单词 | miser |
释义 | † misern.2 Obsolete. A kind of sop made with breadcrumbs, etc. Cf. mise n.2 ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > dishes and prepared food > bread > bread dish > [noun] > sops > a sop sopa1000 wine-sop14.. milksopa1475 water-sopa1500 honeysop?a1513 sippet1530 sipping1535 sup1543 miser1594 sop in the pana1625 joy-sop1648 soppet1664 1594 T. Nashe Vnfortunate Traveller (new ed.) sig. K They may crumble it [sc. bread] into water well inough, and make mizers [(ed. 1) misons] with it. 1670 H. Wolley Queen-like Closet ii. 235 To make Misers for Children to eat in Afternoons in Summer. Take half a Pint of good small Beer, two spoonfuls of Sack, the Crum of half a penny Manchet [etc.]. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2002; most recently modified version published online December 2020). † misern.3 Engineering. Obsolete. A boring tool used in sinking wells, consisting of a hollow iron cylinder having an opening in the side with a cutting lip, into which earth is collected. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > piercing or boring tools > [noun] > boring tool > for boring in the ground auger1532 borer1572 boring-rod?1677 wimble1693 well borer1780 rock drill1836 miser1842 bore-rod1849 header1863 well drill1866 rig1875 well rig1875 trepan1877 broaching-bit1881 heading machine1897 1842 Civil Engineer & Architect's Jrnl. 5 168/2 The ‘miser’ can bring up a cubic yard of earth each time it is raised. 1843 Minutes Proc. Inst. Civil Engineers (1844) 2 59 The advantages of a large diameter were manifest to all practical men, particularly when the auger or ‘miser’ was used. 1875 E. Spon Sinking & Boring Wells 56 The valve in the old form of mizer is subject to various accidents which interfere with the action of the tool. 1875 E. Spon Sinking & Boring Wells 57 The conical bottom of the mizer has a triangular-shaped opening. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2002; most recently modified version published online December 2020). miseradj.n.1α. late Middle English misser, 1500s myser, 1500s myzer, 1500s–1600s mizer, 1500s– miser, 1600s mysser; Scottish pre-1700 1700s– miser, 1800s– meiser, 1900s– meeser, 1900s– meezer, 1900s– mieser. β. 1500s–1600s misard, 1800s– miserd (English regional (chiefly northern), Scottish, and Irish English (northern)), 1800s– misert (Scottish and Irish English (northern)), 1800s– mysart (English regional (northern)), 1800s– myserd (English regional (northern)), 1800s– myzert (English regional (northern)). A. adj. 1. Of a person: miserly, parsimonious. Also in extended use. Now Scottish and poetic. ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > retaining > niggardliness or meanness > [adjective] > miserly gnedy?c1225 miserable1484 misera1500 muckeringa1525 pinchpence1540 snudging1553 pinchpenny1582 miserly1593 mising1595 scraping1597 chuff-penny1603 wretched1652 nabalitic1653 skinflint1737 nippit1808 Scrooge-like1976 α. β. 1825 J. Jamieson Etymol. Dict. Sc. Lang. Suppl. Miserly, Misert, extremely parsimonious.1912 D. McKie Fables frae French 68 A lesson to a' misert fowk, to tell That Avarice may aft owrereak itsel.a1500 in Archiv f. das Studium der Neueren Sprachen (1913) 131 56 (MED) Of his plentevous bloode he was not misser, For he sufferd his manhod to be slayne. 1602 N. Breton Mothers Blessing sig. E3v Where thou shalt see the mizer-minded-dogge, Frie in the furnace of his molten gold. 1605 J. Sylvester tr. G. de S. Du Bartas Deuine Weekes & Wks. ii. i. 353 Treasures, scrapt by th' Vsurie and Care Of miser-Parents [Fr. des ayeuls vsuriers]. 1612 W. Parkes Curtaine-drawer 22 A miser father finds a thriftlesse sonne. 1729 R. Savage Wanderer iii. 155 The miser-spirit eyes the spendthrift heir. 1790 R. Burns in J. Johnson Scots Musical Museum III. 288 Still o'er these scenes my mem'ry wakes And fondly broods with miser-care. 1810 J. Montgomery W. Indies (ed. 3) 18 Dark through his thoughts the miser purpose roll'd To turn its hidden treasures into gold. 1855 R. C. Singleton tr. Virgil Aeneid iii, in tr. Virgil Wks. I. 311 Ah! fly fell regions, fly a miser shore [L. fuge litus avarum]. 