the Subjects abovemention'd.
1768 L. Sterne Sentimental Journey I. 73 Mons. Dessein came up with the key of the Remise in his hand, and forthwith let us into his magazine of chaises.
1793 E. Burke Corr. (1844) IV. 143 No magazine, from the ware~houses of the East India Company to the grocer's and the baker's shop, possesses the smallest degree of safety.
1808 Z. M. Pike Acct. Exped. Sources Mississippi iii. App. 23 A public magazine for provisions, where every farmer brings whatever grain and produce he may have for sale.
1875 Stanley in Contemp. Rev. 25 489 Imported..from the magazines of France and of Belgium, according to the last fashions of Brussels or Paris.
1904 Westm. Gaz. 24 Aug. 7/3 A later cemetery, containing larnax burials, yielded bronze implements, beads, and vases like those in the palace magazines.
1986 T. Mo Insular Possession iii. 12 Also to be seen are a few storage magazines against the walls, and..a secure treasury with heavy iron doors.
b. A country or district rich in natural products, a centre of commerce. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > supply > storage > [noun] > place where anything is or may be stored > place as store of natural or commercial products
magazine1596
1596 W. Raleigh Discoverie Guiana (new ed.) 3 Guiana (the Magazin of all rich mettels).
1632 W. Lithgow Totall Disc. Trav. iv. 165 Constantinople..Aleppo..and grand Cayro..are the three Maggezzines of the whole Empire.
1640 Digby in Lismore Papers (1888) 2nd Ser. IV. 133 He conceaued that the City of London was the Magazine of money.
1650 T. Fuller Pisgah-sight of Palestine iii. 410 Timber they fetched from mount Libanus (the magazeen of Cedars).
1718 J. Addison Remarks Italy (ed. 2) 259 The great Magazine for all kinds of Treasure is supposed to be the Bed of the Tiber.
1787 Gentleman's Mag. 57 ii. 1115/2 The Dutch islands of Curaçoa and St. Eustatius are now converted into complete magazines for all kinds of European goods.
1833 L. Ritchie Wanderings by Loire 109 The..bourg of Chouzé, set down in a perfect magazine of fruit and vegetables, grain and wine.
c. A portable receptacle (usually for articles of value). Now historical.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > equipment > receptacle or container > bag > [noun] > for articles of value
magazine bag1653
magazine1768
1768 L. Sterne Sentimental Journey II. 112 She open'd her little magazine, laid all her laces..before me.
1781 S. Johnson Thomson in Pref. Wks. Eng. Poets IX. 6 He had recommendations..which he had tied up carefully in his handkerchief; but..his magazine of credentials was stolen from him.
1861 J. G. Holland Lessons in Life viii. 120 The great army of little men that is yearly commissioned to go forth into the world with a case of sharp knives in one hand, and a magazine of drugs in the other.
1969 E. H. Pinto Treen 331 Wooden pocket cases, to hold any number from three to six cheroots or slender cigars,..were made from about 1830. The enterprising Smith family..were quick off the mark with what they described as ‘magazines’.
2. Military (a) A building, room, or compartment (of a ship, etc.), for the storage of arms, ammunition, or other military provisions. (b) spec. A store for large quantities of explosives.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > military equipment > store of weapons or equipment > [noun] > place for storing weapons
armoury1440
arsenal1572
magazinea1599
small armoury1713
armamentary1727
place of arms1768
ammunition depot1799
expense magazine1839
bell1858
ammunition dump1918
weapon-pita1944
silo1958
society > armed hostility > military organization > logistics > [noun] > provision or procurement of supplies > storehouse
magazinea1599
society > armed hostility > military equipment > store of weapons or equipment > [noun] > place for storing weapons > gunpowder store
powder house1461
magazinea1599
powder magazine1712
a1599 E. Spenser View State Ireland 97 in J. Ware Two Hist. Ireland (1633) Then would I wish that there should bee good store of Houses and Magazins erected in all those great places of garrison, and in all great townes, as well for the victualling of Souldiers, and Shippes, as for..preventing of all times of dearth.
?1610 H. Wotton Let. in L. P. Smith Life & Lett. Sir H. Wotton (1907) I. 497 A way how to save gunpowder from all mischance of fire in their magazines.
1616 J. Bullokar Eng. Expositor Megasine, a storehouse for warre.
1647 N. Nye Art of Gunnery ii. 72 A barrell of the best powder in the Magazine.
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost iv. 816 A heap of nitrous Powder, laid Fit for the Tun som Magazin to store Against a rumord Warr. View more context for this quotation
1711 A. Pope Ess. Crit. 39 Thus useful Arms in Magazines we place.
1745 J. Swift in Ann. Reg. (1759) II. 328 Here Irish wit is seen, When nothing's left, that's worth defence, We build a magazine.
1769 W. Falconer Universal Dict. Marine sig. Bb2 Magazine, a..store-house, built in the fore, or after-part of a ship's hold, to contain the gun-powder.
1800 Duke of Wellington Dispatches (1837) I. 213 I have no power to order the repair of magazines, storerooms, &c.
1847 W. H. Prescott Hist. Conquest Peru I. iii. iii. 373 In another quarter they beheld one of those magazines destined for the army, filled with grain, and with articles of clothing.
1868 Queen's Regulations & Orders Army ⁋1238 The reserve Ammunition will be kept in the Magazine.
1877 A. B. Edwards Thousand Miles up Nile ix. 239 To provide a safe underground magazine for gunpowder.
1904 R. Kipling Traffics & Discov. 53 The Gunner mops up a heathenish large detail for some hanky-panky in the magazines.
1931 Amazing Stories Dec. 804/1 The rayguns of the battlecraft, being of superior range, melted down the mortars of the fort at the magazine.
3. A ship which supplies provisions. Cf. magazine ship n. at Compounds 2. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > war vessel > [noun] > tender or supply vessel
victuallera1572
handmaid1599
magazine ship1617
magazine1624
victualling-ship1665
tender1675
storeship1693
supply ship1778
foraging-ship1809
supply boat1823
powder-hoy1867
oiler1916
1624 J. Smith Gen. Hist. Virginia iv. 155 Some pety Magazines came this Summer.
1624 J. Smith Gen. Hist. Virginia v. 189 About this time arriued the Diana with a good supply of men and prouision, and the first Magazin euer seene in those Iles.
