| 释义 | 
		messengern. Origin: A borrowing from French. Etymons: French messager, messagier, mesanger. Etymology:  <  Anglo-Norman messager, messagier, messanger, messenger, massager, Old French messager (c1100), messagier (c1170), mesanger (c1190)  <  Old French message  message n.   + -ier  -er suffix2. Compare Old Occitan messatgier   (12th cent.), Spanish mensajero   (1207), Portuguese mensageiro   (?13th cent. in form †mesegeyro  ), Italian messaggero   (a1292 in form messaggiere   (now rare)). In Middle French by the end of the 16th cent. messager   had supplanted message   in the same sense, with the latter word retaining its sense ‘message’, thus restoring the formal distinction between senses that had ended with the falling together of post-classical Latin missaticus   and missaticum   in Old French message   (see message n.).The β.  forms   show the common late Middle English development of an intrusive n   before g   (representing both /dʒ/ and  /ɡ/: see E. J. Dobson  Eng. Pronunc. 1500–1700 (ed. 2, 1968) II. §438, and compare forms s.vv. passenger n., harbinger n., nightingale n.1), probably strongly reinforced by similar Anglo-Norman and Picard forms with -n-  . Forms with ma-   probably reflect Anglo-Norman massager   (compare forms s.v. message n.); such forms continue to be found (chiefly in East Anglian texts) into the 16th cent. Attested as a surname from the late 12th cent., as Lucas le mesagier   (1193), Johannes Messager   (1194), though it is unclear whether these are examples of the Middle English or the Anglo-Norman word. Sense  2b   reflects the use of Hebrew mal'aḵ, Hellenistic Greek ἄγγελος, and classical Latin nuntius in biblical literature.  1. society > communication > information > message > 			[noun]		 > messenger society > authority > rule or government > politics > international politics or relations > diplomacy > 			[noun]		 > ambassador or envoy α.  ?c1225						 (?a1200)						     		(Cleo. C.vi)	 		(1972)	 143  				Hech monnes Messager me schal hechliche vnderfon. c1300     		(Cambr. Gg.4.27)	 		(1901)	 l. 117  				Artu Mi sones Messager, Þat bringest me þis greting her? c1415						 (c1390)						    G. Chaucer  		(Lansd.)	 		(1871)	 333  				My sonne in pointe is fo to lete The holy laws of owre Akkaron Ȝeuen be goddes Messagiere Makomet. 1481    W. Caxton tr.   		(1893)	 i. 18  				Machomet..whiche was messager of the deuil. 1522–3    in  W. Fraser  		(1885)	 IV. 83  				For baithe be messinger and write I declarit him playnlie [etc.]. 1558    J. Knox  f. 5  				The especiall dutie of Goddes messagers is to preache repentance. a1576    L. Nowell  		(1952)	 142/2  				Sandesman, a messagier, legate. 1653    J. Hope Diary in   		(1919)	 III. 157  				A litle fascicull..which the messager had give me. 1743    Duke of Richmond Let. July in   		(1984)	 109  				My Lord Cartaret knew it here only by a private Messager from Sr John Rushout. 1922    D. H. Low tr.   115  				God be with thee, thou royal messager.  β. c1330    Adam & Eve 		(Auch.)	 7 in  C. Horstmann  		(1878)	 139 (MED)  				Þan seyd þe messanger To..Lucifer, ‘Bot þou do godes comandment, Þou art inobedient.’c1400						 (a1376)						    W. Langland  		(Trin. Cambr. R.3.14)	 		(1960)	 A.  iv. 115  				But it be marchaunt..oþer messangeris with lettres.a1425						 (?a1300)						     		(Linc. Inn)	 		(1952)	 6326  				Ac by special messangere Y wol sende hire loue dreury.c1450						 (a1400)						     		(Calig. A.ii)	 		(1969)	 1657  				A mayde þat ys her messengere..me brouȝt her.a1525						 (c1448)						    R. Holland Bk. Howlat l. 231 in  W. A. Craigie  		(1925)	 II. 102  				The dow noyis messingere.1535     1 Sam. xix. 20  				Saul sent his messaungers to Dauids house, that they shulde..kyll him.1588    in   		(1809)	 II. 87  				If he minded to revenge against any other nation, he would plead the cause by messengers.1625    S. Ward Let. in  R. Parr  		(1686)	 Coll. lxxviii. 