1928 T. Olson Stranger & Afraid 19 So much he wrested from this miser land: A meadow plot, a square of furrowed loam. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > adversity > [adjective] > miserable or wretched un-i-selieOE drearyOE unseelyOE wretcha1122 usellc1175 unselea1200 wretcheda1200 misease?c1225 un-i-sele?c1250 wanlichec1275 miseasyc1300 wrackfulc1311 unblessed1340 wretchfula1382 wretchedful1382 caitiff1393 loddera1400 unhappena1400 pilledc1400 miserable?c1422 vengeablec1430 unhappyc1440 meschant?1473 miserousc1475 unselc1480 miser1542 forlorn1582 villainous1582 skybala1585 unblestful1608 despicable1635 haveless1868 the mind > goodness and badness > inferiority or baseness > wretchedness > [adjective] unledeeOE sorryOE evila1131 usellc1175 wanlichec1275 bad1276 sorry1372 meana1375 caitiff1393 loddera1400 woefula1400 foulc1400 wretched1450 meschant?1473 unselc1480 peevisha1522 miser1542 scurvy?1577 forlorn1582 villainous1582 measled1596 lamented1611 thrallfula1618 despicable1635 deplorable1642 so-and-so1656 poorish1657 squalida1660 lamentable1676 mesquina1706 shan1714 execrable1738 quisby1807 hole in the wall1822 measly1847 bum1878 shag-bag1888 snidey1890 pathetic1900 the mind > emotion > suffering > misery > [adjective] armlyeOE un-i-selieOE unledeeOE unseelyOE armOE wretcha1122 unselea1200 wretcheda1200 wretchlyc1200 misease?c1225 wanlichec1275 miseasyc1300 wansomea1325 simplec1330 wretchfula1382 wretchedful1382 caitiff1393 loddera1400 desolate14.. disconsolatea1425 meschant?1473 miserousc1475 miser1542 unvisited1548 tribulate1575 happiless1582 uncomforted1583 blisslessa1586 uncomfortless1598 miserablea1616 thrallfula1618 calamitous1668 tribulated1682 donsie?1719 unsolaced1796 mis1939 the world > action or operation > adversity > [adjective] > miserable or wretched > full of or attended with misery wretch1131 wretchlyc1200 woefula1393 miserousc1475 miserable?a1513 miser1542 woe1572 thrallfula1618 1542 N. Udall tr. Erasmus Apophthegmes i. f. 108v (margin) Manne of all creatures moste miser. 1558 T. Phaer tr. Virgil Seuen First Bks. Eneidos ii. sig. E.ivv Again to wepons fourth I flewe, and death moste myser call [L. mortemque miserrimus opto]. 1567 G. Turberville Epitaphes, Epigrams f. 8 Thus must I Miser liue till shee..Doe pittie mee. a1586 Sir P. Sidney Arcadia (1590) ii. xix. sig. Bb4v She assured her selfe I was such a one as would make euen his miser-minde contented, with what he had done. 1612 W. Fennor Cornu-copiæ 54 And looking forth did see that miser wight, which (like a drowned mouse) stood dropping there. B. n.1 ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > adversity > [noun] > tribulation, trouble, or affliction > wretched person wretchc1000 caitiffc1325 crachouna1400 wretcheda1425 miserable1484 miser1542 afflicted1545 seggon1570 elf1573 devil1593 wreck1795 the mind > emotion > suffering > misery > [noun] > miserable person armOE ermingOE wretchc1000 caitiffc1325 crachouna1400 miserable1484 miser1542 elf1573 angishore1835 1542 N. Udall tr. Erasmus Apophthegmes i. f. 108v So did the philosophier call hym a miser, that had no qualitee aboue the commen rate of manne. 1548 Hall's Vnion: Henry VIII f. ccxlijv Thomas lorde Cromewel..paciently suffered the stroke of the axe, by a ragged and Boocherly miser, whiche very vngoodly perfourmed the Office. 1584 R. Scot Discouerie Witchcraft viii. ii. 160 If these cold prophets..tell thee prosperitie, and deceiue thee, thou art made a miser through vaine expectation. 1608 E. Topsell Hist. Serpents 99 Beeing..destitute of..comfort [printed comforr], like a silly Miser,..hee trudged home to his owne lodging. a1616 W. Shakespeare Henry VI, Pt. 1 (1623) v. vi. 7 Decrepit Miser, base ignoble Wretch. View more context for this quotation 1820 W. Scott Monastery II. x. 296 And who..is the old miser who stands beside him? 1828 W. Scott Fair Maid of Perth iii, in Chron. Canongate 2nd Ser. II. 101 See thou keep thy scoffs, to pass upon misers in the hospital. 