单词 | missed |
释义 | missedadj. 1. That has been missed; that has failed. Also: lost, absent. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > insufficiency > [adjective] > deficient or wanting wanec825 thurfec1175 lacking1480 indigent1531 defect1543 awanting1583 missed1584 wanting1592 defective1603 wanted1619 half-baked1627 deficient1632 manqué1773 the world > action or operation > inaction > not doing > [adjective] > not done, performed, or carried out > of an appointment or event missed1584 the mind > emotion > suffering > sorrow or grief > sorrow caused by loss > [adjective] > loss perceived with regret missed1584 the world > action or operation > harm or detriment > disadvantage > uselessness > misuse > [adjective] > not used advantageously lost1535 missed1584 the mind > possession > loss > [adjective] > lost tinta1340 forlostc1374 withlosena1400 unrecovered1433 lost1526 forlorn1577 imbecilea1677 missed1763 society > travel > rail travel > [adjective] > not caught (of train) missed1898 1584 W. Warner Pan his Syrinx sig. Nv Not knowing the same [Forrest] to be the Receptacle of Deipyrus, much lesse of his missed wife and children. 1599 H. Porter Pleasant Hist. Two Angrie Women of Abington sig. K3 To light my mist way feete to my right way. 1615 G. Wither Shepherds Hunting Ecl. iii Thy mist pleasure. 1657 in T. Burton Diary (1828) 195 It was a little missed sense, that might be mended. 1763 ‘T. Insulanus’ Treat. Second Sight 189 His account of a missed hatchet found by a dream. 1862 N.Y. Sunday Mercury 13 July 6/2 Creighton..made his base by a missed fly-catch of Sawyer's. 1898 Westm. Gaz. 6 Sept. 2/3 This missed train. 1904 Lancet 18 June 1724/1 The various explanations of ‘return’ cases were considered, including..the possibility of a relapse of the original disease, of latent microbism, or of missed cases. 1960 C. Day Lewis Buried Day ii. 36 I knew I was back where a missed connection does not mean the end of the world. 1993 Newsline Royal Bank of Scotl. Apr. 19 Stranraer..were in danger of losing..the match at the last end but a missed stone from the opposing skip handed them victory. 1994 N. DeMille Spencerville viii. 74 What happened afterward was a series of missed opportunities. ΚΠ 1780 A. Young Tour Ireland (Dublin ed.) I. 259 Those who buy the mist heifers are farmers in Monaghan. Compounds missed abortion n. Medicine spontaneous abortion in which the dead embryo or fetus is retained in the uterus for a period of time; an instance of this; the uterine contents in such a case. ΚΠ 1873 Trans. Obstetr. Soc. London 14 223 These are cases of missed abortion, missed miscarriage, missed labour. 1936 W. Shaw Textbk. Gynæcol. xii. 262 In missed abortion the signs of pregnancy disappear. 1972 W. Barr Clin. Gynaecol. xi. 148 There is a risk that, if a missed abortion is left in situ for over four weeks, difibrination of the blood can occur. 1985 M. F. Myles Textbk. Midwives (ed. 10) x. 166 Blood coagulation disorders may develop in cases of missed abortion. 2000 Steroids 65 807 It [sc. mifepristone] is also effective in the treatment of missed abortion. missed approach n. Aeronautics an approach (approach n. 13) that is discontinued for any reason; frequently (with hyphen) attributive. ΘΚΠ society > travel > air or space travel > action of flying (in) aircraft > specific flying operations or procedures > [noun] > sudden rapid descent > descent prior to landing > landing approach > types of blind approach1936 power approach1938 missed approach1951 instrument approach1957 1951 Gloss. Aeronaut. Terms (B.S.I.) iii. 20 Missed-approach altitude, the minimum height at which a final approach should be discontinued if it cannot be completed. 1951 Gloss. Aeronaut. Terms (B.S.I.) iii. 21 Missed-approach procedure, procedure to be followed when an aircraft cannot complete final approach. 1971 Flying Apr. 42/3 Sometimes, the missed-approach procedure directs you to an NDB. 1973 Black Panther 13 Oct. 14/2 The Aero Commander pilot requested of Midway Tower a ‘missed approach’ (that he be allowed to go round again and make a second landing attempt). 1986 Aircraft Illustr. July 359/1 . missed labour n. Medicine brief uterine contractions, occurring at the normal time of labour, that do not result in the expulsion of the (usually dead) fetus; (also) failure of labour to occur at the normal time. ΚΠ 1847 H. Oldham in Guy's Hosp. Rep. 2nd Ser. 5 109 A female carries a child in the womb to the full period of gestation; but the process of labour is literally missed, and lactation follows on completion of gestation. 1847 H. Oldham in Guy's Hosp. Rep. 2nd Ser. 5 109 Cases resembling this, in its principal feature of labour being missed, have been recorded.] 1864 Med. Times & Gaz. 22 Oct. 449/2 Dr. Greenhalgh did not consider that Dr. Williams' cases could be placed under the head of missed labour... Dr. Oldham said that he had used the term as the most appropriate he could find. It was a case in which the time of natural labour passed by without any pains, and the child was not expelled. 1878 Med. Times & Gaz. 28 Dec. 730/1 This is a case in which you have..slight protraction of pregnancy, and then the condition of missed labour. 1971 E. S. Taylor Beck's Obstetr. Pract. (ed. 9) xxix. 436/1 Missed labor, unlike missed abortion, is extremely rare. Pregnancy continues to term in the normal manner, but near the expected date of confinement labor starts and then ceases after a time. 1980 Internat. Jrnl. Fertility 25 88 Midtrimester abortions and a number of cases with missed labor were induced by intrauterine instillation. missed miscarriage n. Medicine a type of early pregnancy loss in which the dead embryo or fetus is retained in the womb for a period of time, during which the usual symptoms of miscarriage may not occur; an instance of this. ΚΠ 1872 Lancet 29 June 895/1 Firm compression as is seen in a case of missed miscarriage or missed labour. 1956 Brit. Med. Jrnl. 14 Jan. 69/2 Oxytocin is safe for induction..with missed miscarriage. 2009 Daily Tel. 23 Mar. 26/4 My husband..and I had to wait five days for another scan to confirm a ‘missed miscarriage’—that is, one in which the embryo is dead but the process of miscarriage hasn't started. ΘΚΠ society > travel > aspects of travel > travel in specific course or direction > [adjective] > having missed the way missed way1599 1599Mist way [see sense 1]. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2002; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < adj.1584 |
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