321  				This Messenger bringeth the Book, and things from Mr. Crane.1667    J. Milton   vii. 572  				God..Thither will send his winged Messengers On errands of supernal  Grace.       View more context for this quotation1719    D. Defoe  322  				Messengers were sent Express.1796    C. Burney  III. 142  				He has consigned to my messenger..six volumes..not only without a box, but without any kind of envelope, or direction.1859    W. Collins  I. 41  				[I] sent off a mounted messenger with the letter.1925    N. Lucas  vii. 105  				Crooks go ‘drumming’ in pairs, dressed as clerks or messengers... Should they find an office left unoccupied during the lunch hour they quickly and skilfully ‘turn it over’.1990    ‘A. Cross’  		(1992)	 i. 17  				She received an envelope from Simon Pearlstine, delivered by messenger.a1387    J. Trevisa tr.  R. Higden  		(St. John's Cambr.)	 		(1865)	 I. 7 (MED)  				Storie is wytnesse of tyme, mynde of lyf, messager of eldnesse. a1425						 (?a1400)						    G. Chaucer  		(Hunterian)	 2919  				The eye is a good messanger, Which can to the herte..Tidyngis sende. 1490    W. Caxton tr.   xix. 71  				[Mount Caucasus] sendeth doun her colde messagers as snowe, froste, heyle, & tempeste. 1578    J. Banister   viii. f. 98  				The Nerues..beyng therfore rightly iudged the diligent messengers and garders of the brayne. 1615    H. Crooke  535  				The Sences..are the messengers and interpreters of the Soule. a1616    W. Shakespeare  		(1623)	  ii. vii. 77  				His teares, pure messengers, sent from his  heart.       View more context for this quotation 1759    J. Woolman  		(1971)	 vi. 102  				I have looked at the smallpox as a messenger sent from the Almighty. 1813     Chron. 83/2  				Casting these leaden messengers of death [sc. bullets]. 1860    J. Ruskin  V. 43  				It [sc. the trunk] is rather a messenger to the roots. 1914    E. R. Burroughs  x. 124  				It was this deadly stuff that killed, and not the little arrow, which was merely the messenger that carried it into the body of its victim. 1992    J. Stern  & M. Stern  27/2  				A mere one-twenty-fifth the size of what overenthusiastic sky-watchers were beginning to call the Killer Comet,..or the Cosmic Messenger of Doom. a1425						 (c1340)						    R. Rolle  		(Laud)	 		(1884)	 ciii. 5  				The gostis of kynde that ar ay before the..thou makes thaim messangers of thi will. 1425    W. Paston in   		(2004)	 I. 3  				I haue..in makyng a procuracie..and also a general appelle þe engrossyng of wych þe messager of this bill myght nought abide. 1583    A. Golding tr.  J. Calvin  cix. 672  				Yet doth God appoint vs to be..messagers of his vnfallible trueth. 1584    J. Dee Jrnl. in   		(1659)	  i. 63  				Those that are the..Messagers and Angles of the Dignified and Triumphant Glory. a1616    W. Shakespeare  		(1623)	  ii. i. 260  				Messengers of  Warre.       View more context for this quotation a1640    J. Fletcher  et al.  Faire Maide of Inne  iii. ii, in  F. Beaumont  & J. Fletcher  		(1647)	 sig. Fffffff2v/2  				At next visit Madam Ile be a messenger of comfort. 1703    D. Defoe in   		(1897)	 App.  iv. 76  				You must not refuse to be the messenger of my acknowledgments. 1770    T. Percy tr.  P. H. Mallet  II. xvi. 85  				The Giantess Angerbode, or Messenger of Ill. 1826    J. F. Cooper  ii. 18  				I trust you are no messenger of evil tidings? 1885    R. F. Burton tr.   I. i. 4  				He despatched vaunt-couriers and messengers of glad tidings. 1957    F. Benet in  K. Polanyi et al.   x. 205  				All through history the Moghreb women were conciliators and messengers of peace. 1646    in   		(1853)	 II. 155  				To assemble the churches, or their messengrs, upon occasion of counsell. 1646    in   		(1853)	 II. 155  				A publike assembly of the elders and other messengers of the severall churches. 