单词 | old style |
释义 | old stylen.adj. A. n. 1. Dating in accordance with the unreformed Julian calendar after the introduction of the Gregorian calendar. Following a date: stated in accordance with this Julian calendar. Also in extended use. Abbreviated O.S. Cf. new style n.The Gregorian calendar was adopted in 1582 or soon after by the Catholic countries of Europe, in 1600 in Scotland, and in 1752 in England: see the note s.v. new style n. After 1752 some well-established days became known as Old —— (e.g. Old Christmas Day): see old adj. 11d. ΘΚΠ the world > time > reckoning of time > calendar > [noun] > old style or new style English Style1590 Julian account1592 new style1615 old style1617 N.S.1698 O.S.1710 1617 F. Moryson Itinerary i. 63 The ninth of September, after the old stile (for the new style is vsed in Poland) I tooke my iourney to Crakaw. 1667 Philos. Trans. 1665–6 (Royal Soc.) 1 390 Five or six years ago, vid. Novemb. 21. Old Style, 1661. an hour after Sun-set, I saw a great Halo about the Moon. 1749 H. Fielding Tom Jones V. xv. ii. 207 Then they parted to dress, it being now past three in the Morning, or to reckon by the old Style, in the Afternoon. View more context for this quotation 1793 J. Sinclair Statist. Acct. Scotl. V. 84 On the first of May, Old Style, a festival called Beltan is annually held here. 1809 R. Langford Introd. Trade 35 Russia is..the only country in which bills are dated by the Old Style. 1879 J. A. Froude Cæsar xxii. 387 The 9th of August, old style, or towards the end of May by real time. 1906 G. R. Sims Living London (rev. ed.) III. 47/2 Most people have seen the little grottoes..which children erect with oyster shells on St. James's Day, i.e. July 25th (Old Style, August 5th). 1923 D. A. Mackenzie Myths China & Japan v. 57 In Gaelic Scotland the serpent, which is associated with the goddess Bride, sleeps all winter and comes forth on 1st February (old style). 1969 Jrnl. Brit. Astron. Assoc. 80 30 Berhard-Woldemar Schmidt..was born on the island of Naissaar (or Nargen) in the Gulf of Finland on 1879 March 30 (Old Style). 2001 Hist. Today Jan. 16/2 Like the Ethiopian Church, many cultures have not adjusted the Roman Julian calendar (‘Old Style’) to the amendments introduced in the Gregorian calendar (‘New Style’). 2. Typography. An old-style typeface: see sense B. 2. ΘΚΠ society > communication > printing > types, blocks, or plates > relating to type > style of type > [noun] > type face or font > Roman Roman1548 white letter1687 antiqua1829 old style1884 1884 J. Southward Pract. Printing in W. Tracy Lett. of Credit (1986) 19 The words ‘Old Face’ and ‘Old Style’ are at times used indiscriminately to the faces imitating the ancient founts, and to those which are a modern modification of them. 1900 T. L. DeVinne Plain Printing Types 193 The modernized old-style here shown is an attempt to accommodate the old fashion to newer notions of symmetry. 1971 Interpressgrafik 7 47 The definition of Old-Style being that the axis of its curves is oblique. 2000 Typography Papers No. 4. 31 While Grimm, Littré, and De Vries were being set in undistinguished and rather cramped moderns, the OED was set in a strongly drawn old style, brevier (8 pt) for entry text, nonpareil (6 pt) for quotations and notes. B. adj. Frequently hyphenated. 1. Belonging to or made in an old style; old-fashioned. ΘΚΠ the world > time > relative time > the past > oldness or ancientness > [adjective] > old-fashioned or antiquated moth-frettenOE antiquate?a1425 antique?1532 rusty1549 moth-eaten1551 musty1575 worm-eatenc1575 overyear1584 out of date1589 old-fashioned1592 out of date1592 worm-eat1597 old-fashion1599 ancient1601 outdated1616 out-of-fashion1623 over-aged1623 superannuateda1634 thorough-old1639 overdateda1641 trunk-hosea1643 antiquitated1645 antiquated1654 out-of-fashioned1671 unmodern1731 of the old school1749 auld-farrant1750 old-fangled1764 fossila1770 fogram1772 passé1775 unmodernized1775 oxidated1791 moss-covered1792 square-toeda1797 old-fashionable1807 pigtail1817 behind the times1826 slow1827 fossilized1828 rococo1836 antiquish1838 old-timey1850 out of season1850 moss-grown1851 old style1858 antiqued1859 pigtaily1859 prehistoric1859 backdated1862 played1864 fossiled1866 bygone1869 mossy-backed1870 old-worldly1878 past-time1889 outmoded1896 dated1900 brontosaurian1909 antiquey1926 horse-and-buggy1926 vintage1928 Neolithic1934 time-warped1938 demoded1941 steam age1941 hairy1946 old school1946 rinky-dink1946 time warp1954 Palaeolithic1957 retardataire1958 throwback1968 wally1969 antwacky1975 1858 W. Kelly Life in Victoria I. xvi. 268 Bell-topper was the derisive name given by diggers to [an] old style hat, supposed to indicate the dandy swell. 