1624 J. Smith Gen. Hist. Virginia v. 195 He made..a large new storehouse of Cedar for the yeerely Magazines goods.
1624 J. Smith Gen. Hist. Virginia v. 198 Constrained to buy what they wanted, and sell what they had at what price the Magazin pleased.
1769 W. Falconer Universal Dict. Marine sig. *I Magasins, the store-ships which attend on a fleet of men of war.]
II. That which is kept in a storehouse, and related uses.
4.
a. Military. The contents of a magazine; a store. In plural, also with collective sense (rarely as mass noun): military stores, provisions, munitions; armaments, military equipment. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > military equipment > [noun]
gearc1275
armourc1300
armsc1325
armingc1330
ordnancea1393
armourer?c1400
artilleryc1405
habiliments1422
artry1447
armaturea1460
apparamenta1464
atour1480
munitionc1515
furnishments1559
furniture1569
equipage1579
ammunition?1588
magazine1588
victuals1653
war1667
armament1668
contraband1753
stuff1883
society > armed hostility > military equipment > store of weapons or equipment > [noun]
magazine1588
weapon-hoard1955
1588 Narr. Def. Berghen 27 Sept. in Ancaster MSS (Hist. MSS Comm.) (1907) 208 Sir John Wingfield sent all the said victualles to Berghen, being then besieged, to be emploied as Magasin for that garrison.
1591 W. Raleigh Rep. Fight Iles of Açores sig. A4 Of which [Armada] the number of souldiers,..with all other their magasines of prouisions, were put in print.
a1613 T. Overbury Obseruations Xvii. Prouinces (1626) 11 They allowed neither Cannon vpon the Rampier, nor Megazins of powder.
1644 in J. Rushworth Hist. Coll.: Third Pt. (1692) II. 670 The Kings forces..marcht away with their Artillery and Magazeen towards Oxford.
1667 J. Dryden Annus Mirabilis 1666 cclxxi. 69 And bad him swiftly driv'the approaching fire From where our Naval Magazins were stor'd.
1671 J. Milton Samson Agonistes 1281 Thir Armories and Magazins . View more context for this quotation
1774 T. West Antiq. Furness (1805) 48 They took most part of their arms..with a coup laden with magazeen, drawn by six oxen.
1781 E. Gibbon Decline & Fall III. xxxi. 259 He used, with so much skill and resolution, a large magazine of darts and arrows, that [etc.].
1810 Duke of Wellington Dispatches (1836) VI. 23 A corps of 5000 men..had carried away a magazine of arms.
1830 E. S. N. Campbell Dict. Mil. Sci. Base-line, in Military Tactics, signifies the line on which all Magazines and means of Supply of an Army are established.
1864 T. Carlyle Hist. Friedrich II of Prussia IV. xvii. iv. 540 Seize Saxony..and in that rich corny Country, form Magazines.
1889 ‘M. Twain’ Connecticut Yankee xxiii. 289 We placed a whole magazine of Greek fire on each corner of the roof.
b. gen. A store of provisions, materials; a pile; a stock of clothing. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > supply > storage > [noun] > that which is stored or a store
store1487
store1520
reserving1530
staple1549
forestore1556
conserve1586
budget1597
magazine1615
stock1638
stowaway1913
dump1915
bank1918
stockpile1942
1615 H. Crooke Μικροκοσμογραϕια 61 Next vnder the Skin lyeth the Fat..a Stowage or Magazine of nourishment against a time of dearth.
1637 T. Heywood Londini Speculum sig. C3 By which small mites to Magozines increase.
a1641 T. Heywood Captives (1953) ii. iii. 47 That have no more left off a Magazin, then these wett Cloathes vpon mee.
1661 J. Evelyn Fumifugium To Rdr. sig. a2 The Deformity of so frequent Wharfes and Magazines of Wood, Coale, Boards, and other course Materials.
1669 J. Rose Eng. Vineyard (1675) 34 A load of lime, to every ten loads of dung, will make an admirable compost..but your magazine will require the maturity of two, or three years.
1712 J. Arbuthnot John Bull in his Senses iv. 18 She [sc. Usury] had amass'd vast Magazines of all sorts of Things.
1714 J. Gay Fan i. 13 Should you the Wardrobe's Magazine rehearse, And glossy Manteaus rustle in thy Verse.
1719 D. Defoe Life Robinson Crusoe 180 A..Magazine of Flesh, Milk, Butter and Cheese.
1771 O. Goldsmith Hist. Eng. III. 165 A magazine of coals were usually deposited there.
1790 T. Bewick Hist. Quadrupeds (1807) 419 Each Beaver forms its bed of moss, and each family lays in its magazine of winter provisions.
1828 S. Smith Wks. (1859) II. 21/1 Distillation, too, always insures a magazine against famine... It opens a market for grain.
1849 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. II. ix. 437 In every asylum were collected magazines of stolen or smuggled goods.
5. figurative. In literary use or rhetorically: a store or repertoire (of resources, ideas, rhetorical weapons, etc.). Usually with of.
ΚΠ
1600 B. Jonson Every Man out of his Humor ii. i. sig. Eivv What more than heauenly pulchritude is this? What Magazine, or treasurie of blisse? View more context for this quotation
a1610 J. Healey in tr. Theophrastus Characters To Rdr., in tr. Epictetus Manuall (1616) That great Magazine or Storehouse of all learning M. Cassaubon.
1638 R. Baker tr. J. L. G. de Balzac New Epist. III. 242 I take not upon me to contend with you in Compliments..who..have whole Magasins of good words.
1656 A. Cowley Misc. 23 in Poems The Lace, the Paint, and warlike things That make up all their Magazins.
1709 H. Sacheverell Communic. of Sin 15 What a Magazine of Sin, what an Inexhaustible Fund of Debauchery,..does any Author of Heresie..set up!
1738 G. Smith Curious Relations II. 216 My Friend! the Rich are the Poor Man's Magazine.
1750 S. Johnson Rambler No. 76. ⁋6 He has stored his magazine of malice with weapons equally sharp.
1795 E. Burke Let. to W. Elliot in Wks. VII. 348 The magazine of topicks and common-places which I suppose he keeps by him.
