单词 | mask |
释义 | maskn.1 1. The mesh of a net; (in plural) the openings of such a mesh. In Old English: the net itself. Now Scottish and English regional (northern). ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > textile fabric or an article of textile fabric > textile fabric > textile fabric manufactured in specific way > [noun] > with open texture > net or mesh > mesh maskOE mascle1329 mesha1425 shale1606 mass1641 OE Ælfric's Colloquy (1991) 23 Plecto mihi retia...usque quo [ferae] perueniunt ad retia inprouise et sic inretientur, et ego iugulo eos in retibus : ic brede me max...oþþæt hig [wildeor] þe cuman [read becuman] to þam nettan unforsceawodlice & þæt hig swa beon begrynodo, & ic ofslea hig on þam maxum. OE Ælfric's Colloquy (1991) 26 Ascendo nauem et pono retia mea in amne : ic astigie min scyp & wyrpe max mine on ea. 1343 in H. T. Riley Memorials London (1868) 215 (MED) [The] masks [of the same nets..ought to be two inches wide]. c1450 Jacob's Well (1900) 239 Smale lytell fyssches skyppyn thruȝ þe maskys of a nett in-to þe watyr & lyven. 1469 Acts Parl. Scotl. (1814) II. 96/2 Salmonde, grils and trowtis..ar distoyit be cowpis, narow mass nettis and prinnis. ?c1475 Catholicon Anglicum (BL Add. 15562) f. 78 (MED) A Maste of a nett: hamus, macula. a1500 R. Henryson tr. Æsop Fables: Lion & Mouse l. 1563 in Poems (1981) 62 [The mice] schuir the raipis off the mastis in schunder. 1584–5 Act 27 Eliz. c. 21 Greate destruction of the Frye of Fisshe there enseweth, by reason of the smallnes of the Maskes of suche Nettes as they use. c1600 in Balfour's Practicks (1754) 543 All sic cruives and maskis and heckis thairof, sall have at the leist twa inche in lenth, and thre inche in breidth, swa that the smolt or fry may frelie swim up and down the water. 1607 T. Tomkis Lingua ii. vi The maskes [of a net] are made so strong, That I my selfe vpon them scal'd the heauens. 1669 in Quarter Sessions Rec. (N. Riding Rec. Soc.) (1888) VI. 134 Two men presented for fishing with a net of which every maske was not 2 in. broad and 1 in. long. 1886 Chester Gloss. Maske, a mesh of a net. 1916 J. J. H. Burgess Rasmie's Smaa Murr 27 June Ye canna sye mylk trouw da masks o a pokk. 1932 A. Horsbøl tr. J. Jakobsen Etymol. Dict. Norn Lang. in Shetland II. (at cited word) De masks o' de mesi or kessi, o' de net, o' de sokk. 1978 A. Fenton Northern Isles lxix. 615 Herring nets... The mesh was the mask..a Scots word, though ultimately from Norse, used in Shetland before 1838. ΘΚΠ society > communication > indication > insignia > heraldic devices collective > charge: device on shield > [noun] > less honourable charge > diamond-shaped charge > pierced masclec1460 macle1494 mask1538 1538 Grant of Arms to Thatcher of High Hedge, Derbyshire in Reliquary 22 (1881) 50 Gules a feese betwene iij maskes argent. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2000; most recently modified version published online March 2022). † maskn.2 Chiefly Scottish. Obsolete. 1. = mash n.1 2. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > animal food > [noun] > fodder > chopped or milled fodder or mash mask1508 mash1577 chop1830 Weatings1931 1508 in J. B. Paul Accts. Treasurer Scotl. (1902) IV. 111 Item,..for maskis of malt to the said hors. 1617 in J. Imrie & J. G. Dunbar Accts. Masters of Wks. (1982) II. 64 For ane mask to ane seik hors vi s. viii d. 1703 in A. W. C. Hallen Acct. Bk. Sir J. Foulis (1894) 319 For 2 peck of malt to be a mask to the 2 ryding horses. 2. = mash n.1 1a. Also: the quantity of malt mashed at one time. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > drink > manufacture of alcoholic drink > brewing > [noun] > mashing > mash masheOE mask1509 moaks1703 mash wort1875 1509–10 Rentale Dunkeldense f. 85v In brasina pro lie burn & candelis ad sedecim lie maskis x s. iiij d. 1567 in J. Cranstoun Satirical Poems Reformation (1891) I. viii. 35 Ane mask of malt. 1627 Linlithgow Burgh Rec. 4 May in Dict. Older Sc. Tongue (at cited word) Onlie sewin firlottis at the most to be grund for any mask. 1708 Session Papers in Sc. National Dict. (1965) VI. (at cited word) Three masks of malt in the Defunct's kiln. Compounds mask rudder n. = mash rudder n. at mash n.1 Compounds 2. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > drink > manufacture of alcoholic drink > brewing > [noun] > brewers' utensils mash-rule1388 strum1394 tunning dish14.. rudder1410 graner1413 mashel1440 mash rudder1454 pig's foot1467 mask rudder1588 tunnel dish1610 paddle-staff1682 mash1688 mashing staff1688 mash-staff1688 oar1735 mashing-stick1741 porcupine1748 thrum1828 rouser1830 tun-pail1833 mashing oar1836 racker1843 attemperator1854 sparger1858 zymoscope1868 nurse1880 parachute1885 pitching machine1940 sparge arm1947 mash-stick1953 mash oar1974 1588–9 in J. D. Marwick Extracts Rec. Burgh Glasgow (1876) I. 129 Ane mask ruther. 1703 in A. W. C. Hallen Acct. Bk. Sir J. Foulis (1894) 305 For to buy a mask rudder. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2000; most recently modified version published online September 2021). maskn.3 I. A covering for the face, and related senses. 1. a. A covering worn on or held in front of the face for disguise, esp. one made of velvet, silk, etc., and concealing the whole face or the upper part of it (except the eyes), worn at balls and masques. †in mask: masked (obsolete). ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > hiding, concealing from view > means of concealment > dress, garb > [adjective] > to conceal head or face visoredc1380 in masker1519 in maska1533 muffled1566 vizarded1593 viserneda1599 masked1599 bemasked1620 larvated1623 crape-faced1815 bird-masked1876 stocking-masked1971 ski-masked1976 the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > hiding, concealing from view > means of concealment > dress, garb > [noun] > for face or head > worn at masquerade maskeler1514 masker1519 maska1533 domino1719 loup1834 a1533 Ld. Berners tr. A. de Guevara Golden Bk. M. Aurelius (1537) f. 102v The vices that they brought [from Asia] to Rome..The patritiens bearyng Measques, the Plebeyens usynge smelles, and the emperours to weare purple. 1581 G. Pettie tr. S. Guazzo Ciuile Conuersat. (1586) i. 28 There are certaine glorious fellowes, who at shrouetide goe with Maskes on their face, and yet woulde faine be knowne what they are. 1582 G. Whetstone Heptameron Ciuill Disc. sig. Giijv Bargetto, lighted by a Page..followed Ismarito, hauing the mouth of his Mask closed with a small Golden Lock. 1617 F. Moryson Itinerary iii. 177 Gentlemen and Citizens wiues when they goe out of dores, weare vpon their faces little Maskes of silk, lined with fine leather. 1667 S. Pepys Diary 18 Feb. (1974) VIII. 71 One of the ladies would, and did, sit with her mask on. 1691 London Gaz. No. 2651/3 To march out with their Arms and Baggage, Colours Flying,..30 Covered Wagons, and 50 Persons in Masks, &c. 1722 D. Defoe Moll Flanders 397 I had no Mask, but I ruffled my Hoods so about my Face, that [etc.]. 1790 C. Powys Passages from Diaries Mrs. Powys (1899) 250 Numbers of fancy dresses and many good masques. 1821 Ld. Byron Jrnl. 19 Feb. in Lett. & Jrnls. (1978) VIII. 47 Solitary stragglers muffled in cloaks—women in mask. 1833 H. Martineau Three Ages i. 1 A troop of gentlemen..whose country could not be divined from their complexions, since each wore a mask. 1884 ‘M. Twain’ Adventures Huckleberry Finn ii. 14 We are highwaymen. We stop stages and carriages on the road, with masks on, and kill people and take their watches and money. 1933 P. G. Wodehouse Heavy Weather iii. 34 At any moment..the bounder was liable to come sneaking in, mask on face and poison-needle in hand, intent on nobbling the favourite. 1988 H. C. R. Landon Mozart's Last Year iv. 42 The Austrians were tremendous flirts and the masks encouraged daring conversations. 2011 J. H. Johnson Venice Incognito Pref. p. xi I wanted to know what masks tell us about the people who wear them, and Venice seemed like the place to start. b. Theatre. An image of a face worn by an actor; (Classical Theatre) a hollow figure of a human head intended both to identify the character represented and to amplify the voice. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > the theatre or the stage > a theatre > theatrical equipment or accessories > [noun] > costume > ancient Greek or Roman buskin1570 sock1597 mask1600 cothurn1606 cothurno1611 cothurnal1626 cothurnus1728 1600 W. Shakespeare Midsummer Night's Dream i. ii. 45 Fl. Nay faith: let not me play a woman: I haue a beard comming. Quin. Thats all one: you shall play it in a Maske . View more context for this quotation 1602 B. Jonson Poetaster iv. i. sig. G Giue me my Muffe, and my Dogge there... Giue me my Fanne, and my Masque too. 1705 J. Addison Remarks Italy 103 Could we suppose that a Mask represented never so naturally the general Humour of a Character, it can never suit with the Variety of Passions that are incident to every single Person in the whole Course of a Play. 1732 T. Lediard tr. J. Terrasson Life Sethos II. x. 435 The actor whose mask represented Cheres..went off from the stage. a1862 H. T. Buckle Misc. Wks. (1872) I. 487 The Romans sometimes played without masks: the Greeks never. 1932 A. C. McGiffert Hist. Christian Thought I. xii. 238 The word [sc. πρόσωπον] means not person but face, and was used for the mask worn by actors in the theatre or for the part they played. 1972 Conc. Oxf. Compan. Theatre 340/1 The comic actors of the..commedia dell' arte always wore masks... Otherwise masks, which continued to be an essential factor in the Japanese nō play and other Far Eastern theatres, were discarded in Europe. 1986 Omnibus Nov. 7/1 The chorus of an Aristophanic comedy..and the use of masks seem to be aspects of the first kind of Greek theatrical productions grafted afresh onto Aristophanes' plays. 