1873 R. Browning Red Cotton Night-cap Country ii. 132 Dignified And gentry-fashioned old-style haunts of sleep! 1895 Educat. Rev. Sept. 123 The old-style naturalist had been working from time immemorial. 1927 G. Bradford Gloss. Sea Terms 176/2 Strongback... A spar lashed to and running between the old style davits to steady them. 1978 Detroit Free Press 16 Apr. e 8/3 The old style boot greases were developed during World War II for government use. 2001 Observer 15 July (Food Monthly Suppl.) 57/4 There's a nice old-style boozer near there, by the BBC building. 2. Typography. Belonging to or designating a group of roman typefaces developed from old-face designs, esp. those of Caslon; (U.S.) = old-face adj.The typefaces were introduced at the Edinburgh foundry of William Miller and Walter Richard in 1852 (see quot. 1966). In contrast with old-face fonts, they had vertical rather than oblique stress, greater stroke contrast, and more equal character widths. They were widely used from around the mid 19th cent. to the mid 20th cent. ΘΚΠ society > communication > printing > types, blocks, or plates > relating to type > style of type > [noun] > type face or font > old style or face old style1868 imprint1913 Plantin1914 old-face1931 1868 (title) Specimens of printing from old style types. 1883 J. Millington Are we to read Backwards? 39 The modern Arabic figures—uniform in linage—[are] more legible than the ‘old style’ figures, with their many ascenders and descenders. 1884 E. C. Bigmore & C. W. H. Wyman Bibliogr. Printing II. 42 Perceiving the tendency to go back to a former taste in printing, this foundry [sc. Miller & Richard], about 1850, commenced to cut a series of what they termed ‘old-style founts’. 1913 J. H. Quinn Libr. Cataloguing xv. 222 ‘Old-style’ in type does not mean old-fashioned, but the more artistic and readable type modelled on the lettering of the early printers, principally those of the Italian presses. 1922 D. B. Updike Printing Types I. ii. 19 The earlier form of letter, with slighter differences in contrasting weight of stroke, we now call ‘old style’; the much later form, exhibiting greater contrasts of thick and thin lines, constitutes a ‘modern face’ letter. 1966 H. Williamson Methods Bk. Design (ed. 2) viii. 101 The new class of old style types, of which this was the first, reverted to gradual shading and to oblique top-serifs, but retained vertical stress. 1986 W. Tracy Lett. of Credit 19 In 1860, when the Miller & Richard foundry of Edinburgh introduced the new face created by Alexander Phemister they said it was superior to the ‘old style’ types (meaning Caslon's face in particular). Yet they named the new face ‘Old Style’, to the confusion of printers of Britain, who were forced to invent a new term ‘old face’ for Caslon and earlier book types. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2004; most recently modified version published online March 2022). > as lemmasOld Style a. A mode of expressing dates. Chiefly, Either of the two methods of dating that have been current in the Christian world since the introduction of the Gregorian calendar in 1582: viz., the New Style (abbreviated N.S.), which is the result of the Gregorian reform, and the Old Style (O.S.) which follows the unreformed calendar. The New Style is occasionally called the Roman Style, and the Old Style the English Style. In historical dates earlier than 1582, however, Roman Style, as used by modern writers, means only that the year mentioned is to be understood as beginning on 1 January.The Julian calendar was based on the assumption that the tropical year consisted of 365¼ days. In order that the average calendar year should have this length, it was provided that the normal year should contain 365 days, but every fourth year 366 days. Down to a.d. 1582 the Julian calendar continued to be used by all Christian nations. In calendars and almanacs, the year began on 1 January (like the Roman consular year); but for ordinary purposes the time of beginning the year was different in different places; in England, after some fluctuations, the beginning of the legal year was fixed for 25 March. After the adoption of the Christian era, the leap years were those whose number a.d.