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单词 bale
释义

balen.1

Brit. /beɪl/, U.S. /beɪl/
Forms: Old English balu, bealu, bealo, genitive beal(o)wes, plural beal(e)wu, Middle English balu, bælu, balw, ballu, baluw, balluw, baleu, balwe, Middle English– bale, (Middle English bal, baal, Middle English bael, bayle, Middle English–1500s Scottish baill, bayle, 1600s baile).
Origin: A word inherited from Germanic.
Etymology: Common Germanic: Old English balu , bealu , (genitive bealw-es ) = Old Saxon and Old Frisian balu , Old High German balo , Old Norse böl < Germanic *balw-o(m) , the neuter of the bale adj. adjective; compare evil, ill, good, as nouns. Almost confined to poetry from Old English downwards; in Middle English it seems to have derived fresh vitality from the Old Norse böl, pronounced /bɔl/, whence also its alliterative use with bote ‘remedy, relief,’ and bete ‘to relieve.’ More of English origin, perhaps, is its alliterative opposition to bliss. Marked obsolete in dictionaries soon after 1600, and rare thence to the 19th cent., when its undefined vague sense of evil made it a favourite word with the poets.
I. Senses.
1.
a. Evil, especially considered in its active operation, as destroying, blasting, injuring, hurting, paining, tormenting; fatal, dire, or malign quality or influence; woe, mischief, harm, injury; in earlier use often = death, infliction of death.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > harm or detriment > [noun] > quality > extreme
balea1000
malicea1382
deadlinessc1450
fatality1490
maliciousness1555
virulency1651
fatalness1652
contagium1654
virulentness1727
outrage1735
virulence1748
a1000 Ags. Ps. lix. 2 Me wið blodhreowes weres bealuwe gehǽle.
OE Christ & Satan 681 Þa he mid hondum genom atol þurh edwit, and on esle ahof, herm bealowes gast, and on beorh astah, asette on dune drihten hælend.
1076 Anglo-Saxon Chron. Þær wæs þæt bryd ealo, þæt wæs manegra manna bealo.
c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1963) l. 2501 Whet wult þu balwe [c1300 Otho sake] menge.
c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1963) l. 729 Balu com on ueste.
1330 R. Mannyng Chron. 74 Þe Komyn had his bale, his lif was lightly sold.
1340 R. Rolle Pricke of Conscience 6103 That day [of doom], Þe day of bale and of bitternes.
c1340 Alex. & Dind. 163 Þi bestus of bale · þat bi þe water ferde.
c1440 Gesta Romanorum (1879) 188 I am worthi al this bale, for I tolde to the woman al my counseill.
1579 E. Spenser Shepheardes Cal. Nov. 84 The flouret..buryed long in Winters bale.
1647 J. Cleveland Poems in Char. London-diurnall (Wing C4662) 27 Caligula, whose pride was Mankinds Baile.
1748 J. Thomson Castle of Indolence i. i Withouten that would come an heavyer bale.
1870 W. C. Bryant tr. Homer Iliad I. ii. 75 Tidings of bale she brought.
b. Evil-speaking, abuse.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > disapproval > invective or abuse > [noun]
balec1220
ordurec1390
revile1439
brawlingc1440
railing1466
opprobry?a1475
revilingc1475
vituperation1481
vituper1484
vitupery1489
convicy1526
abusion?1530
blasphemation1533
pelta1540
oblatration?1552
words of mischief1555
abuse1559
inveighing1568
invection1590
revilement1590
invective1602
opprobration1623
invecture1633
thunder and lightning1638
raillery1669
rattlinga1677
blackguarding1742
pillory1770
slang1805
slangwhanging1809
bullyragging1820
slanging1856
bespattering1862
bespatterment1870
bad-mouthing1939
bad mouth1947
slagging1956
flak1968
verbal1970
handbagging1987
pelters1992
c1220 Legend St. Katherine 551 Ha tukeð ure godes to balewe & to bismere.
2. Evil in its passive aspect; physical suffering, torment, pain, woe.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > ill health > pain > [noun]
sorec825
acheeOE
wrakeOE
trayOE
woe?a1200
pinec1200
sorrowc1225
teenc1225
grievousness1303
dolec1320
balea1325
painc1330
warkingc1340
dolour?c1370
sufferance1422
offencea1425
angerc1440
sufferingc1450
penalty?1462
penality1496
grief1509
stress1533
sufferance1597
somatalgia1607
suffering1609
tort1632
miserya1825
a1325 (c1250) Gen. & Exod. (1968) l. 68 Deuel dwale, Ðat made ilc sorge and euerilc bale.
1393 W. Langland Piers Plowman C. xxi. 34 And bringe adoun · bale and deþ for euere.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 19379 Þat neuer for na bale ne buud.
c1400 (?c1380) Pearl l. 477 & lyued in penance..With bodyly bale hym blysse to byye.
