单词 | mystery |
释义 | mysteryn.1 I. Theological uses. ΘΚΠ society > faith > aspects of faith > spirituality > mysticism > [adverb] in (also through) his mysteryc1350 in mistc1400 mysteriallyc1425 mysticlyc1429 in (a) mystery1526 mystically1552 the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > secrecy, concealment > a profound secret, mystery > [adverb] dighenlichec893 diȝelichec1200 darklyc1350 mysteriously1486 mystically1509 in (a) mystery1526 abstrusely1611 cryptically1663 oracularly1771 occultly1793 pokerishly1854 mystifically1880 sophically1888 sphinxily1889 mystifyingly1937 c1350 (a1333) William of Shoreham Poems (1902) 24 Ac one god aryȝt hyt nomeþ, Þat body ine hys mysterye. 1526 Pylgrimage of Perfection (de Worde) f. 31 God hath no suche bodyly membres, as this texte [sc. Exodus 33:23] to the lettre dothe pretende to shewe: but all this was done in great mistery. 1533 J. Frith Bk. answeringe Mores Let. sig. Fvii For we do it not actuallye in dede, but onlye in a misterye. 1560 J. Daus tr. J. Sleidane Commentaries f. cxviij Whiche place..is to be vnderstande in a mistery [L. mystice]. 1628 Field's Of Church (ed. 2) iii. App. 205 The crucified body of Christ thy sonne, which is here present in mystery, and sacrament. 2. a. A religious truth known or understood only by divine revelation; esp. a doctrine of faith involving difficulties which human reason is incapable of solving. ΘΚΠ society > faith > aspects of faith > spirituality > mysticism > a mystery > [noun] privity?c1225 mysteryc1384 mistc1400 c1384 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(2)) (1850) Rom. xvi. 25 The revelacioun of mysterie holden stille, that is, not shewid..the which mysterie is now maad opyn by scripturis of prophetis. c1400 Bk. to Mother (Bodl.) 14 (MED) As ofte as Crist criede, his crie bitokeneþ sum gret mysterie. a1450 St. Katherine (Richardson 44) (1884) 64 (MED) She had also wisdom anempst god by heuenly contemplacion and by knowyng of the mysteryes of the fayth. c1475 (a1449) J. Lydgate Testament (Harl. 218) 163 in Minor Poems (1911) i. 335 (MED) At welles five licour I shal drawe..Where al mysteryes of the olde and newe lawe Toke oryginall. a1522 G. Douglas in tr. Virgil Æneid (1959) vi. Prol. 143 The glorius modir..Quhilk of hir natur consavit Criste, and buir Al hail the misteris of the Trinite. 1544 Letanie in Exhort. vnto Prayer sig. Bvv By the mystery of thy holy incarnation,..Good lorde delyuer vs. a1568 R. Ascham Scholemaster (1570) i. f. 28 They counte as Fables, the holie misteries of Christian Religion. 1610 Bible (Douay) II. Psalms cl. Comm. S. Augustin in the conclusion of his Enarrations or Sermons upon the Psalmes, explicateth a mysterie. 1654 Bp. J. Taylor Real Presence xii. 267 The name of Transelementation, which Theophylact did use, seems to approach nearer to signify the propriety of this mysterie, because it signifies a change even of the first elements. 1719–20 J. Swift Let. to Young Gentleman (1721) 24 I do not find that you are any where directed in the Canons or Articles, to attempt explaining the Mysteries of the Christian Religion. 1785 W. Cowper Task ii. 528 'Tis revelation satisfies all doubts, Explains all mysteries, except her own. 1855 D. Brewster Mem. Life I. Newton (new ed.) II. xxiv. 359 The investigation of the sacred mysteries, while it prepared his own mind for its final destiny, was calculated to promote the spiritual interests of thousands. 1894 J. R. Illingworth Personality iii. 68 In the presence of a fact which..was a mystery—a thing which could be apprehended when revealed, but could neither be comprehended nor discovered. 1950 Sc. Jrnl. Theol. 3 37 To this inner fellowship of disciples the ‘mystery’ of the Kingdom of God is disclosed, whereas to outsiders this same Kingdom remains veiled in parables. 1988 B. Chatwin Utz 14 Or debate with learned rabbis the mysteries of the Cabbala. b. [In allusion to 2 Thessalonians 2:7, post-classical Latin mysterium iniquitatis (Vulgate), Hellenistic Greek τὸ μυστήριον τῆς ἀνομίας.] mystery of iniquity n. the mystery of the existence of evil and the Devil, whose origin it is supposed reason alone can not explain; (in extended use) any instance of extreme and inexplicable evil or suffering. Formerly also †mystery of wickedness. ΘΚΠ the mind > goodness and badness > badness or evil > evil thing > [noun] > and secret mystery of iniquityc1384 society > morality > moral evil > wickedness > [noun] > iniquity > secret or inexplicable mystery of wickednessc1384 mystery of iniquity1545 c1384 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(2)) 2 Thess. ii. 7 Forwhi the mysterie, or priuyte, of wickidnesse worchith now [1526 Tyndale the mistery off iniquytie]. c1400 Bk. to Mother (Bodl.) 182 For Anticrist worcheþ now misterie of wickednes to hem þat parshen. 1545 J. Bale (title) A mysterye of inyqyte contayned within the heretycall Genealogye of Ponce Pantolabus. 1613 S. Purchas Pilgrimage 571 If I might, with the Readers patience, I would adde somewhat of their Mysterie of iniquitie, and the mysticall sense of this iniquitie. 1647 N. Bacon Hist. Disc. Govt. 24 If God had not given them over to thraldome under that mystery of iniquity, of sinfull man aspiring into the place of God. 1721 R. Wodrow Hist. Sufferings Church of Scotl. (1830) IV. 286 This hellish mystery of antichristian iniquity and arbitrary tyranny. 1756 E. Burke Vindic. Nat. Society 38 The Whole of this Mystery of Iniquity is called the Reason of State. 1819 W. Scott Ivanhoe III. vii. 170 We will search to the bottom this mystery of iniquity. 1855 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. IV. xvii. 52 This mystery of iniquity [sc. a plot against William III] has..been gradually unveiling. 1884 Pall Mall Gaz. 28 Aug. 3/2 The great city [of London] is full of many mysteries—not a few of them..mysteries of iniquity. 1922 G. M. Trevelyan Brit. Hist. 19th Cent. xii. 199 He [sc. Sir Robert Peel] at once cleared out the mystery of iniquity at the Home Office. 1980 J. Saward Perfect Fools viii. 128 Surin faced the mystery of iniquity in all its horrific power. 3. An ordinance, rite, or sacrament of the Christian Church, esp. (in later use) the Eastern Orthodox Church. In plural: the Eucharist; the consecrated elements used in the Eucharist. ΘΚΠ society > faith > worship > sacrament > [noun] sacramentc1175 mystery?a1425 society > faith > worship > sacrament > communion > [noun] massOE servicelOE sacrament?c1225 table1340 commoningc1384 the Lord's Supperc1384 Eucharista1400 oblation?a1425 communion1440 sacrifice?1504 Lord's Table1533 Maundy1533 the Supper?1548 unbloody sacrifice1548 mystery1549 communication1550 banquet1563 liturgy1564 table service1593 synaxis1625 mysteriousness1650 second service1655 nagmaal1833 ordinance1854 table prayer1858 society > faith > artefacts > consumables > eucharistic elements > [noun] houseleOE bread and winea1225 sacrament?c1225 sacringc1290 spicec1425 kind?1531 Eucharistc1540 element1556 species1579 elemental1656 mystery1662 symbol1671 waybread1993 ?a1425 tr. Catherine of Siena Orcherd of Syon (Harl.) (1966) 249 (MED) Wiþ what iȝe..schuldist þou and oþire byholde and se, touche, and resceyue þis blessid mysterie? c1450 Speculum Christiani (Harl. 6580) (1933) 182 (MED) Maner also of araynge to the mystery of this holy sacrament es touchede, Exodi xii, thus of the pasche lombe. 