| 释义 | 
		neern.1 Origin: Either (i) a word inherited from Germanic. Or perhaps (ii) a borrowing from Middle Low German. Etymon: Middle Low German nēre. Etymology: Either the reflex of an unattested Old English word (probably with Old English -ēo-  ) cognate with West Frisian nier  , Middle Dutch niere   (Dutch nier  ), Middle Low German nēre  , neyre  , nyere  , etc., Old High German nioro  , niero  , nier  , etc. (also in sense ‘testicle’; Middle High German niere  , nier  , German Niere  ), Old Icelandic nýra  , Norwegian nyre  , Old Swedish niure   (Swedish njure  ), Danish nyre  , Old Gutnish niauri   (in vigniauri   testicle)  <  the same Indo-European base as ancient Greek νεϕρός   kidney, also (in plural) testicles (see nephro- comb. form), classical Latin (Praenestinian) nefrōnēs, (Lanuvian) nebrundinēs (plural), probably ‘testicles’, or perhaps a borrowing of the corresponding word in Middle Low German. Scandinavian influence may be shown by the East Anglian forms nyre, nire.At the beginning of the 20th cent. the word was still attested in common regional use in northern, north-midland, and eastern counties of England as well as in Scotland. 20th cent. evidence for England is limited: the only relevant item in the  Surv. Eng. Dial. questionnaire is ‘What do you call the inner layer of fat round the kidneys of a pig?’, for which near-fat  /nɪəfat/ is recorded as a response only from Yorkshire and Nottinghamshire. Nears   ‘kidneys’ is also recorded in a glossary from Lincolnshire in the mid 20th cent., and there is also limited evidence for near   in the sense ‘kidney in suet’ from Derbyshire in the same period, although in all areas where it occurred in the 20th cent. the item would appear to have been recessive. Spellings in ea   among α, β, and γ forms probably show lowering of Middle English close ē   to open ē   before r  , although in some more recent instances confusion or analogy with other words may also be a significant factor (compare near adj.). The β.  forms   apparently show metanalysis (see N n.), although analogy with ear n.1   may also have played a part; F. Grose  Provinc. Gloss. (ed. 2, 1790) at Inear, Near notes the resemblance of a kidney when cut lengthwise to an ear. The γ.  forms   (earliest in quot. 1788 at main sense   and in F. Grose  Provinc. Gloss. (ed. 2, 1790), and subsequently in a number of 19th-cent. Yorkshire glossaries) are harder to account for: Grose suggests confusion with inner adj.; perhaps compare innerer adj.   Eng. Dial. Dict. also records a form nurses in the sense ‘kidneys’ from Lancashire, probably arising through analysis of the plural word as singular, and with typical Lancashire merger of  /ɛə/ and  /əː/.  Now  Scottish and  English regional (chiefly  northern and  East Anglian). the world > life > the body > secretory organs > gland > specific glands > 			[noun]		 > kidney a1325     		(Arun.)	 		(1857)	 149 (MED)  				Dedens le cors en checun homme Est trove quer, foye..boueles [glossed] neres [v.rr. tharme, roppes, boweles, merys], et reinoun [glossed] kidenei. a1400    in  R. H. Robbins  		(1959)	 157  				Fatter men about þe neres Ȝit sawe I neuer þen are þese frers. a1425     		(Stonyhurst)	 f. 38v  				Lumbus, a nere.    		(Harl. 221)	 353  				Neere of a beest, Ren. a1475     		(Sloane)	 		(1862)	 52 (MED)  				For hagese. Þe hert of schepe, þe nere þou take. c1480						 (a1400)						    St. Lawrence 12 in  W. M. Metcalfe  		(1896)	 I. 403  				It brakis þe stane, þat man in bledyr ore nere has tane. 1535     Isa. xxxiv. A  				With the fatnesse of neeres of the wethers. c1550     		(1979)	 vi. 53  				Tansay that is gude to purge the neiris. 1595    A. Duncan Appendix Etymologiae: Index in    				Ren, the neire. 1634    ‘Philiatreus’  sig. A2v  				If in the water there is found any peece of flesh, it betokens the neers to bee hurt. 1740    A. Brodie  		(1863)	 288  				My pain off gravel in my neers and loins. 1788    W. Marshall Provincialisms E. Yorks. in   II. 337  				In-ear, or Near, the kidney. 1841    R. W. Hamilton  348  				Will you eat a part of the niere? 1868    G. MacDonald  I. 41  				I would like a dish o' your chits and nears. 1947    E. S. R. Tait  I. 71  				We'd spaarls an' neers, reestid tees an' skenk hochs. Compounds 1444    in  J. Stuart  		(1844)	 I. 11  				That na fleshowar..tak oute of ony mutonne the neris or the nerecress. 1526    in  R. Renwick  		(1887)	 I. 27  				Na nyeiris na nyeircres be tane out of the scheip. 1877    E. Peacock  at Near-end  				The near-end of a loin of veal is the part next the kidneys. 1884    G. S. Streatfeild  Gloss. 346  				Near-end, part next to the kidneys. 