单词 | metamorphosis |
释义 | metamorphosisn. 1. a. The action or process of changing in form, shape, or substance; esp. transformation by supernatural means. ΘΚΠ the world > space > shape > [noun] > shaping > action or fact of changing shape metamorphosis1447 transformation?a1475 metamorphosy1532 transfiguration1548 transforming1580 metamorphose1608 metamorphosing1608 metamorphizing1609 transformance1611 transmogrification1661 transfigurement1865 the world > time > change > change to something else, transformation > [noun] > changing in shape or form metamorphosis1447 translatingc1454 metamorphosy1532 transfiguration1548 metamorphose1608 trans-shape1611 tranation1654 transfigurement1865 transpeciation1867 shape-shifting1884 neomorphism1888 trans-shaping1909 1447 O. Bokenham Lives of Saints (Arun.) (1938) 5034 Mynerue hyr-self..ne coude prouyde More goodly aray, þow she dede en[cl]os Wyth-ynne oo web al methamorphosyos. 1533 T. More Debellacyon Salem & Bizance f. 1 v Salem & Bizans somtime two great townes..were..with a meruelouse metamorphosys, enchaunted and turned into twoo englyshe men. 1598 J. Marston (title) The metamorphosis of Pigmalions image. 1619 E. M. Bolton tr. Florus Rom. Hist. 115 As if by a kind of metamorphosis, the gods had..changed trees to vessels. 1674 Govt. Tongue xii. 204 One would think we were fallen into an Age of Metamorphosis, and that the Brutes did (not only Poetically and in fiction) but really speak. For the talk of many is so bestial, that [etc.]. 1712 Spectator 28 June 602/2 What more strange, than the Creation of the World, the several Metamorphoses of the fallen Angels. 1794 R. J. Sulivan View of Nature IV. 179 From the metempsychosis, however, arose the doctrine of the metamorphosis. 1856 J. Ruskin Mod. Painters III. 290 A fourth..will begin to change them in his fancy into dragons and monsters, and lose his grasp of the scene in fantastic metamorphosis. 1869 H. F. Tozer Res. Highlands of Turkey II. 264 The points..on which the stories turn are transformations and metamorphoses of various kinds. 1899 R. C. Temple in Folk-lore Dec. 411 The sole difference between the folk notions of metamorphosis and metempsychosis lies in the fact of the former consisting in change of form during life, and in the latter after death. 1939 H. Miller Tropic of Capricorn 80 I wanted a metamorphosis, a change to fish, to leviathan, to destroyer. 1978 A. S. Byatt Virgin in Garden i. xiii. 137 She located a man becoming a stag, a creature whose tortured energy of metamorphosis was something like that of the foliate men in Southwell Minster. 1983 P. de Man Rhetoric of Romanticism (1984) 240 Anthropomorphisms can contain a metaphorical as well as a metonymic moment—as in an Ovidian metamorphosis in which one can start out from the contiguity of the flower's name to that of the mythological figure in the story. ΘΚΠ the world > space > shape > [noun] > that which is shaped > changed metamorphosis1574 the world > time > change > change to something else, transformation > [noun] > product of transformation metamorphosis1574 convert1589 magistery1605 transformationa1616 anagrama1631 permutation1883 1574 B. Rich Right Exelent Dialogue Mercury & Eng. Souldier sig. Miii v Those that are in deed Metamorphosis hauing but the shapes of men. 1589 R. Greene Menaphon sig. H4v Samela..stoode amazed like Medusaes Metamorphosis. 1651 T. Randolph et al. Hey for Honesty ii. i. 11/2 But come you Pig-hogs, let us leave jesting. I restore you to your old metamorphosis, as you may see in the first leaf of Virgil's Bucolicks. 1719 J. Barker Exilius (ed. 2) II. iii. 236 I am sure I shall be as great a Metamorphosis in Manners, as thou art in Person. 1789 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 79 69 I find the whole island formed of an argillaceous earth, either in its primitive state, or under its different metamorphoses. 1859 ‘G. Eliot’ Adam Bede I. i. vi. 138 An amount of fat on the nape of her neck, which made her look like the metamorphosis of a white sucking pig. 2. A complete change in the appearance, circumstances, condition, or character of a person, a state of affairs, etc. ΘΚΠ the world > time > change > change to something else, transformation > sudden or complete change > [noun] leapc1000 lope14.. revolution?a1439 reverse?1492 metamorphosis1548 transformation1581 earthquake1592 upside down1593 metamorphose1608 sea-changea1616 peritropea1656 transilience1657 transiliency1661 saltus1665 catastrophe1696 peristrophe1716 transiliency1769 upheaving1821 upset1822 saltation1844 shake1847 upheaval1850 cataclysm1861 shake-out1939 virage1989 1548 Hall's Vnion: Henry VI f. clxj Ihon Cade..departed secretly in habite disguysed, into Sussex: but all his metamorphosis or transfiguracion, litle preuailed. 1598 R. Barckley Disc. Felicitie of Man iii. 187 The Hermite..asked him how it chaunced, that he was fallen into such a metamorphosis? 