c1460 Frere & Boy in J. Ritson Pieces Anc. Pop. Poetry (1833) 35 God that..dranke both eysell and gall, Brynge vs out of bale.
1593 T. Churchyard Challenge 25 Borne vnto bale, and subiect to debate.
c1824 Campbell Fragm. Oratorio Bk. Job 37 The bitterness of my bale.
1834 R. Southey Doctor I. 143 Death..calls up a soul from bale to give an account of his own sufferings.
3. Mental suffering; misery, sorrow, grief.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > suffering > [noun]
sorec888
teeneOE
sorrowOE
workOE
wrakeOE
careOE
gramec1000
harmOE
howc1000
trayOE
woweOE
angec1175
derfnessc1175
sytec1175
unwinc1175
wosithc1200
ail?c1225
barrat?c1225
derf?c1225
grief?c1225
misease?c1225
misliking?c1225
ofthinkingc1225
passion?c1225
troublec1230
pinec1275
distress1297
grievancea1300
penancea1300
cumbermentc1300
languorc1300
cumbering1303
were1303
angera1325
strifea1325
sweama1325
woea1325
painc1330
tribulationc1330
illa1340
threst1340
constraintc1374
troublenessc1380
afflictiona1382
bruisinga1382
miseasetya1382
pressurec1384
exercisec1386
miscomfortc1390
mislikea1400
smarta1400
thronga1400
balec1400
painfulnessc1400
troublancec1400
smartness?c1425
painliness1435
perplexity?a1439
penalty?1462
calamity1490
penality1496
cumber?a1513
sussy1513
tribule1513
afflict?1529
vexation of spirit1535
troublesomeness1561
hoe1567
grievedness1571
tribulance1575
languishment1576
thrall1578
tine1590
languorment1593
aggrievedness1594
obturbation1623
afflictedness1646
erumny1657
pathos1684
shock1705
dree1791
vex1815
wrungnessa1875
dukkha1886
thinkache1892
sufferation1976
c1400 (?c1380) Pearl l. 18 My breste in bale bot bolne & bele.
c1400 Melayne 576 For bale hym thoght he brynt.
c1425 Seven Sages (P.) 258 He that tolde hire that tale, Broght him in mykil bael.
1590 E. Spenser Faerie Queene i. ix. sig. I Our feeble harts Embost with bale, and bitter byting griefe.
1616 J. Bullokar Eng. Expositor Bale (Now out of vse), Sorrow, great miserie.
1847 B. Disraeli Tancred I. ii. i. 111 Relieve my spirit from the bale that bows it down.
II. Phrases and locutions:
4. to work, bake, brew bale: to make mischief, prepare woe or misery.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > suffering > cause of mental pain or suffering > cause mental pain or suffering to [verb (transitive)]
heavyc897
pineeOE
aileOE
sorryeOE
traya1000
sorrowOE
to work (also do) (a person) woeOE
angerc1175
smarta1200
to work, bake, brew balec1200
derve?c1225
grieve?c1225
sitc1225
sweam?c1225
gnawc1230
sughc1230
troublec1230
aggrievea1325
to think sweama1325
unframea1325
anguish1340
teen1340
sowa1352
distrainc1374
to-troublea1382
strain1382
unglad1390
afflicta1393
paina1393
distressa1400
hita1400
sorea1400
assayc1400
remordc1400
temptc1400
to sit (or set) one sorec1420
overthrow?a1425
visit1424
labour1437
passionc1470
arraya1500
constraina1500
misgrievea1500
attempt1525
exagitate1532
to wring to the worse1542
toil1549
lament1580
adolorate1598
rankle1659
try1702
to pass over ——1790
upset1805
to touch (also get, catch, etc.) (a person) on the raw1823
to put (a person) through it1855
bludgeon1888
to get to ——1904
to put through the hoop(s)1919
c1200 Trin. Coll. Hom. 257 Bale to breówe.
1330 R. Mannyng Chron. 55 How falsnes brewes bale with him, and many mo.
c1400 Judicium (1822) 11 Your baill now brewys.
c1460 in Pol. Rel. & L. Poems (1866) 144 Whan þou doest thus, there bale þou bakeste.
c1460 in Pol. Rel. & L. Poems (1866) 100 Y am worsse than wode Myn owne bale for to brewe.
1594 T. Nashe Vnfortunate Traveller sig. F4v To worke her bale.
5. Opposed alliteratively to bliss, blithe.
ΚΠ
c1400 (?c1380) Pearl l. 373 My blysse, my bale ȝe han ben boþe.
c1400 St. Alexius (Trin.) 140 Hire blesse turnde to Bale.
1488 (c1478) Hary Actis & Deidis Schir William Wallace (Adv.) (1968–9) iv. l. 337 Now lycht, now sadd; now blissful, now in baill.
a1500 R. Henryson tr. Æsop Fables: Cock & Fox l. 521 in Poems (1981) 24 Be blyith in baill, for that is best remeid.
a1577 G. Gascoigne Princelie Pleasures Kenelworth sig. B.iiiv, in Whole Wks. (1587) And turne your present blysse to after bales.
1598 B. Yong tr. G. Polo Enamoured Diana in tr. J. de Montemayor Diana 440 That still deducts my life in blisselesse bale.
1816 S. T. Coleridge Christabel i. Concl. 20 Her face resign'd to bliss or bale.
1876 J. R. Lowell Poet. Wks. (1879) 468/2 Was it a comet or star; Omen of blessing or bale?