1665    J. Eliot  4  				The Intrinsecall and proper Efficients of a Council, are the Churches, who elect and send Messengers to that end. 1712    S. Sewall  		(1879)	 II. 347  				Declar'd that the Elders and Messengers of Churches had appointed him to give the charge. 1829    in  W. W. Sweet  		(1931)	 I  				To the Ministers and Messengers Composing the Illinois Association. 1866     119  				The churches invited to assist in a council are represented by messengers or delegates. 1947     21 May 648/2  				The Southern Baptist Convention is an assemblage..of messengers and visitors from local churches. 1998     22 June 69/1  				Eight thousand Southern Baptist ‘messengers’, as delegates are called, had trekked north to Salt Lake City. society > communication > journalism > journal > newspaper > 			[noun]		 > titles of newspapers 1796    		(title)	  				Village Messenger (Amherst, N.H.). 1804    		(title)	  				The Mississippi Messenger. 1834    		(title)	  				The Southern literary messenger. 1886     XXI. 109/2  				Many excellent literary journals and magazines..among these..the time-honoured Viestnik Yevropî (‘Messenger of Europe’). 1922    J. Joyce   ii. xv. [Circe] 444  				Messenger of the Sacred Heart and Evening Telegraph with Saint Patrick's Day Supplement. 1975    		(title)	  				Kent Messenger. a1616    W. Shakespeare  		(1623)	  iv. vi. 56  				You shall chance to whip your Information, And beate the Messenger, who bids beware Of what is to be  dreaded.       View more context for this quotation]			 1962     29 253  				If you find that the norms you specify lead to results that seem absurd (or empty) to you, that is reason to re-examine your own norms, not shoot the messenger boy or analyst. 1980    D. Carkeet  ix. 143  				You can't shoot the messenger for bringing bad news. 1997     10 Oct. 2/1  				Although Councillor Leonard Groat backs the tenants in their grievance he urged them not to ‘shoot the messenger’ by blaming Mr Selwyn and the housing department for spending cutbacks.   2. the world > movement > progressive motion > order of movement > going first or in front > 			[noun]		 > one who goes first > as a harbinger or messenger c1230						 (?a1200)						     		(Corpus Cambr.)	 		(1962)	 99  				Ich am þe schadewe seið þes messager. þet is worldes weane. c1385    G. Chaucer  1491  				The bisy larke, messager of day. c1390    G. Chaucer  6  				Aprill..is messager to May. a1425						 (c1385)						    G. Chaucer  		(1987)	  iii. 1417  				Lucyfer, þe dayes messager, Gan for to rise. ?a1450						 (?1350–75)						    Origo Mundi l. 2199 in  E. Norris  		(1859)	 I. 166  				My a'd pys now messyger dog manerlich ov baner. 1545     		(STC 16034)	 sig. C.iii.v  				The birde, of day messinger, Croweth and sheweth, that light is nere. a1616    W. Shakespeare  		(1623)	  ii. i. 103  				Yon grey Lines, That fret the Clouds, are Messengers of  Day.       View more context for this quotation 1653    Duchess of Newcastle  73  				O, said the Swallow.., I am the Messenger of Summer warme. 1828    W. Wordsworth Morning Exercise in   		(1888)	  				That fleet messenger of summer days, The Swallow. the world > time > relative time > the past > antecedence or being earlier > 			[noun]		 > antecedent or precursor c1300    St. Brendan 		(Harl.)	 122 in  C. Horstmann  		(1887)	 223 (MED)  				Ich wot þis is a messager þe riȝte wei ous to lede. 1340     		(1866)	 195 (MED)  				H[u]anne a riche man ssel come to ane toune..he zent his messagyers bo-uore uor to nime guod in. c1384     		(Douce 369(2))	 		(1850)	 Luke ix. 52  				He [sc. Christ] sente messangeris [v.r. messageris] bifore his siȝt. a1400						 (c1300)						    Northern Homily: Herod & John the Baptist 		(Coll. Phys.)	 in   at Messager  				He [sc. John the Baptist] was ryt cristes messager. a1475						 (?a1430)						    J. Lydgate tr.  G. Deguileville  		(Vitell.)	 24191 (MED)  				Deth..hath vs sent to-forn, As massagers to warne the. 1600    W. Shakespeare   v. i. 117  				There is come a Messenger before to signifie their  comming.       