1817 Parl. Deb. 1st Ser. 352 A magazine of petitions had been opened in Scotland.
a1856 W. Hamilton Lect. Metaphysics (1859) I. ii. 23 An individual may possess an ample magazine of knowledge, and still be little better than an intellectual barbarian.
1878 P. Robinson In my Indian Garden (ed. 2) 49 The monstrous jáck that in its eccentric bulk contains a whole magazine of tastes and smells.
1918 J. Woodroffe Shakti & Shâkta 49 According to Shâkta doctrine each man and woman contains within himself and herself a vast latent magazine of Power or Shakti.
III. (Figuratively from senses 1, 2.)
6.
a. A book providing information on a specified subject or for a specified group of people. (Frequently as part of the title.) Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > book > kind of book > reference book > [noun] > encyclopaedia
thesaurary1592
magazine1639
encyclopaedia1644
enciclopaidion1693
cyclopaedia1728
cyclopede1778
pantology1813
thesaurus1840
collegiate dictionary1872
collegiate1898
desk dictionary1948
learner's dictionary1948
megabook1990
1639 R. Ward (title) Animadversions of Warre; or, a Militarie Magazine of the trvest rvles..for the Managing of Warre.
1669 S. Sturmy (title) The Mariners Magazine.
1705 G. Shelley (title) The Penman's Magazine: or, a New Copy-book, of the English, French and Italian Hands.
1719 R. Hayes (title) Negociator's Magazine.
1802 J. Allen (title) Spiritual Magazine, or Christian's Grand Treasure.
b. A periodical publication containing articles by various writers; esp. one with stories, articles on general subjects, etc., and illustrated with pictures, or a similar publication prepared for a special-interest readership.The use of the word (rather than periodical) typically indicates that the intended audience is not specifically academic.Cf. quot. 1731 at sense 1a, with reference to the Gentleman's Magazine.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > journalism > journal > periodical > [noun] > magazine
book1659
magazine1731
mag1742
mimeo mag1967
1731 (title) The Gentleman's magazine; or, Trader's monthly intelligencer.
1742 A. Pope New Dunc. i. 42 Hence Journals, Medleys, Merc'ries, Magazines;..and all the Grub-street race.
1748 Lady Luxborough Let. 28 Apr. in Lett. to W. Shenstone (1775) 23 Nothing can be more just than the criticism upon the Play in the Magazine.
1762 O. Goldsmith in Lloyd's Evening Post 8–10 Feb. 142/1 It is the life and soul of a Magazine never to be long dull upon one subject.
1798 A. Tilloch (title) The Philosophical Magazine.
1819 Ld. Byron Don Juan: Canto I ccxi. 108 All other magazines of art or science, Daily, or monthly, or three monthly.
1823 (title) The Mechanics' Magazine.
1857 A. Mathews Tea-table Talk I. 2 A Magazine is the fancy fair of literature—a reader's veritable bazaar.
1860 (title) Baily's Monthly Magazine of Sports and Pastimes.
1880 J. McCarthy Hist. our Own Times IV. lix. 304 He wrote largely on the subject in reviews and magazines.
1929 R. S. Lynd & H. M. Lynd Middletown xvii. 241 As in its reading of books Middletown appears to read magazines primarily for the vicarious living in fictional form they contain.
1948 E. Waugh Loved One 1 Each in his rocking-chair, each with his whisky and soda and his outdated magazine.
1987 S. Bellow More die of Heartbreak 85 It was no longer an impropriety, according to the women's magazines and TV, to take the initiative.
2003 PC Mag. 25 Mar. 86/2 AlterNet is an online magazine devoted to independent coverage of important issues.
c. Broadcasting. A regular programme comprising a variety of topical items, often dealing with a specific subject area. Formerly also: a short film released as part of a regular series of this type.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > broadcasting > a broadcast programme or item > [noun] > types of
news bulletin1857
news summary1875
police message1886
newsflash1904
headline1908
play-by-play1909
feature1913
spot ad1916
magazine1921
news1923
time signal1923
outside broadcast1924
radiocast1924
amateur hour1925
bulletin1925
serial1926
commentary1927
rebroadcast1927
school broadcast1927
feature programme1928
trailer1928
hour1930
schools broadcast1930
show1930
spot advertisement1930
spot announcement1930
sustaining1931
flash1934
newscast1934
commercial1935
clambake1937
remote1937
repeat1937
snap1937
soap opera1939
sportcast1939
spot commercial1939
daytimer1940
magazine programme1941
season1942
soap1943
soaper1946
parade1947
public service announcement1948
simulcasting1949
breakfast-time television1952
call-in1952
talkathon1952
game show1953
kidvid1955
roundup1958
telenovela1961
opt-out1962
miniseries1963
simulcast1964
soapie1964
party political1966
novela1968
phone-in1968
sudser1968
schools programme1971
talk-in1971
God slot1972
roadshow1973
trail1973
drama-doc1977
informercial1980
infotainment1980
infomercial1981
kideo1983
talk-back1984
indie1988
omnibus1988
teleserye2000
kidult-
1921 A. C. Lescarboura Cinema Handbk. (1922) x. 351 Paralleling all this is the filming of short features for the news and magazine films.
1936 Radio Times 30 Oct. 88/2 ‘Picture Page’. A Magazine of Topical and General Interest.
1957 B.B.C. Handbk. 153 Family affairs: a weekly magazine for mothers with children.
1984 Broadcast 7 Dec. 47/1 The channel's weekday 07.00 to 09.00 programme band..will be given a magazine format.
1989 Listener 4 May 41/1 The Survivors' Guide (Thursday 6.30–7 p.m.), an advice and info magazine, is the last of C4's spring youth-show launches.
IV. (In various extended uses of sense 2.)
7.
a. An air-chamber in a wind-gun; (also) a chamber for a supply of bullets in a ‘magazine wind-gun’. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > device for discharging missiles > firearm > parts and fittings of firearms > [noun] > bore > chamber > in wind-gun
magazine1677
1677 R. Hooke Diary 4 Oct. (1935) 317 Pappin shewd wind gun..[Section] ff was a magazine for the air and might hold almost half a pint.
