单词 | mort |
释义 | mortn.1ΘΚΠ the world > life > death > [noun] > general loss of life walc900 qualeeOE qualmOE mortc1330 murraina1387 loss of lifec1405 mortality?a1425 megadeath1953 the world > life > death > killing > slaughter > [noun] sleightc893 wal-slaught?a900 qualeeOE deathOE swordc1000 morthOE slaughta1225 destroyingc1300 drepingc1300 martyrdomc1325 murderc1325 mortc1330 sleighterc1330 slaughter1338 iron and firea1387 murraina1387 manslaughtera1400 martyre?a1400 quella1425 occision?a1430 decease1513 destruction1526 slaughting1535 butchery?1536 butchering1572 massacrea1578 slaughterdom1592 slaughtering1597 carnage1600 massacring1600 slaughtery1604 internecion1610 decimationa1613 destroy1616 trucidation1623 stragea1632 sword-wrack1646 interemption1656 carnifice1657 panolethry1668 butcher work1808 bloodbath1814 populicide1824 man-slaughtering1851 battue1864 mass murder1917 genocide1944 overkill1957 the world > food and drink > hunting > signals > [noun] > signal on horn forloinc1369 motec1400 strakea1425 rechasec1425 recopec1425 morta1500 seekc1500 death note1575 recheat1575 gibbet1590 wind1596 relief1602 call1677 stroke1688 gone away1827 rattle1889 c1330 (?a1300) Arthour & Merlin (Auch.) (1973) 9066 (MED) Þo stode Herui bi Bohort, Boþe in periil of mort. a1470 T. Malory Morte Darthur (Winch. Coll. 13) (1990) III. 1154 The Moste Pyteuous Tale of the Morte Arthure Saunz Gwerdon par le Shyvalere Sir Thomas Malleorre, Knyght. a1500 (?a1400) Wars Alexander (Trin. Dublin) 1279 (MED) Aristes..To alexander anone þees aunters hym telles, The morte of all þe masydons. 1536 Exhort. to North in F. J. Furnivall Ballads from MSS (1868) I. 306 Noitt dowtyng off them to maike gret morte. 1575 J. Rolland Treat. Court Venus i. f. 16 Ouirset with slicht sulphurious, And suddand mort. c1586 J. Stewart Poems (1913) 40 Quhilks all susteind ane miserabill mort. ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > dead body > [noun] lichc893 dust?a1000 holdc1000 bonesOE stiff onea1200 bodyc1225 carrion?c1225 licham?c1225 worms' food or ware?c1225 corsec1250 ashc1275 corpsec1315 carcass1340 murraina1382 relicsa1398 ghostc1400 wormes warec1400 corpusc1440 scadc1440 reliefc1449 martc1480 cadaverc1500 mortc1500 tramort?a1513 hearse1530 bulk1575 offal1581 trunk1594 cadaverie1600 relicts1607 remains1610 mummya1616 relic1636 cold meat1788 mortality1827 death bone1834 deader1853 stiff1859 c1500 in R. G. Cant College St. Salvator (1950) 159 Ane burd and tua trestis for the mortis. a1600 (?c1535) tr. H. Boece Hist. Scotl. (Mar Lodge) xi. vi. f. 416, in Dict. Older Sc. Tongue (at cited word) As mort or dede carion..he was in derisioun to his propir servandis. 1694 R. Franck Northern Mem. 7 Every Generation since Adam, has so diminished that Beauty and Lustre, that from Men we are almost dwindled into Morts. a1839 J. Galt Demon of Destiny (1840) 14 The gathering myriads of the famous great—All skeletons, like morts, derisive grin. 1888 H. James Let. 31 July (1920) I. 138 You have become a beautiful myth—a kind of unnatural uncomfortable unburied mort. 3. Hunting. a. The note sounded on a horn at the death of the deer. Chiefly in to blow (also sound, wind, etc.) the (also a) mort. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > signals > call or signal [verb (transitive)] > sound a call to blow (the) prisec1300 strakea1400 to blow the (also a) deathc1425 to blow (also sound, wind, etc.) the (also a) mort1555 to sound the prise1803 the world > food and drink > hunting > hunting specific animals > [noun] > deer > actions in deer-hunting huinga1250 assayc1400 lodging1525 mort1555 imprime1590 say?1611 essay1694 mort note1830 tufting1862 society > leisure > the arts > music > type of music > music on specific instrument > [noun] > wind music > cadence or flourish on horn blas?c1225 forloinc1369 windc1374 strakea1425 strakinga1425 rechasec1425 rechasingc1425 recopec1425 seekc1500 mort1555 recheat1575 gibbet1590 senneta1593 relief1602 horn-call1632 call1677 stroke1688 tantivy1785 tralira1801 tra-la-la1886 1555 H. Braham Inst. Gentleman sig. Giiij Likewyse hunting in hys kind as..to blow the mort, called the mote, the retract, the chase [etc.]