View more context for this quotation 1989     Mal. iii. 1  				I am about to send my messenger to clear a path before me. the world > the earth > weather and the atmosphere > weather > cloud > 			[noun]		 > a cloud > small cloud > small detached clouds ?1789    T. Best  		(ed. 2)	  ii. viii. 145  				When..there are small black fragments of clouds like smoke, flying underneath, which some call messengers,..rain is not far off. 1854    A. E. Baker  II. 19  				Messengers, small floating clouds separated from larger masses: the sure precursors of rain. 1880    R. Jefferies  vi. 133  				The ‘messengers’—small detached clouds, that precede the rest—were already passing overhead. 1884    R. Lawson  23  				Messenger, a small detached cloud (cumulus) floating low, and supposed to betoken rain. Sometimes called a Carrier.   3. society > law > administration of justice > general proceedings > arrest > 			[noun]		 > one who arrests society > communication > information > message > 			[noun]		 > messenger > official messenger ?1316     		(Royal)	 		(2002)	 l. 608  				He wes þe kynges messager In his neodes fer & ner. c1330						 (?a1300)						     		(Auch.)	 		(1973)	 l. 1219  				Her comeþ þe kinges messanger..Forto han min hert-blod. 1428    Ayr Burgh Accts. in   		(1957)	 31 143  				To the Kyngis hors messynger for sommonym to the cheker and parlament. a1450     		(Richardson 44)	 		(1884)	 33 (MED)  				Þe kynges messeger..tolde hir what batayl was sette aȝeynst hir on þe next morwe. 1535     c. 27 §3  				There shalbe..one other person, which shalbe called Messanger of the same Courte. 1607    J. Cowell  sig. Xx1  				Messenger of the Exchequer, is an Officer there, of which sorte there be foure in that court, that be Pursuyvants attending the lord Treasurer, to cary his letters and precepts. 1694    A. Wood  		(1894)	 III. 463  				Most of the messingers are gone into the country to fetch up persons seised upon account of the plot. 1696    E. Phillips  		(new ed.)	  				Messenger, one that attends upon the King and his Council to carry Dispatches, and waits upon the Sergeant at Arms to Apprehend Prisoners of State. 1706     		(new ed.)	  				Messengers of the Exchequer, certain Officers in that Court, four in Number, who as Pursuivants, attend the Lord Treasurer, to carry his Letters and Orders. 1732    G. Berkeley  I.  i. ix. 29  				A Man had better a thousand times be hunted by Bailiffs or Messengers. 1788    R. Twining Let. 15 Aug. in   		(1887)	 156  				Prince Ernest has promised to send a set over for me by the King's messenger as soon as the work is published. 1789     8 Apr. 		(1834)	 I. 18  				Cornelius Maxwell was appointed Messenger [by the Senate]. 1846    B. Disraeli  26 Dec. 		(1938)	 22  				Mrs Orme..married a person, who..was converted from a Queen's Messenger into a paid Attaché. 1874     c. 81 §4  				The office of messenger or pursuivant of the Great Seal shall as a separate office be abolished. 1879    C. Marvin  201  				A Queen's Messenger who is about to set off in five minutes' time for Cairo. 1909    M. Beerbohm  126  				Had nomady been my business, had I been a commercial traveller or a King's Messenger. 1965    B. Sweet-Escott  iii. 80  				A King's Messenger..overheard my argument with the booking office and offered me his berth, explaining however that it was full of Foreign Office bags. 1987    B. Moore  xv. 108  				The helmeted government messenger appeared. 2005    G. Sheffield  & J. Bourne in  D. Haig  46  				This diary was written on an almost daily basis during the Great War and sent by King's Messenger in batches to Lady Haig in England. society > law > administration of justice > one who administers justice > an officer of the court > 			[noun]		 > official who executes orders of court > bailiff 1482    in  T. Rymer  		(1711)	 XII. 166/1  				We..Constitute..the same Gartier and Northumberlond, our Ambassadours, Oratours, Procuratours, Factours, and Masseagers. 