6. Opposed to boot (Middle English bote) ‘relief, remedy,’ and bete vb. ‘to relieve, mend.’ So in Icelandic, böl og bót ‘bale and boot,’ bölva bætr ‘boots of bales’.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > harm or detriment > [noun]
burstc1000
harmOE
scatheOE
teenOE
evil healc1175
waningc1175
hurt?c1225
quede?c1225
balec1275
damage1300
follyc1300
grill13..
ungain13..
torferc1325
eviltyc1330
wem1338
impairment1340
marring1357
unhend1377
sorrowc1380
pairingc1384
pairmentc1384
mischiefc1385
offencec1385
appairment1388
hindering1390
noyinga1398
bresta1400
envya1400
wemminga1400
gremec1400
wilc1400
blemishing1413
lesion?a1425
nocument?a1425
injuryc1430
mischieving1432
hindrance1436
detrimenta1440
ill1470
untroth1470
diversity1484
remordc1485
unhappinessc1485
grudge1491
wriguldy-wrag?1520
danger1530
dishort1535
perishment1540
wreaka1542
emperishment1545
impeachment1548
indemnity1556
impair1568
spoil1572
impeach1575
interestc1575
emblemishing1583
mishap1587
endamagement1593
blemishment1596
mischievance1600
damnificationa1631
oblesion1656
mishanter1754
vitiation1802
mar1876
jeel1887
the mind > emotion > suffering > sorrow or grief > [noun]
rueeOE
teeneOE
sorrowOE
gramec1000
sytec1175
ruthc1225
dolea1240
balec1275
sighinga1300
dolour13..
ermingc1300
heartbreakc1330
discomfortc1350
griefa1375
tristourc1380
desolation1382
sichinga1387
tristesse1390
compassiona1400
rueinga1400
smarta1400
displeasure14..
gremec1400
heavity14..
dillc1420
notea1425
discomforturec1450
dolefulnessc1450
wandremec1450
regratec1485
doleance1490
trista1510
mispleasance1532
pathologiesa1586
balefulness1590
drearing1591
distressedness1592
woenessa1600
desertion1694
ruesomeness1881
schmerz1887
the mind > emotion > suffering > misery > [noun]
unselthc888
ermtheOE
unselea1023
wellawayOE
wretchhead1154
wandrethc1175
woec1175
wanea1200
wretchdom?c1225
yomernessc1250
balec1275
un-i-selec1275
wan-siðc1275
unseelinessa1300
wretchedheada1300
cursedness1303
wretcheddomc1320
wrechea1325
wretchnessa1330
tribulationc1330
wretchednessa1340
caitifty1340
meeknessa1382
unwealsomeness1382
infelicityc1384
caitifhedea1400
ill liking?a1400
sorea1400
ungleea1400
unweala1400
caitifnessc1400
deploration1490
caitifdoma1500
woefulnessa1513
misery1527
miserity1533
mishappinessa1542
unwealfulnessa1555
tribulance1575
miserableness1613
agony1621
desolatenessa1626
unblissa1628
unhappiness1722
misère1791
shadow1855
valley1882
miz1918
c1275 Luue Ron 125 in Old Eng. Misc. 97 Þar-inne is vich balewes bóte.
1393 W. Langland Piers Plowman C. xxi. 208 Hit is a botles bale.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Gött.) l. 105 All vr balis for to bete.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 44 [Que]dur þai be worthi or bale or bote.
c1420 Sir Amadace iv That myȝte not bete my bale!
a1475 J. Russell Bk. Nurture (Harl. 4011) in Babees Bk. (2002) i. 183 Than brynge hym to his bed, his bales there to bete.
1496 (c1410) Dives & Pauper (de Worde) ii. xix. 157/2 The holy ghoost..is bote of euery bale.
a1500 (a1460) Towneley Plays (1994) I. iii. 38 Thank we that fre, Beytter of bayll.
1546 J. Heywood Dialogue Prouerbes Eng. Tongue ii. iv. sig. Giv This..rather bri[n]geth bale than boote.
c1560 Hunting Cheviot in F. J. Child Eng. & Sc. Pop. Ballads (1889) III. vi. 310 Ihesue Crist our balys bete, And to the blys vs brynge.
1565 J. Hall Hist. Expost. in tr. Lanfranc Most Excellent Woorke Chirurg. sig. Dddijv Oure boote mixed wyth bale.
1867 G. MacDonald Poems 144 Where he had found Boot for every bale.
7. Proverbs. Cf. Icelandic þegar böl er hæst er bót næst ‘when bale is highest boot is nighest,’ etc.
ΚΠ
a1250 Owl & Nightingale 687 Hwon þe bale is alre hecst Þonne is þe bote alre necst.
c1330 Florice & Bl. 858 After bale hem com bote.
1393 W. Langland Piers Plowman C. v. 88 Betere ys þat bote · bale a-doun brynge, Than bale be ybete · and bote neuere þe betere.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Fairf. 14) l. 4775 Quen þe bal ys alder hext þen sum time ys bote next.
c1400 Test. Love (1560) ii. 288 b/1 When bale is greatest then is bote a nie bore.
c1430 Syr Gener. 3328 Aftre bale euer cometh bote.
1546 J. Heywood Dialogue Prouerbes Eng. Tongue i. xii. sig. Eiv Comforte your selfe with this old text..when bale is hekst, boote is next.
a1600 Sir Aldingar 177 in Furniv. Percy Folio I. 171 When Bale is att hyest, boote is att next.
1870 W. Morris Earthly Paradise: Pt. III 524 Bettered is bale by bale that follows it, The saw saith.