1744 J. T. Desaguliers Course Exper. Philos. II. 399 The small or shooting Barrel, which receives the Bullets one at a time from the Magazine, being a serpentine Cavity, wherein the Bullets..nine or ten, are lodged.
b. A container or (detachable) receptacle in a repeating rifle, machine-gun, etc., containing a supply of cartridges which are fed automatically to the breech.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > device for discharging missiles > firearm > parts and fittings of firearms > [noun] > bore > chamber > in magazine gun
magazine1868
mag1958
1868 C. B. Norton & W. J. Valentine Rep. to Govt. U.S. on Munitions of War at Paris Universal Exhib. 1867 28 Drop the cartridges into the outer magazine, ball foremost, to the number of seven.
1884 H. Bond Treat. Small Arms 89 Magazine arms in which the cartridges are placed in a tube or magazine under the barrel.
1890 G. A. Henty With Lee in Virginia 153 Many of the men carried repeating rifles, and the magazines were filled before these were slung across the riders' shoulders.
1915 ‘I. Hay’ First Hundred Thousand vii. 77 Pumpherston graciously accepted the charger of cartridges.., rammed it into the magazine, adjusted the sights,..and fired his first shot.
1930 W. S. Churchill My Early Life xv. 208 I found I had fired the whole magazine of my Mauser pistol, so I put in a new clip of ten cartridges before thinking of anything else.
1964 H. L. Peterson Encycl. Firearms 255/1 This turret system was revived many years later as a practical magazine for the Lewis machine gun.
1990 Guns & Weapons Sept.–Oct. 15/1 Remove the magazine and make sure the chamber is empty.
c. A store of essential supplies in a machine or apparatus, or the compartment or receptacle in which these supplies are contained.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > supply > storage > [noun] > place where anything is or may be stored > receptacle > in a camera, machine, etc.
magazine1873
society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > parts of machines > other parts > [noun] > other specific parts
armOE
button?1561
running gear1663
relax1676
collar1678
drumhead1698
long arm1717
drum1744
press cloth1745
head1785
absorber1789
bearing plate1794
crown1796
rhodings1805
press box1825
alternator1829
cushion1832
saw tooth1835
shoe1837
keyboard1839
returner1839
cross-head1844
channel shoe1845
baster1846
water port1864
shifter1869
magazine1873
entry port1874
upsetter1875
mechanism1876
tapper1876
tension bar1879
buttonholer1882
take-up1884
auger1886
instrument panel1897
balancer1904
torsion bar1937
powerhead1960
1873 J. Richards On Arrangem. Wood-working Factories 45 Exhausting the air from the magazine by fans.
a1884 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. Suppl. 570/2 As in the Daniells' battery, which has a magazine of sulphate of copper crystals.
1889 Judge (U.S.) 22 June 180/2 Every operator can develop and print his own negatives and refill his magazine.
1893 C. H. Bothamley Ilford Man. Photogr. xix. 136 Hand-cameras..in which the plate-reservoir or magazine is detachable.
1936 E. A. Powell Aerial Odyssey x. 148 The film is still in the magazine.
1958 Amateur Photographer 31 Dec. 3/2 (advt.) The Hanomatic slide changer is complete with a plastic magazine holding 36 slides.
1964 C. Willock Enormous Zoo v. 77 John Buxton used up one magazine of film and then reloaded with terrible precision.
1967 H. M. R. Souto Technique Motion Pict. Camera i. 13 The first mechanism has the task of drawing the unexposed film (or raw stock) from the storage chamber, called a magazine, and after exposure, driving it into a similar magazine.
1970 E. A. D. Hutchings Surv. Printing Processes (1978) i. 7 The matrices are carried in magazines located at the front of the machine at the top.
1989 Which? Apr. 186/2 The Pioneer and Technics have removable ‘magazines’ which can be loaded with six CDs.
d. A case in which a supply of cartridges is carried. Obsolete. rare.
ΚΠ
1892 W. W. Greener Breech-loader 184 Cartridges are best carried in a magazine of solid leather.

Compounds

C1. General attributive, objective, etc.
a. (In senses 1a, 2.)
magazine door n.
ΘΚΠ
society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > a building > parts of building > window or door > [noun] > door
doorOE
entry door1526
jigger1567
magazine door1646
main door1825
Rory1892
Rory O'More1894
1646 Mercurius Academicus No. 12 111 Our daring and undaunted Foot..brought away two of their Gunners, with their Spunges, Ladles, and Wormes, the Key of their Magazine doore, and 16 of their Common Souldiers prisoners.
1761 J. Call in R. O. Cambridge Acct. War in India 167 They were employed..in making traverses before the magazine doors of the Nabob's bastion.
1848 G. C. Furber Twelve Months Volunteer xii. 551 Near the magazine door, in which set the powder-men, are a number of shells, loaded, with their fuses driven in them.
1998 Knoxville News-Sentinel (Knoxville, Tennessee) (Nexis) 13 May a4 Maybe something went wrong as they went to close the magazine doors.
magazine house n. Obsolete
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > supply > storage > [noun] > place where anything is or may be stored > storehouse > warehouse
warehouse1349
packhousec1483
godown1588
bankshallc1615
serai1619
seraglio1628
magazine house1645
truck-house1731
packing house1796
1645 in D. Robertson S. Leith Rec. (1911) 57 To gait the kyes of Peter Cochrins house in the links to make ane magazine house therof to lay in beer, aill, bread and uthir necessars therin.
a1649 W. Drummond Wks. (1711) 185 That..the Town's Magazine-Houses, be furnished with Arms.