2004 New Theatre Q. Aug. 251/1 Viewed at different angles, one of the slave masks..seems to change its expression from one that is ‘scheming, prying, and shifty’ to ‘smiling’ and ‘anguished’. c. A representation (usually carved or sculpted) of a human face or animal head, originally made for religious or ceremonial purposes but later often produced simply as a decorative artefact. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > representation in art > [noun] > an artistic representation > others quathriganc1175 starc1384 yoke1415 sheafc1420 arrow1548 thunder-dart1569 memento mori1598 quadriga1600 Triton1601 anchor1621 chimera1634 forest-work1647 Bacchanaliaa1680 Bacchanal1753 subject1781 harp1785 mask1790 arrowhead1808 gorgoneion1842 Amazonomachia1845 Amazonomachy1893 mythograph1893 physicomorph1895 horns of consecration1901 double image1939 motion study1977 society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > representation in art > [noun] > an artistic representation > of living thing > of human figure > of part of handOE headOE heart1446 face1488 tongue1488 mask1790 1790 Coll. Voy. round World V. x. 1764 These [sc. North American Indian masks] consist of a great variety of wooden masks, applied to the face, forehead, or upper part of the head. Some of these visors resemble human faces..others..the heads of birds, and various animals. 1816 Gentleman's Mag. 86 4 An antique vase, with Bacchanalian masks. 1864 C. de W. Brownell Indian Races N. & S. Amer. 509 Every man of the tribe possessed a mask made from the skin of a buffalo's head, including the horns, and dried as nearly as possible in the natural shape, to be worn on these occasions [sc. ‘buffalo dances’]. 1901 R. Kipling Kim ix. 212 He had seen devil-dance masks at the Lahore Museum. 1957 Antiq. & Survival 2 167/1 Near it a cult mask, made of clay, was still lying on the floor. 1990 F. Starn Soup of Day iv. xxxii. 126 On the wall to her left was a delicately carved Yoruba mask. 2003 P. Poplawski Encycl. Lit. Modernism 323/1 Tribal forms are rigidly codified by tradition, as can be seen in the distinctive style languages of Kifwebe and Fang masks. d. A grotesque or comical representation of a face, made of pasteboard, plastic, or other material, and worn at carnivals, parties, etc. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > hiding, concealing from view > means of concealment > dress, garb > [noun] > for face or head > worn at carnivals, etc. junkanoo1826 mask1837 1837 D. Jerrold in New Monthly Mag. Nov. 317 The mask fixed upon the effigy [of Guy Fawkes]. 1901 Ann. Brit. School Athens 1899–1900 6 126 The young man [in the carnival] contents himself with..a roughly-made domino, or, thanks to the steadily increasing influx of Western culture..an ‘Ally Sloper’ mask. 1943 B. Smith Tree grows in Brooklyn xxvi. 174 It was the day children went around ‘ragamuffin’ or ‘slamming gates’, wearing costumes topped off by a penny mask. 1981 B. Byars Cybil War 5 He had never been one for costumes—even at Hallowe'en he limited himself to a mask. 2003 A. Best & D. W. Barnes Basic Tort Law vi. 269 The caricature mask of George Bush which he wore during employment as an entertainer. 2. figurative and in figurative context. a. A pretence, a front, an outward show intended to deceive; frequently in to put on (also throw off, drop, etc.) the mask. under the mask of: with the appearance or apparent motive of (but not actually). ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > hiding, concealing from view > means of concealment > [noun] > mask, cloak, disguise visor1390 scugc1485 cloak1526 visor1532 vizarda1555 mask1577 superficiesa1592 muffler1605 umbrella1623 misguise1646 travesty1732 iron mask1760 domino1836 vizarding1861 1577 tr. ‘F. de L'Isle’ Legendarie sig. Fivv That their nephue Francis serued but as a maske and cloke to their fellonie. 1678 A. Behn Sir Patient Fancy v. i. 74 Keep still that mask of Love we first put on..for I have no joy beyond cheating that filthy Uncle of thine. 1702 Clarendon's Hist. Rebellion I. iii. 148 No man had ever a greater power over himself, or was less the man that he seem'd to be, which shortly after appear'd to every body, when he cared less to keep on the Masque. 1748 S. Richardson Clarissa IV. xlvii. 275 If I write not in time, but that thou hast actually pulled off the mask; let [etc.]. 1766 O. Goldsmith Vicar of Wakefield II. xi. 165 A base ungenerous wretch, who, under the mask of friendship, has undone me. 1812 G. Crabbe Tales xvi. 286 She veil'd her troubles in a mask of ease. 1832 T. De Quincey Cæsars in Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. Oct. 604 He himself, by way of masque,..attended a public spectacle. 1849 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. I. 400 He had covered his failings with the mask of devotion. 1876 E. A. Freeman Hist. Norman Conquest (ed. 2) IV. xvii. 37 The way in which..wrong contrived to assume the mask of right. 1922 P. G. Wodehouse Clicking of Cuthbert ix. 203 It was only..when I learned that in the privacy of her home she would weep bitterly..that I realized that she did but wear the mask. 1940 J. Buchan Memory Hold-the-Door xii. 284 Under the mask of a riotous life there would be death at the heart. 1956 A. Stevenson in Chicago Tribune 18 Oct. 2/6 This is a man of many masks. Who can say they have seen his real face?’ 1992 M. Medved Hollywood vs. Amer. ii. iv. 57 Another holy hypocrite hides his private prurience behind a mask of public piety. b. A covering of something (material or immaterial), hiding something else from view. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > hiding, concealing from view > means of concealment > [noun] shadowc1200 blindfolding?c1225 coverturec1374 hiding1382 veilc1384 palliation?c1425 covert1574 panoply1576 hoodwink1577 mask1597 cover1600 screena1616 pretexture1618 purdah1621 subterfuge1621 tecture1624 coverlet1628 domino1836 face shield1842 concealment1847 protective colouring1873 camouflage1885 protective coloration1892 smokescreen1926 cover-up1927 scrim1942 marzipan1945 the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > covering > [noun] > a covering > concealing veila1382 palla1450 stole1590 mask1597 vapour1597 vizard1621 film1837 1597 W. Shakespeare Romeo & Juliet ii. i. 127 The maske of night is on my face, Els would a Maiden blush bepaint my cheeks. View more context for this quotation 1655 R. Fanshawe tr. L. de Camoens Lusiad ii. lxvi. 36 The self-same time they did their Anchors weigh, (Hid in the mask of night). 1752 W. Mason Elfrida 25 To..be led Veil'd in the mask of night, to Edgar's chamber, A counterfeit Matilda. 1820 J. Keats Sonnet, Lover's Complaint in Poet. Wks. (1906) 486 The new soft-fallen mask Of snow upon the mountains. 1886 R. Willis & J. W. Clark Archit. Hist. Univ. Cambr. III. 540 The series of melancholy attempts..to convert the medieval style of our colleges into Italian by a mere mask of ashlar. 1918 W. Cather My Ántonia ii. vi. 198 All those frivolities of summer, the light and shadow, the living mask of green that trembled over everything, they were lies. 1960 P. S. Minear Images Church in N.T. iv. 106 An anti-Semitism can readily don the mask of pro-Christianism. 1995 R. D. V. Glasgow Madness, Masks, & Laughter ii. 45 Wearing a wobbly mask of piety beneath which his baser instincts are very much in evidence. c. A facial expression assumed deliberately to conceal an emotion or give a false impression; an outward appearance which belies a person's true nature. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > sight and vision > thing seen > appearance or aspect > [noun] > facial appearance or expression > specific light1535 mask1605 severity1711 beam1773 study1886 1605 Disc. Treason in His Maiesties Speach sig. H1v The maske of his Romaine fortitude did visibly begin to weare & slide off his face. 1749 J. Cleland Mem. Woman of Pleasure II. 12 The mask of mock-modesty was compleatly taken off. 1782 W. Cowper Conversation in Poems 227 A shallow brain behind a serious mask. 1844 R. W. Emerson Ess. 2nd Ser. iii. 103 Suppose a slaver on the coast of Guinea should take on board a gang of negroes, which should contain persons of the stamp of Toussaint L'Ouverture: or, let us fancy, under these swarthy masks he has a gang of Washingtons in chains. 1897 B. Stoker Dracula ix. 113 As soon as the door was closed, however, the mask fell from her face., and she sank down into a chair with a great sigh. 1905 Baroness Orczy Scarlet Pimpernel xv. 144 She had detained him for a while..trying to get at the thoughts which lay beyond that thin, fox-like mask. 1993 V. E. Mitchell Windows on Lost World ii. 16 Kaul's expression settled into a mask that matched Spock's for blandness. 2002 R. Huntford tr. A. Naess Life's Philos. ii. 42 When it finally dawns on a little child that she is being watched, her natural reaction appears to be shyness. The formation of the mask is beginning. d. A human face regarded as resembling a mask, esp. by being fixed in a particular expression. ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > external parts of body > head > face > face with expression or expression > [noun] > without expression or expressionless muffin face1777 mask1795 muffin countenance1823 poker face1874 dead-pan1933 po-face1965 1795 W. Hayley National Advocates 18 To them Religion's sweet seraphic face Appears the sickly mask of sour grimace. 1887 O. Wilde Ld. Arthur Savile's Crime i, in Court & Soc. Rev. 11 May 449/1 For a moment his face became a white mask of horror. 1897 J. Conrad Nigger of ‘Narcissus’ v. 104 He lifted his head and turned bravely at Donkin, who saw a strange face, an unknown face, a fantastic and grimacing mask of despair and fury. 1935 T. Wolfe Of Time & River lv. 492 She had..a strong convulsive mouth, a mask which was like a destiny since it seemed to have been carved and fashioned for the dirge-like wailing of eternal grief. 