1587     		(1814)	 III. 449/2  				Of late ȝeiris þair is enterit in the office of armes sindry extraordinar maseris..and a verie greit nowmer of messingeris. 1681    J. Dalrymple   iv. xlvii. 14  				From the impression of the King's arms on this blazon, messengers are called messengers at arms. 1753    R. Thomson  2  				There ought only to be in all Scotland 200 Messengers, or Officers of Arms (including Heralds, Macers and Pursuivants, 17 in Number). 1812    W. Tennant   ii. xxxii. 38  				Sheriffs learn'd..And messengers-at-arms, (a fearful class!). 1838    W. Bell   				Messenger-at-arms; an officer appointed by, and under the control of the Lyon King-at-Arms... They are employed in executing all summonses and letters of diligence, both in civil and criminal matters. Our signet letters..were constantly directed to messengers-at-arms, as sheriffs in that part. 1872    J. G. Michie  ii. 17  				A messenger-at-arms..the terror of evil doers far and wide. 1914    N. Munro  iii. 28  				As Messenger-at-Arms,..he was forever on the road upon MacCailein's business. 1980    D. Maxwell  43  				A messenger may not refuse to act for anyone who wishes to employ him and who tenders reasonable remuneration. society > law > law enforcement > law-enforcement or peace-officer > 			[noun]		 > officer enforcing publishing licence 1682    N. Luttrell Diary in   		(1857)	 I. 226  				The Stationers company..have called one Robert Stephens (a common messenger of the presse) on the livery. 1694    A. Wood  		(1894)	 III. 470  				Tomson the printer was seized on by Stephens, the messenger of the press, in the act of printing a pamphlet reflecting on the government. 1770    Copy of Information in   49  				Mr. Serjeant Glynn. You are a messenger to the press, please to tell us what that office is? A. It is my business to buy all political pamphlets.   1960    C. Blagden  ix. 167  				Robert Stephens,..who had just lost his job as Messenger of the Press because he took bribes. society > law > administration of justice > one who administers justice > an officer of the court > 			[noun]		 > official who executes orders of court 1732     c. 30 §4  				That every such Bankrupt..shall be..required..to deliver up..all his..Bookes of Accounts..not seized by the Messenger of the said Commission. 1883     c. 52 §153  				The official solicitors and messengers in bankruptcy..shall be transferred to and become officers of the Board of Trade. 1894    G. Y. Robson  		(ed. 7)	 77  				The messenger was a sort of sheriff's officer employed to execute the orders and warrants of the court. Originally..a messenger was attached to the court of each commissioner. society > law > administration of justice > one who administers justice > an officer of the court > 			[noun]		 > official who executes orders of court > bailiff 1801    J. Barrow  I. ii. 79  				The next step is..to apply for a commission, consisting of the Landrost, two members of the Council, the Secretary of the district, and a Messenger. 1872    E. W. Robertson  114  				The Bode or messenger of the Court. 1972    V. G. Hiemstra in   VII. 345  				Messenger of the Court, Official who is responsible for the serving of process of the magistrate's court and for the execution of orders of that court, including attachment of goods in civil cases and sales in execution... The process of the Water Court is also served by the Messenger of the Court. 1986     		(ed. 3)	 227  				All magistrates' courts have members of staff called messengers of the court... A messenger of the court is obliged to execute ‘without avoidable delay’ all processes handed to him by the clerk of the court. 