单词 | opening |
释义 | openingn. I. Senses relating to the action of making open or not closed or shut. 1. a. The action of making open; an instance of this. Also in extended use: the opening of a shop for business, the opening of an area for trade, etc. ΚΠ OE Arundel Psalter cv. 17 Aperta est terra et deglutiuit dathan : openung is eorþan & forwealh dathan. c1350 Apocalypse St. John: A Version (Harl. 874) (1961) 123 (MED) Þe openyng of þe temple bitokneþ þe pryuetes of holy chirche þat ben shewed. 1560 in Trans. Shropshire Arch. Soc. (1880) 3 71 The sayde accomptaunt dothe charge hym selfe wth money due vpon Jeu'n ap Ellys for oppenynge of his shope & sellinge of wares. 1568 T. Hill Proffitable Arte Gardening (rev. ed.) ii. xxxi. f. 107 This flower [sc. the marigold]..is named the husbande mans Dyall, for that the same soo aptly declareth, the howers of the morning and eueninge, by the openynge and shuttynge of it. 1593 in S. Ree Rec. Elgin (1908) II. 34 Accusit of..oppining of his buyth dur that daye [sc. Sunday]. 1683 J. Moxon Mech. Exercises II. 204 By Opening, you must now understand removing the Quoins, till they stand loose. 1706 Phillips's New World of Words (new ed.) Opening of Trenches,..the first breaking of Ground made by the Besiegers, in order to carry their Approaches to the place besieged. 1792 T. Paine Rights of Man: Pt. Second v. 166 The opening of South America would produce an immense field of commerce, and a ready money market for manufactures. 1884 Harper's Mag. May 870/2 The settlement had no growth until the recent impetus given it by..the opening of coal seams. 1900 J. E. Ellis in Corr. rel. Polit. Situation S. Afr. 12 We want a stream of facts concerning suppression of telegrams, opening of letters, arbitrary arrests, [etc.]. 1990 ‘A. Cross’ Players come Again (1992) i. 6 They were interrupted by the waiter with their lunch, and the ceremonial opening of Kate's wine bottle. b. spec. The action of opening an orifice of the body. ΚΠ OE tr. Defensor Liber Scintillarum (1969) xxiv. 188 Apertio oris illius infamatio est : openung muþes his widmærsung ys. a1425 (a1400) Northern Pauline Epist. (1916) Eph. vi. 19 þe woord be gyfen to me in þe openyng of my mowþ. a1450 St. Katherine (Richardson 44) (1884) 27 (MED) Iesu..be bore of hir wyth oute openynge of hir wombe. 1526 W. Bonde Pylgrimage of Perfection iii. sig. UUUiiv Vnto the openyng of the forsayd closed & festred woundes. 1547 Certain Serm. or Homilies sig. F ij Evenso went he vnto his death without any repugnaunce or opening of his mouthe to sei any euill. 1647 N. Bacon Hist. Disc. Govt. 105 Not onely the opening of the eye, but also the rowling of it about. 1739 H. Baker & J. Miller Cit Turn'd Gentleman ii. vi. 100 The opening of the Mouth makes exactly a little Ring, which resembles an O. 1844 C. Dickens Martin Chuzzlewit xxxvi. 420 An involuntary opening of his eyes. 1981 Oxf. Compan. Animal Behaviour 563/2 The opening of the mouth that precedes biting has evolved into a ritualized baring of the teeth that is characteristic of threat in many mammals. ΚΠ ?a1425 MS Hunterian 95 f. 54v ȝif a man blede inmoderately..be cause of openynge of a veyne oþer off ane arterie..it is good for to kitte þe veyne o brede. 1634 T. Johnson tr. A. Paré Chirurg. Wks. xvii. lix. 692 Arteriotomie, is the opening of an Artery. a1788 P. Pott Chirurg. Wks. (1790) II. 448 An abscess, or imposthumation which may be relieved or cured by an opening. d. An evacuation of the bowels. rare. Now historical. ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > organs of excretion > defecation or urination > defecation > [noun] purgationa1387 shitting1386 officec1395 outpassinga1398 subduction?a1425 easementa1438 cuckingc1440 siegea1475 evacuation?1533 stool1541 egestion1547 dunging1558 purging1579 stooling1599 cackc1600 motion1602 dejection1605 excretion1640 exclusion1646 purgament1650 exoneration1651 disenteration1654 orduring1654 crapping1673 passage1681 seat1697 opening1797 defecation1825 excreting1849 poopc1890 movement1891 job1899 shit?1927 crap1937 dump1942 soiling1943 gick1959 jobbie1981 pooh1981 1679 M. Waite Warning to All Friends 2 In the openings of the bowels of his endlesse love, he shewed me, a Terrible day drew near.] 1797 M. Underwood Treat. Dis. Children (1799) III. 192 They should..not [be] suffered to play until they have had an opening. 1990 Times 30 June 20/4 It was discovered that a daily pint and a half of the water was sufficient to give the King ‘two openings’. 2. The action of opening a gate or door. Cf. open v. 1a. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > condition of being open or not closed > [noun] > action or process of opening openinga1425 unclosinga1475 reseration1548 unlocking1568 reserating1598 apertion1615 aperture1669 a1425 J. Wyclif Sel. Eng. Wks. (1871) II. 8 In openyng of hevene ȝatis. 1593 T. Nashe Christs Teares 27 b The East-gate..(the dry rusty creeking of whose hookes and gymmes as it was in the opening, might be heard a myle of). 