1678 in M. Wood Extracts Rec. Burgh Edinb. (1950) X. 354 Keeper of the merchant magazine hous or wairhous within this burgh.
magazine storehouse n. Obsolete rare
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > supply > storage > [noun] > place where anything is or may be stored
aumbry1356
promptuary?a1425
repository1485
staple1523
magazine1583
reposement1592
repertory1593
rendezvous1608
reserve1612
conservatory1624
reconditory1633
dormerc1640
stowagea1641
depositum1646
repositary1650
magazine storehousea1654
deposit1719
reservoir1739
battery1748
depository1750
storage1775
depot1795
depositary1797
repertorium1797
rua1831
stowaway1913
a1654 in H. Wotton Lett. (1654) II. 91 To erect and set up..a Company, to be called The East Indian Company of Scotland, making their first Magazin Storehouse..in some parts of our Realm of Ireland.
b. (In sense 1c.)
magazine bag n. Obsolete
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > equipment > receptacle or container > bag > [noun] > for articles of value
magazine bag1653
magazine1768
1653 I. Walton Compl. Angler iv. 117 You must be sure you want not in your Magazin bag, the Peacocks feather. View more context for this quotation
1681 J. Chetham Angler's Vade Mecum xxxiv. 127 The Angler must always have in readiness a large Magazine Bag or Budget, plentifully furnished with the following materials.
magazine chest n. Obsolete rare
ΚΠ
1694 R. Gibson in S. Pepys Corr. (1926) I. 124 Your Majesty will please to..alter the present method of letting your sea-surgeons provide..their own medicines; but that it be done by a magazine chest from Apothecary's Hall.
c. (In sense 6b.)
magazine article n.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > journalism > journal > matter of or for journals > [noun] > article
piece1533
notice1592
article1701
contribution1714
magazine article1820
magazine paper1833
1820 C. Brown Let. 21 Dec. in J. Keats Lett. (1958) II. 365 The fellow forsooth must have the chapters somewhat converted into the usual style of magazine articles.
1888 N.Y. Herald 29 July (Farmer) The editor of the Century Magazine blue pencils magazine articles by the bushel.
1955 Times 5 May 15/4 There is..a key-note running through the essays and magazine articles here reprinted.
1993 R. Hughes Culture of Complaint i. 15 One morning in 1991, a waitperson named Barbara..saw a journalist sitting on his own and perusing a magazine article.
magazine editor n.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > journalism > journalist > editor of journal or newspaper > [noun]
author1697
editor1777
editor-in-chief1810
we1826
magazine editor1857
1857 Ladies' Repository 17 563 Thus is the magazine editor enabled to benefit by useful information, or by plain and moral appeals to the sentiments.
1942 H. Haycraft Murder for Pleasure xi. 267 Some..magazine editors have been experimenting with novelette-length condensations.
1990 Technol. Rev. Nov. 4/1 A magazine editor is like a conductor, encouraging one theme, discouraging another, ensuring a measure of coordination and perhaps a kind of vision.
magazine-monger n.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > trader > traders or dealers in specific articles > [noun]
magazine-monger1767
1767 ‘Coriat Junior’ Another Traveller! II. 134 A noted book-maker, magazine-monger, and anti~critic of the eighteenth-century.
1994 Steyr GB Magazine Found in rec.guns (Usenet newsgroup) 28 Mar. The magazine monger at our local gun shows (Eastern PA) finally had a Steyr GB magazine.
magazine rack n.
ΚΠ
1917–18 T. Eaton & Co. Catal. Fall–Winter 416/1 Morris Chair... Paper and magazine rack under arm.
1955 E. Bowen World of Love ii. 42 One or two ruched taffeta cushions and a magazine-rack..survived from her few attempts to bring the room into line with her ideas.
1990 Gay Scotl. Dec. 9/1 Remove all tales of lesbian love and dyke dalliances from your bookcase, the same applies for Gay Scotland from coffee tables, magazine racks.
magazine-reader n.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > reading > reader > [noun] > reader of specific material
newsreader1759
novel-reader1775
newspaper reader1822
magazine-reader1833
1833 J. S. Mill Let. 24 Sept. in Wks. (1963) XII. 179 They would not be attractive to the bulk of Magazine-readers.
1897 W. James Will to Believe 109 Thousands of innocent magazine readers lie paralyzed and terrified in the network of shallow negations which the leaders of opinion have thrown over their souls.
1992 M. Margetts Classic Crafts 10/3 Increased wealth and leisure time has given many more people the opportunity either to take up a craft or to pursue their enthusiasms as craft collectors, exhibition goers, magazine readers and bespoke home-makers.
magazine rights n.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > printing > publishing > [noun] > publishing rights
privilege1513
copyright1735
fair use1869
book rights1880
release1904
magazine rights1909
fair dealing1916
permission1945
1909 Westm. Gaz. 14 July 11/2 In America ‘magazine rights’ did not necessarily mean publication by instalments. The term was used to distinguish magazine rights from newspaper syndicate rights.
magazine table n.
ΘΚΠ
society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > a building > furniture and fittings > table > [noun]
boarda1000
beodc1000
throckOE
tablec1330
stool1519
taffel1552
magazine table1966
1966 H. Roth Button, Button (1967) i. 15 A small, locked safe..unnoticeable..because the top was extended to make it look like a magazine table.
1967 A. Diment Dolly Dolly Spy xi. 145 The magazine table caught them neatly behind the naked knees and..they overbalanced.
1988 M. Bishop Unicorn Mountain (1989) iii. 25 He lay on the low-slung sofa with a Bloody Mary on the magazine table beside him.
magazine verse n.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > versification > [noun]
versification1693
magazine verse1885
1885 Overland Monthly 5 653/1 Two or three touch the level of possible magazine verse.
1915 L. M. Montgomery Anne of Island xxvii. 233 But it was very tolerable magazine verse.
magazine world n.
ΚΠ
1833 Fraser's Mag. 8 482/1 He [sc. Bulwer] came into our magazine world with an impertinent swagger.
1964 M. McLuhan Understanding Media (1967) i. v. 65 The magazine world has discovered a hybrid that ended the supremacy of the short story.
1991 Atlantic Dec. 4/2 Lemann avidly followed the magazine world's debates about ‘the New Journalism’ and ‘the nonfiction novel’.
magazine-writer n.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > journalism > journalist > [noun]
gazetteer1611
newsmaker1648
diurnalist1649
diurnaller1661
gazette-writera1678
journalist1693
journalier1714
couranteer1733
magazine-writer1787
diarian1800
hack1803
pressman1818
print journalist1965
journo1967
newsperson1973
Bigfoot1980
1787 P. H. Maty tr. J. K. Riesbeck Trav. Germany II. xlv. 206 Reviewers, magazine-writers.
1901 F. Harrison Autobiogr. Mem. (1911) II. 203 Ah! when the dream is over—and I wake up to find myself an average magazine writer.