1867    W. H. Smyth  & E. Belcher   				Messengers, boys appointed to carry orders from the quarter-deck. 1918    L. E. Ruggles  96  				It is the duty of the messenger to run errands for the deck officer or executive officer while on watch both at sea and in port.  society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > equipment of vessel > ropes or chains other than rigging or cable > 			[noun]		 > line sent ahead of larger line society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > equipment of vessel > anchoring equipment > 			[noun]		 > endless chain on capstan 1633    T. James  80  				We..put our Cables ouer-boord, with Messengers vnto them. 1691    R. Hooke in  R. T. Gunther  		(1930)	 VII. 722  				To know this [sc. deep-sea temperature], I have another messenger, call'd explorator temperamenti. 1775    N. D. Falck  29  				Then a jewel, well parcelled with about an hundredweight of stones together with a messenger of jewel-rope, was let over the hawser, and run down, in order to jam the sweep. 1784    J. King  III.  vi. xi. 475  				Having, in our endeavours to heave the anchor out of the ground, twice broken the old messenger, and afterward a new one. 1839     2 158/1  				An improved capstan and winch for purchasing or raising ship's anchors, without the application of a messenger. 1882    G. S. Nares  		(ed. 6)	 159  				The messenger is an endless chain passing round the capstan and two rollers in the manger. 1955    C. N. Longridge   i. iv. 62  				The cables were never taken round the capstan, but were hove in by means of a ‘messenger’, which was an endless rope rove through a snatch block in the bows with three or more turns round the capstan barrel.  5. society > leisure > entertainment > toy or plaything > other toys > 			[noun]		 > kite > specific part 1746    Ld. Chesterfield  9 Oct. 		(1932)	 		(modernized text)	 III. 785  				My long and frequent letters..put me in mind of certain papers, which you have very lately, and I formerly, sent up to kites, along the string, which we called messengers; some of them the wind used to blow away,..and but few of them got up and stuck to the kite. 1864     99  				Some boys amuse themselves by sending messengers up to their kites when they have let out all their string. A messenger is formed of a piece of paper three or four inches square. society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > parts of machines > mechanism > 			[noun]		 > part of > which sets other parts moving 1929     4 193  				When a messenger is sent down the line it first hits the arm holding the stop. By the blow the stop is forced away, the messenger below is set free. 1963    H. F. P. Herdman in  M. N. Hill  II. vi. 124  				When the messenger hits this catch, the lids are immediately closed and the bottle falls away through 180°. 1984    A. C. Duxbury  & A. Duxbury  vi. 192  				A small weight known as a messenger is then attached around the hydrowire.  society > communication > record > written record > compiler or keeper of written records > 			[noun]		 > others 1793    J. Leslie tr.  Comte de Buffon  VII. 320  				Its most usual exercise is to walk with long steps from one side to another... This quality has probably conferred on it the name of Messenger, as the bundle of feathers on the top of the neck has procured that of Secretary. the world > life > biology > biological processes > genetic activity > genetic components > 			[noun]		 > other genetic structures 1905    E. H. Starling in   5 Aug. 340/1  				These chemical messengers, however, or ‘hormones’..as we might call them. 1923     18 Jan. 12  				Hormones and chalones (specific chemical messengers) produced by the ductless or endocrine glands. 1961    S. Brenner  et al.  in   13 May 576  				The paradox..can be resolved by the hypothesis, put forward by Jacob and Monod.., that..ribosomes are non-specialized structures which receive genetic information from the gene in the form of an unstable intermediate or ‘messenger’. 1993     30 Oct. 285/1  				Cocaine bothers insects by preventing their nerve cells from taking up key chemical messengers. Compounds C1.   General  attributive. 