Compounds

(The Old English poetical compounds were very numerous, e.g. bealu-cræft magic art, bealu dǽd sin, bealu-ráp deadly rope, bealu-spell fatal news, bealu-þanc malicious thought.)
bale-sithe n. [Old English bealu-síð, < sið expedition, adventure, fortune, lot] Obsolete death, destruction; evil-doing, mischief; evil fortune, calamity.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > death > [noun]
hensithOE
qualmOE
bale-sithea1000
endingc1000
fallOE
forthsitheOE
soulingOE
life's endOE
deathOE
hethensithc1200
last end?c1225
forthfarec1275
dying1297
finec1300
partingc1300
endc1305
deceasec1330
departc1330
starving1340
passingc1350
latter enda1382
obita1382
perishingc1384
carrion1387
departing1388
finishmentc1400
trespassement14..
passing forthc1410
sesse1417
cess1419
fininga1425
resolutiona1425
departisona1450
passagea1450
departmentc1450
consummation?a1475
dormition1483
debt to (also of) naturea1513
dissolutionc1522
expirationa1530
funeral?a1534
change1543
departure1558
last change1574
transmigration1576
dissolving1577
shaking of the sheets?1577
departance1579
deceasure1580
mortality1582
deceasing1591
waftage1592
launching1599
quietus1603
doom1609
expire1612
expiring1612
period1613
defunctiona1616
Lethea1616
fail1623
dismissiona1631
set1635
passa1645
disanimation1646
suffering1651
abition1656
Passovera1662
latter (last) end1670
finis1682
exitus1706
perch1722
demission1735
demise1753
translation1760
transit1764
dropping1768
expiry1790
departal1823
finish1826
homegoing1866
the last (also final, great) round-up1879
snuffing1922
fade-out1924
thirty1929
appointment in Samarra1934
dirt nap1981
big chill1987
the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > [noun]
end832
bale-sithea1000
wrakea1275
wonderc1275
destroyingc1300
destruction1340
contritionc1384
stroying1396
undoing1398
tininga1400
ruinc1425
fatec1430
fordoingc1450
perishing?1523
shipwreck1526
pernicion?1530
ruining1562
ruinating1587
defeasance1590
defeature1592
breakneck1598
ruination1599
defeat1600
doom1609
planet-striking1611
mismaking1615
rasurea1616
destructa1638
perition1640
interemption1656
smashing1821
degrowth1876
uncreation1884
creative destruction1927
the world > action or operation > adversity > calamity or misfortune > [noun]
unhealc700
unselthc888
bale-sithea1000
unselea1023
un-i-selthOE
sithec1250
ruthc1275
unwhatec1275
tempestc1330
illa1340
infelicityc1384
banec1400
naufragiea1425
infortunitya1438
naufrage1480
calamity1490
inconvenience1509
wanweirda1522
inconveniency1553
wroth1581
murderation1862
a1000 Cædmon's Ex. (Gr.) 5 Æfter bealusíðe.
c1175 Lamb Hom. 185 Al imengd wiþ balewsið and wiþ bitternesse.
c1200 Soloman & Saturn 236 Þat he ne solde þe upbreidin of þine balesiþes.
c1220 St. Marher. 23 Lif þat a lesteð buten balesið.
c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1963) l. 327 & abat his bale-siðes.
c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1963) l. 285 Iwenden toward Brutun to his bale-siðe.
bale-stour n. [stour tumult, battle] Obsolete fatal struggle, death-throe.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > death > [noun] > death throes
throwingeOE
death throec1300
throec1300
stour1340
bale-stourc1400
gasping1440
agonya1500
(one's) last gasp1564
death flurry1831
c1400 (?c1380) Patience l. 426 Bed me bilyue my bale stour, & bryng me on ende.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1885; most recently modified version published online December 2021).