1502 tr. Ordynarye of Crysten Men (de Worde) i. iii. sig. d.ii Many of the mysteryes afore sayd be done at ye chirche dore & not wtin. 1549 Bk. Common Prayer (STC 16267) Matrimonie f. xvi* O god, whiche hast consecrated the state of matrimonie, to such an excellent misterie, that in it is signified & represented the spirituall mariage and vnitie betwixte Christe & his churche. 1581 N. Burne Disput. Headdis of Relig. f. 47v The Gentilis vsit to baptise thame quha come to thair mistereis and to mark thame in the forret. 1624 T. Gataker Discuss. Transubstant. 94 The..Mysterie, or mysterious rite, as the word there vsed properly importeth. 1662 J. Davies tr. A. Olearius Voy. & Trav. J. Albert de Mandelslo 30 in Voy. & Trav. Ambassadors His mouth and nose were covered with a linen cloth, lest the impurity of his breath should profane the mystry. 1693 W. Wotton tr. L. E. Du Pin New Hist. Eccl. Writers II. 108 (note) Concerning the Holy Mysteries of the Altar. 1737 J. Wesley Let. 11 Aug. in Jrnl. (1739) 48 I will administer to you the Mysteries of God. a1773 A. Butler Lives Saints (1779) III. 207 The five following he spoke to them after they were baptised during Easter week, to instruct them perfectly in the mysteries of the three sacraments they had received together. 1809 R. K. Porter Travelling Sketches Russia & Sweden I. viii. 73 There are seven mysteries..in the Greek church, viz. baptism, the chrism.., the eucharist, [etc.]. 1854 H. H. Milman Hist. Lat. Christianity I. iii. vii. 472 Within [the sacred edifices] were the relics of the tutelar saint, the mysteries, and the presence of the Redeemer. 1918 W. M. Kirkland Joys of being Woman xxi. 247 A pink-paper catechism, frank in its woodcuts and facile in its explanation of the mysteries of the sacraments. 1986 J. M. Hussey Orthodox Church in Byzantine Empire ii. 349 By means of its sacraments, or mysteries as they were called, special graces were conferred on members of this society through the Holy Spirit. 4. Christian Church. An incident in the life of Christ or (occasionally) a saint, regarded as a subject for contemplation or as having mystical significance. Also spec. (chiefly Roman Catholic Church): each of the events relating to the life of Christ commemorated in the rosary; (hence) each of the divisions of the rosary commemorating these events.The fifteen mysteries traditionally commemorated in the rosary are in three groups of five: the ‘joyful mysteries’, relating to the annunciation and birth of Christ, the ‘sorrowful mysteries’, relating to the Passion, and the ‘glorious mysteries’, relating to Christ's resurrection. In 2002, Pope John Paul II, in his Apostolic Letter on the rosary, Rosarium Virginis Mariae, announced the addition of a fourth group, the ‘mysteries of light’ or ‘luminous mysteries’, relating to the public ministry of Christ. Each group corresponds to the five decades of a chaplet, a different mystery being contemplated during the recital of each decade. ΘΚΠ society > faith > aspects of faith > Bible, Scripture > biblical events > [noun] > mystical incident mystery1655 society > faith > worship > prayer > kinds of prayer > [noun] > using the rosary > division of mystery1655 1655 Bp. J. Taylor Golden Grove 57 Meditate on the passion of our blessed Saviour and all the mysteries of our Redemption. 1655 Bp. J. Taylor Golden Grove 59 Upon the Holy-days..let the matter of your meditations be according to the mystery of the day. 1687 A. Lovell tr. J. de Thévenot Trav. into Levant i. 195 We went in Procession through all the Sanctuaries of the great Church, where all the mysteries of the Passion were represented to the Life. 1704 R. Nelson Compan. Festivals & Fasts i. Prelim. Instr. 8 If we commemorate any Mystery of our Redemption. 1737 R. Challoner Catholick Christian Instructed xxv. 240 The Rosary..is divided into three Parts, each Part consisting of five Mysteries... The first five are called the five joyful Mysteries. 1835 Penny Cycl. IV. 79/1 A chaplet..divided into three sets, white, red, and damask roses, corresponding to the joyful, sorrowful, and glorious mysteries. 1852 A. Jameson Legends Madonna Introd. p. lxi Another cycle of subjects consists of the fifteen Mysteries of the Rosary. 1910 Encycl. Brit. XXIII. 724/2 A subject for meditation selected from the ‘mysteries’ of the life of Christ and of the Blessed Virgin. 1987 M. Dorris Yellow Raft in Blue Water (1988) xvii. 304 Each set of its ten Hail Marys was a different pastel shade,..with the mysteries between them marked by silver metal balls. II. Non-theological uses. 5. a. A hidden or secret thing; something inexplicable or beyond human comprehension; a person or thing evoking awe or wonder but not well known or understood; an enigma. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > secrecy, concealment > a profound secret, mystery > [noun] rounOE mysteryc1384 sacramentc1384 secrec1386 secret1390 riddlec1400 concealment1598 arcanum1605 Sphinxa1610 abstrusity1632 cryptic1663 c1384 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(2)) Dan. ii. 27 And Danyel answerde byfore the kyng, and saith, ‘The mysterie whiche the kyng axith, the wise men and the witchis and dyuynours..mown not shewe to the kyng.’ c1450 J. Lydgate Secrees (Sloane 2464) 231 (MED) Be disposicyoun to haue intelligence Of Secre thynges, whan I was in dowte, The hyd mysteryes for to seke hem owte. c1475 (?c1400) Apol. Lollard Doctr. (1842) 44 (MED) Daniel, ouercomer of lyowns, saw misteris of priui þingis. a1557 J. Cheke tr. Gospel St. Matthew (1843) xiii. 11 A mysteri is a secret and an hiden thing, which ought not to be schewed abrood. 1601 B. Jonson Every Man in his Humor ii. ii. sig. E To meditate Vpon the difference of mans estate: Where is deciphered to true iudgements eye A deep, conceald, and precious misterie . View more context for this quotation 1638 F. Junius Painting of Ancients 27 The great interpreter of the mysteries of Nature. 1673 Humours Town 39 This is the wondrous Mystery,—that Smirkin Monsieur wears so many badges of the Ladies Favours. 1731 N. Bailey Universal Etymol. Eng. Dict. II Mysteries (in Numbers), the number 5 multiplied by 5, makes 25; and 4 multiplied by 4, makes 16; and 3 multiplied by 3, makes 9; but 9 and 16 is equal to 25. 1744 E. Young Complaint: Night the Seventh 26 'Tis Immortality decyphers Man, And opens all the Mysteries of his Make. 1784 E. Allen Reason vii. §1. 238 In vain we endeavor to search out the hidden mistery of a perpetual motion. 1832 W. Macgillivray Trav. & Researches A. von Humboldt xviii. 246 There are mysteries in the affections and hatreds of animals. 1869 E. A. Freeman Hist. Norman Conquest III. xii. 84 There was a mystery about the marriage. 1882 R. L. Stevenson New Arabian Nights II. 230 Not otherwise might two philosophers salute, as..each recognised that he was still a mystery to his disciples. 1970 M. Angelou I Know Why Caged Bird Sings iv. 21 He remained a mystery in my childhood. 