1711    Ld. Shaftesbury  III. Misc.  v. iii. 337  				There are further Miracles remaining for 'em to perform, e'er they can in modesty plead the Apostolick or Messenger-Authority. 1898     Mar. 427  				The messenger-wind that drives before the dawn.   C2.  1825    F. D. Hemans in   131 		(title)	  				The messenger-bird. 1835    F. A. Butler  II. 54  				That Messenger Bird threw more than a passing gloom over me. 1935     35 63  				The gru or crane..the symbolic messenger-bird of the goddess. society > communication > information > message > 			[noun]		 > messenger > young messenger 1832    E. C. Wines  I. 41  				Some are employed as cooks at the galley, and others as messenger boys on the quarter deck. 1886     26 Aug. 11/1  				A Wall-street banker..sent a note by a district messenger boy to the office of his broker. 1959    N. Mailer  		(1961)	 208  				I was amateur agent for it, messenger boy, editorial consultant..and I made a hundred mistakes. the world > matter > physics > electromagnetic radiation > electricity > electrical power, electricity > distribution system > 			[noun]		 > suspension cable 1916     §778  				A messenger wire or cable is a wire or cable running along with and supporting other wires, cables or contact conductors. 1948     		(Amer. Techn. Soc.)	 IX. 48  				A stranded steel messenger cable is strung over the chord of the trusses. 1989    M. C. Smith   i. v. 45  				The ramp's steel-mesh safety gate swung up and two men in hard hats, life jackets and lifelines around their waists dragged heavy messenger cables down the ramp to the bag. the world > life > biology > biological processes > genetic activity > genetic components > 			[noun]		 > nucleic acid > RNA 1961    S. Brenner  et al.  in   13 May 577/1  				Model III implies that a special type of RNA molecule, or ‘messenger RNA’, exists which brings genetic information from genes to non-specialized ribosomes. 1973     Aug. 21/1  				Some of the RNA (messenger RNA) determines the structure of the proteins (primarily enzymes) that constitute or manufacture all the tissues of the organism. 1992     24 Oct. 129/1  				Messenger RNAs..are copied from the gene, and thus share its sequence. 1780    H. Walpole Let. 22 Feb. in   		(1971)	 IX. 17  				The Admiral's messenger-sloop has been taken. the world > matter > physics > electromagnetic radiation > electricity > electrical power, electricity > distribution system > 			[noun]		 > suspension cable 1898    E. J. Houston  		(ed. 4)	 849/2  				Messenger wire of aerial cable.  1916Messenger wire [see messenger cable n.].							1948     (U.S. Pub. Roads Admin.)  iii. 117  				All overhead cable shall be supported by a suitable aerial messenger wire whenever there is a span of more than 30 feet. 1984     Mar. 64/1  				Catenary consists of messenger wire at 26 1/	2 feet above the track and contact wire at 21 1/	2 feet.  Derivatives 1594    G. Ellis in   		(Hist. MSS Comm.)	 		(1899)	 I. 25  				He is upon a journey, messenger like,..to apprehend..her Majesty's loving subjects.  This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2001; most recently modified version published online June 2022). messengerv. Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: messenger n. Etymology:  <  messenger n. 1822    C. Lamb  12 Dec. 		(1935)	 II. 351  				Can I have a revise of Philelia..sent by post. Don't trouble yourself to messenger it. 1985    R. Lourie  		(1986)	 xxi. 202  				I told him that I would need a letter on his stationery messengered up to me. society > communication > information > message > send a message or messenger			[verb (transitive)]		 1891    M. J. Cawein  159  				Eastward he journeyed... And messengered the monarch with a gift. 1979     6 Mar.  b8/2  				A copy of the letter was received from the White House..and of course immediately messengered to the FTC hearings and ABC witnesses. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2001; most recently modified version published online March 2022). <  n.?c1225 v.1822 |