balen.2

Brit. /beɪl/, U.S. /beɪl/
Forms: Old English bæ̂l, Middle English– bale; (ScottishMiddle English baile, Middle English belle, 1500s baill, bele, 1700s beal, Middle English– bail).
Origin: A word inherited from Germanic.
Etymology: Common Germanic, though known only in Old English bǽl and Old Norse bál great fire, blazing pile, funeral pyre < Germanic bāl-o(m) , cognate with Sanskrit bhālas lustre, Greek ϕαλός shining, bright. In Middle English and modern English almost exclusively northern, and apparently < Old Norse bál rather than Old English bǽl , which would have given modern beal , beel . By later writers much mixed up with bale n.1: see 3. Compare also bale-fire n.
1. gen. A great consuming fire, a conflagration; a blazing pile, a bonfire. Obsolete.[An immense bonfire of faggots and boughs, formerly (until c1840) kindled annually in November on the village green of Denholm in Roxburghshire, was called the Bale or Bowa-bale.]
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > properties of materials > temperature > heat > burning > a fire > [noun] > a kind of fire > immense
baleOE
bale-firec1400
balowe-firec1430
Mongibel1632
inferno1894
OE Beowulf 2322 Befangen, bæle ond bronde.
c1420 Anturs of Arth. xv I brenne as a belle.
1487 (a1380) J. Barbour Bruce (St. John's Cambr.) xvii. 619 Thai flaggatis byrnand in a baill.
1557 Earl of Surrey et al. Songes & Sonettes (new ed.) f. 110v Such heat..As Priamus towne felt not more flame, when did the bale begin.
1568 Christis Kirk on Grene in W. T. Ritchie Bannatyne MS (1928) II. 267 And branewod brynt in bailis.
2. spec.
a. A funeral pile or pyre. (Long obsolete, but used by W. Morris.)
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > death > disposal of corpse > cremation > [noun] > pile or pyre
adeOE
fireeOE
baleOE
pile1531
stacka1547
funeral pile1555
roge1559
fire pile1577
pyre1638
funeral pyre1658
death pile1791
OE Beowulf 1109 Betst beadorinca wæs on bæl gearu.
c1394 P. Pl. Crede 667 To brenne the body In a bale of fiir.
1876 W. Morris Story of Sigurd iii. 305 Far out in the people's meadows they raise a bale on high..and thereon shall the mighty lie.
b. A signal- or beacon-fire. (Scottish) archaic.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > indication > signalling > visual signalling > luminous signals > [noun] > fire signal > beacon
beacon1377
lightc1425
firebome1440
bale1455
cresset-light1525
flambeau1688
coal-light1775
bale-fire1805
needfire1805
ward-fire1859
beaconage1862
fanal-
1455 Act 12 Jas. II (1597) §48 The quhilkis..sal make taikenings be bailes burning & fire. Ane Baile, is warning of their cumminge..twa bailes togidder at anis, they are cumming in deed.
a1522 G. Douglas tr. Virgil Æneid (1957) ii. v. 13 The takynnyng or the bail [1553 bele] of fyre.
1535 W. Stewart tr. H. Boethius Bk. Cron. Scotl. (1858) II. 151 Richt mony fyre and balis gart burne brycht; And mony blast gart blaw of buglis horne.
1805 W. Scott Lay of Last Minstrel iii. xxvii. 85 On Penchryst glows a bale of fire, And three are kindling on Priesthaughswire.
3. figurative. Sometimes confused with bale n.1
ΚΠ
?1569 W. Lauder Lament. in Godlie Tractate sig. Diiv My breist in baill, it dois combure.
1590 E. Spenser Faerie Queene i. ix. sig. H7 He stroue to cloke his inward bale, And hide the smoke, that did his fire display.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1885; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

balen.3

Brit. /beɪl/, U.S. /beɪl/
Forms: Middle English– bale (1500s balle, 1500s–1700s ball), 1600s bayl, 1600s–1700s bail.
Etymology: Middle English bale , perhaps < Old French bale, balle, = Provençal bala , Spanish bala , Italian balla , palla , medieval Latin bala , balla , ‘ball’ and ‘rounded package,’ generally taken to be an adoption of Old High German balla , palla , ball (ball n.1); though some refer it to Greek πάλλα ball. But the English may be immediately < Flemish bale (modern Dutch baal) ‘bale,’ itself adopted < French or other Romanic language. Bale and ball have from the first been distinct in English, though ball (for French balle) is occasional in this sense in 17–18th cent.
1. A large bundle or package of merchandise, originally of more or less rounded shape; now, spec. a package closely pressed, done up in canvas or other wrapping, and tightly corded or hooped with copper or iron, for transportation.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > arrangement or fact of being arranged > state of being gathered together > an assemblage or collection > [noun] > pack or parcel > bale
balec1380
ball1425
c1380 Sir Ferumbras (1879) l. 4201 Þay fulde sakkes, & trossede males, To Charyotes þay drowen þe grete bales.
a1400 Cov. Myst. 210 Of spicery ther growyth many an C. balys.
c1400 (?c1380) Patience l. 57 Busy ouer-borde bale to kest.
1540 Act 32 Hen. VIII xiiii A bale of saies of vi. fote high.
1695 W. Lowndes Rep. Amendm. Silver Coins 6 The Merchants..concealed the Parcels in Bails of Cloth.
a1753 P. Drake Memoirs (1755) II. iii. 59 Putting the Bails on board.
a1774 A. Tucker Light of Nature Pursued (1777) III. iii. 289 Known to put false marks upon their bales.
1850 Ld. Tennyson In Memoriam xiii. 21 As tho' they brought but merchants' bales . View more context for this quotation
2. (Used with more or less precision as a measure of quantity.)
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > measurement > the scientific measurement of volume > measure(s) of capacity > [noun] > dry measure > specific dry measure units > pack, bundle, or bunch as unit
pack1416
balec1503
hand1726
robin1766
society > trade and finance > merchandise > [noun] > goods carried or sold in specific unit
ball1425
balette1453
packware1570
bale-goods1694
allotment1703
ballot1729
bale1753
parcel1841
unit load1884
bagging1900
c1503 R. Arnold Chron. f. lxxviijv/1 A balle bokrom conteyneth lx pecis..a balle fustian conteyneth xlv half peces.
1740 W. Dunster Mem. Turkey in J. Hanway Hist. Acct. Brit. Trade Caspian Sea (1753) I. viii. 61 A reduction of their custom..to 30 dollars the bale of 20 pieces.
1753 Chambers's Cycl. Suppl. A bale or ballon of crown paper..consists of 14 reams.
1863 Parl. Deb. 3rd Ser. 171 1831 To grow 1,000 bales of cotton a year.
1880 W. Whiteley Diary & Alman. 82 Bale of coffee (Mocha) = 2 to 2½ cwt.
3. The set of dice for any special game, formerly usually three. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > games of chance > dice-playing > [noun] > die or dice > set of
bale1481
1481–90 Howard Househ. Bks. 327 Paid to Jeffery for a bale of dysse iiiijd.
1578 in J. Raine Wills & Inventories Archdeaconry Richmond (1853) 277 Iij ball of dyce, ixd.
1587 A. Fleming et al. Holinshed's Chron. (new ed.) III. 848/2 Diuerse bales of dice, and..certeine paires of cards.
1614 J. Cooke Greene's Tu Quoque in I. Reed Dodsley's Sel. Coll. Old Plays (1780) VII. 50 A pox upon these dice! give's a fresh bale.
1632 W. Rowley Woman never Vexed ii. i, in W. C. Hazlitt Dodsley's Sel. Coll. Old Eng. Plays (1875) XI. 121 Give's a bale of dice! [They play at ‘Passage’ and throw] Two treys and an ace, Two quatres and a trey.
1674 C. Cotton Compl. Gamester 13 They [sc. loaded dice] are sold in many places about the Town; price current..eight shillings, whereas an ordinary Bale is sold for sixpence.
1822 W. Scott Fortunes of Nigel II. xii. 282 The Captain, taking a bale of dice from the sleeve of his coat.
4. ? A bolus, a pill = ball n.1 10. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > healing > medicines or physic > medicines of specific form > pills, tablets, etc. > [noun] > pill > large pill
balla1400
bale1576
bole1601
bolus1603
1576 G. Baker tr. C. Gesner Newe Jewell of Health iii. f. 183v I gaue..to a Melancholy person..fiue graynes..in a bale or dose.