1992 Sci. News 8 Feb. 88/1 The life cycle and behavior of the 20 million adult Mexican free-tailed bats..living in this cave outside San Antonio, Texas, have remained something of a mystery to scientists. b. In weakened use (chiefly ironic or humorous): a puzzle, a conundrum. Esp. in —— is a mystery to me and variants. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > belief > uncertainty, doubt, hesitation > perplexity, bewilderment > [noun] mingingOE riddleOE cumbermentc1300 willa1325 encumbrancec1330 were1338 perplexitya1393 discomfiturea1425 cumbrancec1460 confuse1483 proplexity1487 perplexion?c1500 amazedness?1520 amazement1553 subversion1558 amaze?1560 perplexednessa1586 confusedness1587 puzzle1599 confusion1600 mizmaze1604 discomfita1616 embarras1627 obfuscation1628 mystery1629 confoundedness1641 puzzledness1662 confuseness1710 puzzlement1731 puzzledom1748 embarrassment1751 puzzleation1767 bepuzzlement1806 conjecture1815 mystification1817 bewilderment1819 perplexment1826 fuddle1827 wilderment1830 discomforture1832 head-scratching1832 baffle1843 posement1850 muddlement1857 turbidity1868 fogging1878 bemuddlement1884 harl1889 befuddlement1905 turbidness1906 wuzziness1942 perplexability1999 1629 J. Ford Lovers Melancholy iv. i. 64 Aret.: What should this young man bee, Or whither can he be conuay'd? Sophr.: Tis to me a mystery, I vnderstand it not. a1668 W. Davenant Man's the Master (1669) v. 65 This is a mystery! still you are muttering, but what look you for? 1720 J. Mitchell To Right Honourable James Craggs in Poems Several Occasions (1732) 217 What's the Charm, and how to know it, Remains a Mystery to your Poet. 1775 E. Thompson Fair Quaker (ed. 2) i. 12 Ara.: Can't you apprehend the reason why I study to make a breach betwixt my sister and yourself? Wor.: It is all a mystery to me. 1837 C. Dickens Pickwick Papers xxvii. 279 ‘Wery glad to see you, Sammy,’ said the elder Mr. Weller, ‘though how you've managed to get over your mother-in-law, is a mystery to me.’ 1889 J. K. Jerome Three Men in Boat i. 15 Where the thousands upon thousands of bad sailors that swarm in every ship hide themselves when they are on land is a mystery. 1922 D. H. Lawrence England my England 273 Where Bob gets the money for his drink from is a mystery. 1974 K. Amis Ending Up i. 8 How a bad leg prevents you from being able to carry things is a mystery to me. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > secrecy, concealment > a profound secret, mystery > [noun] > mystic meaning mysticc1350 mysterya1500 a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 325v In many place of holy writ it scheweþ how moche misterie and priuete [L. mysterium] is in resoun of nombres. a1439 J. Lydgate Fall of Princes (Bodl. 263) ii. 3514 Danyel Fulli expownyd to Baltazar the kyng The mysterie of this dark writyng. ?a1475 (?a1425) tr. R. Higden Polychron. (Harl. 2261) (1871) III. 103 (MED) Seynte Mathewe..assignethe xiiij generaciones, for the cause of a certeyne mistery [a1387 J. Trevisa tr. som priue menynge]. a1500 (?a1422) J. Lydgate Life Our Lady (Adv.) in W. B. D. D. Turnbull Visions of Tundale (1843) 134 Grete mystery is in both tweyne The toon [turtle] comendyd for his chastite And the tother [sc. the dove]..Is symple and meke. 1591 J. Harington Briefe Apol. Poetrie in tr. L. Ariosto Orlando Furioso sig. ¶iiij The ancient Poets haue..wrapped..in their writings diuers..meanings, which they call the sences or mysteries thereof. 1598 R. Barret Theorike & Pract. Mod. Warres iv. 100 Is there any meaning or misterie in marching the left or right side shot before in the vantgard? 1658 Sir T. Browne Hydriotaphia: Urne-buriall iii. 31 Most [urns] imitate a circular figure..whether from any mystery, best duration or capacity, were but a conjecture. 1687 A. Lovell tr. J. de Thévenot Trav. into Levant i. 82 Nor shall I speak of their Sacerdotal Vestments, which have their Mysteries. 7. a. A secret rite of an ancient religion or occult society to which only the initiated are admitted. Chiefly in plural. Cf. mystery religion n. ΘΚΠ society > faith > worship > observance, ritual > kinds of rite > secret > [noun] mysteryc1487 society > society and the community > social relations > an association, society, or organization > secret society > [noun] > the Freemasons > secrets mystery1738 c1487 J. Skelton tr. Diodorus Siculus Bibliotheca Historica i. 40 He was by theym electe & chosen theyr kynge agayn; whiche, after the re-adopcion of his regaly, taughte theym the ceremonyes & mysteres of Ceres Eleusine. 1616 B. Jonson Hymenæi in Wks. (Rtldg.) 553/1 Bid all profane away; None here may stay To view our mysteries. 1621 R. Montagu Diatribæ Hist. Tithes 553 From him are the Sabasia, old Pagan Orgiaes and Mysteries deriued. 1678 R. Cudworth True Intellect. Syst. Universe i. iv. 286 Zoroaster and the ancient Magi, who were best initiated in the Mithraick Mysteries. 1738 W. Warburton Divine Legation Moses I. ii. iv. 134 The first and original Mysteries, of which we have any Account, were those of Isis and Osiris in Egypt. 1776 E. Gibbon Decline & Fall I. xvi. 527 By imitating the awful secrecy which reigned in the Eleusinian mysteries, the Christians had flattered themselves, that they should render their sacred institutions more respectable. 1805 H. K. White Let. 10 Nov. in Remains (1807) I. 189 I have as much expectation of gaining it, as of being elected supreme magus over the mysteries of Mithra. 1850 G. Grote Hist. Greece VIII. ii. lxiv. 204 Until that day of the month Boedromion (about the beginning of September) when the Eleusinian mysteries were celebrated. 1910 Encycl. Brit. I. 567/2 He..instituted mysteries like those of Eleusis, from which his particular enemies..were..excluded as ‘profane’. 1991 S. Larsen & R. Larsen Fire in Mind iv. xxiii. 524 The trip went from Delphi to Eleusis, the now almost unrecognizable site of the Mysteries. b. Freemasonry. A masonic secret or ritual. Chiefly in plural. ΚΠ a1692 R. Kirk in M. M. Rossi Cappellano delle Fate (1964) 63 The doctor called the mason-word a rabbinical mystery. 1728 J. Anderson Constit. Fraternity Free Masons 150 The G. Master shall ask his Deputy, if he..finds the Candidate Master well skill'd in the Noble Science and the Royal Art, and duly instructed in our Mysteries? 1767 Coll. Masonic Songs xli. 69 The Cowan may strive, nay plot and contrive To find out our great mystery. 1872 C. I. Paton Freemasonry ii. i. 50 Every candidate for initiation into the mysteries of Freemasonry. 1922 F. C. Higgins (title) Occult masonry, the number philosophy, symbolism, cosmic geometry; the lost word, a scientific study of the ancient mysteries and symbolisms of freemasonry and religion. 1970 W. T. Downey (title) Admitted to the mysteries; a history of Freemasonry and its hidden rites. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > secrecy, concealment > [noun] > something concealed, a secret > deep, personal mystery1529 the secrets of the (one's) heart1535 bosom secret1659 1529 T. More Dialogue Heresyes i, in Wks. 124/2 Let ye knowlege of the father alone therefore amonge our wifes misteryes. 