1990 J. Rose Modigliani (BNC) 200 The artist sits holding his palette, a blue scarf tucked into his bronze corduroy jacket, the face burnt free of passion, a beautiful mask looking at the world through narrowed eyes. 2010 K. Morton Distant Hours 42 The man in the photograph wore the frightened mask of prolonged internal torment. 3. a. A protective covering for the face; (now) esp. a rigid covering worn to protect the face from physical injury in certain sports and other activities. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > headgear > [noun] > mask invisory1583 mask1601 vizard1614 face coveringa1732 the world > action or operation > safety > protection or defence > [noun] > means of protection or defence > device or contrivance to protect a thing or person > protection worn on face mask1601 society > leisure > sport > general equipment > [noun] > guard or mask mask1823 guard1889 1601 P. Holland tr. Pliny Hist. World I. 367 He..hath a thicke coife or maske [L. persona densusque reticulus] about his head, for doubt that hee should bestow any [frankincense] in mouth or eares. a1616 W. Shakespeare Two Gentlemen of Verona (1623) iv. iv. 150 Since she did neglect her looking-glasse, And threw her Sun-expelling Masque away. View more context for this quotation 1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory iii. 13/1 A Mask... This is a thing..Gentlewomen used to put over their Faces..to keep them from Sun burning. 1739 T. Gray Let. 25 Oct. in Corr. (1971) I. 125 We are..as well armed as possible against the cold, with muffs, hoods, and masks of bever. 1823 G. Roland Treat. Art Fencing i. 25 Each fencer wears a closely wrought wire mask for the security of his face. 1845 R. Browning Laboratory in Bells & Pomegranates No. VII: Dramatic Romances & Lyrics i Now that I, tying thy glass mask tightly, May gaze thro' these faint smokes curling whitely. 1875 E. H. Knight Amer. Mech. Dict. II. 1403/2 Mask,..a wire cage to protect the face from a stray cut or thrust with a foil in fencing... A face protection to be worn in glass-works or foundries, to protect against radiant heat. 1901 ‘H. McHugh’ John Henry 68 Baseball masks. 1975 R. Pilcher Day of Storm viii. 103 He wore a welding mask. 1989 D. Okrent & S. Wulf Baseball Anecd. i. 12 The first catcher to wear a mask and a balloon glove. 2013 Inside Baseball Hall of Fame 130 (caption) Fred Thayer, the captain of the Harvard baseball team, designed this first catcher's mask around 1876, basing it on masks worn by Harvard's fencers. b. Surgery. Any of various types of dressing for the face. rare. ΚΠ 1889 New Sydenham Soc. Lexicon Mask, A piece of linen, with holes for the eyes and mouth, used for applications to the face. 1989 Ann. Plastic Surg. 23 166 The results using this technique parallel those with a tape mask. 2013 C. T. Hess Clin. Guide Skin & Wound Care (ed. 7) 289 Silon-TSR Temporary Skin Replacement..Dressing: 5″ x 5″;..Face mask. c. Medicine. A device placed over the nose and mouth, through which oxygen or gaseous anaesthetic is inhaled; (occasionally) a facial covering of gauze impregnated with a drug for inhalation. Also (in extended use): a similar device for supplying oxygen on an aircraft, etc.face, oxygen mask, etc.: see the first element. ΚΠ 1897 R. W. Garrett Text Bk. Med. & Surg. Gynæcol. vi. 66 Chloroform may be administered by means of a towel placed over the patient's face, but it is best given on an Esmarch's mask, which..fits loosely over the nose and mouth, thus admitting air freely, while the chloroform is dropped on it a few drops at a time. 1936 Discovery July 206/2 A liquid compound of ether..given..from a face mask through a drop bottle. 1959 Woman 16 May 23/2 An officious nurse plonked down a gas and air mask on my face. 1970 A. K. Armah Fragments 42 An oxygen supply is provided for each passenger. Masks are located in the back of the seat in front of you. 1992 Independent 29 Sept. 13/8 Mum out of danger, removed to ward. No mask. Still drip and catheter. 2002 J. Mercurio Bodies (2003) 188 The male nurse runs the curtains round... ‘Get us a mask for sixty per cent oxygen, two hundred of hydrocortisone ten of chlorpheniramine’. d. A covering worn over the mouth and nose in order to reduce the transmission of infectious agents, or to prevent the inhalation of pollutants and other harmful substances.See also medical mask n., surgical mask n. ΚΠ ?1900 H. L. Wagner in Trans. Med. Soc. Calif. 30 473 It is absolutely necessary for important operations..to use a mask, which will filter the expired air. 1933 A. W. Bourne et al. Queen Charlotte's Text-bk. Obstetr. (ed. 3) xiv. 266 No person is allowed in the hospital labour ward without a mask, which covers both the mouth and nose. 1995 K. McCloud Techniques of Decorating (1998) 149/2 Always wear gloves (pigments can be absorbed through the skin and accumulate beneath fingernails), and a paper dust mask. 2006 HealthFacts (Center for Med. Consumers) Feb. 5/2 Jefferson and colleagues..advise public health measures like frequent handwashing, quarantining infected people, and wearing masks and gowns. 2018 Sun (Nigeria) (Nexis) 21 Apr. The two have spent much of their time at various landfills and refuse dumps rummaging through filth, picking, sorting and selling junk without using gloves, boots or masks. e. = gas mask n. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > safety > protection or defence > [noun] > means of protection or defence > device or contrivance to protect a thing or person > protection worn on face > respirator mouthpiece1790 nosebag1834 respirator1836 inhaler1864 smoke respirator1866 aerophore1876 open circuit1876 inspirator1898 muzzle1899 smoke helmet1900 gas helmet1910 gas mask1915 mask1915 oxygen mask1920 inhalator1929 closed circuit1953 1915 H. W. Wilson Great War IV. 331 (caption) A Highlander wearing a mask. 1918 H. W. Wilson Great War XI. 454 French soldiers wearing the masks, fitted with goggles and respirators, that rendered them immune to noxious gases. 1929 R. Graves Good-bye to all That xv. 204 Vermorel-sprayers had cleared out most of the gas, but we still had to wear our masks. 1984 J. Bedford Titron Madness (BNC) 78 They all knew that some gases were skin absorbable... There could be no telling if his mask would be effective until it was too late. 2014 M. W. Nance Terrorist Recognition Handbk. xii. 137 Protective masks are a preincident indicator of preparation for weapons of mass destruction (WMDs) usage. f. A watertight shield with a transparent front, worn over the eyes during underwater swimming and diving. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > water sports except racing > skin-diving > [noun] > equipment mask1945 aqualung1950 scuba1952 snorkel1953 1945 Newsweek 17 Sept. 113 (advt.) He'd organized a spear-fishing party, and this is the proper regalia—glass-front mask, flipper shoes, and a..spear. 1977 G. Durrell Golden Bats & Pink Pigeons v. 110 We had only masks and no snorkels, and my mask let in water. 1994 Alert Diver Mar. 37/1 (advt.) The Standard Oxygen Unit contains a multifunction regulator, demand inhalator valve with clear Tru-Fit mask, pocket mask, non-rebreather mask with 6-foot oxygen tubing. 2000 W. Hendrick et al. Public Safety Diving xvi. 228 You should never clear condensation inside a mask by flooding it while diving. 4. a. A woman's face as disguised by cosmetics; a (heavy) facial covering of make-up.In quot. 1778 also with allusion to sense 2a. ΚΠ 1778 W. Kenrick Lady of Manor i. 9 Fine ladies with painted faces in town, One mask with another may hide. a1811 R. T. Paine Self-complacency in Wks. (1812) ii. 123 Mine be the nymph, whom native charms adorn; Who looks on Fashion's painted mask with scorn. a1911 D. G. Phillips Susan Lenox (1917) II. viii. 210 She fixed her gaze upon the eyes looking through the hideous mask of paint and powder partially concealing the madam's face. 1962 K. A. Porter Ship of Fools 219 She painted and powdered her face half a dozen times a day, putting on her mask as carefully as an actress preparing to face her audience. 1993 I. Welsh Trainspotting 64 A coldly smiling dyke in a woman's business suit wi a thick foundation mask. 2008 M. Belanger Walking Twilight Path 45 One such ‘mask’ that I have used to great effect involves a foundation of pale powder. b. A cosmetic preparation spread on the face; a face pack. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > beautification > beautification of the person > beautification of the skin or complexion > [noun] > preparations for the skin or complexion > face packs face mask1754 mud mask1854 face pack1916 mud-pack1922 mask1928 pack1934 1928 Daily Express 16 June 3/4 I suggested that I should like a mud-mask. The assistant appeared to be alarmed. 1931 H. G. Wells Work, Wealth & Happiness Mankind I. v. 221 She has her face put under a ‘mask’, an affair of beaten-up eggs and other ingredients which tightens on the face. 1955 C. Hart Handbk. Beauty 29 Cover your hair,..because the mask stuff is sticky. 1993 Vanity Fair (N.Y.) Mar. 105/2 Beauty editor..assumes boy has been playing with samples of new placenta-based masque. 2005 J. Toedt et al. Chem. Composition Everyday Products 30 Romans used masks formulated with ass's milk, wet bread dough, or crude wool grease combined with honey, eggs, barley flour, [etc.]. 5. A likeness of a person's face in clay, wax, etc., esp. one made by taking a mould from the face itself. Cf. death-mask n. at death n. Compounds 2. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > relationship > imitation > [noun] > cast or impression > mask mask1780 death-mask1838 1780 C. Rogers Let. 6 Apr. in Archaeologia (1782) 6 109 Some of these greatly resemble those published by Ficoroni,..many of which masques are also in terracotta. 1846 Penny Cycl. Suppl. II. 705/2 They [sc. the wax imagines of the Romans] were probably cast from moulds taken from models, though such masks [taken after death] may have been used in the formation of the models. 