Compounds

C1. General attributive.
bale-sack n.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > equipment > receptacle or container > bag > [noun] > sack > for other specific contents
sand-poke1415
hopsack1481
coal sack1574
hop-bag1604
sugar-bag1764
nutsack1842
bale-sack1883
sugar sack1891
1883 Cent. Mag. Oct. 817/2 This man flung them into an enormous bale-sack, swinging wide-mouthed from a derrick.
C2.
bale-band n. (see quot.).
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > equipment of vessel > masts, rigging, or sails > spar > [noun] > mast > fittings on mast for affixing rigging
funnel1694
throat bolt1805
futtock-staff1841
necklace1860
truss-hoop1867
tumbler1867
futtock-hoop1874
bale-band1891
truss-band1909
1891 H. Patterson Illustr. Naut. Dict. Bale-band, a big shackle-shaped iron at the mast-head, supported by the cap-band, and to which the standing part of the flying jib-stay is bent on.
bale-cloth n. U.S. cloth used for covering bales.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > textile fabric or an article of textile fabric > textile fabric > textile fabric for specific purpose > [noun] > for wrapping or covering
gabarage1697
bale-cloth1797
tilloting cloth1884
1797 B. Hawkins Let. in Georgia Hist. Soc. Coll. (1916) IX. 346 8 yds. bale cloth to Harry Dergin, at 12½c., $1.00.
1865 Trans. Illinois State Agric. Soc. 1861–4 5 159 We have pressed the sirup from the sugar through fine bale-cloth.
bale-goods n. merchandise in bales: as opposed to case-goods.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > merchandise > [noun] > goods carried or sold in specific unit
ball1425
balette1453
packware1570
bale-goods1694
allotment1703
ballot1729
bale1753
parcel1841
unit load1884
bagging1900
1694 London Gaz. No. 3032/3 Bound with Glass and Bale Goods..for Bourdeaux.
1790 R. Beatson Naval & Mil. Mem. I. 217 Her cargo consisted of cordage and bale goods.
1800 Asiatic Ann. Reg. III. 41/2 One of the above ships had on board a very valuable cargo of bale goods.
1894 W. C. Russell in Idler Sept. 135 The original freight of the ship had been bale goods.
bale-rope n. U.S. rope used for securing bales.
ΚΠ
1824 Deb. Congr. (1856) 16 Feb. 1542 But in selling cotton, the bagging and balerope are all weighed and sold as cotton.
1837 Mass. Statutes 12 Apr. A corporation, by the name of the Goulding Patent Bale Rope Manufacturing Company, for the purpose of manufacturing bale rope.
bale-sling n. (see quot. 1891).
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > equipment > building and constructing equipment > fastenings > [noun] > strap > types of
billet1481
tab1607
bale-sling1883
1883 Man. Seamanship for Boys' Training Ships Royal Navy 93 There are several methods of slinging a cask, either with a pair of butt slings, bale slings, or a bowline knot.
1891 H. Patterson Illustr. Naut. Dict. Bale-sling, a simple strap passed round a bale or bag, the two ends meeting on top, one dipping under the other.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1885; most recently modified version published online December 2021).

baleadj.