1604 W. Shakespeare Hamlet iii. ii. 354 You would plucke out the hart of my mistery . View more context for this quotation a1616 W. Shakespeare Othello (1622) iv. ii. 32 Your mistery, your mistery: nay dispatch. View more context for this quotation 1617 F. Moryson Itinerary i. 13 The servant answered that the old woman was in bed and that he knew not the mystery, whether any eggs were in the house or no. 9. = miracle n. 2b. Cf. mystery play n.Certain writers have sometimes attempted to draw a distinction between mystery plays and miracle plays (see quot. 1875), but the terms are generally used interchangeably. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > a play > [noun] > mystery or miracle play miraclec1395 resurrectiona1400 wonder1435 mystery1555 scaffold play1565 miracle play1602 mystery play1808 1555 Edinb. Hammermen f. 199, in Dict. Older Sc. Tongue at Mistery To ane callit Wilsoun that plaid on the squasche the tua dayis that the tovn maid ther mestris. 1744 R. Dodsley Select Coll. Old Plays I. Pref. p. xiii The mysteries only represented in a senseless manner some miraculous History from the Old or New Testament. a1772 T. Hawkins Origin Eng. Drama (1773) Pref. p. vii One of the first improvements on the old Mystery was the Allegorical Play, or Morality. 1821 W. Scott Kenilworth II. v. 119 My wife, sir, hath played the devil ere now, in a Mystery, in Queen Mary's time. 1838 W. H. Prescott Hist. Reign Ferdinand & Isabella II. i. xx. 231 The sacred plays, or mysteries, so popular throughout Europe in the middle ages. 1875 A. W. Ward Hist. Eng. Dramatic Lit. I. 23 Properly speaking, Mysteries deal with Gospel events only... Miracle Plays, on the other hand, are concerned with incidents derived from the legends of the saints of the Church. 1910 Encycl. Brit. VIII. 501/2 The Chester Plays..were undoubtedly indebted both to the Mystère du vieil testament and to earlier French mysteries. 1990 Illustr. London News Christmas No. 11/3 The play originated in the Mysteries, or dramatizations of sacred history, ultimately leading to our farce, secular drama and pantomime. 10. More generally: an action or practice about which there is or is reputed to be some secrecy; esp. a highly skilful or technical operation in a trade or art. Now usually in plural. Cf. mystery n.2 2. Now chiefly humorous. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > manner of action > [noun] > specific manner of action or operation > secret or known only by a select few secret1486 mystery1563 the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > secrecy, concealment > [noun] > something concealed, a secret > secret process secret1486 mystery1563 trade secret1825 1563 J. Shute First Groundes Archit. sig. Biiv [An architect] must also be a perfect distributor of the great misteries, that he hath perceued and experymented. 1594 T. Lodge & R. Greene Looking Glasse sig. B2 He was the first man that euer instructed me in the mysterie of a pot of Ale. 1607 J. Norden Surueyors Dialogue i. 6 And of whom such land is holden, the same is called the Lord of that land after a sort [etc.]..as if you be so willing as you seeme to talke of these mysteries, you shall anon perceiue. 1617 F. Moryson Itinerary iii. 80 They forbad the English..to dwell in Poland..lest they should..find the mysteries of the trade. 1675 W. Wycherley Country-wife iv. i. 65 To talk of Honour in the mysteries of Love, is like talking of Heaven, or the Deity in an operation of Witchcraft. 1707 E. Ward Wooden World Dissected 61 The Mystery of his Art and Science, consists in a long List of Fustian Words and Phrases. 1719 D. Defoe Life Robinson Crusoe 263 I let him into the Mystery, for such it was to him, of Gunpowder, and Bullet. 1785 E. Burke Speech Nabob of Arcot's Private Debts 33 The whole art and mystery..of the profession of soucaring. 1808 H. More Cœlebs in Search of Wife I. xxi. 305 No man is allowed to set up in an ordinary trade till he has served a long apprenticeship to its mysteries. 1837 B. Disraeli Venetia I. 90 Harassed with all the mysteries of packing. 1869 L. M. Alcott Little Women II. v. 77 John rescued his babies, and marched up and down, with one on each arm, as if already initiated into the mysteries of baby-tending. 1927 W. E. Collinson Contemp. Eng. 19 Only gradually did the mysteries of yorkers, full tosses and leg-breaks penetrate to us. 1991 Traveller Winter 6/3 When the luggage porter or bell captain shows guests to their rooms..could he not be persuaded to reveal the mysteries of getting out of the hotel in a fire? 11. a. The quality or condition of being obscure or enigmatic; mysteriousness. Also: mysteries collectively. shrouded (also †involved, wrapped) in mystery: made obscure or recondite; hard to fathom or interpret. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > secrecy, concealment > a profound secret, mystery > [adjective] secrec1386 mystica1398 mystical1516 dark1532 arcane1547 occulta1549 shadowish1561 abstruse1576 cryptical1588 shrouded (also involved, wrapped) in mysterya1616 mysterious1622 mysterial1630 cryptica1638 researched1653 rarefied1662 arcanalc1828 sphinx-like1837 sphinxine1845 abstrusive1848 Sphingine1925 the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > secrecy, concealment > a profound secret, mystery > [noun] > mysterious state or quality mysticalness1608 mysterya1616 abstruseness1628 mysteriousness1633 abstrusity1649 mysticity1761 mysticality1834 sphinxineness1845 a1616 W. Shakespeare All's Well that ends Well (1623) v. iii. 104 Platus [sic] himselfe,..Hath not in natures mysterie more science, Then I haue in this Ring. View more context for this quotation 1659 W. Chamberlayne Pharonnida ii. v. 159 Every Tree, In wreaths where Love lay wrapt in mystery, Held their included Names. 1678 J. Bunyan Pilgrim's Progress 102 If a man doth delight to talk of the History or the Mystery of things..where shall he find things..so sweetly penned, as in the holy Scripture? View more context for this quotation 1744 E. Young Complaint: Night the Seventh 8 And Virtue vies with Hope in Mystery. 1788 T. Reid Aristotle's Logic iv. §2. 74 This is the mystery contained in the vowels of those barbarous words. 1807 T. Jefferson Speech 22 Jan. in Writings (1984) 533 The objects of the conspiracy began to be perceived, but still so blended and involved in mystery that nothing distinct could be singled out for pursuit. 1818 S. T. Coleridge Friend (new ed.) I. xiii. 161 The mystery and the dignity of our human nature. 1837 T. Carlyle French Revol. II. v. v. 308 The Queen, shrouded in deepest mystery. 1883 H. Drummond Nat. Law in Spiritual World Introd. 28 A Science without mystery is unknown; a Religion without mystery is absurd. 1916 E. R. Burroughs Beasts of Tarzan i. 1 The entire affair is shrouded in mystery. 1986 T. O. Echewa Crippled Dancer ii. x. 222 Sun glasses for mystery—eyes that saw without being seen. b. The tendency to make secrets or puzzles of things, esp. for the purpose of exercising undue power or influence; deliberate mysteriousness in speech or behaviour. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > secrecy, concealment > a profound secret, mystery > [noun] > mysterious state or quality > making mysterious > capacity for mystery1692 mysteriousnessa1784 mysterizingness1817 1692 tr. C. de Saint-Évremond Misc. Ess. 209 Questions, which should be handled with a great deal of Mystery and Secrecy. 