1877    E. Peacock   				Near-fat, the fat about the kidneys. 1886    R. E. G. Cole   				Near-fat, the fat round the kidneys in a sheep, pig, or other animal. 1824    J. Mactaggart  at Neers  				Neer-strings, those strings which are connected with the kidneys.  This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2003; most recently modified version published online March 2022). ne'eradv.n.2 Origin: A variant or alteration of another lexical item. Etymon: never adv. Etymology: Variant (with elision of the medial consonant) of never adv. Compare β.  forms at ever adv. and adj.  A. adv. 1. the world > time > frequency > infrequency > 			[adverb]		 > never c1275						 (?a1200)						    Laȝamon  		(Calig.)	 		(1978)	 l. 15075  				He wolde aȝein wenden heom to his folke..and ner [c1300 Otho neuere] æft a-ȝen teon. a1300						 (c1250)						     		(Vitell.)	 		(1966)	 74 (MED)  				In worle nes nere non þine imake of no wimmon. a1350    in  G. L. Brook  		(1968)	 39 (MED)  				Nes ner gome so gladly on gere. a1382     		(Bodl. 959)	 		(1961)	 Lev. vi. 13  				Þis fuyr is perpetuel þat shal ner [a1425 L.V. neuer; L. numquam] faile in þe auter. a1450     		(Bodl. Add.)	 		(1967)	 425  				Nere nowther [c1390 Vernon Neuer nouþer ne spekeþ him good]. a1450     		(Faust.)	 		(1883)	 3089 (MED)  				In þe ȝere of grace hit was..After þat goddus sone was of Mary ybore A thousonde euene & neron mo. a1513    W. Dunbar  		(1998)	 I. 114  				Thy trublit gaist sall neir moir [a1586 never] be degest. 1590    R. Harvey  25  				Thou gettest such praise, As neer decaies. a1631    J. Donne  		(1650)	 57  				So these extreames shall ne'r their office doe. 1680    T. Otway   v. 63  				Mon. We ne're must meet again—Cast... Ne're meet again? Mon. No, never. 1738    J. Swift  46  				You have the old Proverb on your Side, Naught's ne'er in Danger. 1803    in  J. Johnson  VI. 565  				We'll ne'er permit a foreign foe, On British ground to rally. a1833    A. H. Hallam  		(1834)	 38  				Those dogs that from him ne'er would rove. a1902    F. Norris  		(1903)	 iii. 89  				Goodbye. I ne'er shall look upon your like again. 1960    J. Barth   iii. xvii. 717  				He ne'er durst proffer advice unless asked for't. 2002     Jan. 67/1  				When that bum baillie comes, 'e'll ne'er finnd us. the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > want of knowledge, ignorance > be ignorant			[phrase]		 > profess ignorance a1400     		(Pepys)	 		(1922)	 69 (MED)  				And Jesus hem ansuered þat hij nysten nere what hij bisouȝtten. a1425						 (c1395)						     		(Royal)	 		(1850)	 John ix. 21  				Who openyde hise iȝen, we witen nere [v.r. neuere]. a1425    J. Wyclif  		(1871)	 II. 93  				Þei seiden to him, Where is he? And he seide, Y woot nere. a1500     		(Trin. Cambr.)	 5702  				Wherfor it gan do, certes wote I nere. a1535    T. More Hist. Richard III in   		(1557)	 39/1  				I wote nere whither any preachers woordes ought more to moue you. 1590    R. Harvey  5  				Nay I wot neere, but it hath left behind it a wale in my throate.   2. the mind > attention and judgement > testing > attestation, witness, evidence > qualification > 			[adverb]		 > however, nevertheless, notwithstanding a1382     		(Bodl. 959)	 Num. xiv. 22  				Y haue forȝeue to hem..nerþeles [a1425 Corpus Oxf. netheles; L. Attamen] alle men þat..han tempted me now..sholyn not see þe lond. a1400						 (a1325)						     		(Vesp.)	 21247  				Bot ner-þe-less, for his liuelade, o biscop siþen he tok þe hade. 1447    O. Bokenham  		(Arun.)	 		(1938)	 1125 (MED)  				Ineuytabylly I must deyin her..Nertheles, vertu of necessyte I wyl make. c1450						 (c1385)						    G. Chaucer  130  				But ner the lesse, for al his heuy armure, He foloweth her. a1500    tr.  Lanfranc  		(Wellcome)	 f. 25v (MED)  				Nerthelesse this enpostume worchithe more whan it hathe made wheter þan afore. 1542    N. Udall tr.  Erasmus  f. 168v  				Nerethelesse many princes there bee, whiche..abuse the good menne. 1621    F. Quarles  sig. G2  				Yet be thy iust Petition ne'rthelesse Entirely granted. 1718    R. Blackmore  92  				Their Station will be low, but ne'er the less For this Provision they should Thanks express. 1796    St. G. Tucker  xv. 97  				Cowardice is courage ne'ertheless. 1822    Ld. Byron   i. i. 684  				Ne'er the less I must have three. 1851    E. B. Browning   i. xiii. 37  				What if, ne'ertheless, The sun did, that day, leave upon the vines No charta. 1912    D. Ferguson  135  				If brought humble, round you crumble Fondest hopes, yet ne'ertheless, To cease coping and sit moping Proves but little manliness. the mind > attention and judgement > testing > attestation, witness, evidence > qualification > 			[adverb]		 > however, nevertheless, notwithstanding a1382     		(Douce 369(1))	 		(1850)	 Judith iii. 11  				Ȝit nerþelatere þese thingis doende, þei myȝten not swagen þe feerste of his brest. 