. c1560 Hunting of Cheviot 31 in F. J. Child Eng. & Sc. Pop. Ballads (1889) III. vi. 307/2 The blwe a mort [MS Ashm. 48 mot] uppone the bent. 1584 R. Greene Gwydonius f. 28 Hee that bloweth the Mort before the fall of the Buck, may very well misse of his fees. 1589 R. Robinson Golden Mirrour sig. C.3v Presently, the Mort the Hunts-man blew. a1600 in T. Blount Fragmenta Antiquitatis (1679) 170 As soone as the Bukks head is offered uppe all the kepers shall blowe a Morte three tymes. a1616 W. Shakespeare Winter's Tale (1623) i. ii. 120 And then to sigh, as 'twere The Mort o' th' Deere. View more context for this quotation 1677 N. Cox Gentleman's Recreation (ed. 2) i. 80 Then, having blown the Mort, and all the company come in [etc.]. 1737 Compl. Family-piece (ed. 2) ii. i. 292 Then sound the Mort or Morts. 1821 W. Scott Kenilworth III. viii. 136 The horns again poured on her ear the melancholy yet wild strain of the mort, or death-note. 1845 R. Browning Flight of Duchess xi, in Bells & Pomegranates No. VII: Dramatic Romances & Lyrics 14/2 When horns wind a mort and the deer is at siege. 1898 J. A. Gibbs Cotswold Village 263 That was the country fellow that turned up when we sounded the mort by Coln-Dene. 1931 J. Buchan Blanket of Dark iii. 76 They..had killed in the hollow east of Beckley... He had heard the mort sounded. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > thing hunted or game > [noun] > killed game mort1827 kill1878 1827 T. Hood Plea Midsummer Fairies cx, in Plea Midsummer Fairies & Other Poems 56 'Tis these befriend the timid trembling stag,..And prompt fresh shifts in his alarum'd ears, So piteously they view all bloody morts. c. The death of a hunted animal; the kill. Now archaic. ΚΠ 1855 C. Kingsley Westward Ho! iv You will..be enabled yourselves to see the mort more pleasantly. 1938 T. H. White Sword in Stone i. 8 If you did the wrong thing at the mort or the undoing, for instance, you were bent over the body of the dead beast and smacked with the flat side of a sword. 4. The skin of a sheep or lamb that has died a natural death. Cf. mort lambskin n., mort skin n. at Compounds. Now Scottish. Sc. National Dict. (1965) records this sense as still in use in southern Scotland in 1963. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > materials > raw material > skin or hide > skin with hair attached or fur > [noun] > of sheep > types of scalding1429 shorling1429 morkin1474 mort1592 mort skin1624 1592 R. Greene Quip for Vpstart Courtier sig. F3 The Sadler..makes the lether of them of morts, or tand sheeps skinnes. 1611 in Hist. MSS Comm.: MSS Duke of Rutland (1905) IV. 486 in Parl. Papers (Cd. 2606) LXIII. 301 Sheepeskinnes, slaughtered hath bin sold by great..for xxiiijs. the dozen, good and bad, mortes and all included. 1798 R. Douglas Gen. View Agric. Roxburgh & Selkirk 259 (note) Morts are the skins of sheep and lambs who die. 1816 W. Scott Black Dwarf i, in Tales of my Landlord 1st Ser. I. 27 He'll be unco busy amang the morts this season. 1923 G. Watson Roxburghshire Word-bk. 216 Murt, the skin of a lamb that has died young or of a starveling sheep. Compounds mort bell n. Scottish (now historical) a funeral bell. ΚΠ 1590 in J. D. Marwick Extracts Rec. Burgh Glasgow (1876) I. 153 Thair twa commoun bellis, viz. the mort and skellet bellis. a1709 J. Fraser Chrons. Frasers (1905) 508 The trumpets and murning or mort bells usher them in. 1824 J. Galt Rothelan III. vi. i. 13 From the hour that the mort-bell was again heard in the land, men relapsed into their wonted customs. 