1726 J. Swift Gulliver I. ii. vii. 128 He professed..to..despise all Mystery, Refinement, and Intrigue, either in a Prince or a Minister. 1776 E. Gibbon Decline & Fall I. v. 107 The emperors taught them..to lay aside that reverential awe, which distance only, and mystery, can preserve, towards an imaginary power. 1821 Ld. Byron Marino Faliero (2nd issue) iii. ii. 78 Israel, speak! what means this mystery? 1832 J.-C.-L. S. de Sismondi Hist. Ital. Republics ix. 218 The senate joined to this rigour the perfidy and mystery which characterise an aristocracy. 1851 N. Hawthorne House of Seven Gables xiv. 235 She was by nature as hostile to mystery as the sunshine to a dark corner. 1900 J. Conrad Lord Jim xxix. 308 Old Tunku Allang got frightened and returned all my things. It was done in a roundabout way, and with no end of mystery. 1989 R. J. Smith Unknown C.I.A. i. 12 More than one perspective would be useful, it seemed to me, when trying to describe this organization so veiled by mystery and misunderstanding. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > secrecy, concealment > [noun] > something concealed, a secret > of the state mysterya1618 state secret1656 official secret1891 a1618 W. Raleigh Maxims of State (1642) 9 Mysteries or Sophismes of State, are certaine secret practizes, either for the avoiding of danger; or averting such effects as tend to the preservation of the present State, as it is set or founded. 1622 F. Bacon Hist. Raigne Henry VII 43 Touching the Mysterie of reannexing of the Duchy of Britainie to the Crowne of France..the Ambassadours bare aloofe from it. 1659 in T. Burton Diary (1828) III. 130 Every secretary ought to write what is to pass a Parliament, not as he writes his mysteries. a1704 T. Brown Declam. Praise Poverty (rev. ed.) in Wks. (1730) I. 89 Half-politicians maxims called mysteries of state. 1757 W. Thompson Gondibert & Birtha iii. iii. 396 Nor less his Skill In Counsels and the Mysteries of State. 1815 C. Lloyd tr. V. Alfieri Don Garcia i. i, in Trag. V. Alfieri III. 4 Kings, More than all thoughts, should hide their thoughts of fear. 'Tis the most jealous mystery of state. 1857 H. T. Buckle Hist. Civilisation Eng. I. xii 668 They heard..mysteries of state and mysteries of creed unfolded..to the popular gaze. 1877 J. A. Heraud Uxmal vi. 124 Off with this mystery of state, or know I am thy victim. 13. to make a mystery of [compare Middle French, French faire (un) mystère de (1551)] : to treat as a secret; to make (a thing) out to be more puzzling or inexplicable than it really is, esp. in order to make an impression. Also simply to make a mystery. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > secrecy, concealment > a profound secret, mystery > make mystical or mysterious [verb (transitive)] to make a mystery of1634 mysticize1681 enigmatize1800 mystify1829 mysterize1845 1634 W. Tirwhyt tr. J. L. G. de Balzac Lett. 248 I cannot..make of euery meane matter a mystery by whispering it in the eare. 1687 A. Lovell tr. J. de Thévenot Trav. into Levant i. 2 Making a mystery of nothing, and frankly discoursing with any man upon what Subject he proposes. 1720 J. Ozell et al. tr. R. A. de Vertot Hist. Revol. Rom. Republic I. iv. 196 The Consuls always made a Mystery to the People of those first Elements of their Juris-Prudence. 1765 L. Sterne Life Tristram Shandy VIII. xxvii. 121 When he felt he was in love with widow Wadman, he had no conception that the thing was any more to be made a mystery of, than if Mrs. Wadman, had given him a cut with a gap'd knife across his finger. 1834 H. Martineau Farrers of Budge-Row iii. 35 He made no mysteries, but told all that he was asked to tell. 1841 G. Borrow Zincali I. i. ii. 58 Nor did he make a mystery of his knowledge, but publicly boasted of it. 1915 A. Conan Doyle Valley of Fear i. vii. 122 Well, not to make a mystery of so simple a matter, I was looking for the missing dumb-bell. 1988 R. Basu Hours before Dawn xvi. 127 He applied and got the job. It's quite unnecessary for you to make a mystery of it. ΘΚΠ the world > the supernatural > the occult > sorcery, witchcraft, or magic > non-European magic (miscellaneous) > [noun] > American Indian medicine medicine1767 mystery1841 the world > the supernatural > the occult > sorcery, witchcraft, or magic > non-European magic (miscellaneous) > [noun] > sorcerer or medicine man > American Indian medicine man1801 medicine1817 medicine woman1834 mystery1841 mystery man1841 mediciner1852 1841 G. Catlin Lett. N. Amer. Indians I. xii. 87 The whole village..with..its medicines (or mysteries) and scalp-poles waving over my head. 1841 G. Catlin Lett. N. Amer. Indians I. xv. 106 I..have been regularly installed medicine or mystery. 15. Angling. A small yellowish fly used in salmon fishing. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > fishing > fishing-tackle > means of attracting fish > [noun] > artificial fly > salmon flies salmon fly1704 kingfisher?1758 tartan1837 goldfinch1845 parr-tail1847 baker1848 butcher1860 Jock Scott1866 claret1867 colonel1867 king1867 major1867 Shannon fly1867 wasp1867 chimney-sweep1872 Jack Scott1874 hornet1876 winesop black1876 mystery1880 1880 F. Francis Bk. Angling (ed. 5) xi. 427 No. 1 is called The Mystery. 1902 Encycl. Brit. XXV. 446/1 Lightly dressed flies..such as the Sun-fly and the Mystery. 1987 Trout & Salmon Mar. 36/4 The Mystery and the Crane..were tied for him locally and he admits that they were big for rough, heavy water. 16. slang. Inferior meat of dubious origin, served as corned beef, sausages, etc. Cf. mystery meat n. at Compounds. Now rare.In quot. a1890 short for bag of mystery n. at bag n. 18d. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > animals for food > [noun] > meat > inferior meat sticking1764 mule meat1846 mystery1882 mule1887 1877–8 Cornelian 86 Mystericum, hash.] 1882 J. W. Miller & C. H. Harlow 9′–51″ 280 Suppose, for example, he thinks of some common, fleshly thing like ‘hash’. Now you all know what hash is but behold the result. My machine weaves off something like this: Ye mystery, that makes the whole world kin! 1888 in Amer. Heritage (1979) Oct. 20 Our hash is ever cold... I'm sure you'll open wide your eyes and at the ‘mistery’ start. a1890 G. Horncastle in A. Barrère & C. G. Leland Dict. Slang (1890) II. 79/2 The peelers I scorn and defy, While strings of these mysteries I wave round my head, And then to the people I cry, ‘Sassidges, oh, sassidges! Oh, beef and pork and German!’ 1906 C. M'Govern Sarjint Larry 52 ‘Will yez be afther havin' a wee bit of canned mystery, sorr?’ said Sergeant Tipprary, as he drew a half can of Armour corned beef hash from his haversack. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > metal > alloy > [noun] > copper, tin, and platinum or imitation gold mystery1885 1885 Standard 8 Apr. 6/4 There was not a particle of gold in it. It was made of a composition called ‘mystery’, composed of platinum, tin, and copper. 1887 J. Hutchison Pract. Banking III. 681 (note) A great number of spurious sovereigns and half-sovereigns are in circulation... Those made of ‘mystery gold’..stand the tests of the ordinary acids. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > dishes and prepared food > cake > [noun] > a cake > other cakes honey appleeOE barley-cake1393 seed cakea1400 cake?a1425 pudding-cake?1553 manchet1562 biscuit cake1593 placent1598 poplin1600 jumbal1615 bread pudding1623 semel1643 wine-cakea1661 Shrewsbury cake1670 curd cake1675 fruitcake1687 clap-bread1691 simnel cake1699 orange-flower cake1718 banana cake1726 sweet-cake1726 torte1748 Naples cake1766 Bath cake1769 gofer1769 yeast-cake1795 nutcake1801 tipsy-cake1806 cruller1808 baba1813 lady's finger1818 coconut cake1824 mint cake1825 sices1825 cup-cake1828 batter-cake1830 buckwheat1830 Dundee seed cake1833 fat-cake1839 babka1846 wonder1848 popover1850 cream-cake1855 sly-cake1855 dripping-cake1857 lard-cake1858 puffet1860 quick cake1865 barnbrack1867 matrimony cake1871 brioche1873 Nelson cake1877 cocoa cake1883 sesame cake1883 marinade1888 mystery1889 oblietjie1890 stuffed monkey1892 Greek bread1893 Battenberg1903 Oswego cake1907 nusstorte1911 dump cake1912 Dobos Torte1915 lekach1918 buckle1935 Florentine1936 hash cake1967 space cake1984 1889 R. Wells Bread & Biscuit Baker's Assist. 58 Mystery or Cheap Plum Cake at 3d. per lb. 8 lbs. of common flour, 3 lbs. of brown sugar, 1 lb. of lard [etc.]. 19. British slang. Esp. in London: a young woman newly arrived in the city, or having no fixed address; a young or inexperienced prostitute. ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabitant > type of inhabitant generally > [noun] > new inhabitant new-comeOE new-cominga1387 foreigner1422 stranger1447 newcomerc1450 new face?a1513 new comeling1587 come-o'-will1815 settler1815 newie1856 sinkeh1878 new kid1894 ring-neck1898 blow-in1908 malihini1914 mystery1937 new jack1988 society > morality > moral evil > licentiousness > unchastity > prostitution > [noun] > a prostitute > young or inexperienced punketto1601 punkettee1612 punklinga1640 flapper1889 mystery1937 1937 J. Worby Other Half 278 Mystery, a girl who is down and out, come to town to look for a job. 1955 ‘C. H. Rolph’ Women of Streets x. 120 When you're a new girl they call you a ‘mystery’. And you're a mystery until you've been here three or four years. Then you become a ‘history’. 1960 Observer 28 Feb. 23/4 Many teddys, tearaways and mysteries (drifting girls) are put off by the typical orthodox youth club. 1962 R. Cook Crust on its Uppers (1964) iv. 37 ‘I Saw a Human Monster in My Bedroom, says Teenager’..means the little mystery's woken up when she wasn't supposed to. 1974 G. F. Newman Price v. 169 Instead of calling a couple of mysteries, he called a cab. 20. A mystery story, novel, etc. Cf. murder mystery n. at murder n.1 and int. Compounds 2. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > literature > prose > narrative or story > other fictional narrative > [noun] > mystery story mystery story1892 mystery1949 mystery novel1967 1949 R. Chandler Let. 28 Dec. (1966) 76 The mystery and 'tec are on the wane. 1969 New Yorker 30 Aug. 22/3 Linda was on the next bed, reading her mystery. 1976 M. Machlin Pipeline xlvii. 494 He didn't think he could hang around Mitchell Mesa another day watching television and reading dog-eared mysteries and paperback Westerns. 1996 City Paper (Baltimore) 24 Apr. 29/1 The story in this screenplay is about as inventive as your average Nancy Drew mystery—perhaps less so. Compounds mystery bag n. = bag of mystery n. at bag n. 18d. ΚΠ 1889 Sportsman 2 Feb. 4/1 But the ‘mystery-bags’ of Sieur X, if we are to believe the common report, were far from being fragrant. This gentleman has been sentenced to six months' imprisonment for ‘making sausages of tainted meat’. 1975 Observer 16 Mar. (Colour Suppl.) 8/3 The British call them sausages, chipolatas, bangers, porkers, grunters, dogs, thins, links, mystery bags. mystery cult n. a cult based on mysteries and occult rites; a mystery religion. ΚΠ 1899 W. R. Inge Christian Mysticism App. B. 350 The alliance between..the neoplatonic philosophy and the revived pagan Mystery-cults. 1931 K. E. Kirk Vision of God (1950) 501 Even the Neronian persecution was stimulated by the belief that Christianity partook of all the ordinary features of a mystery-cult. 1992 Commentary Feb. 41/2 A bold synthesis of monotheism with the mythic power of the mystery cults. mystery meat n. colloquial (originally U.S.) meat of uncertain origin, esp. as served in an institutional dining hall. ΚΠ 1968 C. F. Baker et al. College Undergraduate Slang Study (typescript, Brown Univ.) 160 Mystery meat, bad dining hall meat. 1977 Washington Post (Nexis) 13 Oct. e1 Individual puff pastry packets are popular, but I think it's just a new way of presenting minced mystery meat. 1989 Independent (BNC) 16 Dec. 35 This is a common approach for country butchers, but it is exemplary in town; so are the clearly displayed credentials on all the meat he sells. May it herald the demise of mystery meat. mystery novel n. = mystery story n. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > literature > prose > narrative or story > other fictional narrative > [noun] > mystery story mystery story1892 mystery1949 mystery novel1967 1967 Films in Rev. Feb. 83/2 Wallace began what can only be called the belt-line production of mystery novels during World War I. 1975 Publishers Weekly 1 Dec. 67/2 The type of wan, lightweight heroine who can't support her own pantyhose let alone a mystery novel. 1996 New Yorker 21 Oct. 180/3 Revolutionism hasn't diminished his taste for his regular poker game..for TV cop shows, or for the mystery novels that he and his wife consume by the bagload. mystery-piety n. [after Swedish mysteriefromhetens (1936 in the passage translated in quot. 1939)] rare religious observance based on mysteries and occult rites. ΚΠ 1939 P. S. Watson tr. A. T. S. Nygren Agape & Eros Pt. 2 II. ii. iii. 355 Neoplatonism..to a large extent bears the stamp of Mystery-piety. ΚΠ 1751 G. Lavington Enthusiasm Methodists & Papists: Pt. III 385 Jannes and Jambrees, who opposed Moses..when the Jews were expelled Egypt, were Egyptian Mystery-Priests. mystery ship n. now historical (chiefly in the First World War (1914–18)) an armed and camouflaged merchant vessel used as a decoy or to destroy submarines; = Q-boat n. at Q n. Compounds.In quot. 19162 perhaps simply: an unidentified ship. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > war vessel > [noun] > decoy-ship decoy ship1915 mystery ship1916 Q-boat1918 Q-ship1918 Q1920 1916 Kia-ora (H.M.S. New Zealand) Aug. 10 Quite close..is the great leviathan, H.M.S. Conundrum of the Doldrum Class; but she is a mystery ship, and of her we must say no more. 1916 Times 1 Sept. 4/3 As our patrol boat stole into port at dusk we passed a ‘mystery ship’ making ready to sail.] 1918 Times 5 Aug. 6/6 A mystery ship—a decoy,..one of the oldest ruses of war adapted to modern warfare. Such a vessel was known in both the British and American services as a Q. ship. 1975 B. Meyrick Behind Light xvi. 207 The crew of Mystery Ship 51 listened as the warning boom of their foghorn echoed..through..the Dover Straits. 