1948 F. R. Leavis Great Tradition (1955) iii. 180 Conrad must here stand convicted of borrowing the arts of the magazine-writer.
1992 Chicago Jan. 57/3 He meets a trailer-park tart with a 24-karat heart and learns that the veneer separating a..magazine writer from a blue-collar grunt is fairly thin after all.
magazine writing n.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > journalism > [noun]
newspapering1816
journalism1833
magazine writing1835
journalistics1838
pressmanship1882
print journalism1961
print writing1976
1835 F. Marryat Olla Podrida xxx, in Metrop. Mag. Magazine writing..is the most difficult of all writing.
1976 National Observer (U.S.) 11 Sept. 20/1 This colorful chap..teaches photojournalism, magazine writing, and investigative reporting at Brigham Young University in Utah.
d. (In sense 7b.)
magazine arms n.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > device for discharging missiles > firearm > small-arm > [noun] > magazine gun
magazine gun1744
magazine wind-gun1744
magazine rifle1867
magazine arms1868
magazine weapon1884
1868 C. B. Norton & W. J. Valentine Rep. to Govt. U.S. on Munitions of War at Paris Universal Exhib. 1867 19 These cartridges cannot with safety be used in magazine arms.
1884 H. Bond Treat. Small Arms 89 Magazine arms in which the cartridges are placed in a tube or magazine under the barrel.
magazine rifle n.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > device for discharging missiles > firearm > small-arm > [noun] > magazine gun
magazine gun1744
magazine wind-gun1744
magazine rifle1867
magazine arms1868
magazine weapon1884
society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > device for discharging missiles > firearm > small-arm > [noun] > rifle > types of
three-o(h)-three1683
air rifle1801
yager1817
big bore1838
seventy-five1840
telescopic rifle1850
Minié rifle1851
needle rifle1856
pea rifle1856
Lancaster1857
six-shooting1858
Whitworth1858
Henry1861
polygroove1863
telescopic-sighted rifle1863
spencer1866
magazine rifle1867
Snider rifle1868
chassepot1869
Martini–Henry rifle1869
Winchester1871
Mauser rifle1872
Martini1876
saloon rifle1881
express1884
express rifle1884
Mannlicher1884
Mauser1887
Lee-Enfield1888
Flobert1890
pump gun1890
take-down1895
two-two1895
Ross rifle1901
hammer-rifle1907
sporter1907
French 751914
twenty-two1925
machine-gun rifle1941
assault rifle1950
assault weapon1968
kalashnikov1970
assault rifle1975
1867 Rep. Artisans Visit Paris Universal Exhib. ii. 98 Repeating or magazine rifles.
1908 Chambers's Jrnl. Feb. 141/1 Scarlet-coated British infantrymen with magazine-rifles.
1945 C. E. Balleisen Princ. Firearms viii. 79 In some firearms, notably magazine rifles, the magazine remains in the gun at all times.
1985 Christie's Sale Catal. Mod. & Vintage Firearms 20 Mar. A .44-40 ‘Lightning’ Slide-action magazine rifle.
magazine-slot n.
ΚΠ
1910 R. Kipling Land & Sea Tales (1923) 178 The tiny twenty-two cartridge had dropped into the magazine-slot.
magazine weapon n.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > device for discharging missiles > firearm > small-arm > [noun] > magazine gun
magazine gun1744
magazine wind-gun1744
magazine rifle1867
magazine arms1868
magazine weapon1884
1884 Pall Mall Gaz. 28 Aug. 5/1 The information as to magazine or repeating weapons is very meagre.
1945 C. E. Balleisen Princ. Firearms i. 2 Those which require manual operation by the gunner before and after each shot to actuate the firearm are known as single-shot or magazine weapons.
C2.
magazine battery n. Obsolete a galvanic battery with a perforated container for holding crystals by which the solution was kept saturated.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > physics > electromagnetic radiation > electricity > galvanism, voltaism > voltaic or galvanic battery > [noun]
electric battery1774
pile1800
battery1801
trough1806
voltaic battery1812
voltaic pile1812
magnetomotor1823
trough battery1841
gas battery1843
gravity battery1870
sand-battery1873
Bunsen battery1879
gravitation battery1883
magazine batterya1884
perfluent batterya1884
a1884 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. Suppl. 570/2 Magazine battery, one in which a magazine contains the crystals which are supplied to the liquid as exhausted, to keep the liquid saturated.
magazine camera n. now historical a camera in which the plates for exposure are inserted in batches.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > photography > camera > [noun] > general types of
box camera1828
daguerreotype1839
view camera1851
pistolgraph1859
pinhole camera1861
panoramic camera1862
pantoscopic camera1865
pistolograph1866
pantoscope1879
detective camera1881
filmograph1881
photographometera1884
photochronograph1887
snap-shooter1890
stand camera1890
tele-objective camera1891
film camera1893
magazine camera1893
panoram1893
telephoto1894
mutograph1897
tele-camera1899
telephote1903
press camera1912
reflex1922
candid camera1929
minicam1935
single-lens reflex1936
plate camera1937
magic eye1938
subminiature1947
miniature1952
all-sky camera1955
microfilmer1959
stereo-camera1959
streak camera1962
gallery camera1964
SLR1964
TLR1965
spy-camera1968
pinhole1976
multi-mode1981
digicam1989
point-and-shoot1991
1893 Beginner's Guide to Photogr. (ed. 5) 130 The..Magazine Camera was highly extolled..as least complicated of Reservoir Cameras.
1989 Miller's Collectables Price Guide 1989–90 50/3–4 A Rex magazine camera.
magazine clothing n. woollen clothing to be put on before entering a powder magazine.
ΚΠ
1876 G. E. Voyle & G. de Saint-Clair-Stevenson Mil. Dict. (ed. 3) 558 All persons employed in magazines..will..change their own clothes and boots for magazine clothing and slippers.
magazine cover n. the (usually pictorial) cover of a magazine.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > journalism > journal > parts and layout of journals > [noun] > magazine cover
magazine cover1893
1893 Overland Monthly 21 448/1 She objects to changes in magazine covers that make them lose the charm of the familiar.
1914 S. Lewis Our Mr. Wrenn i. 2 A newsstand was heaped with the orange and green and gold of magazine covers.
1938 Toronto Daily Star 30 Dec. 12/6 Famous Hollywood Glamour Girls. Magazine cover models.
1951 M. McLuhan Mech. Bride 120/2 The feminine images of our ads and magazine covers.
1990 N.Y. Woman Oct. 91/2 Brooke Shields is widely seen as..a chimera off a magazine cover.
magazine-day n. Publishing (chiefly historical) the day on which a particular magazine is issued to the trade.