1439    in  J. P. Collier  		(1857)	 19 (MED)  				Nerthelatyr the wille and the full entent of me..ys to have..all the issues and profites of the seyde manerys. c1460						 (?c1400)						     120  				Ner þe latter Endurith for a while, & suffreth hem þat woll. the world > relative properties > quantity > 			[adverb]		 > no more 1509    A. Barclay  		(Pynson)	 f. lv  				Thou ought nat yet to kepe it nere the more. But to his sectours or heyres it restore. c1520    tr.  Terence Andria  ii. ii, in   sig. B.iii  				L. I haue now cawse to be glad iwis. D. Nay by my troth nere the more for this. 1633    G. Wither  62  				They doe abhorre a rich man ne'er the more. 1709    R. Gould  323  				Our Cash grows less, and Prudence ne'er the more.    B. n.21802    S. Kerr  3  				It's no' weel tellt, but ne'er may care, It's nae less true. 1814    W. Scott  III. xi. 132  				The ne'er be in me, sir, if I think you're  safe.       View more context for this quotation 1816    W. Scott  I. ix. 201  				I was at the search..but ne'er be licket could they find that was to their purpose.  Compounds C1.   With participles, forming adjectives. rare after 17th cent.the world > time > change > absence of change, changelessness > 			[adjective]		 a1616    W. Shakespeare  		(1623)	  ii. ii. 46  				His new Kingdome of nere-changing night [1597 perpetuall rest]. 1893    H. A. Jones   ii. 39  				Sentence us To our ne'er-changing doom, ne'er-changing love, So that the hungry centuries may ne'er..once tear thee from me. 1598    J. Marston   iii. viii. sig. Gv  				Hee that the inmost nookes of hell did know, Whose nere craz'd prowesse all did ouer-throw. the world > time > duration > eternity or infinite duration > 			[adjective]		 1693    W. Congreve tr.  Juvenal in  J. Dryden et al.  tr.  Juvenal   xi. 219  				Arms, which to Man ne're-dying Fame afford. 2000    Re: Help in  soc.culture.brazil 		(Usenet newsgroup)	 20 Oct.  				And has your long-sought friend, and the ne'er dying remembrance of it, not ever chanced having a telephone number? the world > time > duration > eternity or infinite duration > 			[adjective]		 a1616    G. Chapman tr.  Homer  XVII. 274  				And now begun, the Euens nere-ending day. a1704    T. Brown Satyr against Woman in   		(1707)	 I. i. 83  				A Veng'ance of ne'er ending Harms. 2001    Re: Deer State Penn Doods! in  rec.sport.football.college 		(Usenet newsgroup)	 5 Sept.  				You know how people fly unique flags in order to let others know where they are in the ne'er-ending parking lot? 1647    R. Stapleton tr.  Juvenal  226  				The white sow..That for her thirty ne're-seen paps was fam'd. 1998    Sanctus says ‘Adios, UOmigos!’ in   		(Usenet newsgroup)	 17 Aug.  				My ne'er-seen friends, the circle ends, I'll see you someday. 1612    J. Davies Muses Sacrifice in   		(Grosart)	 II. 83  				Like a ne'er-suffized Graue. a1616    W. Shakespeare  		(1623)	  iii. xii. 31  				Want will periure The ne're touch'd  Vestall.       View more context for this quotation   C2.  the mind > goodness and badness > inferiority or baseness > worthlessness > worthless person > 			[noun]		 society > morality > moral evil > evil nature or character > lack of magnanimity or noble-mindedness > 			[noun]		 > worthlessness > good-for-nothing person 1675    C. Cotton Burlesque upon Burlesque in   		(1725)	 210  				'Tis that Nere-be-good, thy Son, Has made me do what I have done. 1814    Intrigues of Day  v. i, in   I. 168  				A couple of as arrant ne'er-be-goods as ever cheated a poor poet. the mind > goodness and badness > inferiority or baseness > worthlessness > worthless person > 			[noun]		 society > morality > moral evil > evil nature or character > lack of magnanimity or noble-mindedness > 			[noun]		 > worthlessness > good-for-nothing person 1814    W. Scott  II. vii. 124  				D'ye hear what the..young gentleman says, ye drunken ne'er-do-good ?       View more context for this quotation the mind > goodness and badness > inferiority or baseness > worthlessness > worthless person > 			[noun]		 society > morality > moral evil > evil nature or character > lack of magnanimity or noble-mindedness > 			[noun]		 > worthlessness > good-for-nothing person a1450     		(1885)	 329  				Þou nerthrist [read nerthrift] of Nazareth, now neuend is þi name.  This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2003; most recently modified version published online March 2022). <  n.1a1325 adv.n.2c1275 |