1877 C. Bell tr. G. Ebers Uarda I. 311 (note) Such a mask of the dead is not unfrequently found at the head of mummy cases. 1934 Biometrika 26 1 (title) The Wilkinson head of Oliver Cromwell and its relationship to busts, masks and painted portraits. 2008 M. Belanger Walking Twilight Path 45 Among the Romans, death-masks were made when famous people died, and during certain public rites, the descendants of these great people wore the masks. II. Specialized uses. 6. a. A stylized representation of a face, or a face and neck, usually in stone; (Architecture) a grotesque representation of a face used in panels, keystones of arches, etc. Also: a kind of corbel which casts a shadow resembling a man's profile, a buckle (see buckle n. 4). ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > architecture > architectural ornament > [noun] > gargoyles or grotesques gargoyle13.. baboonc1400 antic1532 marmoset1687 mask1731 antefix1819 figurehead1874 society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > architecture > other elements > [noun] > corbel > specific type console1706 mask1731 society > armed hostility > military equipment > armour > shield > [noun] > decoration mask1869 1731 N. Bailey Universal Etymol. Eng. Dict. (ed. 2) II Masque (with Architects), certain pieces of sculpture, representing some hideous form; grotesque or satyrs faces, used to fill up or adorn some vacant places. 1777 W. Hamilton Acct. Discov. Pompeii 14 Colossal masks of terra cotta in the situation in which they were found. 1784 H. Walpole Let. 7 Sept. (1858) VIII. 502 Mrs. Damer herself is modelling two masks for the key-stones of the new bridge at Henley. 1848 J. H. Parker Rickman's Styles Archit. Eng. (ed. 5) Introd. xxx A good bold corbel-table..carried on masks, a name given to a peculiar corbel because the shadow of it is the same as that from a head. 1869 C. Boutell tr. J. P. Lacombe Arms & Armour ii. 19 The shield..in either case was adorned by having the head of an animal nailed in the centre..or a mask executed with the hammer (repoussé) in bronze, was fixed in a similar position. 1870 F. R. Wilson Archit. Surv. Churches Lindisfarne 111 The labels terminate in grotesque masks. 1942 Harvard Jrnl. Asiatic Stud. 7 88 (caption) The stone door is beautifully carved with a monster mask in high relief. 1984 N. A. Cookson Romano-Brit. Mosaics (BNC) 26 Masks of Neptune occupy the interspaces between the central and other roundels. 2010 J. E. Clark et al. in J. Guernsey et al. Place of Stone Monum. 19/2 Sculptures on these buildings were made by constructing a stone skeleton for each mask... Most masks are thought to be representations of various gods. b. Hunting. The face, head, or head-skin of a fox or other game animal, esp. taken as a trophy. Also (in extended use): the head or muzzle of a living animal. to set his mask for: (of a fox) to head or make for (rare). ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > [noun] > trophies mask1828 the world > animals > mammals > group Unguiculata or clawed mammal > family Canidae > [noun] > genus Vulpes > vulpes vulpes (fox) > miscellaneous parts of fox-stones1597 mask1828 1828 Sporting Mag. July 244/1 The masks of a bitch fox and five of her cubs were nailed against the door of his keeper's kennel. 1853 ‘C. Bede’ Adventures Mr. Verdant Green vii. 56 Over the mirror was displayed a fox's mask. 1891 County Gentleman 29 1684 A second fox..set his mask for Vowes's Gorse. 1894 C. Phillipps-Wolley et al. Big Game Shooting (Badminton Libr. of Sports & Pastimes) II. xv. 417 Peel off the whole mask from the antlers downwards to the muzzle. 1928 C. S. Stockley Big Game Shooting 88 Skins..should..be..hung on a frame to dry, the mask being filled with dry grass or paper. 1945 C. L. B. Hubbard Observer's Bk. Dogs 214 A light Cairn may have a dark mask. 1957 P. White Voss viii. 206 Cattle lumbered to a standstill, holding their masks close to the ground. 1972 Daily Tel. 8 Apr. 17/4 Six more dog pelts, all complete with masks—the head of the dog—have been found..at Nuneaton. 1991 Dogs Monthly Feb. 28/3 She was a rich red with a dark mask and tiny ears..and she was a well constructed Dane. 2008 H. M. Menino Darwin's Fox & my Coyote vi. 117 Parking Lot Papa has handsome russet markings on his legs and mask and ears. 7. a. Entomology. The labium of a dragonfly larva, which is greatly elongated and hinged, concealing the other mouthparts, and can be rapidly extended to capture prey. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > subclass Pterygota > [noun] > division Exopterygota or Hemimetabola > order Odonata > member of (dragonfly) > enlarged labium of mask1797 1797 Encycl. Brit. X. 20/1 at Libella This mask, fastened to the insect's neck,..serves to hold its prey while it devours it. 1896 J. W. Kirkaldy & E. C. Pollard tr. J. E. V. Boas Text Bk. Zool. 255 The larvæ [of dragon-flies]..are characterised by the modification of the labium into a long eversible prehensile organ (the mask). 1938 A. D. Imms Gen. Textbk. Entomol. (ed. 4) 334 In the nymph this organ is modified for prehensile purposes and is known as the mask from the fact that it conceals the other mouth-parts. 1965 J. D. Carthy Behaviour of Arthropods iii. 39 A dragonfly larva catches its prey by shooting out its specialized labium, the mask, which bears two jaws. 2011 N. Amer. Wildlife (Marshall Cavendish Ref.) 66/1 The [dragonfly] larvae, or nymphs, capture their prey using what is known as a mask. b. A feature or marking on an animal's face, resembling or likened to a mask. ΚΠ 1840 E. Blyth et al. Cuvier's Animal Kingdom 174 The mask, formed by the fringed feathers that surround the eyes, is greatly extended [in the barn owl]. 1961 ‘J. B. Aistrop’ Pet Lover's Dict. 31 The male [golden-breasted waxbill] is remarkable for the brilliant golden yellow of its breast..and the red mask, which surrounds its eyes. 1980 G. Corbet & D. Ovenden Mammals Brit. & Europe 46 Fat dormouse. Glis glis. Large, grey; no mask but dark rings make eyes appear very large and dark. 2008 K. Doudna It's Baby Raccoon! 5 Her cubs are born blind and helpless. In about 10 days, a cub's black mask becomes visible. c. [Compare French masque, 1867 in this sense.] Medicine mask of pregnancy n. a blotchy, brownish discoloration which may appear on the forehead, cheeks, and neck of a woman during pregnancy; chloasma. ΚΠ 1913 R. W. Johnstone Text-bk. Midwifery viii. 82 Irregular patches are sometimes seen on the face and neck, the so-called chloasma uterinum (uterine mask).] 1940 R. C. Brown & B. Gilbert Midwifery xxiii. 208 Patches of pigmentation are occasionally seen on the face and form..a definite condition..spoken of as the chloasma, or the mask of pregnancy. 1997 D. Johnson Le Divorce 221 I noticed that her cheeks had lately developed a pattern of redness, I think called the mask of pregnancy, which flared now, giving her a piratical, desperado look. 8. a. Fortification. A screen to protect people engaged in construction, or to conceal a battery, etc. Also: a casemated redoubt serving as a counterguard to the caponier. Now historical and rare. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > defence > defensive work(s) > shelter or screen > [noun] ripare1562 shelter1594 mask1802 1802 C. James New Mil. Dict. (at cited word) Several masks must be hastily thrown up, whilst the men are employed behind one. 1846 P. N. Barbour Jrnl. 29 Mar. (1936) 21 Duncan's Battery, under mask, has been put in position so as to batter Mejia's quarters and the walls of the fort near them. 1876 G. E. Voyle & G. de Saint-Clair-Stevenson Mil. Dict. (ed. 3) (at cited word) Mask, a casemated redoubt, one or two stories high and 12 yards wide at the capital, which is sometimes added in front of the caponier. 1884 Instr. Mil. Engin. (ed. 3) I. 86 A floating mask, may be necessary for the protection of the men forming the head of the bridge. The mask should be of planks covered with iron or steel plate if possible. 1884 Instr. Mil. Engin. (ed. 3) I. 86 As the work proceeds, a parapet must be erected on the causeway under cover of the mask to protect the men from the flank-fire of the enemy. 2005 R. Field Amer. Civil War Fortifications 10 Blockhouse walls were often..surrounded by earthworks, which provided a partial mask from artillery fire. b. Photography, Printing, and Electronics. An opaque screen, often with a shaped aperture, used to cover parts of an image that are to be excluded or shaded; a digital function in image processing that achieves a similar effect. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > photography > photographic processes > processing and printing equipment > [noun] > mask or vignetter mask1871 vignetter1875 vignetting mask1889 1871 W. de W. Abney Instr. Photogr. 66 Bright spots..should be sunned down by shading all the print except that particular part. This may be done by using a brown paper mask, cutting out the shape of the object to be toned down. 1889 T. C. Hepworth Bk. Lantern (ed. 2) 141 Now take a slide, duly fitted with its black mask, and a cover glass. 1909 Westmorland Gaz. 27 Feb. 14/2 After the print has been exposed in the ordinary way behind the opening of the opaque mask it is transferred to a frame containing the graduated mask. 1948 A. L. M. Sowerby Dict. Photogr. (ed. 17) 444 In the opaque paper shaped openings are cut; and the piece cut out is termed the disc, the margin being called the mask. 1984 J. Partridge One Touch Photogr. 25 When the picture is printed the negative is held by a mask slightly smaller than the negative. 2009 R. Wickes Found. Blender Compositing i. 19 You can work dynamically..to create a mask that hides a portion of the images in a video sequence. c. A covering used to protect or shield the object or surface over which it is placed, esp. from paint. ΚΠ 1909 Webster's New Internat. Dict. Eng. Lang. (at cited word) Mask,..a covering over something to prevent soiling or other damage. 