1927 Scots Mag. May 148 The town of Glasgow formerly possessed two official hand bells, to wit, the ‘mort’ bell and the ‘skellat’ bell. ΚΠ 1554–5 in J. D. Marwick Extracts Rec. Burgh Edinb. (1871) II. 359 To mak twa mortcaippis. mort-head n. British regional (chiefly Scottish) a death's head. ΚΠ 1554–5 in J. D. Marwick Extracts Rec. Burgh Edinb. (1871) II. 359 Item, for half ane quarter quhit sating to be the mort heids, iiijr. 1722 A. Nisbet Syst. Heraldry I. 267 Crest, a Mort-head, with two Leg-Bones, Saltier-ways proper. 1900 Weekly Free Press & Aberdeen Herald 29 Dec. Weel, boys, fat think ye o' a mort-heid an' a white sheet at his window. 1912 N. Munro Ayrshire Idylls 132 She spoke of many names I could see on ony Sunday carved under mort-head and cherubim in Girvan churchyard. ΚΠ 1692 in J. D. Marwick Rec. Convent. Royal Burghs Scotl. (1880) IV. 602 Fyve thousand sheep skins..sex thousand mort lambskins. 1720 J. Steuart Let.-bk. (1915) 120 On[e] thousand and ninetie on[e] duzans mort lambskins. 1752 in W. Cramond Rec. Elgin (1903) I. 464 Ilk dozen of mort lamb skins 2d. 1796 J. Sinclair Statist. Acct. Scotl. XVIII. 520 A good many small and slink kid, and mert [sic] lamb-skins. 1796 J. Sinclair Statist. Acct. Scotl. XVIII. 521 They have a plentiful supply of mort lamb-skins for that purpose [sc. glove manufacture]. ΚΠ 1568 A. Scott Poems (1896) i. 92 Mantand mort mvmblingis mixt wt monye leis. mort note n. rare = sense 3. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > hunting specific animals > [noun] > deer > actions in deer-hunting huinga1250 assayc1400 lodging1525 mort1555 imprime1590 say?1611 essay1694 mort note1830 tufting1862 1830 A. E. Bray Fitz of Fitz-ford II. v. 97 The woods rang with the clamour of blowing the stag to bay, or the triumph of the mort-note. mort safe n. Scottish (now historical) an iron frame placed over a coffin or at the entrance to a grave as a protection against resurrectionists in Scotland. ΚΠ 1821 A. Thomson Jrnl. 1 Mar. in Life & Ministry (1869) iii. 285 The mort-safe was for the first time put into his grave. 1888 Northern Notes & Queries 3 51 The coffin is then lowered, the cage-like mortsafe put over it, and the hinged rods, the tops of which interlace, bent over and padlocked... The grave is then filled up. 1993 Canoeist Dec. 39/1 St Ninian's Episcopal Church..has the graves of knights templars, several provosts and many freemen with a mort safe to deter body snatchers. ΚΠ 1624 in G. Ornsby Select. from Househ. Bks. Naworth Castle (1878) 212 Received of my Lady for mort skins, iijli vjs viijd. ΚΠ 1503 in J. B. Paul Accts. Treasurer Scotl. (1900) II. 290 The mortstand, with tua tunycales with offrez of fine gold, ane gret caip of the mortstand with sternys of gold on it and offrez of gold. 1561 in J. Stuart Extracts Council Reg. Aberdeen (1844) I. 330 Ane croce of siluer, the forclayth of the hie altar,..ane arress bed, ane siluer spune, the mort stand [etc.]. ΚΠ 1842 H. Taylor Edwin the Fair v. vii. 227 Oh me! the mortstone! This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2002; most recently modified version published online March 2022). † mortn.2 Obsolete. A kind of wax candle. (In quot. 1546 perhaps: a set of wax candles.) ΘΚΠ the world > matter > light > artificial light > an artificial light > candle > [noun] > wax candle > type of mort1394 statual taper1825 1394 in R. Gough Sepulchral Monuments (1796) I. ii. 170* Fynolx, morts, brennynges, croppes, tapres quarrez. a1533 Ld. Berners tr. Arthur of Brytayn (?1560) xxiiii. sig. Di The foure mortees of waxe [Fr. quatre cierges ardans] yt stode brennynge before her beddes fete. 1546 in F. Blomefield Ess. Topogr. Hist. Norfolk (1745) II. 155 An Herse with 120 Lyghts and dyverse Floryshes, Hangyngs and a Mortes of Wax. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2002; most recently modified version published online December 2020). mortn.3 Chiefly British regional. A young salmon; spec. a young salmon in its third year; (also) a sea trout. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > fish > class Osteichthyes or Teleostomi > order Salmoniformes (salmon or trout) > family Salmonidae (salmon) > [noun] > genus Salmo > salmo salar (salmon) > in third year mortc1490 trout1604 yellowbelly1775 salmon mort1893 c1490 in A. J. R. Waller Suffolk Stour (1957) v. 44 [4 messes of] morts. 1530 J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 246/2 Morte a fysshe. 1584 T. Cogan Hauen of Health clxxxii. 145 The mort is of like nature, for it is the young Salmon. 1686 F. Willughby & J. Ray De Hist. Piscium iv. iv. 189 Nostratibus in fluvio Ribble agri Eboracensis Salmones primo ætatis anno Smelts dicuntur; secundo Sprods; tertio Morts. 1753 Chambers's Cycl. Suppl. Mort, among fishermen of some parts of England, a name given to the salmon while in its third year's growth. 1861 Act 24 & 25 Victoria c. 109 §4 Migratory fish of the genus salmon,..known by the names..forktail, mort, peal, herring peal, may peal, pugg peal, harvest cock. 1872 Daily News 13 Aug. 3/6 Nine fish were killed..namely, one mort, one smelt, three brandlings, and four river trout. 1904 Peterite 19 147 Sea-trout, or ‘mort’ as they are locally termed. 1985 K. Howarth Sounds Gradely Mort, a young salmon in poor condition. Flookburgh, Grange-over-Sands. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2002; most recently modified version published online March 2022). mortn.4 Originally cant. Now archaic, historical, and regional (chiefly English regional (Cumberland)). 1. A girl, a woman. Often with distinguishing word (esp. in earlier use), as gentry (also †kinchin, †strolling, †walking) mort. autem mort: see autem n. ΘΚΠ the world > people > person > woman > [noun] wifeeOE womaneOE womanOE queanOE brideOE viragoc1000 to wifeOE burdc1225 ladyc1225 carlinec1375 stotc1386 marec1387 pigsneyc1390 fellowa1393 piecec1400 femalea1425 goddessa1450 fairc1450 womankindc1450 fellowessa1500 femininea1513 tega1529 sister?1532 minikinc1540 wyec1540 placket1547 pig's eye1553 hen?1555 ware1558 pussy?a1560 jade1560 feme1566 gentlewoman1567 mort1567 pinnacea1568 jug1569 rowen1575 tarleather1575 mumps1576 skirt1578 piga1586 rib?1590 puppy1592 smock1592 maness1594 sloy1596 Madonna1602 moll1604 periwinkle1604 Partlet1607 rib of man1609 womanship?1609 modicum1611 Gypsy1612 petticoata1616 runniona1616 birda1627 lucky1629 she-man1640 her1646 lost rib1647 uptails1671 cow1696 tittup1696 cummer17.. wife1702 she-woman1703 person1704 molly1706 fusby1707 goody1708 riding hood1718 birdie1720 faggot1722 piece of goods1727 woman body1771 she-male1776 biddy1785 bitch1785 covess1789 gin1790 pintail1792 buer1807 femme1814 bibi1816 Judy1819 a bit (also bundle) of muslin1823 wifie1823 craft1829 shickster?1834 heifer1835 mot1837 tit1837 Sitt1838 strap1842 hay-bag1851 bint1855 popsy1855 tart1864 woman's woman1868 to deliver the goods1870 chapess1871 Dona1874 girl1878 ladykind1878 mivvy1881 dudess1883 dudette1883 dudine1883 tid1888 totty1890 tootsy1895 floozy1899 dame1902 jane1906 Tom1906 frail1908 bit of stuff1909 quim1909 babe1911 broad1914 muff1914 manhole1916 number1919 rossie1922 bit1923 man's woman1928 scupper1935 split1935 rye mort1936 totsy1938 leg1939 skinny1941 Richard1950 potato1957 scow1960 wimmin1975 womyn1975 womxn1991 1567 T. Harman Caueat for Commen Cursetors (new ed.) sig. Fiiii A Kynchyn Morte is a lytle Gyrle. ?1593 H. Chettle Kind-harts Dreame sig. H It happened within these few yeeres, about Hampshire there wandered a walking Mort, that went about the Countrey selling of tape. 1611 T. Middleton & T. Dekker Roaring Girle sig. K4v Ben mort (good wench) shal you and I heaue a booth. a1637 B. Jonson Masque of Gypsies 69* in tr. Horace Art of Poetry (1640) Male-Gypsies all! not a Mort amongst them. 1665 R. Head Eng. Rogue I. iv. 32/1 Gentry Mort, a Gallant Wench. 1699 B. E. New Dict. Canting Crew Morts, Yeomen's Daughters; also a Wife, Woman, or Wench. 