1656 Earl of Monmouth tr. T. Boccalini Ragguagli di Parnasso i. xxix. 49 The Metamorphosis is too great, when from being a privat man, one becomes a Prince. 1691 A. Wood Athenæ Oxonienses I. 825 News was brought him of a metamorphosis in the State at home. 1725 E. Haywood Fantomina 268 Notwithstanding this Metamorphosis she was still extremely pretty. 1791 J. Boswell Life Johnson anno 1753 I. 137 Whatever agreement a Chief might make with any of the clan, the Herald's Office could not admit of the metamorphosis. 1820 W. Scoresby Acct. Arctic Regions I. 386 The mountains along the whole coast, assumed the most fantastic forms... These varied and sometimes beautiful metamorphoses..suggested the reality of fairy descriptions. 1853 C. Brontë Villette II. xxviii. 317 It [sc. his visage] changed as from a mask to a face... I know not that I have ever seen in any other human face an equal metamorphosis. 1857 H. T. Buckle Hist. Civilisation Eng. I. viii. 519 By a singular metamorphosis, the secular principle was now represented by the Catholics, and the theological principle by the Protestants. 1867 L. M. Child Romance of Republic v. 64 The disguises were quickly assumed, and the metamorphosis made Rosa both blush and smile. 1911 M. Beerbohm Zuleika Dobson v. 71 Do not fear that I, if you were to wed me, should demand a metamorphosis of your present self. I should take you as you are, gladly. 1993 Times 9 Feb. 27/6 The change from saying nothing to being quasi-judges can hardly be described as a comfortable metamorphosis. 3. a. Biology. Change of form in an animal (†or plant), or its parts, during post-embryonic development; spec. the process of transformation from an immature form to a different adult form that many insects and other invertebrates, and some vertebrates (e.g. frogs), undergo in the course of maturing. Also: an instance of this. ΘΚΠ the world > life > biology > biological processes > development, growth, or degeneration > [noun] > life cycle > metamorphosis metamorphosis1665 pleomorphism1854 allomorphosis1860 polyeidism1866 metamorphose1870 morphosis1882 pleomorphy1882 metaboly1890 cyclomorphosis1926 1665 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 1 88 Their [sc. silkworms'] metamorphoses are four. 1722 J. Quincy Lexicon Physico-medicum (ed. 2) Metamorphosis, is applied by Harvey to the Changes an Animal undergoes both in its Formation and Growth; and by several to the various Shapes some Insects in particular pass through, as the Silk Worm and the like. 1797 Encycl. Brit. XIV. 712/1 A new form or change of appearance is always implied in metamorphosis or transformation..; as when the lobes of a seed are converted into seminal leaves. 1828 J. Stark Elements Nat. Hist. II. 232 The transformations or metamorphoses of insects embrace three states. 1881 F. M. Balfour Treat. Compar. Embryol. II. 113 The change undergone by the Tadpole in its passage into the Frog is so considerable as to deserve the name of a metamorphosis. 1888 G. Rolleston & W. H. Jackson Forms Animal Life (ed. 2) 161 A perfect metamorphosis, such as that of Sphinx, with three well-marked stages, larva, pupa, and imago. a1933 J. A. Thomson Biol. for Everyman (1934) I. iii. 38 Phagocytes..may act as sappers and miners when the body is undergoing some great change (metamorphosis), as when a maggot becomes a fly. 1955 Sci. News Let. 14 May 313/2 The fishfly, which begins its slow, nocturnal flights about this time of the year, is among the earliest insects with complete metamorphosis, fossil records show. 1998 L. Margulis & K. V. Schwartz Five Kingdoms (ed. 3) iii. 291/2 In gastropods, bivalves, and scaphopods, the trochophore larvae develop into veliger larvae..before metamorphosis to the adult form. b. Biology (chiefly Botany). Evolutionary change in the form of an organ. Also (Botany): change of one type of organ into another as an abnormal process, as in staminody or petalody. Also: an instance of such change. Now rare.The use of this sense in botany was influenced by Goethe's Versuch die Metamorphose der Pflanzen (1790). ΘΚΠ the world > life > biology > biological processes > evolution > [noun] > processes or types of evolution transmutation1626 substitution1822 subspeciation1826 metamorphosis1835 phytogenesis1847 phytogeny1850 anamorphosis1852 correlation1859 advergence1861 convergence1861 phylogeny1869 ontogeny1872 recapitulation1874 ontogenesis1875 phylogenesis1875 biogenesis1876 abiogenesis1884 anagenesis1889 tachygenesis1893 orthogenesis1895 adaptive radiation1898 speciation1906 microevolution1911 subspeciation1921 raciation1934 orthogenetics1937 encephalization1938 proterogenesis1938 allomorphosis1941 cladogenesis1953 Wallace effect1966 metachromism1968 punctuation1976 speciational evolution1988 tachygen- the world > life > biology > biological processes > evolution > [noun] > modification metamorphosis1835 1835 W. Kirby On Power of God in Creation of Animals II. xvii. 137 If we go from the Cetaceans to the Amphibians, we see a further metamorphosis of the organs of motion. 