1967 J. N. Barron Lang. of Painting 118 Gummed paper tape applied to the canvas as a mask or stencil in order to obtain clean sharp edges. 1992 Step-by-Step 8 93/2 She did not want any paint on the inside of the block. To prevent this, she created ‘bubble’ masks out of tape. 1998 S. Crabtree & P. Beudert Scenic Art for Theatre ix. 202/1 Templates are similar to stencils in that they create a mask for painting. d. Photography. A second version of a negative or a positive image, coloured to compensate for uneven colour development in the original and superimposed during printing to give a print on which the colours are correct. Also (more fully integral mask): such an image incorporated into a colour negative. ΚΠ 1948 D. A. Spencer Colour Photogr. in Pract. (ed. 3) xvii. 326 The use of appropriate masks applied to the colour negative before..printing. 1961 A. L. M. Sowerby Dict. Photogr. (ed. 19) 135 A..yellow mask is used in the magenta layer to compensate for the unwanted absorption of blue by the magenta dye. 1985 M. Freeman Encycl. Pract. Photogr. 100/3 The characteristic hue of a colour negative comes from..an integral mask. e. Electronics. In the manufacture of integrated circuits: a thin surface layer or coating that is removed in parts to permit selective modification of the underlying material. Also: a stencil used to define the pattern etched or deposited on a microchip. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > physics > electromagnetic radiation > electronics > electronic phenomena > electronic circuit > [noun] > masks used in making microcircuits mask1956 photomask1963 1956 Bell Syst. Techn. Jrnl. 35 25 For the emitter, a film of aluminium approximately 1,000 Å thick was evaporated onto the surface through a mask which defined an emitter arc of 1 x 2 mils. 1957 Jrnl. Electrochem. Soc. 104 549/1 A SiO2 surface layer provides a selective mask at high temperatures against the diffusion of some donors and acceptors into Si. 1973 Sci. Amer. Apr. 65/2 Masks can be made from various types of material, for example insulators such as silicon dioxide... To expose the regions in which ion implantation is desired the mask is removed by chemical etching. 1993 SunExpert Jan. 9/2 Your CAD drawings will be clear and distinct. Your chip masks, easily legible. f. Computing. A binary pattern used to select or modify particular bits in a byte, word, or field of data. ΚΠ 1963 L. Schultz Digital Processing xiv. 289 With the mask in the accumulator, the program specifies EXTRACT N + 3. 1972 Y. Chu Computer Organization & Microprogramming ix. 435 The third type is maskable by the PSW system mask. 1993 Byte Feb. 227/3 Masks and mattes control which pixels in the source image are drawn to the destination. 9. a. Psychology. = persona n. 2a, 2b. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > psychology > theory of psychoanalysis > theories of Jung > [noun] > presentation of self mask1902 persona1917 1902 Philos. Rev. 11 571 What is so presented to us is the persona or mask by which he [sc. any individual] chooses to appear before the world, and by which the world sees and recognizes him. 1923 H. G. Baynes tr. C. G. Jung Psychol. Types xi. 590 He puts on a mask, which he knows corresponds with his conscious intentions, while it also meets with the requirements and opinions of his environment... This mask..I have called the persona. 1988 J. Bradshaw Healing Shame that Binds You i. iii. 82 All major schools of therapy speak about this false self. The Jungians call it the persona (the mask). b. Literary Theory. The narrative voice of a text regarded as a persona, distinct from the true voice of the writer. Cf. persona n. 1. ΚΠ 1945 T. Spencer in ELH 12 266 It is the fact that lies behind the search of W. B. Yeats for the anti-mask—the discovery of the self by contemplation of its opposite.] 1948 R. Ellmann (title) Yeats: the man and the masks. 1949 R. Wellek & E. A. Warren Theory of Lit. vii. 72 A work of art..may be the ‘mask’, the ‘anti-self’ behind which his real person is hiding. 1961 W. C. Booth Rhetoric of Fiction vi. 162 ‘That is no country for old men—’ Who says? Yeats, or his ‘mask’, says. 1992 C. Paglia Sex, Art & Amer. Culture 103 For the New Critics, a writer never speaks for himself but only through an assumed persona, a mask. Phrases† to see masks: to hold a masked ball. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > dancing > ball or dance > take part in ball [verb (intransitive)] > in masked ball masque1539 to see masks1755 1755 Universal Mag. Feb. 92/1 The Royal Family..first paid a visit to the Dutchess of Norfolk, who saw masks the beginning of the evening at her Grace's house. 1782 F. Burney Cecilia III. vi. ix. 335 When Mr. Harrel saw masks in Portman-square, my curiosity to behold a lady so adored, and so cruel, led me thither. 1812 'Miss Byron' Englishman I. vii. 177 Lady Morbury saw masks in Grosvenor-square. 1825 Going too Far xiii. 218 She sees masks the first of next month. Compounds C1. Objective. mask-maker n. ΚΠ 1837 B. D. Walsh tr. Aristophanes Knights i. ii, in Comedies 154 The maskmakers [Gk. σκευοποιῶν (genitive pl.)] were so afraid of him, They would not copy them. 1990 Independent 13 July 7 (caption) Maskmakers want their skill to be ranked alongside painting and sculpting. C2. mask crab n. now rare (originally) = masked crab n. at masked adj.2 Compounds 2; (also, in recent use) a similar crab of the family Dorippidae. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Crustacea > [noun] > subclass Malacostraca > division Thoracostraca > order Decapoda > suborder Brachyura (crab) > miscellaneous or unspecified types of crab sea lion1601 blue crab1763 violet crab1774 angular crab1777 red crab1825 softshell1830 turtle-crab1838 porcellanian1840 Thelphusian1842 lady crab1844 oxystome1852 lobster-crab1854 porcelain crab1854 ochidore1855 havil1857 mask crab1857 sepoy crab1857 violet land crab1864 frog crab1876 stool-crab1880 paper-shell1890 porter crab1904 mitten crab1934 1857 Zoologist 15 5717 Mask Crab (Corystes Cassivelaunus, Penn. sp.) Sandy beaches after gales, also deep-sea lines. Not uncommon. 1863 J. G. Wood Illustr. Nat. Hist. (new ed.) III. 596 The Mask-crab buries itself in the sand or muddy bed of the sea. 1992 Acad. Press Dict. Sci. & Technol. 673/1 Dorippidae,..a family of decapods, the mask crabs, in the subsection Oxystomata. mask flower n. [apparently after the name in Quechua: N.E.D. (1905) says ‘after the Peruvian name ricaco or ricarco’; in Quechua likaku or rikarku would mean ‘one which sees itself’] any of several Peruvian plants of the genus Alonsoa (family Scrophulariaceae), grown as ornamentals, originally A. linearis, having scarlet flowers with a black spot at the base, now chiefly A. warscewiczii, whose flowers lack such a spot. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular cultivated or ornamental plants > particular flower or plant esteemed for flower > [noun] > non-British flowers > of south or tropical America marvel of Peru1597 flower of the night1665 world's wonder1706 butterfly flower1731 mirabilis1754 four o'clock flower1756 bastard mustard1759 Browallia1782 bastard plantain1796 cleome1806 alonsoa1812 gloxinia1816 schizanthus1823 butterfly plant1825 petunia1825 sinningia1826 salpiglossis1827 mask flower1834 poinsettia1836 guaco1844 spiderwort1846 mist flower1848 balisier1858 spider flower1861 sun plant1862 eucharis1866 pretty-by-night1869 Rocky Mountain bee plant1870 urn-flower1891 tulip-poppy1909 smithiantha1917 poor man's orchid1922 ten o'clock1953 tiger-iris- 1834 Floricultural Cabinet June 139 It [sc. Alonsoa linearis] grows wild in Peru, where it is known by the names of Ricaco and Ricarco, meaning mask-flower. 1857 E. Balfour Cycl. India 1197/1 Mask flower, Alonsoa. 1989 Gardeners' Encycl. Plants & Flowers (Royal Hort. Soc.) 273/1 Alonsoa warscewiczii (Mask flower). Perennial, grown as an annual... Spurred, bright scarlet flowers are produced during summer–autumn. mask jug n. a jug with a lip or front shaped like a face. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > receptacle or container > vessel > pouring vessel > [noun] > jug > specific types of jug stone juga1616 prochous1800 owl jug1872 Fair Hebe jug1881 masked jug1910 mask jug1912 goat and bee1931 baluster jug1939 1912 Burlington Mag. Mar. 330/1 A typical example of Bristol decoration is a fine mask-jug. 1963 Times 1 May 15/5 A Worcester yellow-ground mask jug fell to Tilley at £700. 1970 Canad. Antiques Collector Jan. 30/1 Mask jugs, in which a face, or even a figure, formed the shape of the front of the jug, opposite the handle, had been made for centuries in most European countries. 2010 S. Sider in J. Marter Grove Encycl. Amer. Art I. 237/1 Grotesque mask jugs of the 20th century continued in the 19th-century tradition. mask-programmable adj. Electronics able to be manufactured by mask programming. ΚΠ 1971 IEEE Jrnl. Solid-state Circuits 6 301/1 These limitations of mask programmable ROMs have led to a growing interest in electrically programmable semiconductor ROMs. 1998 Electronic Engin. Times 11 May 102/3 A company can start production using field-programmable devices and then move to mask-programmable versions to reduce the overall cost. mask-programmed adj. Electronics manufactured by mask programming. ΚΠ 1972 IEEE Jrnl. Solid-state Circuits 7 375/2 The mask-programmed ROM is programmed permanently at the integrated-circuit fabrication stage. 1999 Electronic Buyers' News 21 June 54/4 Complex code make mask-programmed ROM a less favorable choice for all but the very highest-volume and most cost-sensitive applications. mask programming n. Electronics the process of making a read-only semiconductor device by applying thin metallized layers using a mask (sense 8e) to generate the interconnection pattern (and hence the program) required. ΚΠ 1971 R. B. Mann in J. Eimbinder Semiconductor Memories xiii. 131 The mask programming determines whether the gate is connected. 