1710 G. L. Amorous Gallant's Tongue (ed. 5) (Word-list) 113 A person travelling in the Country pretending to be burnt out by Fire. A Cruising Col or Mort Glimmered out of their Ken. ?1747 Humours Flashy Boys in Life & Char. Moll King 12 I'll derrick, my Blood, if I tout my Mort, I'll tip her a Snitch about the Peeps and Nasous. 1905 S. J. Weyman Starvecrow Farm xxxiv. 320 ‘The gentry mort’, she said, in thieves' [printed theives'] patter, ‘is not worth the nubbing-cheat’. 1944 G. Heyer Friday's Child iii. 32 If you be [eloping],..and if you don't wish no one to know nothing about it, that young gentry-mort didn't ought to be a-settin' up there beside you like she is. 1997 W. Rollinson Dict. Cumbrian Dial. 109/2 Morts, girls (Wigton area). ΘΚΠ society > morality > moral evil > licentiousness > unchastity > [noun] > sexual indulgence > unchaste behaviour of woman > unchaste or loose woman queanOE whorec1175 malkinc1275 wenchelc1300 ribalda1350 strumpeta1350 wench1362 filtha1375 parnelc1390 sinner14.. callet1415 slut?c1425 tickle-tailc1430 harlot?a1475 mignote1489 kittock?a1500 mulea1513 trulla1516 trully?1515 danta1529 miswoman1528 stewed whore1532 Tib1533 unchaghe1534 flag1535 Katy1535 jillet1541 yaud1545 housewife1546 trinkletc1550 whippet1550 Canace1551 filthy1553 Jezebel1558 kittyc1560 loonc1560 laced mutton1563 nymph1563 limmer1566 tomboy1566 Marian1567 mort1567 cockatrice1568 franion1571 blowze1573 rannell1573 rig1575 Kita1577 poplet1577 light-skirts1578 pucelle1578 harlotry1584 light o' lovea1586 driggle-draggle1588 wagtail1592 tub-tail1595 flirt-gill1597 minx1598 hilding1599 short-heels1599 bona-roba1600 flirt1600 Hiren1600 light-heels1602 roba1602 baggage1603 cousin1604 fricatrice1607 rumbelow1611 amorosa1615 jaya1616 open-taila1618 succubus1622 snaphancea1625 flap1631 buttered bun1638 puffkin1639 vizard1652 fallen woman1659 tomrigg1662 cunt1663 quaedama1670 jilt1672 crack1677 grass-girl1691 sporting girl1694 sportswoman1705 mobbed hood1707 brim1736 trollop1742 trub1746 demi-rep1749 gillyflower1757 lady of easy virtue1766 mot1773 chicken1782 gammerstang1788 buer1807 scarlet woman1816 blowen1819 fie-fie1820 shickster?1834 streel1842 charver1846 trolly1854 bad girl1855 amateur1862 anonyma1862 demi-virgin1864 pickup1871 chippy1885 wish-wife1886 tart1887 tartleta1890 flossy1893 fly girl1893 demi-mondaine1894 floozy1899 slattern1899 scrub1900 demi-vierge1908 cake1909 coozie1912 muff1914 tarty1918 yes-girl1920 radge1923 bike1945 puta1948 messer1951 cooze1955 jamette1965 skeezer1986 slutbag1987 chickenhead1988 ho1988 1567 T. Harman Caueat for Commen Cursetors (new ed.) sig. Biii Their harlots which they terme Mortes, and Doxes. 1601 A. Munday Downfall Earle of Huntington sig. F2 v If I can get the girle to goe with mee, Disguis'd in habit, like a Pedlers mort. a1640 J. Fletcher et al. Beggers Bush ii. i, in F. Beaumont & J. Fletcher Comedies & Trag. (1647) sig. Kk4/1 Each man shall..enjoy His owne deare Dell, Doxy, or Mort, at night. 1708 Motteux's Rabelais Pantagr. Prognost. v Those whom Venus is said to rule, as..Morts, Doxies. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2002; most recently modified version published online March 2022). mortn.5 English regional (south-western) and Welsh English. Lard; pig's grease. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > greasy or fatty material > [noun] > derived from animals > from pig swine greasea1400 lardc1420 swine seamc1440 hog's grease1525 seam1530 hog's lard1601 mort1610 1610 G. Markham Maister-peece ii. cxiii. 408 You shall adde therto of hogges mort, and fresh butter, of each a pound. 1641 in M. Cash Devon Inventories 16th & 17th Cent. (1966) 59 Wett Larder:..Butter, Hony, Morde, Seame, Tallow. a1794 M. Palmer Dialogue Devonshire Dial. (1839) 15 Their high-peak'd loady heads, wi' a wallage o' hair, plaster'd with mort and flour. 1864 Jrnl. Royal Inst. Cornwall 18 Mar. Mord, lard, pig's grease. 1888 F. T. Elworthy W. Somerset Word-bk. (at cited word) Nif anybody-v a got a bad leg or ort, there idn no fineder thing vor-t-n mort-n chalk. a1895 S. Hewett MS Coll. Devonshire Words in Eng. Dial. Dict. (1903) IV. 165/2 The fat which overlays the kidneys and intestines of the pig. A ‘blow of mort’. 