2. a. A person who hoards wealth and lives miserably in order to do so; (in wider use) an avaricious, grasping, or stingy and parsimonious person. ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > retaining > niggardliness or meanness > [noun] > niggard or mean person > of the worst kind Jew1508 hood-pick?a1513 miser?1577 share-penny1606 flay-flint1672 skinflint1699 flint1841 skin1900 tight-ass1969 the mind > possession > retaining > niggardliness or meanness > [noun] > niggard or mean person > miser or hoarder of wealth chinch?a1300 wretch1303 chincher1333 muckererc1390 mokerarda1400 muglard1440 gatherer?a1513 hoarder?a1513 warner1513 hardhead1519 snudge1545 cob1548 snidge1548 muckmonger1566 mucker1567 miser?1577 scrape-penny1584 money-miser1586 gromwell-gainer1588 muckscrape1589 muckworm1598 scrib1600 muckraker1601 morkin-gnoff1602 scrape-scall1602 incubo1607 accumulator1611 gripe-money1611 scrape-good1611 silver-hider1611 gripe1621 scrapeling1629 clutch1630 scrape-pelfa1640 volpone1672 spare-penny1707 save-all1729 bagger1740 spare-thrift1803 money-codger1818 hunger-rot1828 muckrake1850 muckthrift1852 gripe-penny1860 hugger-mugger1862 Scrooge1940 α. β. 1588 R. Greene Perimedes sig. F This Melissa flourishing thus in happy fame, the old misard her Father..sought out..a yoong Gentleman.1623 H. Cockeram Eng. Dict. i Cimbicke. A misard, or niggard.1879 G. F. Jackson Shropshire Word-bk. Miserd, a miser, an avaricious man.1900 Cent. Mag. Feb. 705 Billy held on to the goal like a miserd to his bag.?1577 Misogonus in R. W. Bond Early Plays from Ital. (1911) 198 The misers wealth, doth hurt his health. a1616 W. Shakespeare Henry V (1623) ii. iv. 47 Defence..Which of a weake and niggardly proiection, Doth like a Miser spoyle his Coat, with scanting A little Cloth. View more context for this quotation 1637 J. Milton Comus 14 The unsun'd heaps Of misers treasure. 1691 J. Norris Pract. Disc. Divine Subj. 265 To see an old shaking Miser among his Bags, like a Scare-Crow in a Field of Corn. 1764 O. Goldsmith Traveller 4 As some lone miser visiting his store, Bends at his treasure, counts, recounts it o'er. 1819 Ld. Byron Don Juan: Canto I cxxiv. 65 Sweet to the miser are his glittering heaps. 1867 Macmillan's Mag. Sept. 381/2 A miser has to pay a high fee to the surgeon that saves his eyesight. 1930 W. C. Sellar & R. J. Yeatman 1066 & All That xxix. 49 Henry VII was a miser and very good at statecraft; he invented some extremely clever policies such as the one called Morton's Fork. 1990 D. Shekerjian Uncommon Genius i. p. xii To some a hero with a brilliant flair for making money, to others a contentious, coarse-grained miser, graceless in all aspects. b. A person who is miserly or parsimonious in the use of some specified type of thing. Formerly with †of. ΚΠ 1630 J. Taylor Wks. i. 130 Wine and Ale was so scarce, and the people there such Mizers of it, that [etc.]. 1819 J. Keats Let. (1947) 14 Feb.–3 May 342 Misers of sound and syllable. 1939 N.Y. Herald Tribune 22 Mar. 24/6 That old Spanish proverb: ‘A spendthrift with the oil, a miser with the vinegar, a wise man with the salt, and a mad man to mix it.’ 1992 S. Bellow Let. 22 July (2010) 495 If I'm ever blocked, it's in conversation. Which is why the revolutionary painter father-in-law called me an oral miser. 3. [Perhaps influenced by economizer n. 2.] Without negative connotation: a vehicle, machine, or other object which makes economical use of a thing specified, esp. fuel. Usually with defining word. ΚΠ 1937 Life 10 May 78/2 (advt.) Year after year, Frigidaire's miracle Meter-Miser holds current cost down. 1976 Eastern Daily Press (Norwich) 16 Dec. 6/2 (advt.) £195. Escort, 1968, miser on petrol. Taxed, year's M.O.T. 1987 Telegraph (Brisbane) 2 Jan. 37/1 (heading) Luxury ‘petrol miser’. 1994 Discover Apr. 17 (advt.) It's a small and inexpensive power miser that tirelessly sequences, decodes and displays paging information. 2002 Care-free Plants (Reader's Digest Assoc.) i. i. 17/1 A number of care-free plants..have the added talent of being drought tolerant... These natural water misers all share a few traits. CompoundsWith miser's.