1998 Electronics Times 5 May 32/6 For true volume applications, Lucent will be able to swap the laser programmed metallisation with mask programming. ΚΠ 1834 Synopsis Contents Brit. Museum (ed. 28) 108 The outer lip of many of these shells is thickened externally..and in the Mask shell, Persona, with the base expanded into a disk. 1861 Rep. Smithsonian Inst. 1860 185 The Personæ, or Mask-shells, are Tritons with a broad thin inner lip and curiously twisted mouth. ΚΠ 1844 Message from President 174 in U.S. Congress. Serial Set (28th Congr., 2nd Sess.: Senate Doc. 1) I A quantity of granite needed for the protection of the mask wall from the violence of the waves and ice on the east side. 1863 D. H. Mahan Summ. Course Permanent Fortif. 59 Cannon..fire through embrasures pierced in the front or mask wall of the casemates. 1890 Cent. Dict. Mask-wall,..the scarp-wall of a casemate. Derivatives ˈmask-like adj. ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > external parts of body > head > face > face with expression or expression > [adjective] > without expression or expressionless mask-like1584 wooden-faced1605 void1796 muffin-faced1823 blank1859 blank-faced1881 poker-faced1915 stone-faced1932 po-faced1934 1584 J. Rainolds & J. Hart Summe of Conf. viii. 598 That which is most maske-like, and least beseemeth Christian Pastours at publike seruice, I meane that which the Priest at Masse weareth vppermost, the chisible. 1653 J. Bulwer Anthropometamorphosis (rev. ed.) App. 533 Maskes perchance were derived first from the Numidians, who cover their Faces with a black Cloath with holes, made Maske-like to see thorow. 1781 E. Darwin Let. 14 Oct. (2007) 194 The greatest care shall be observed to avoid any ridiculous terms... Mask-like might be used, but perhaps most people would prefer grinning as a more literal translation. 1899 F. T. Bullen Way Navy 42 His face was mask-like. 1910 Daily Chron. 15 Jan. 9/1 The Japanese train their women to preserve a mask-like repose of countenance. 2013 S. Teo Asian Cinematic Experience i. 33 The mask-like countenance and other Noh-derived body movements and gestures may be said to be highly theatrical. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2000; most recently modified version published online June 2022). † maskv.1 Obsolete. 1. intransitive. To wander aimlessly; to be bewildered; to lose one's way. Also transitive: to follow (a path or way) aimlessly.In quot. 1598 the reference is to blinded horses walking round and round as they operate a mill. ΘΚΠ society > travel > aspects of travel > travel in specific course or direction > direct one's course [verb (intransitive)] > miss one's way > be lost maska1387 willc1390 mara1450 to lose one's way1530 to walk will of one's way1572 wilder1658 maroon1699 to get slewed1929 a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1869) II. 67 Elidurus..fonde his broþer, Archgalon, maskynge [?a1475 anon. tr. errante; L. aberrantem] in a wode. 1581 J. Bell tr. W. Haddon & J. Foxe Against Jerome Osorius 119 Followyng herein (as it seemeth) his forerunner Hosius, who maskyng in the like maze, doth affirme [etc.]. 1598 Bp. J. Hall Virgidemiarum: 3 Last Bks. iv. iii. 25 Thy Stallion-race, Their eyes boar'd out, masking the Millers-maze. 2. transitive. To bewilder. Usually in passive. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > inattention > mental wandering > confuse, bewilder [verb (transitive)] bewhapec1320 mara1350 blunder?a1400 mada1425 to turn a person's brainc1440 astonish1530 maskc1540 dare1547 bemud1599 bedazea1605 dizzy1604 bemist1609 muddify1647 lose1649 bafflea1657 bewildera1680 bother?1718 bemuse1734 muddlea1748 flurrya1757 muzz1786 muzzle1796 flusker1841 haze1858 bemuddle1862 jitter1932 giggle- c1540 Image Ipocrysy ii, in J. Skelton Poet. Wks. (1843) II. 433 Lest it be to late To trust on hadd I wist, Imasked in a myst. 1659 W. Chamberlayne Pharonnida iv. ii. 38 Their pale souls drunk With innocent blood, stagg'ring from earth, to be Maskt in the desarts of eternitie. 1659 W. Chamberlayne Pharonnida v. iii. 145 Where your sorrow stands maskt with amazements. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2000; most recently modified version published online December 2021). maskv.2 Now Scottish and English regional (northern). transitive. To mesh or enmesh in a net. Occasionally used intransitively (in quot. a1896: to admit of being netted). Also figurative. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > equipment > trap or snare > [verb (transitive)] > catch in a net maska1425 adhamate1623 the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > deceit, deception, trickery > snare, trap, entanglement > entrap, ensnare [verb (transitive)] shrenchc897 beswike971 betrapa1000 bewindOE undernimc1175 undertakec1175 bisayc1200 beguile?c1225 catchc1225 beginc1250 biwilea1275 tele?a1300 enginec1300 lime13.. umwrithea1340 engrin1340 oblige1340 belimec1350 enlacec1374 girnc1375 encumber138. gnarec1380 enwrap1382 briguea1387 snarl1387 upbroid1387 trap1390 entrikea1393 englue1393 gildera1400 aguilec1400 betraisec1400 embrygec1400 snare1401 lacea1425 maska1425 begluec1430 marl1440 supprise?c1450 to prey ona1500 attrap1524 circumvene1526 entangle1526 tangle1526 entrap1531 mesh1532 embrake1542 crawl1548 illaqueate1548 intricate1548 inveigle1551 circumvent1553 felter1567 besnare1571 in trick1572 ensnare1576 overcatch1577 underfong1579 salt1580 entoil1581 comprehend1584 windlassa1586 folda1592 solicit1592 toil1592 bait1600 beset1600 engage1603 benet1604 imbrier1605 ambush1611 inknot1611 enmesha1616 trammela1616 fool1620 pinion1621 aucupate1630 fang1637 surprise1642 underreacha1652 trepan1656 ensnarl1658 stalk1659 irretiate1660 coil1748 nail1766 net1803 to rope in1840 mousetrap1870 spider1891 a1425 (c1385) G. Chaucer Troilus & Criseyde (1987) iii. 1734 The..beaute..In any other lady..Kan nought the montance of a knotte unbynde, Aboute his herte, of al Criseydes net, He was so narwe ymasked and yknet. 1556 J. Heywood Spider & Flie xv. 20 Neuer was there flie in this net, thus masked, That euer scapte. 1557 Earl of Surrey et al. Songes & Sonettes sig. Q.iiiiv Thus in the net of my conceit I masked styll among the sort Of such as fed vpon the bayt, That Cupide laide for his disport. 1628 O. Felltham Resolves: 2nd Cent. ii. sig. H2 Like a Partridge in the net, he maskes himselfe the more, by the anger of his fluttering wing. 1808 J. Jamieson Etymol. Dict. Sc. Lang. (at cited word) To Mask, to catch in a net. In this sense, a fish is said to be maskit, Ayrs[hire]. 1829 H. Miller Lett. Herring Fishery 17 It was calculated that not less than two hundred barrels of herrings were masted in this single drift. 1882 F. T. Buckland Notes & Jottings 69 We quickly perceived from the bobbing of the corks that the fish..were ‘masked’ in the trammel. a1896 J. Slater Seaside Idylls (1898) 45 It mak's the net like a bag in the watter, An the herrin mask better. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2000; most recently modified version published online March 2022). maskv.3 Scottish and English regional (northern). I. Senses homologous with mash v.1 1. a. transitive. To infuse (malt) as a mash; to prepare a mash in (a vat or similar vessel); to brew (ale, etc.) by mashing. Also intransitive. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > drink > manufacture of alcoholic drink > brewing > [verb (transitive)] > mix malt with water masha1350 mask1483 to dough in1882 1483 Catholicon Anglicum (BL Add. 89074) (1881) 230 To Maske, ceruidare. 1493 in E. Beveridge Burgh Rec. Dunfermline (1917) 46 All ale that is masckit in the luimes till haue fredowme quhill Sonday to declair thar handis tharof. c1500 Chalmerlan Ayr in Acts Parl. Scotl. (1844) I. 377/2 Item þat þai grynd jt [sc. malt] our small þat jt will nocht ryn quhen jt is maskit. 1598 in D. H. Fleming Reg. Christian Congregation St. Andrews (1890) II. 850 That na brouster..leid..ony burn, to mask thair fattis..upon the saboth day. 1622 Rec. Perth Kirk Session 25 Mar. in Dict. Older Sc. Tongue (at cited word) He vseis to mask wpone the saboth nichtis. 1650 in W. M. Ogilvie Extracts Rec. Presbytery of Brechin (1876) 32 That Jonat Couper cam to her hous when shee was masking the fatt. 1743 Sel. Trans. Soc. Improvers Knowl. Agric. Scotl. 352 A Brewing-keeve, wherein Brewers mask their Drink. a1779 D. Graham Coll. Writings (1883) II. 14 Five pecks o' maut masket in the meikle kirn. 1816 W. Scott Old Mortality x, in Tales of my Landlord 1st Ser. II. 244 ‘Have they plenty of ale?’ ‘Sax gallons, as gude as e'er was masked.’ 1871 W. Alexander Johnny Gibb xxx. 214 There's naething like a starn gweed maut, maskit i' yer nain bowie. 1920 J. Firth Reminisc. Orkney Parish 103 After ‘masking’ for two hours the wort was drawn off. ΚΠ 1639 S. Rutherford Let. 1 Oct. (1848) cclxxxvii. 577 I hope that for his sake who brewed and masked this cup [of affliction] in heaven, ye will gladly drink. 2. transitive. To infuse or brew (tea). Also intransitive: (of tea) to draw, brew. Also in extended use. Cf. mash v.1 7. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > drink > preparation of drinks > [verb (transitive)] > infuse infuse1541 brewa1626 draw1736 mask1799 mash1845 1799 H. Mitchell Scotticisms 54 Mask the tea, is Scotch; infuse the tea, is English. a1805 A. Carlyle Autobiogr. (1860) iii. 151 My mother's custom was to mask the tea before morning prayer. 1814 W. Scott Waverley II. xix. 299 I hope your honours will tak tea..and I maun go and mask it for you. View more context for this quotation 1840 G. Webster Ingliston xxviii The mistress maskit a penny-worth o' Epsom sauts. 