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > period > a day or twenty-four hours > [noun] > day on which something is scheduled to begin
opening day1798
magazine-day1821
first1868
zero day1917
1821 Guardian 4 Mar. 3/1 There is no bustle, to our minds, half so agreeable as the bustle of Paternoster-row on the last day of the month. This is Magazine-day.
1837 J. S. Mill Let. in Wks. (1963) XII. 332 The review shall always be ready for publication by the 20th of the month so that it may be brought out at..the most advantageous moment between that & magazine-day.
1872 J. Forster Life Dickens I. 129 The magazine-day of that April month, I remember, fell upon a Saturday.
magazine gun n. (a) = magazine wind-gun n. (obsolete rare); (b) a firearm provided with a ‘magazine’ (sense 7b).
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > device for discharging missiles > firearm > small-arm > [noun] > magazine gun
magazine gun1744
magazine wind-gun1744
magazine rifle1867
magazine arms1868
magazine weapon1884
1744 J. T. Desaguliers Course Exper. Philos. II. 399 The Magazine-Gun, as he calls it.
1880 Encycl. Brit. XI. 284/2 The Vetterli gun..is a repeater or magazine gun.
magazine paper n. now rare a magazine article.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > journalism > journal > matter of or for journals > [noun] > article
piece1533
notice1592
article1701
contribution1714
magazine article1820
magazine paper1833
1833 Fraser's Mag. 8 482/1 He had written some smart magazine papers, bound up in a volume called Pelham.
1855 W. M. Thackeray Let. 22 Sept. (1946) III. 471 I think it's the best magazine paper that ever was written.
magazine programme n. (see sense 6c).
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > broadcasting > a broadcast programme or item > [noun] > types of
news bulletin1857
news summary1875
police message1886
newsflash1904
headline1908
play-by-play1909
feature1913
spot ad1916
magazine1921
news1923
time signal1923
outside broadcast1924
radiocast1924
amateur hour1925
bulletin1925
serial1926
commentary1927
rebroadcast1927
school broadcast1927
feature programme1928
trailer1928
hour1930
schools broadcast1930
show1930
spot advertisement1930
spot announcement1930
sustaining1931
flash1934
newscast1934
commercial1935
clambake1937
remote1937
repeat1937
snap1937
soap opera1939
sportcast1939
spot commercial1939
daytimer1940
magazine programme1941
season1942
soap1943
soaper1946
parade1947
public service announcement1948
simulcasting1949
breakfast-time television1952
call-in1952
talkathon1952
game show1953
kidvid1955
roundup1958
telenovela1961
opt-out1962
miniseries1963
simulcast1964
soapie1964
party political1966
novela1968
phone-in1968
sudser1968
schools programme1971
talk-in1971
God slot1972
roadshow1973
trail1973
drama-doc1977
informercial1980
infotainment1980
infomercial1981
kideo1983
talk-back1984
indie1988
omnibus1988
teleserye2000
kidult-
1941 B.B.C. Gloss. Broadcasting Terms 18 Magazine programme, programme made up of miscellaneous items (e.g. talks, interviews, musical acts), loosely related one to the other by a compère or by other means of presentation.
1970 Times 23 Feb. 25/3 B.B.C. Newcastle..will have its own budget which will be sufficient to allow the production of another 30-minute weekly magazine programme.
1972 P. Black Biggest Aspidistra iii. iv. 175 Godfrey Bazely, a Midland Region broadcaster..loved the world of farming... The BBC gave him a new magazine programme aimed at farmers and their families.
magazine release n. a catch which allows the magazine of a gun to be removed; frequently attributive.
ΚΠ
1970 R. A. Steindler Firearms Dict. 150/2 Magazine release catch, on rifles and pistols, a small spring-activated knob or protrusion that, when pushed or moved, permits the magazine to be removed from the magazine housing.
1992 Guns Illustr. (ed. 24) 118/1 Extended beavertail grip safety; improved magazine release; skeletonized trigger and hammer.
magazine section n. a section in a newspaper the contents of which resemble a magazine.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > journalism > journal > parts and layout of journals > [noun] > other sections or columns
Poets' Corner1733
situations wanted1809
situations vacant1819
feuilleton1845
roman feuilleton1845
home page1860
personal1860
society page1883
City page1893
women's page1893
book page1898
ear1901
film guide1918
op-ed1931
masthead1934
magazine section1941
write-in1947
listings1971
1941 P. Sturges Palm Beach Story in Four more Screenplays (1995) 187 I mean you read things like that in the Sunday magazine section but you don't run up against them in real life.
1959 N. Mailer Advts. for Myself (1961) 158 Sam throws the Magazine Section away... Sam is enraged at editorial dishonesty.
1969 Listener 30 Jan. 148/1 Leavis did not apologise that his terms of reference should be the Robbins Report and Harold Wilson and the magazine sections of the English Sundays.
1993 Coloradoan (Fort Collins) 4 Sept. a10/4 Years ago, during the pre-political correctness era The New York Times magazine section ran a recipe..for..a Crazy Pancake.
magazine ship n. now historical a ship which supplies provisions, or (occasionally) munitions (cf. sense 3).
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > war vessel > [noun] > tender or supply vessel
victuallera1572
handmaid1599
magazine ship1617
magazine1624
victualling-ship1665
tender1675
storeship1693
supply ship1778
foraging-ship1809
supply boat1823
powder-hoy1867
oiler1916
1617–18 S. Argall Memoranda in S. M. Kingsbury Rec. Virginia Company (1933) III. 78 Ye most convenient times & Seasons..for ye Magazine Ship to Set forth..towards Virga.
1647 Let. 12 Feb. in William & Mary Q. Hist. Mag. (1929) 9 302 The Deputy of the Sommer Ilands Company..will transmit them [sc. the letters]..by their Magazine ship that they send to us everie yeare about November.