2011 J. D. Doenecke Nothing less than War v. 122 The supposed rescue craft was a British ‘Mystery Ship’ or ‘Q-boat’, a decoy ship named Baralong. mystery shopper n. a person employed to visit a shop or restaurant incognito: (a) U.S. one who gives a prize to the first shopper who correctly guesses his or her identity (now rare); (b) one employed to pose as a customer in order to evaluate a business based on the quality or range of goods, customer service, staff performance, etc. ΚΠ 1931 Evening Times (Manitowoc, Wisconsin) 15 Sept. 1/6 Miss High Heels will appear in the various stores at 7:30 p.m... To the first woman who addresses her with these words: ‘You are Miss High Heels, the Mystery Shopper of The Evening Times’,..Miss High Heels will give a certificate good for $25. 1937 Bluefield (W. Va.) Daily Tel. 3 Mar. 9/7 To encourage retail clerks to push the 300 ‘gold’ items included in the sale, thirty ‘mystery shoppers’ were employed to circulate among the stores. Whenever a clerk suggested five or more ‘gold’ items he was immediately handed 50 cents. 1944 Minute Man 15 Dec. 3/2 In Phoenix, Arizona, and elsewhere, ‘to keep the troops on their toes’, a Mystery Shopper, set out to buy a $1,000 Bond from the first retail clerk asking him to purchase an extra Bond. 1968 Fort Madison (Iowa) Democrat 21 Dec. 10/5 (advt.) Frances Judy, our ‘Mystery Shopper’, was spotted..by Gloria Mendez... Congratulations Gloria on winning a $3.00 gift and $2.00 in cash. 1973 Billboard 13 Oct. 40/1 A special promotion squad will be calling on dealers to explain the company's product. This will be shortly followed by a visit from a mystery shopper with queries about Pye product. 1989 Caterer & Hotelkeeper 14 Dec. 29/2 Other initiatives are being brought from the US..including..a ‘mystery shoppers’ system whereby a team of people will visit pubs and restaurants incognito to check on standards. 1994 Times 4 Aug. 24 Retailers and hotel and restaurant chains have for some time used mystery shoppers, where specially trained evaluators assess how outlets and staff perform. mystery story n. a detective or crime story; a novel in which a mystery is investigated or solved. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > literature > prose > narrative or story > other fictional narrative > [noun] > mystery story mystery story1892 mystery1949 mystery novel1967 1892 R. L. Stevenson & L. Osbourne Wrecker Epil., in Scribner's Mag. July 75/2 We had long been at once attracted and repelled by that very modern form of the police novel or mystery story. 1932 H. Crane Let. 20 Mar. (1965) 404 Even the suspense of the usual mystery story utilizes that device. 1993 Time Out 31 Mar. 59/4 Part intimate melodrama, part mystery story, the film delves with confidence into some dark areas. mystery tour n. an organized pleasure trip whose destination is kept secret from the passengers; also in extended use. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > outing or excursion > [noun] > type of summering1606 campaign1748 shoemaker's holiday1768 water-party1771 marooning1773 maroon1779 junket1814 pleasure cruise1837 straw ride1856 camp1865 pleasure cruising1880 hanami1891 mystery tour1926 mystery trip1931 awayday1972 gimmick1998 1926 A. G. McAdie Man & Weather 3/3 A party of men..left Bristol in the morning for what a motor firm advertised as ‘a mystery tour’. 1947 J. Betjeman in Strand Mag. Aug. 41 The morning paddle, then the mystery tour By motor-coach inland this afternoon. 1973 C. Bonington Next Horizon vii. 105 Climbing with Tom Patey was a kind of Magical Mystery Tour, in which no one, except perhaps himself, knew what was coming next. 1987 P. Benson Levels x. 73 He'd been taken by Donald, his uncle..on a mystery tour. The Hodges Coach Co. offered the trip. mystery train n. a train taking passengers on a mystery tour. ΘΚΠ society > travel > rail travel > rolling stock > [noun] > train > passenger train > types of parliamentary train1845 excursion-train1849 parliamentary1854 parly1855 corridor train1892 trip-train1894 railmotor1903 railbus1932 mystery train1933 pool passenger train1934 Skybus1963 pay-train1968 1933 H. A. Piehler England for Everyman 35 Recent enterprises include ‘mystery’ trains for hikers, bound for unknown destinations, and circular tours by special trains through beautiful scenery. 1990 Rolling Stone 22 Mar. 38/1 Mystery Train [sc. the 1989 U.S. film]..follows the overlapping activities of people staying in a grungy Memphis hotel called the Arcade. mystery trip n. = mystery tour n. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > outing or excursion > [noun] > type of summering1606 campaign1748 shoemaker's holiday1768 water-party1771 marooning1773 maroon1779 junket1814 pleasure cruise1837 straw ride1856 camp1865 pleasure cruising1880 hanami1891 mystery tour1926 mystery trip1931 awayday1972 gimmick1998 1931 Times 20 Aug. 7/3 A number of mystery trips were among the tours for which Mr. E. R. Gudge, of Farnham, applied for road service licences. 1958 Listener 23 Oct. 653/2 An enterprising char-à-banc proprietor advertised ‘mystery trips’. 1976 Burnham-on-Sea Gaz. 20 Apr. 23/3 Members are reminded that, on Friday, the coach for the mystery trip will leave the Willow Tree at 1.30 pm. 1991 Amer. Square Dance Nov. 41/2 The couple sponsors mystery trips, travels widely in a motorhome. mystery woman n. a woman about whom little is known; an enigmatic or secretive woman. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > secrecy, concealment > a profound secret, mystery > [noun] > person > woman mystery woman1913 Mona Lisa1923 1913 R. C. Praed (title) The mystery woman. 1922 M. Arlen ‘Piracy’ 321 The Daily Mail at once called her a ‘mystery woman’. 1991 Sports Illustr. 29 July 34/1 Seles, the self-styled mystery woman and wannabe star of stage and screen, resurfaced in a blaze of publicity last week. mystery writer n. a writer of mystery stories. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > literature > prose > narrative or story > other fictional narrative > [noun] > mystery story > writer of mystery writer1942 1942 Amer. Speech 17 3 Most of this [sc. slang and cant] I have excluded,..because it is already rather thoroughly recorded in the special dictionaries, out of which, no doubt, the mystery-writers took it in the first place. 1992 Skeptical Inquirer Fall 44/1 The Trap Door Spiders, an informal group of science-fiction and mystery writers in the New York area. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2003; most recently modified version published online June 2022). mysteryn.2 a. Ministry, office; service, occupation. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > [noun] > regular occupation, trade, or profession workeOE mysteryc1390 facultyc1405 business1477 industrya1500 roomc1500 trade1525 pursuit1529 function1533 calling1539 profession?1552 vocation1553 entertainment1568 station1574 qualitya1586 employment1598 way of lifea1616 state1625 cloth1656 avocation1660 setworka1661 employ1669 estate1685 walk of life?1746 walk1836 c1390 G. Chaucer Parson's Tale 895 Preestes ben aungeles as by the dignytee of hir mysterye. a1450 (?c1421) J. Lydgate Siege Thebes (Arun.) (1911) 4170 (MED) They casten hem..to purchace Some prudent man..That in swich thyng myght hem most availle Thorgh mystery of his dyvynaylle, By craft of sorte or of profecye. ?a1475 (?a1425) tr. R. Higden Polychron. (Harl. 2261) (1874) V. 195 (MED) Paphnucius..causede the sonne to stonde stille thro his preyer un tille that he hade fullefillede his mistery [a1387 J. Trevisa tr. office; L. ministerium]. 