1846 Hist. Berwickshire Naturalists' Club 2 176 One dozen stalks are ‘masked’ in a pint of boiling water. 1883 A. S. Swan Aldersyde ii. i. 78 Marget will mask anither cup o' tea for ye. 1906 T. P. Ollason Spindrift 127 ‘Haest dee, lass’, he said, ‘an' mask me a air o' tae as whick as doo can.’ 1954 Banffshire Jrnl. 29 June in Sc. National Dict. (at cited word) An' syne wid pit on the kettle an' mask a cuppie o' her speecial tay in a broon tracky o' a pot. 1985 M. Munro Patter 45 We'll just give the tea a wee minute to mask. II. Figurative uses. 3. intransitive. British regional. Of a storm: to begin to develop, to brew. Also with non-referential it as subject. Also with up.In quots. only in present participle. ΚΠ 1638 A. Henderson Serm., Prayers & Pulpit Addresses (1867) 1 There is no way for you to prevent the wrath of God that has been masking in a cloud above you this long time. 1832 A. Rodger in Whistle-Binkie 1st Ser. 108 I saw the storm was masking fast, That wad soon fa' on me. 1866 W. Gregor Dial. Banffshire (Philol. Soc.) 112 Mask, to gather..; as, ‘It's maskin', or maskin' up for anither shoor’. 1876 F. K. Robinson Gloss. Words Whitby It's masking for thunder. 1900 J. Milne Poems in Aberdeenshire Dial. 43 The whislin' key hole o the door Fou plainly tells a storm is maskin'. ΚΠ 1887 J. Service Life Dr. Duguid xviii. 116 I could see that he was maskin' for the pocks. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2000; most recently modified version published online June 2022). maskv.4 1. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > hiding, concealing from view > means of concealment > be or go in disguise [verb (intransitive)] mask1579 mumchance1606 to show (also hang out) false colours1655 masquerade1677 to parade as1887 1579 E. Spenser Shepheardes Cal. Jan. 24 Now is come thy wynter's stormy state, Thy mantle mard, wherein thou maskedst late. a1591 H. Smith 6 Serm. (1618) A 4 Like Æsops Asse, masking in the Lions skinne. c1592 Faire Em sig. A3 Thus must we maske to saue our wretched liues. a1617 S. Hieron Wks. (1620) I. 21 The spirituall venome that masketh vnder these deceitfull shadowes, is either not beleeued or not thought vpon. 1632 W. Lithgow Totall Disc. Trav. ix. 394 The French men..were cruelly massacred..; which exploit masketh vnder the name of Vesperi Siculi. a1649 W. Drummond Irene in Wks. (1711) 170 How bravely soever ye mask and flowrish in Words. 1789 G. Parker Life's Painter xiv. 125 Some mask for mere pleasure, but many we know, To lick in the rhino, false faces will show. b. transitive. To disguise (feelings, etc.) under an assumed outward show; to conceal (intentionally or otherwise) the real nature or meaning of. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > deceit, deception, trickery > dissimulation, pretence > semblance, outward show > present speciously [verb (transitive)] showc1175 feignc1340 clothe1393 colourc1400 gloze1430 pretence1548 whiten1583 maska1593 vizard1628 tissuea1639 to whiten up1746 act1790 veneer1875 histrionize1876 window dress1913 the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > deceit, deception, trickery > dissimulation, pretence > semblance, outward show > present speciously [verb (transitive)] > conceal real state dissimulec1374 feigna1393 shroud1412 abuse?a1439 counterfeit1490 cloak1509 dissemblea1535 maska1593 dissimulate1610 disguisea1616 pretext1634 mascherate1654 veil1700 camouflage1917 the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > hiding, concealing from view > keeping from knowledge > keep from knowledge [verb (transitive)] heeleOE dernc893 mitheeOE wryOE buryc1175 hidec1200 dilla1300 laina1375 keepa1382 wrapa1382 cover1382 conceala1393 curea1400 shroud1412 veilc1460 smorec1480 cele1484 suppress1533 wrap1560 smoulder1571 squat1577 muffle1582 estrange1611 screen1621 lock1646 umbrage1675 reserve1719 restrict1802 hugger-mugger1803 mask1841 ward1881 thimblerig1899 marzipan1974 a1593 H. Barrow Four Causes Separation in T. G. Crippen Relics Puritan Martyrs (1906) 10 They..mask and disguise & seek to cover their ravin & intrusion with sheps clothing. 1598 W. Shakespeare Love's Labour's Lost i. ii. 88 Most maculate thoughts Maister, are maskt vnder such colours. View more context for this quotation 1656 J. Bramhall Replic. to Bishop of Chalcedon iii. 153 Sedition masked under the Visard of Religion. 1749 J. Cleland Mem. Woman of Pleasure I. 47 Wanting the art to mask my sentiments, I gave them no hopes of their employer's succeeding..with me. a1816 R. B. Sheridan School for Scandal (rev. ed.) i. i, in Wks. (1821) II. 16 He has been obliged to mask his pretensions. 1841 I. D'Israeli Amenities Lit. III. 296 Polemical studies become political when the heads of parties mask themselves under some particular doctrine. 1865 C. Dickens Our Mutual Friend II. iii. v. 42 Its old simplicity of expression got masked by a certain craftiness. 1870 W. Morris Earthly Paradise I. i. 215 Masking with a smile The vain regrets that in their hearts arose. 1919 J. Reed Ten Days that shook World iii. 51 The bourgeoisie is in control, but this control is masked by a fictitious coalition with the oborontsi parties. 1953 P. Gallico Foolish Immortals v. 33 He saw a startled expression come over her features before she could mask it. 1988 R. Christiansen Romantic Affinities iii. 126 Her depression set in hard and deep, successfully masked from friends and acquaintance, but painfully communicated to Shelley. c. transitive. To obscure the true character or extent of; to cause to appear differently. ΚΠ 1843 R. Owen Lect. Compar. Anat. Invertebr. Animals xviii. 248 That stage of the orthopterous..insects, in which they are masked by the vermiform or true larval condition. 1857 A. Gray First Lessons Bot. (1866) xv. 106 In Catalpa this number is masked in the calyx by irregular union, and in the stamens by abortion. 1922 W. G. Kendrew Climates of Continents 18 The south-east trades..are now at their greatest strength, but sea breezes mask them on the immediate littoral. 1931 Times 18 Feb. 6/5 It was this late stroke, masked, into the left corner which defeated the game of Joshua Crane. 1983 G. Harris Seventh Gate i. 5 Shock masked the pain of the first stroke. 1990 Jrnl. Molluscan Stud. 56 324 (caption) Single ceras, showing the superficial orange pigmentation which partially masks the digestive gland. 2. a. transitive. To hide from view, by interposing something. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > hiding, concealing from view > hide, conceal [verb (transitive)] heeleOE forhelec888 i-hedec888 dernc893 hidec897 wryOE behelec1000 behidec1000 bewryc1000 forhidec1000 overheleOE hilla1250 fealc1325 cover1340 forcover1382 blinda1400 hulsterc1400 overclosec1400 concealc1425 shroud1426 blend1430 close1430 shadow1436 obumber?1440 mufflea1450 alaynec1450 mew?c1450 purloin1461 to keep close?1471 oversilec1478 bewrap1481 supprime1490 occulta1500 silec1500 smoor1513 shadec1530 skleir1532 oppressa1538 hudder-mudder1544 pretex1548 lap?c1550 absconce1570 to steek away1575 couch1577 recondite1578 huddle1581 mew1581 enshrine1582 enshroud1582 mask1582 veil1582 abscondc1586 smotherc1592 blot1593 sheathe1594 immask1595 secret1595 bemist1598 palliate1598 hoodwinka1600 overmaska1600 hugger1600 obscure1600 upwrap1600 undisclose1601 disguise1605 screen1611 underfold1612 huke1613 eclipsea1616 encavea1616 ensconcea1616 obscurify1622 cloud1623 inmewa1625 beclouda1631 pretext1634 covert1647 sconce1652 tapisa1660 shun1661 sneak1701 overlay1719 secrete1741 blank1764 submerge1796 slur1813 wrap1817 buttress1820 stifle1820 disidentify1845 to stick away1900 1582 R. Stanyhurst tr. Virgil First Foure Bookes Æneis iii. 59 Whilste thee sunbeams are maskt, hyls darcklye be muffled. 1609 W. Shakespeare Sonnets xxxiii. sig. C3v The region cloude hath mask'd him from me now. View more context for this quotation a1616 W. Shakespeare Macbeth (1623) iii. i. 126 Masking the Businesse from the common Eye. View more context for this quotation 1646 R. Crashaw Steps to Temple 113 A soule whose intellectuall beames No mistes doe maske no lazy steames. 1833 C. Lyell Princ. Geol. III. 210 The talus d, e, which masked the inland cliff until it was artificially laid open to view. 1871 L. Stephen Playground of Europe ii. 100 Rocky fragments..frequently masked by cushions of fresh fallen snow. 1928 E. Blunden Undertones of War x. 104 The heart of the village is masked with its hedges and orchards from almost all ground observation. 1955 A. West Heritage ii. 108 Max sat at the end of the table..with his head leaning forward so that his eyebrows almost masked his eyes. 1984 K. Waterhouse Thinks xix. 168 There is a slight stir among the Portsea Sound crowd as the plush curtain masking the street door billows. b. transitive. Military. (a) To conceal (a battery, force, etc.) from the view of the enemy; (b) to hinder (a force, etc.) from action by opposing it with sufficient strength; (c) to hinder (a friendly force) by standing in its line of fire. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > military operations > [verb (transitive)] > hinder from attack by watching mask1706 society > armed hostility > defence > defensive work(s) > shelter or screen > protect with screen or shelter [verb (transitive)] > conceal mask1706 1706 London Gaz. No. 4256/2 Many Persons might march out with the Garison masked as the Governor should think fit. 1763 Brit. Mag. 4 204 The seamen..mounted all the guns in the battery, which we masked. 1802 C. James New Mil. Dict. (at cited word) One toise and a half of epaulement will require two chandeliers, and 60 fascines, to mask it. 1811 Duke of Wellington Dispatches (1837) VII. 328 The other fleche was masked. 