1862 Rep. U.S. Quartermaster's Dept. 18 Nov. 7 Other vessels of the fleet served as tenders,..ordnance and magazine ships, hospital ships, and store ships.
1963 William & Mary Q. 20 496 The Privy Council took up his petition and held a two-day hearing on the Company's magazine ship monopoly.
magazine story n. a story written for publication in a magazine.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > journalism > journal > matter of or for journals > [noun] > other matter in journals
open letter1798
yell1827
court circular1841
magazine story1841
personal1860
pictorial1906
full spread1913
sidebar1937
lede1951
news peg1960
society > leisure > the arts > literature > prose > narrative or story > types of narrative or story generally > [noun] > story written for magazine
magazine story1841
1841 Southern Literary Messenger 7 664 The young gentleman or lady who cannot refrain from devouring..every silly magazine story, that chance presents.
1885 C. M. Yonge Nuttie's Father II. ii. 23 The hero of many a magazine story.
1932 Q. D. Leavis Fiction & Reading Public i. iii. 47 The magazine story is almost without exception a commercial article.
1942 John o' London's Weekly 10 Apr. 6/2 The short story of today is roughly one of two kinds—what is called the Magazine Story; and the newer kind which derives from Tchekov.
1974 E. Bowen Henry & Other Heroes ix. 186 There was a magazine story containing the grim notion that how one went about being forty was of no consequence because the whole world was headed for a youth-in.
magazine stove n. now chiefly historical a kind of stove with a fuel-chamber which supplies the grate.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > properties of materials > temperature > heat > heating or making hot > that which or one who heats > [noun] > a device for heating or warming > devices for heating buildings, rooms, etc. > stove
stove1604
furnace1691
fire stove1699
stow1730
poil1756
stove-fire1769
hypocaust1829
magazine stove1875
1875 E. H. Knight Amer. Mech. Dict. II. 1369/1 Magazine-stove, one in which is a fuel-chamber which supplies coal to the fire as that in the grate burns away.
1974 L. Gay Compl. Bk. Heating with Wood (1980) 81 Dr. Nott's..base-burning magazine stove was a forerunner of the modern Riteway pictured next.
magazine well n. the aperture into which a magazine is loaded on an automatic firearm.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > device for discharging missiles > firearm > parts and fittings of firearms > [noun] > other specific parts
touch plate1508
maniglion1704
gun-lock screw1731
match pipe1740
quoin of mire1797
bricole1809
tumbler-screw1843
training wheel1875
hand1880
side lever1892
gun-lock spring1894
gun control1909
magazine well1948
1948 W. H. B. Smith Rifles ii. xix. 82 The magazine well..is the square-sided hole milled through the receiver from top to bottom, immediately to the rear of the breech face of the barrel.
1993 Soldier of Fortune Feb. 13/1 By the time anyone could..insert a magazine in the magazine well..the shooters would be gone down the street and around the corner.
magazine wind-gun n. Obsolete rare a type of wind-gun fitted with a magazine of bullets.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > device for discharging missiles > firearm > small-arm > [noun] > magazine gun
magazine gun1744
magazine wind-gun1744
magazine rifle1867
magazine arms1868
magazine weapon1884
1744 J. T. Desaguliers Course Exper. Philos. II. 399 An ingenious Workman call'd L. Colbe has very much improv'd it [sc. the old Wind-Gun], by making it a Magazine Wind-Gun; so that 10 Bullets are so lodg'd in a Cavity..that they may be..successively shot.
magazine work n. (a) writing for magazines; (b) Printing setting up type for magazines.
ΚΠ
1831 T. Carlyle Let. 8 May in Coll. Lett. T. & J. W. Carlyle (1976) V. 272 Magazine work is below street sweeping as a trade.
1891 Labour Commission Gloss. Magazine Work, printing work paid by the 100 lines.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2000; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

magazinev.

Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: magazine n.
Etymology: < magazine n.
Obsolete.
1. transitive. To store up (goods, etc.) in or as in a magazine or storehouse. Also with up.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > supply > storage > store [verb (transitive)]
again-layOE
to put upc1330
to lay up?a1366
bestow1393
to set up1421
reserve1480
powder1530
store1552
uplay1591
garnera1616
storea1616
revestry1624
reposit1630
barrel1631
magazine1643
stock1700
to salt down1849
reservoir1858
tidy1867
larder1904
1643 Let. in Boys Sandwich (1792) 754 Those arms..shall be magazined up, in such convenient place as shall be thought fit.
1655 R. Child in S. Hartlib Legacy (ed. 3) 93 It is a great Deficiency in England, that we do not magazine or store up Corn.
1656 S. Hunton Golden Law 97 Thus the Sweden King, so the great Alexander,..did contract and magazine al the Honour &c. in their own names, which..their Commanders, Officers, and Souldiery had a great share in.
a1734 R. North Examen (1740) i. iii. §154. 222 Such Secrets..that, being magazined up in a Diary, might serve for Materials, as..might serve to build up his Plot.
1745 W. Ellis Agric. Improv'd II. July xii. 123 Mr. Worlidge, and the most ingenious Mr. Jethro Tull, has given some Account of keeping Wheat by way of magazining it.
2. intransitive. To produce a magazine.
ΚΠ
a1763 [see magazining n. and adj. at Derivatives].

Derivatives

magazining n. and adj.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > supply > storage > [noun]
store1487
storing1494
bestowinga1533
reposition1617
repositure1657
magazininga1763
storage1828
the mind > possession > supply > storage > [adjective]
muckeringa1525
hoardinga1616
magazininga1763
a1763 J. Byrom Pass. Particip. Petit. i, in Poems (1773) I. 106 Urban or Sylvan,..thou foremost in the Fame Of Magazining Chiefs.
1863 J. D. Dana Man. Geol. iv. 747 The Vegetable Kingdom is a provision for the storing away or magazining of force for the Animal Kingdom.
1895 ‘M. Twain’ in N. Amer. Rev. Jan. 49 What would the new teacher..teach us?.. Journalism? No. Magazining? No.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2000; most recently modified version published online September 2018).
<
n.1583v.1643
随便看

 

英语词典包含1132095条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

Copyright © 2004-2022 Newdu.com All Rights Reserved
更新时间:2025/2/5 23:34:38