Forms: Old English balu, bealu, definite balewe, bealwe, Middle English bali, Middle English balu, beali, bæl, Middle English bale.
Origin: A word inherited from Germanic.
Etymology: Common Germanic; = Gothic balws (in compounds, as balwa-wesei wickedness, balwjan to plague, torment, balweins torment) < Germanic *balw-oz.
Obsolete.
1. Actively evil, deadly, dire, pernicious, destructive, fatal, cruel, tormenting.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > goodness and badness > badness or evil > [adjective]
woughc888
litherc893
frakeda900
sinnyc950
unrighteouseOE
baleOE
manOE
unfeleOE
ungoodc1000
unwrasta1122
illc1175
nithec1175
wickc1175
hinderfulc1200
quedec1275
wickedc1275
wondlichc1275
unkindc1325
badc1330
divers1340
wrakefula1350
felonousc1374
flagitiousc1384
lewdc1386
noughta1387
ungoodly1390
unquertc1390
diverse1393
felona1400
imperfectc1400
unfairc1400
unfinec1400
unblesseda1425
meschant?c1450
naughtyc1460
feculent1471
sinister1474
noughty?1490
ill-deedya1500
pernicious?1533
scelerous1534
naught1536
goodlyc1560
nefarious1567
iron1574
felly1583
paganish1587
improbate1596
malefactious1607
villain1607
infand1608
scelestious1609
illful1613
scelestic1628
inimicitious1641
infandous1645
iniquous1655
improbous1657
malefactory1667
perta1704
iniquitous1726
unracy1782
unredeemed1799
demoralized1800
fetid1805
scarlet1820
gammy1832
nefast1849
disvaluable1942
badass1955
bad-assed1962
the world > action or operation > harm or detriment > [adjective] > harmful or injurious > harmful or pernicious
baleOE
balefulc1175
venomousc1290
contagiousc1440
pestiferous1458
pestilent?a1475
perniciousc1475
pestilential1531
pestilentious1533
plaguey1574
deleterious1630
unedifying1641
perniciable1656
inedifying1659
unimproving1747
insalutary1836
unsalvatory1850
OE Beowulf 977 Nearwe befongen, balwon bendum.
OE Christ & Satan 482 Ic on neorxnawonge niwe asette treow mid telgum, þæt ða tanas up æpla bæron, and git æton þa beorhtan blæda, swa inc se balewa het, handþegen helle.
c1175 Cott. Hom. 281 Þa buffetes and ta bali duntes þat tu þoledest.
c1220 St. Marher. 13 Tu..me wið bale bondes bitterliche bindest.
c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1963) l. 2964 To-brokene mid þeon balu [c1300 Otho mochele] fehte.
c1400 (?c1380) Cleanness (1920) l. 1243 So biten with þe bale hunger.
c1540 (?a1400) Destr. Troy iv. 1388 Bannet worthe the bale tyme þat ho borne was.
2. subjectively, Sorrowing, mournful, woeful.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > suffering > sorrow or grief > [adjective]
sorelyc888
gramec893
sorrowfuleOE
unblithec897
sorryeOE
carefulOE
charyOE
sickOE
yomerOE
sorry-moodOE
sweerc1000
yomerlyOE
sorrilyOE
woea1200
balec1220
sorry?c1225
sorec1275
sorec1275
gremefula1300
sada1300
ruthlyc1300
thoughtfulc1300
woebegonea1325
heavyc1330
grievousc1374
woefula1375
sorrowya1382
dereful?a1400
sorousa1400
sytefula1400
teenfula1400
wrotha1400
balefulc1400
tristy?c1400
tristc1420
dolefulc1430
wapped in woec1440
yhevidc1440
dolenta1450
condolentc1460
discomforted1477
tristfula1492
sorrow1496
dram?a1513
dolorous1513
earnful?1527
troublous1535
amort1546
mournfula1558
passioned1560
sadded1566
tristive1578
distressed1586
passionate1586
sorrowed1596
distressful1601
passionful1605
sighful1606
contristed1625
anguishinga1642
sadful1658
saddened1665
tristitious1694
sick as a parrot1705
pangful1727
woesome1778
grieving1807
ruesome1833
yearned1838
doleant1861
mournsome1869
thoughted1869
tragical1887
grief-stricken1905
the mind > emotion > suffering > sorrow or grief > lamentation or expression of grief > [adjective]
carefulOE
charyOE
mourningOE
sorrowingOE
sorryOE
balec1220
heavy?c1225
ruefulc1225
ruthfulc1225
sorrowful?c1225
dolefulc1275
plaintivea1393
complainingc1430
lamentable?a1475
plaining?c1475
dolent1490
lamentatious1532
troublous1535
plaintfula1542
dirge-like1561
yearnfula1566
waymenting1573
mestive1575
lamentatory1576
mestful1577
wailful1579
lamentinga1586
weepy1602
deplorative1610
deploringa1616
gement1656
condolent1691
dirgeful1793
dirgy1830
lamentful1876
c1220 Legend St. Katherine 2367 Nalde ȝe nawt bringe me forð toward blisse wið se bale bere.
c1540 (?a1400) Destr. Troy vi. 2681 Ho brast out with a birre from hir bale hert.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1885; most recently modified version published online March 2021).