1868 J. F. Kirk Hist. Charles the Bold III. v. iii. 411 The idea of leaving Morat unassailed, masking it with a portion of his army while prosecuting operations with the rest. 1870 Pall Mall Gaz. 3 Sept. 2 Bazaine..has succeeded in convincing the Prussians that it requires a large force to mask him. 1874 F. G. D. Bedford Sailor's Pocket Bk. vii. 223 Such boats must be cautioned not to mask the fire of any boats employed for the same purpose. 1884 Pall Mall Gaz. 29 Oct. 2/2 To command the sea we must be prepared at a moment's notice to mask the enemies' fleets by forces..equal to his. 1944 Return to Attack (Army Board, N.Z.) 5 The 5th Brigade remained to mask Bardia. 1990 Games Rev. Jan. 27/1 March your forces eastwards through the hills, but mask your movement from the enemy. c. transitive. Architecture. To conceal (an architectural feature) from view. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > architecture > other elements > [verb (transitive)] > conceal from view mask1828 1828 H. Steuart Planter's Guide 518 It appeared extremely desirable to that artist to mask or conceal the Approach from the House and adjoining grounds. 1867 A. Barry Life & Wks. Sir C. Barry viii. 291 A cloister with one story above it, or an open arcade, might mask the building from the high ground of Bridge Street. a1878 G. G. Scott Lect. Mediæval Archit. (1879) II. 100 The roofs, internally, may be proved to have been masked by level ceilings. 1995 BNC The high performance pvc roof membrane..is masked from general view by the use of a reconstituted Cumbrian slate mansard roof. d. transitive. Cookery. To cover or coat (food) with a sauce or glaze. ΚΠ 1846 A. Soyer Gastron. Regenerator 106 This sauce requires to be rather thick, to mask the fish. 1877 Cassell's Dict. Cookery 1177/2 Mask, to cover meat with any rich sauce, ragoût, &c. 1964 F. Tuohy Ice Saints (1965) xxiii. 138 The herring arrived, masked in its sauce of cream and chopped onion. 1982 T. Berger Reinhart's Women i. 14 The oeufs en meurette when done were pinkish gray, not in themselves a ravishing display, but they were masked in the velvety, rich brown sauce made from the poaching liquid. e. transitive. Photography. To cover, shade, or mount with or as with a mask. See mask n.3 8b. ΚΠ 1884 W. de W. Abney Treat. Photogr. (ed. 6) 212 Masking the negative. 1948 A. L. M. Sowerby Wall's Dict. Photogr. (ed. 17) 444 A number of prints identically masked can be made rapidly and readily with one of these frames. 1969 Focal Encycl. Photogr. (rev. ed.) 921/1 Holding the hands, or a piece of card, over part of the image in an enlarger for part of the exposure, masks the print. 1986 R. Narayan Talkative Man 36 Don't worry that you may also be in the picture—I'll mask you. f. transitive. Of a sound, smell, etc.: to diminish or prevent the perception of (another stimulus, esp. one affecting the same sense). ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > psychology > psychology of perception > object of perception > make phenomenal [verb (transitive)] > impede mask1923 1923 Physical Rev. 21 706 When the masking tone is loud it masks tones of higher frequency better than those of frequency lower than itself. 1949 C. P. McCord & W. N. Witheridge Odors xvii. 190 The opportunity for masking objectionable textile odors by..impregnating the goods with a definitely noticeable perfume seems to be negligible. 1960 Lang. & Speech 3 160 The low-frequency noise masks the voicing of a consonant. 1966 Jrnl. Exper. Psychol. 72 233/1 Backward masking refers to the power of certain stimuli, the masking stimuli, to disrupt or mask the processing of other stimuli, the target stimuli, which have been presented earlier. 1974 Encycl. Brit. Macropædia XVI. 555/1 The substantially greater intensity of one odour may mask another. 1990 D. Ackerman Nat. Hist. Senses iii. 149 Potatoes contain solanine, a bitter toxic alkaloid, but the Quechuas find that if they smear kaolin clay on the potatoes, it masks the bitterness. g. transitive. Chemistry. To prevent (an ion or molecular group) from taking part in a certain reaction, by causing it to be in a bound or complexed form. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > chemistry > chemical reactions or processes > undergo chemical reactions or processes [verb] > undergo a process affecting reaction > mask mask1934 1934 in Webster's New Internat. Dict. Eng. Lang. Mask. 1936 Industr. & Engin. Chem. (Analyt. ed.) 15 Nov. 409/1 A characteristic example in the analysis of anions is that..in which sulfite is masked by the addition of formaldehyde. 1970 D. D. Perrin Masking & Demasking Chem. Reactions i. 2 Silver is masked by ammonia against precipitation as the hydroxide or chloride. h. transitive. To protect or shield with a covering, such as adhesive tape. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > covering > cover [verb (transitive)] > cover and protect shrouda1400 fortify1607 loricate1623 protect1839 cocoon1948 mask1961 sleeve1980 1961 Webster's 3rd New Internat. Dict. Eng. Lang. Mask.., to cover for concealment or protection. 1969 R. Mayer Dict. Art Terms & Techniques 310/2 [Masking tape] is widely used in decorative painting, especially when spray coatings are to be applied, to mask or protect areas that are to be left blank or have already been painted. 1990 FineScale Modeler Feb. 18/2 I was forced to mask and paint these areas. 3. a. transitive. To cover (the face or head) with a mask; to disguise with a mask. Frequently in passive. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > hiding, concealing from view > means of concealment > dress, garb > disguise in fancy dress [verb (transitive)] > head or face muzzlec1450 bemask1579 mask1594 vizarda1641 crape1815 1594 W. Shakespeare Lucrece sig. F4 Where now I haue no one to blush with me,..To maske their browes and hide their infamie. View more context for this quotation 1598 W. Shakespeare Love's Labour's Lost v. ii. 156 The Trompet soundes, be maskt, the maskers come. View more context for this quotation 1611 T. Middleton & T. Dekker Roaring Girle sig. I2 Good faces maskt are Iewels kept by spirits. Hide none but bad ones. 1617 F. Moryson Itinerary iii. 173 The Women no lesse then Men..goe masked. 1675 W. Wycherley Country-wife iii. 35 A Woman mask'd, like a cover'd Dish, gives a Man curiosity, and appetite. 1711 R. Steele Spectator No. 8. ⁋4 All the Persons who compose this lawless Assembly are masked. 1780 Ann. Reg. ii. 4 As they are masked, they do not scruple to reconnoitre the company with their spying-glasses. 1825 E. Bulwer-Lytton Zicci 15 A tall figure, masked and mantled, appeared. 1839 E. W. Lane tr. Thousand & One Nights I. 73 At the fair of Okaz, the heroes were masked. 1895 D. W. Prowse Hist. Newfoundland xiii. 402 Some were dressed as women, with long garments, known as ‘eunchucks’. They were all masked, and ran at passengers with an Indian yell. 1910 Encycl. Brit. I. 103/1 In 1690 the Accademia degli Arcadi was founded at Rome..and, to avoid disputes about pre-eminence, all came to its meetings masked. 1993 Scotsman 24 Mar. 3/7 A lorry driver told the High Court in Inverness yesterday of the night he had been masked, bound and abducted by two men. b. transitive. gen. To provide with a disguise of any kind. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > hiding, concealing from view > means of concealment > conceal by disguise [verb (transitive)] beclout?c1225 disguisea1375 veilc1384 dissimule1485 counterfeit1490 dissemble?1507 guisea1510 wry1567 discountenance1574 conceal1598 belie1610 dislikena1616 obvolve1623 transvest1649 travesty1665 mask1847 camouflage1917 1847 Ld. Tennyson Princess v. 113 A set of saucy boys Brake on us.., Mask'd like our maids. 1903 Edinb. Rev. Apr. 411 His ghost masks himself in no futile disguises. c. transitive. In passive. To be equipped with a gas mask. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > safety > protection or defence > protect or defend [verb (transitive)] > furnish with specific protective device or substance bastion1654 cushion1836 rod1877 mask1916 1916 War Illustr. 4 607 Machine-gun section masked, ready for the enemy. 1918 H. W. Wilson Great War XI. 455 French soldier with one of the French army dogs, both masked against enemy gas attack. Phrasal verbs to mask up a. transitive. To put a mask on (a person), esp. to cover, conceal, or protect the face or head; to cover with a mask (mask n.3 1, 3). Chiefly in passive. ΚΠ 1870 R. S. Wayland Legend of Maiden Rock iii. 64 Another [conjurer] had his head masked up all round With holes cut in the mask for him to see out. 1936 Liberty (N.Y.) 20 June 54/3 The whole tarnation lot of ye look like a bunch of kids masked up for Halloween. 1974 Daily Tel. 13 Feb. 17/3 He had not gone on the first one [sc. robbery]..because he was known in the area and could not be ‘masked up’. 2020 Daily Tel. (Nexis) 27 Aug. 16 Teachers need to be able to see the mouths of their charges in order to hold them to account for chatting, swearing and the like. Mask them up and teachers won't have a clue who said it. b. intransitive. To put on a mask, esp. to cover, conceal, or protect the face or head. ΚΠ 1923 Anaconda (Montana) Standard 24 July 7/1 We masked up with parts of an old white shirt of Hughes in the Cadillac. 1962 J. Brunner Iron Jackass in Analog Sci. Fact & Sci. Fiction Mar. 72/2 Marghem could put up with all the other inconveniences of living here; masking up to take even a short walk was the one which irritated him. 1968 Cosmopolitan Oct. 76/3 You see his kewpie-doll face everywhere—escorting Jacqueline Kennedy to plays, masking-up for Truman Capote's famous Plaza Ball, [etc.]. 1986 Sunday Tel. 7 Dec. (Mag.) 55/2 You don't have nurses now who insist on completely ‘masking up’ to go into Ward 5A. 2020 N.Y. Times (National ed.) 19 Aug. d5/1 Whenever I mask up, I have to make two shoelace knots behind my head. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2000; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.1OEn.21508n.3a1533v.1a1387v.2a1425v.31483v.41579 |
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