1967 H. Orton & M. F. Wakelin Surv. Eng. Dial. IV. i. 365 Q[uestion]. What do you call the inner layer of fat round the kidneys of a pig?.. [Cornwall, Devon] Mort. 1999 D. Parry Gram. & Gloss. Conservative Anglo-Welsh Dial. Rural Wales 169/2 Mort, the inner layer of fat round the kidneys of a pig. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2002; most recently modified version published online March 2022). mortn.6 regional. 1. A large quantity or number; a great deal. Usually with of. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > [noun] > (a) great quantity or amount felec825 muchc1230 good wone1297 plentyc1300 bushelc1374 sight1390 mickle-whata1393 forcea1400 manynessa1400 multitudea1400 packc1400 a good dealc1430 greata1450 sackful1484 power1489 horseloadc1500 mile1508 lump1523 a deal?1532 peckc1535 heapa1547 mass1566 mass1569 gallon1575 armful1579 cart-load1587 mickle1599 bushelful1600–12 a load1609 wreck1612 parisha1616 herd1618 fair share1650 heapa1661 muchness1674 reams1681 hantle1693 mort1694 doll?1719 lift1755 acre1759 beaucoup1760 ton1770 boxload1795 boatload1807 lot1811 dollop1819 swag1819 faggald1824 screed1826 Niagara1828 wad1828 lashings1829 butt1831 slew1839 ocean1840 any amount (of)1848 rake1851 slather1857 horde1860 torrent1864 sheaf1865 oodlesa1867 dead load1869 scad1869 stack1870 jorum1872 a heap sight1874 firlot1883 oodlings1886 chunka1889 whips1888 God's quantity1895 streetful1901 bag1917 fid1920 fleetful1923 mob1927 bucketload1930 pisspot1944 shitload1954 megaton1957 mob-o-ton1975 gazillion1978 buttload1988 shit ton1991 1694 L. Echard tr. Plautus Epidicus ii. ii, in tr. Plautus Comedies 94 They had a mort o' Prisoners. 1708 Brit. Apollo 9–14 July You having zuch a Mort of Wit. 1775 R. B. Sheridan Rivals i. i Here's a mort o' merry~making, hey? 1803 R. B. Sheridan Let. 31 Aug. (1966) II. 203 I am now going about business and to get my wench a mot of money! 1821 J. Clare Village Minstrel I. 123 She talk'd of morts of luck. 1850 C. Dickens David Copperfield xxxii. 321 ‘We have had a mort of talk, sir’, said Mr. Peggotty to me. 1868 A. Helps Realmah ii My Betsy..knew a mort more than I do. 1887 H. Smart Cleverly Won i. 7 There's a mort of money to be made off the farm in a good year. 1919 R. Firbank Valmouth xi. 183 I've seen a mort o' queer things in my day..but a negress; oh deary me! a1944 A. Lewis Ha! Ha! among Trumpets (1945) 69 The face distorted in a jungle pool That drowns its image in a mort of leaves. 1965 East Anglian May 242/2 One is none, tew is some, three is a sort, four is a mort. 1995 Guardian 8 July (Weekend Suppl.) 60/1 Boregs..are made with either filo pastry or a mort of scone mixture moistened with yoghurt and olive oil. 2. a mort (used adverbially to modify a (usually comparative) adjective): a great deal, a lot. ΚΠ 1812 J. Baillie Siege ii. iii, in Series of Plays III. 207 It fits my fingers to a hair. It must be a mort too large for your delicate hand. 1854 A. E. Baker Gloss. Northants. Words II. 32 I've been deadly bad, but I'm a mort better. 1887 H. Caine Son of Hagar i. Prol. I'll not say but other folks look a mort madder nor ever I looked. 1904 S. J. Weyman Abbess of Vlaye viii You've fared better with me, ay, a mort better, than you'd have fared if the Captain had been here. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2002; most recently modified version published online March 2022). mortadj. Now rare (archaic in later use). 