balev.1

Etymology: < Old French baler (since 16th cent. baller ) to dance (= Provençal balar , Italian ballare , Spanish bailar , Portuguese bailar ) < late Latin (Isidore) ballāre to dance. Some think the Latin formed < Greek βαλλίζειν to dance, some < balla ball n.1, on the alleged ground that, in the Middle Ages, tennis was accompanied with dancing and song.
Obsolete. rare.
To dance.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > dancing > [verb (intransitive)]
frikec1000
sail1297
dancec1300
sault1377
tripc1386
balea1400
hopc1405
foota1425
tracec1425
sallyc1440
to dance a fita1500
fling1528
to tread a measure, a dance1577
trip1578
traverse1584
move1594
to shake heels1595
to shake it1595
firk1596
tripudiate1623
pettitoe1651
step1698
jink1718
to stand up1753
bejig1821
to toe and heel (it)1828
morris1861
hoof1925
terp1945
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 13138, l. 13139 His broþer doghter..Com þaim be-for al for to bale, Baled wel and tumbel wit-al.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1885; most recently modified version published online June 2021).

balev.2

Brit. /beɪl/, U.S. /beɪl/
Etymology: < bale n.3
To make up into a bale or bales.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > arrangement or fact of being arranged > state of being gathered together > gather together [verb (transitive)] > make into a pack or parcel
hamperc1400
packc1400
to pack up1530
mail1570
emball1588
fardel1594
packet1621
farla1640
to make up1709
embale1727
bale1762
parcel1775
empacket1825
make1849
package1917
society > occupation and work > industry > manufacturing processes > perform general or industrial manufacturing processes [verb (transitive)] > pack > specific methods
sackc1405
bale1762
unitize1945
vacuum-pack1951
cargo1959
blister-pack1971
1762 O. Goldsmith Citizen of World I. 15 These goods are baled up, and consigned to a factor abroad.
1879 T. H. S. Escott England I. 224 The cotton itself has been..baled, and sent down to the seaport.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1885; most recently modified version published online December 2021).

balev.3

Brit. /beɪl/, U.S. /beɪl/
Etymology: Variant spelling of bail v.4
To lade or throw water out of a boat or ship with buckets (formerly called bails) or other vessels. Const. to bale the water out, bale the boat (out). to bale up: to scoop up. See bail v.4
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > travel by water > other nautical operations > [verb (transitive)] > bail
scoopc1330
lade1340
empt1555
free1612
bail1614
bale1692
the world > space > relative position > arrangement or fact of being arranged > state of being gathered together > gather together [verb (transitive)] > (as) with a shovel or scoop
skim1665
shovel1685
bale1692
scoop1850
1627 J. Smith Sea Gram. vi. 27 To baile or cast out the water.]
1692 Smith's Sea-mans Gram. (new ed.) i. xvi. 75 To bale, to lade Water out of the Ships Hold with Buckets, or the like.
1748 B. Robins & R. Walter Voy. round World by Anson iii. v. 342 In baling out the water.
1842 F. Marryat Percival Keene I. xvi. 231 Let's bale the boat out first.
1884 Graphic 23 Aug. 190/2 Herrings..in such surprising quantities that they can be baled up with a basket.

Draft additions March 2009

transitive. With out.
a. figurative. To dole out; to use up, deplete; to clear out or empty (of something). Now rare.
ΚΠ
1844 J. C. O'Callaghan Green Bk. ii. vi. 119 What dray-loads of English, Anglo-Scotch and Anglo-Irish stuff of this kind have been baled out upon the world.
a1869 J. Conington tr. Persius Satires (1872) v. 95 There is always a fresh to-morrow baling out these years of ours.
1888 19th Cent. June 889 The embarrassing surplus baled out by expenditure which almost casts into the shade the prodigalities of monarchial finance.
1888 R. Overton in P. Garrett Speaker's Garland VII. No. 26. 14 The burst of eloquence..had flowed from me... I was baled out of words.
1906 Wall St. Jrnl. 6 July 1/2 An irregular sag ultimately carrying the price to about the old low point. It [sc. the stock market] seems to need this to bale out the weak holders who were helped over the panic.
1915 N.Y. Times 29 June 12/4 It was said that the foreign markets were all ‘baled out’, meaning that they had no more ‘Americans’ to sell.
b. = to bail out at bail v.1 Additions.Perhaps a folk-etymological respelling of to bail out at bail v.1 Additions (see discussion at that entry); however, it is possible that quot. 1906 at Additions a shows an earlier example of this sense, in which case it antedates all examples of to bail out in this sense. It is possible that two originally distinct idioms have merged.
ΚΠ
1929 Wall St. Jrnl. 23 Nov. 31/4 The expansion of the Federal Reserve's portfolio since August served to ‘bale out’ the local banks to a large extent.
1938 N.Y. Times 17 July e8/5 The Federal Government baled out banks and insurance companies, taking over their frozen mortgages through the Home Owners Loan Corporation.
1963 A. J. Zito Unaccustomed as I Am 39 If you suddenly forget your next idea, here's a simple trick to bale yourself out.
1975 Economist (Nexis) 9 Aug. 48 It should not bale out ship operators, such as Terukini Kaiun.., whose difficulties came to the surface last week.
2002 Observer 27 Oct. (Sport section) 8/4 The [football] club owners' reaction..was airily to put their hands out to the government to bale them out.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1885; most recently modified version published online December 2021).
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n.1a1000n.2OEn.3c1380adj.OEv.1a1400v.21762v.31692
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