1839 Penny Cycl. XV. 131/2 Metamorphosis of organs, in the Vegetable Kingdom, consists in an adaptation of one and the same organ to several different purposes. 1847–9 Todd's Cycl. Anat. & Physiol. IV. i. 623/2 A unity which has undergone such an infinitely graduated metamorphosis of its parts as to yield these unequal skeletal forms. 1849 J. H. Balfour Man. Bot. §641. 307 The different parts of the flower may be changed into each other, or into true leaves... These changes may take place from without inwards, by an ascending or direct metamorphosis, as in the case of petals becoming stamens; or from within outwards, by descending or retrograde metamorphosis, as when stamens become petals. 1876 E. R. Lankester tr. E. Haeckel Hist. Creation I. iv. 90 His [sc. Goethe's] idea of metamorphosis is almost synonymous with the theory of development. 1903 W. H. Lang Strasburger's Text-bk. Bot. (ed. 2) i. 10 The various modifications which the primitive form has passed through constitute its metamorphosis. c. Histology and Pathology. Change of form in a cell or tissue; growth or repair of tissue. Now rare except in fatty metamorphosis n. accumulation of lipid in the cytoplasm of cells, esp. of the liver. ΘΚΠ the world > life > biology > biological processes > development, growth, or degeneration > [noun] > transformation of tissue transformation1834 metamorphosis1844 metabolism1872 metaplasia1883 1844 W. B. Carpenter in Todd's Cycl. Anat. & Physiol. III. 750/1 The production of the simple structureless membranes..must be attributed, we think, to the consolidation of a thin layer of blastema, rather than to any metamorphosis of cells. 1845–6 G. E. Day tr. J. F. Simon Animal Chem. I. 133 The metamorphosis [of blood-corpuscles] occurs in the peripheral system. 1857 E. L. Birkett Bird's Urinary Deposits (ed. 5) 440 Every animal developes,..during the process of metamorphosis of tissue, a series of nitrogenized substances. 1864 E. A. Parkes Man. Pract. Hygiene i. vi. 156 There is a much more rapid metamorphosis of tissue in carnivorous animals. 1886 A. H. Buck Ref. Handbk. Med. Sci. III. 47/2 Fatty metamorphosis (both degeneration and infiltration) may generally be detected with the unaided eye. 1899 T. C. Allbutt et al. Syst. Med. VI. 158 Contact with the abnormal surface sets up an immediate viscous metamorphosis of the platelets. 1928 E. V. Cowdry Special Cytol. I. ii. 36 In the sebaceous glands the secretory products are elaborated by the fatty metamorphosis, destruction and discharge of the cells themselves. 1968 Cancer 21 699 Fatty metamorphosis of the liver in malignant neoplasia. 1999 Amer. Jrnl. Gastroenterol. 94 3010 The most likely histological diagnosis is fatty metamorphosis of the liver with occasional associated fibrosis. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > chemistry > chemical reactions or processes > [noun] > chemical reactions or processes (named) > miscellaneous other processes redintegrationa1550 decoction1555 fixion1555 cementation1592 fumigation1617 spiritualization1651 retortion1657 rocking1673 phosphorizationa1687 concentration1689 humectation1706 animalization1733 hyperoxygenation1793 bituminization1804 assimilation1830 metamorphosis1843 transformation1857 retorting1858 tincturation1860 regeneration1869 nitrification1880 diagenesis1886 aluminothermy1900 aluminothermics1902 photoprocess1910 olation1931 mass transfer1937 reconcentration1956 tritiation1961 borohydride reduction1965 1843 R. J. Graves Syst. Clin. Med. Introd. Lect. 34 Professor Liebig applied the name of metamorphosis to those chemical actions in which a given compound by the presence of a peculiar substance, is made to resolve itself into two or more compounds. 1853 W. B. Carpenter Princ. Human Physiol. (ed. 4) 47 When there is a deficiency of fatty matters in the food, these may be formed by a metamorphosis of its saccharine constituents. 1853 W. B. Carpenter Princ. Human Physiol. (ed. 4) 52 The chemical metamorphoses which take place in the economy. 1862 W. A. Miller Elements Chem. (ed. 2) III. 58, 61 Production of Chemical Metamorphoses...1. Oxidation...2. Metamorphoses by Reduction...3. Metamorphoses by Substitution. 1867 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 157 182 Different experimenters have examined the products of its [sc. gun-cotton's] metamorphosis at different stages. 1875 A. W. Bennett & W. T. T. Dyer tr. J. von Sachs Text-bk. Bot. iii. ii. 631 Transitory metamorphoses appear to take place also when the albuminoids stored up in the reservoirs of reserve-materials are being transported and consumed. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2001; most recently modified version published online June 2022). < n.1447 |
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