(reckoned from 1 January) was divisible by 4.The Julian estimate of 365¼ days for the length of the tropical year was too great by about 11 minutes, an error which amounts to one day in about 128 years. Hence in 1581 the date of 21 March for the vernal equinox, assumed since the early 4th cent. in the rule for computing Easter, was 10 days too late. To remedy this inconvenience, and to prevent its recurrence, Pope Gregory XIII, acting on the advice of the Jesuit Clavius and other eminent astronomers, ordained that in a.d. 1582 the day after 4 October should be reckoned as 15 October, and that in future the years which had a number ending in two cyphers should not be leap years unless the number were divisible by 400. The Julian date of 1 January for the beginning of the year was retained. The difference between the old and new calendars continued to be 10 days until 1700 (the first disputed leap-year), when it became 11 days; in 1800 it became 12 days, and in 1900 13 days, from which there will be no further increase till 2100.The Gregorian calendar (so called from the name of the Pope) was speedily adopted in all Roman Catholic countries, while the other nations of Europe adhered to their traditional reckoning. In the 17th and 18th centuries, it was often found necessary to state whether a date was according to Old or New Style, or to give both datings. As the nations which accepted the reform usually began the year on 1 Jan., not, as in England, on 25 March, there was for the March quarter (in addition to the other difference) a discrepancy in the number of the year between the Old Style and New Style dates.In England and Scotland the Gregorian calendar was established by the Act 24 Geo. II. c. 23 (1751), which provided that the year 1752 and all future years should begin on 1 January instead of 25 March (in Scotland this rule had been adopted in 1600), that the day after 2 September 1752 should be reckoned the 14 September, and that the reformed rule for leap year should in future be followed. Ireland followed in 1788. The use of New Style is now universal throughout the Christian world with the exception of certain countries of the Greek Church; in Russia it was officially adopted by the revolutionary government in 1918. In France the expression New Style had been current before the time of the Gregorian reform, with reference to the change in the beginning of the year from Easter to 1 January, which took place in that country in 1563. [With New Style compare post-classical Latin stilus novus (1589 in a British source), French nouveau style method of fixing the beginning of the year following the reform of 1582 (1588 or earlier), method of counting days according to the revolutionary calendar (1802). With Old Style compare French ancien style (1610 or earlier), vieux style (1615 or earlier). With Roman Style compare Middle French stile romaine, with reference to an earlier type of chronology, distinguished from stile françois French style (1334).] ΘΚΠ the world > time > reckoning of time > calendar > [noun] > old style or new style English Style1590 Julian account1592 new style1615 old style1617 N.S.1698 O.S.1710 1589 J. Dee Private Diary (1842) 31 Aug. 5th, novo stylo, Edmond Hilton went toward Stade.] 1590 H. Wotton in L. P. Smith Life & Lett. Sir H. Wotton (1907) I. 239 Written the xxv of September, 1590, style of England. 1615 Cocks Diary 18 June (1883) I. 11 I receved a letter from Jorge Durois, dated in Langasaque, le 22nd of June, new stile. 1617 F. Moryson Itinerary i. 63 The ninth of September, after the old stile (for the new style is vsed in Poland) I tooke my iourney to Crakaw. 1625 in S. R. Gardiner Documents Impeachm. Duke of Buckingham (1889) 160 The eight and twentieth day of this presente moneth of March, Old Stile of England. 1664 R. Fanshawe Let. in Lady Fanshawe Mem. (1829) 329 Madrid, Wednesday, the 15th June, 1664, English Style. 1674 J. Moxon Tutor to Astron. & Geogr. (ed. 3) ii. 84 I look in the Calender of Old Stile for June 1. 1678 Trial of Coleman 28 In the month of April old stile, May new stile. 1712 E. Budgell Spectator No. 395. ¶3 Telling me she looked upon the Month as then out, for that she had all along reckoned by the New Style. 1716 Mar Jrnl. in Patten Hist. Rebell. (1717) 269 It was about the middle of December (our Style) before he could reach Dunkirk. 1753 in W. W. Wilkins Polit. Ballads (1860) II. 311 In seventeen hundred and fifty three The Style it was chang'd to Popery. 1809 R. Langford Introd. Trade 35 Russia is..the only country in which bills are dated by the Old Style. 1829 S. Shaw Hist. Staffs. Potteries vi. 137 At the time of altering the Style, in 1752. 1862 L. F. Simpson Autob. Chas. V p. v Where he was born on February 24, 1500, according to Roman Style. 1879 J. A. Froude Cæsar xxii. 387 The 9th of August, old style [i.e. according to the pre-Julian reckoning], or towards the end of May by real time, Cæsar had [etc.]. < n.adj.1617 as lemmas |
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