1. Dead. ΘΚΠ the world > life > death > dead person or the dead > [adjective] deadOE lifelessOE of lifeOE storvena1225 dead as a door-nail1362 ydead1387 stark deadc1390 colda1400 bypast1425 perishedc1440 morta1450 obita1450 unquickc1449 gone?a1475 dead and gone1482 extinct1483 departed1503 bygonea1522 amort1546 soulless1553 breathless1562 parted1562 mortified1592 low-laid1598 disanimate1601 carcasseda1603 defunct1603 no morea1616 with God1617 death-stricken1618 death-strucken1622 expired1631 past itc1635 incinerated1657 stock-dead1662 dead as a herring1664 death-struck1688 as dead as a nit1789 (as) dead as mutton1792 low1808 laid in the locker1815 strae-dead1820 disanimated1833 ghosted1834 under the daisies1842 irresuscitable1843 under the sod1847 toes up1851 dead and buried1863 devitalized1866 translated1869 dead and done (for, with)1886 daid1890 bung1893 (as) dead as the (or a) dodo1904 six feet under1942 brown bread1969 the mind > language > a language > [adjective] > living, dead, or archaic forsakena1613 living1657 mort1659 modern1699 middle1830 archaic1832 relict1887 a1450 (?c1300) Bevis of Hampton (Caius) l. 1691 + 6 (MED) He was so ffeynt in hys hurte, þer ffore he was al most al morte. c1450 in F. J. Furnivall Polit., Relig., & Love Poems (1903) 188 (MED) Þi meede is markid, whan þou art mort. ?c1500 Digby Plays 71 My mynd waxit mort. a1542 T. Wyatt Coll. Poems (1969) V. 219 Nowe warre, nowe peace, musing all alone, Some tyme all morte and colde as enye stonne. 1659 C. Hoole Childrens Talke Ep. Ded. sig. A3 The many difficulties that attend the work (especially in a Mort Language). 1786 in Naval Documents U.S. Wars Barbary Powers (U.S. Office Naval Rec.) (1939) I. 291 It was known in the U. S. that Hassan Bashaw was mort. 1919 E. Hemingway Let. 4 Dec. in S. Spanier & R. W. Trogdon Lett. (2011) I. 214 Her husband is mort and she has a son with locomotor-ataxia. ΘΚΠ the world > life > death > cause of death > [adjective] > of battle mortalc1387 battle mort?1553 ?1553 (c1501) G. Douglas Palice of Honour (London) 1447 in Shorter Poems (2003) 92 Plesand pastance, and mony lusty sport Thair saw we als, and sum tyme battell mort. 1575 J. Rolland Treat. Court Venus ii. f. 22 v Of Infidelis mony he did downe thring Be battell mort. a1600 ( W. Stewart tr. H. Boece Bk. Cron. Scotl. (1858) II. 297 With mort battell agane King Edelfryde. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2002; most recently modified version published online December 2020). † mortv. Obsolete. rare. 1. transitive. To put to death. ΘΚΠ the world > life > death > killing > kill [verb (transitive)] swevec725 quelmeOE slayc893 quelleOE of-falleOE ofslayeOE aquellc950 ayeteeOE spillc950 beliveOE to bring (also do) of (one's) life-dayOE fordoa1000 forfarea1000 asweveOE drepeOE forleseOE martyrOE to do (also i-do, draw) of lifeOE bringc1175 off-quellc1175 quenchc1175 forswelta1225 adeadc1225 to bring of daysc1225 to do to deathc1225 to draw (a person) to deathc1225 murder?c1225 aslayc1275 forferec1275 to lay to ground, to earth (Sc. at eird)c1275 martyrc1300 strangle1303 destroya1325 misdoa1325 killc1330 tailc1330 to take the life of (also fro)c1330 enda1340 to kill to (into, unto) death1362 brittena1375 deadc1374 to ding to deathc1380 mortifya1382 perisha1387 to dight to death1393 colea1400 fella1400 kill out (away, down, up)a1400 to slay up or downa1400 swelta1400 voida1400 deliverc1400 starvec1425 jugylc1440 morta1450 to bring to, on, or upon (one's) bierc1480 to put offc1485 to-slaya1500 to make away with1502 to put (a person or thing) to silencec1503 rida1513 to put downa1525 to hang out of the way1528 dispatch?1529 strikea1535 occidea1538 to firk to death, (out) of lifec1540 to fling to deathc1540 extinct1548 to make out of the way1551 to fet offa1556 to cut offc1565 to make away?1566 occise1575 spoil1578 senda1586 to put away1588 exanimate1593 unmortalize1593 speed1594 unlive1594 execute1597 dislive1598 extinguish1598 to lay along1599 to make hence1605 conclude1606 kill off1607 disanimate1609 feeze1609 to smite, stab in, under the fifth rib1611 to kill dead1615 transporta1616 spatch1616 to take off1619 mactate1623 to make meat of1632 to turn up1642 inanimate1647 pop1649 enecate1657 cadaverate1658 expedite1678 to make dog's meat of1679 to make mincemeat of1709 sluice1749 finisha1753 royna1770 still1778 do1780 deaden1807 deathifyc1810 to lay out1829 cool1833 to use up1833 puckeroo1840 to rub out1840 cadaverize1841 to put under the sod1847 suicide1852 outkill1860 to fix1875 to put under1879 corpse1884 stiffen1888 tip1891 to do away with1899 to take out1900 stretch1902 red-light1906 huff1919 to knock rotten1919 skittle1919 liquidate1924 clip1927 to set over1931 creasea1935 ice1941 lose1942 to put to sleep1942 zap1942 hit1955 to take down1967 wax1968 trash1973 ace1975 a1450 York Plays (1885) 222 (MED) ‘Howe mene ȝe?’ ‘Sir, to mort hym for mouyng of menne.’ 2. intransitive. To die. ΘΚΠ the world > life > death > [verb (intransitive)] forsweltc888 sweltc888 adeadeOE deadc950 wendeOE i-wite971 starveOE witea1000 forfereOE forthfareOE forworthc1000 to go (also depart , pass, i-wite, chare) out of this worldOE queleOE fallOE to take (also nim, underfo) (the) deathOE to shed (one's own) blood?a1100 diec1135 endc1175 farec1175 to give up the ghostc1175 letc1200 aswelta1250 leavea1250 to-sweltc1275 to-worthc1275 to yield (up) the ghost (soul, breath, life, spirit)c1290 finea1300 spilla1300 part?1316 to leese one's life-daysa1325 to nim the way of deathc1325 to tine, leave, lose the sweatc1330 flit1340 trance1340 determinec1374 disperisha1382 to go the way of all the eartha1382 to be gathered to one's fathers1382 miscarryc1387 shut1390 goa1393 to die upa1400 expirea1400 fleea1400 to pass awaya1400 to seek out of lifea1400–50 to sye hethena1400 tinea1400 trespass14.. espirec1430 to end one's days?a1439 decease1439 to go away?a1450 ungoc1450 unlivec1450 to change one's lifea1470 vade1495 depart1501 to pay one's debt to (also the debt of) naturea1513 to decease this world1515 to go over?1520 jet1530 vade1530 to go westa1532 to pick over the perch1532 galpa1535 to die the death1535 to depart to God1548 to go home1561 mort1568 inlaikc1575 shuffle1576 finish1578 to hop (also tip, pitch over, drop off, etc.) the perch1587 relent1587 unbreathe1589 transpass1592 to lose one's breath1596 to make a die (of it)1611 to go offa1616 fail1623 to go out1635 to peak over the percha1641 exita1652 drop1654 to knock offa1657 to kick upa1658 to pay nature her due1657 ghost1666 to march off1693 to die off1697 pike1697 to drop off1699 tip (over) the perch1699 to pass (also go, be called, etc.) to one's reward1703 sink1718 vent1718 to launch into eternity1719 to join the majority1721 demise1727 to pack off1735 to slip one's cable1751 turf1763 to move off1764 to pop off the hooks1764 to hop off1797 to pass on1805 to go to glory1814 sough1816 to hand in one's accounts1817 to slip one's breatha1819 croak1819 to slip one's wind1819 stiffen1820 weed1824 buy1825 to drop short1826 to fall (a) prey (also victim, sacrifice) to1839 to get one's (also the) call1839 to drop (etc.) off the hooks1840 to unreeve one's lifeline1840 to step out1844 to cash, pass or send in one's checks1845 to hand in one's checks1845 to go off the handle1848 to go under1848 succumb1849 to turn one's toes up1851 to peg out1852 walk1858 snuff1864 to go or be up the flume1865 to pass outc1867 to cash in one's chips1870 to go (also pass over) to the majority1883 to cash in1884 to cop it1884 snuff1885 to belly up1886 perch1886 to kick the bucket1889 off1890 to knock over1892 to pass over1897 to stop one1901 to pass in1904 to hand in one's marble1911 the silver cord is loosed1911 pip1913 to cross over1915 conk1917 to check out1921 to kick off1921 to pack up1925 to step off1926 to take the ferry1928 peg1931 to meet one's Maker1933 to kiss off1935 to crease it1959 zonk1968 cark1977 to cark it1979 to take a dirt nap1981 1568 in W. T. Ritchie Bannatyne MS f. 162 God that he mort in to ane rackett. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2002; most recently modified version published online December 2021). < n.1c1330n.21394n.3c1490n.41567n.51610n.61694adj.a1450v.a1450 |
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