ΚΠ 1627 J. Taylor Armado sig. B4v The Drunken Sisse... Her Ordinance are Gallons, Pottles, Quarts, Pintes, and the mizers Gallon. 1859 J. O. Halliwell & T. Wright Nares's Gloss. (new ed.) II. 572 Miser's gallon, a very small measure.] ΚΠ 1877 Cassell's Dict. Cookery Miser's Sauce. Mince some young onions, a little parsley,..and grate a dessert-spoonful of horse-radish. Mix these ingredients with an equal quantity of oil and vinegar. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2002; most recently modified version published online March 2022). miserv.1 transitive. To hoard or save in a miserly fashion. Frequently with up. ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > retaining > niggardliness or meanness > be niggardly of [verb (transitive)] > hoard up as miser mucka1413 muckera1425 miser1715 rathole1948 1715 J. Ozell tr. A. de la Fosse d'Aubigny Manlius Capitolinus iii. i. 24 Is then my Lord so fond of Grief and Woe As to ingross it all? so selfish grown To Miser up his Cares thus close from me? 1865 F. J. Furnivall in Generides p. xxiv A Chaucer relic, a Percy ballad;—the curse of all true men on him who misers these up in his own strong box, not for love of the writers, but for gratification of vanity and self. 1888 G. MacDonald Elect Lady xvi. 144 Before people had money, they must have misered other things! Some girls miser their clothes, and never go decent. 1908 Collier's 7 Mar. 15/1 She did not hide between her mattresses any of the useless trifles which the others misered up in a senile acquisitiveness that went even to the rubbish heap for tins. 2003 S. Kenyon Night Embrace iii. 57 If her kindness killed her, then she was better off dead than living a cold, unfeeling life where she misered up all her feelings and possessions. Derivatives ˈmisered adj. (also misered-up) that is hoarded or saved in a miserly manner. ΚΠ 1883 H. Fauntleroy Who's to Blame? xxx. 221 She knew nothing of the shriveling curse of misered money, but nobly expanded under the blessing of its generous use. 1896 Washington Post 22 May 6/6 Earth no pleasures now affords; naught to me are misered hoards. 1913 Occident (University of Calif.) Apr. 16 As for the story, it was bulging with all the misered-up passion and feeling that had been accumulating in the pericardiac region of Dicky for twenty odd years. 1969 T. T. Bouldin Coll. Poems Anon. Young Poet 12 Their Stored up—their misered up—contentment Would scatter like waterbugs from a rock. 1989 B. M. Krahn Passion's Ransom v. 83 You'd better pray your old father thinks enough of your troublesome hide to spend some of his misered hoard. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2002; most recently modified version published online March 2022). † miserv.2 Engineering. Obsolete. transitive. To bring up (earth) by means of a miser; to collect up (earth) into a miser. Also intransitive, and with out. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > working with tools or equipment > work with tools or equipment [verb (transitive)] > other tools or equipment rolla1325 coina1483 wedge1530 maul1664 burnish1793 roller1828 shear1837 miser1847 trough1881 tank1905 trepan1909 lance1945 plough1961 1847 C. Holtzapffel Turning & Mech. Manip. II. xxv. 552 In boring large holes, the earth is generally excavated by the process of ‘misering up’. 1855 J. Ogilvie Suppl. Imperial Dict. Miser, an iron cylinder..in which the earthy matters are collected, or misered-up, in the process of sinking. 1882 Minutes Proc. Inst. Civil Engineers 70 288 This was the first pile got down without misering out the core. 1892 Trans. Liverpool Engin. Soc. 13 51 At Croydon a well 7 feet 6 inches in diameter was bored and misered at one operation; and a well at Hornsey has been misered 11 feet in diameter. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2002; most recently modified version published online September 2018). < n.21594n.31842adj.n.1a1500v.11715v.21847 |
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