1509 J. Fisher Mornynge Remembraunce Countesse of Rychemonde (de Worde) sig. Bvi [She] was borne vp in to ye countre aboue wt ye blessyd aungelles deputed..to yt holy mystery. a1533 Ld. Berners tr. A. de Guevara Golden Bk. M. Aurelius (1537) sig. Kviiv None should be taken from the misterie and office that he occupied. b. Something helpful; an aid. Obsolete. rare. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > easiness > aid, help, or assistance > [noun] > that which or one who helps or means of help redeeOE helpc893 bootOE friendOE lithc1275 helpera1300 a helping handa1300 helpingc1330 bieldc1352 succour?a1366 supplementc1384 easementa1398 succourer1442 aid?1473 assister1535 assistant?1541 adminicle1551 mystery1581 second1590 auxiliatory1599 subsidium1640 suffragan1644 facilitation1648 adminiculary1652 auxiliary1656 auxiliar1670 ally1794 Boy Scout1918 assist1954 facilitator1987 1581 R. Mulcaster Positions xxxiv. 122 We..may not neglect so great a misterie for our owne health, as exercise is. 2. a. Craft, art; a trade, profession, calling. Now archaic.Cf. mystery n.1 10. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > [noun] > regular occupation, trade, or profession > craft crafteOE craftworkOE handcraftOE mister?c1225 cunning1340 arta1393 mysterya1400 sciencec1485 handicraft1523 mechanic1604 magistery1647 tradecraft1842 a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Fairf. 14) 13142 (MED) Ho [sc. Salome] daunsed & sange to tumble with-al; alle wonderred on hir in þat halle, for ho sa wele hir mystri [a1400 Vesp. mister, a1400 Gött. maistri] couþe. 1449 in J. C. Tingey Rec. City of Norwich (1910) II. 280 (MED) Ther is not at this day sufficient noumbre of persones in the said mysteris to be cleped a crafte. a1500 (?a1450) Gesta Romanorum (Harl. 7333) (1879) 171 (MED) Archilaus..sente messageris..to loke yf eny swiche myght be founde þat coude make swiche a shirte, but they coude fynde noon but that they wer corrupte or vnperfite of the crafte or vncunnynge in the mystery. 1536 T. Cromwell in R. B. Merriman Life & Lett. T. Cromwell (1902) II. 27 Brought up in some good literature occupacion or misterie. 1581 Compendious Exam. Certayne Ordinary Complaints iii. f. 49 Bristow had a great trade by making of pointes, and was the chiefe misterie that was exercised in the towne. 1609 C. Tourneur Funerall Poeme sig. B2 And out of his owne morall Character, He might haue learn'd his Mysterie of Warre. 1639 J. Woodall Surgeons Mate (rev. ed.) Pref. sig. A5 That noble Science or Mysterie of the healing mans body. a1661 T. Fuller Worthies (1662) i. 48 Seeing the whole mistery of Heraldry, dwells more in the region of fansie, than judgment. 1702 Clarendon's Hist. Rebellion I. iv. 243 That great and admirable mystery, the Common Law. 1727–52 E. Chambers Cycl. Additions of Mystery, are such as scrivener, painter, mason, and the like. 1756 E. Burke Vindic. Nat. Society 33 The Invention of Men has been sharpening and improving the Mystery of Murder. 1800 S. T. Coleridge tr. F. Schiller Piccolomini i. ii. 7 The sum of war's whole trade and mystery. 1827 H. Hallam Constit. Hist. Eng. I. vi. 351 Those arts of management which his successors have always reckoned so essential a part of their mystery. 1889 ‘M. Twain’ Connecticut Yankee xxxii. 410 A good blacksmith..[offered]..to..teach him the trade—or ‘mystery’ as Dowley called it. 1957 Listener 25 July 141/1 We usually start with some sort of prejudice against the verse-writer who is better known as a writer of prose: there is a (very proper) feeling that the two are different mysteries. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > ability > skill or skilfulness > [noun] > skill or art listOE craftOE artc1300 castc1320 misterc1390 mystery1610 1610 T. Campion New Way Counter-point sig. B7 Wee must consider whether the Base doth rise or fall, for in that consists the mistery. a1616 W. Shakespeare All's Well that ends Well (1623) iii. vi. 65 If you thinke your mysterie in stratagem, can bring this instrument of honour againe into his natiue quarter. View more context for this quotation c1639 T. Dekker & J. Ford Sun's-darling (1656) iv. 33 Mistery there, like to another nature, Confects the substance of the choisest fruits, In a rich candy. 1726 J. Swift Gulliver II. iv. vi. 87 Because I had some Skill in the Faculty, I would..let him know the whole Mystery and Method by which they proceed. c. art and mystery n. (also science and mystery and variants) the art and craft of a trade; also in extended use.Formerly used as a formula in apprentices' indentures. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > ability > skill or skilfulness > [noun] > skill or art > a skill or art art and mystery1627 1579 J. Jones Arte preseruing Bodie & Soule i. xxxvi. 73 The rest of the comunaltie, every one to some arte or misterie answerable to their nature.] 1627 Maldon (Essex) Borough Deeds (Bundle 148, No. 5) [To] instruct the said John Wormell in the said science mistery and trade of a woollen draper. 1660 R. May (title) The Accomplisht Cook, or the art and mystery of cookery [etc.]. 1680 C. Cotton (title) The compleat gamester... To which is added, The arts and mysteries of riding [etc.]. 1765 W. Blackstone Comm. Laws Eng. I. 426 This is usually done to persons of trade, in order to learn their art and mystery. 1856 Bouvier's Law Dict. U.S.A. (ed. 6) II. 196/2 Masters..bind themselves in the indentures with their apprentices to teach them their art, trade, and mystery. 1858 G. H. Lewes Sea-side Stud. 276 I got initiated into the art and mystery of trawling, having made friends with a fisherman, master of a Trawler. 1934 A. G. Street Endless Furrow xv. 254 Talk about old Nicholas Crawford's art and mystery in grocerin', why, that's an open book compared to farmin'. 3. A trade guild or company. Now archaic and historical. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > working > association of employers or employees > [noun] > guild craft1384 mysterya1471 guild-mercatory1656 art1678 trade1793 tradecraft1812 trade guild1829 craft-guild1834 a1471 Rolls of Parl. V. 390/2 Men of craft of Taillours..Men of that Gilde or Fraternite..the seid Fraternite or Maister..Men of the same Misterie. 1530 in S. Young Ann. Barber-surgeons London (1890) 579 The Maisters and Wardens of the misterie or Crafte of Barbor Surgions of the Citie of London. 1589 R. Hakluyt Princ. Navigations i. 259 (heading) M. Sebastian Cabota..gouernour of the mysterie and companie of the Marchants aduenturers. 1618 in R. Sanderson Rymer's Fœdera (1717) XVII. 78 The Master and Wardens of the Misterie of Stationers. 1708 J. Chamberlayne Magnæ Britanniæ Notitia (ed. 22) i. iii. x. 29 Each Company or Mystery hath a Master annually chosen from among themselves. 1823 W. Scott Quentin Durward II. ix. 212 President of the mystery of the workers in iron. 1964 Welsh Hist. Rev. 2 307 The shoemakers, who later formed their own mistery, were already numerous enough in the lordship in 1400. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2003; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.1c1350n.2c1390 |
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