1633 in J. Cranna Fraserburgh (1914) 37 For oppning of..his pantrie and houis durris with ane wrang key. 1665 J. Spencer Disc. Prodigies (ed. 2) 247 Whereas both Tacitus and Josephus relate the sudden opening of the doors of the Temple,..they appear to me very much to Ethnicize in all these stories. 1796 M. Hays Mem. Emma Courtney II. xv. 135 I was roused from this reverie by the sudden opening of the door. 1827 W. Clarke Every Night Bk. 108 It is..necessary..to procure tickets of admission prior to the opening of the doors. 1991 H. Barty-King Worst Poverty 89 Though the law prohibited the forcible opening of a door, yet the bailiffs found means to evade that prohibition. 3. The process of loosening matted fibres with an opener.In quot. 1486, referring to the unwinding of old ropes. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > textile manufacture > treating or processing textile materials > treating or processing cotton > [noun] > separating or cleaning opening1844 1486 in M. Oppenheim Naval Accts. & Inventories Henry VII (1896) 13 The..openyng and newe leying of old Ropes. 1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory iii. 289/1 The Preme is made of white Wands, this is for the opening of the Yarn..so that each thred may pass clearly through the Reed. 1704 Dict. Rusticum at Loom Preme, is also an appurtenance, and is made of white Wands for the opening of the Yarn from the Beam. 1844 G. Dodd Textile Manuf. Great Brit. i. 25 This opening of the matted cotton is first partially effected by the process of ‘picking’... Women and children partially disentangle the cotton. 1901 T. Thornley Cotton Spinning I. iii. 64 Q. Give a statement of the objects aimed at in the operation of opening... A. This process first opens out the matted masses of fibres to a very fleecy, soft condition. 1963 A. F. W. Coulson et al. Man. Cotton Spinning II. ii. vi. 129 Better opening and cleaning will be obtained if the machines can be kept working and operating on the cotton continuously in a rather small quantity. 4. a. The action of beginning, starting, setting in action, or inaugurating; a beginning, a start, an inauguration; the part, act, words, etc., with which something opens; the initial steps or stage in a course of action. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > causation > initiating or causing to begin > [noun] opening1531 the world > relative properties > order > order, sequence, or succession > beginning > [noun] ordeOE thresholdeOE frumthc950 anginOE frumeOE worthOE beginninga1225 springc1225 springc1225 commencementc1250 ginninga1300 comsingc1325 entryc1330 aginning1340 alphac1384 incomea1400 formec1400 ingressc1420 birtha1425 principlea1449 comsementa1450 resultancec1450 inition1463 inceptiona1483 entering1526 originala1529 inchoation1530 opening1531 starting1541 principium1550 entrance1553 onset1561 rise1589 begin1590 ingate1591 overture1595 budding1601 initiationa1607 starting off1616 dawninga1631 dawn1633 impriminga1639 start1644 fall1647 initial1656 outset1664 outsettinga1698 going off1714 offsetting1782 offset1791 commence1794 aurora1806 incipiency1817 set-out1821 set-in1826 throw-off1828 go-off1830 outstart1844 start1857 incipience1864 oncome1865 kick-off1875 off-go1886 off1896 get-go1960 lift-off1967 1531 W. Tyndale Answere Mores Dialoge f. ix If stories be true, wemen haue preached sens the openynge of the new testament. 1558 Queen Mary I (title) By the Kynge and the Quene where at the openyng and begynnyng of the warres with the Frenche, the Queenes Maiestie caused her proclamation to be made. 1620 Bp. J. Hall Contempl. V. N.T. ii. 475 The opening of the malady was a crauing of cure. 1684 J. Dryden (title of poem) Prologue and epilogue spoken at the opening of the new House [sc. the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane]. 1705 C. Blount Coll. Poems 19, in Misc. Wks. Duke of Buckingham II. (title of poem) Opening of the Session, 1691. 1712 J. Addison Spectator No. 412. ¶3 In the opening of the Spring. 1724 J. Henley et al. tr. Pliny the Younger Epist. & Panegyrick I. p. ix In the opening of the reign of Nerva. 1782 F. Burney Cecilia III. vi. iv. 253 She came running into Cecilia's room, saying she had very good news for her. ‘A charming opening!’ cried Cecilia, ‘pray tell it me.’ 1789 G. Morris in J. Sparks Life G. Morris (1832) I. 306 At the opening of the States-General. 1849 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. I. iv. 509 The days which..preceded the opening of the session. 1887 Grove's Dict. Music IV. 415 The opening of the opera was originally intended to be quite different from what it is now. 1896 Eastern Morning News (Hull) 22 Feb. 1/2 St. Thomas's Church. Opening of the New Lectern. 1909 ‘A. Hay’ in Granta 11 June 11 I attempted one or two conversational openings of a nature which I considered suitable to her intellectual standard. 1961 Guardian 13 Oct. 5/2 As if this were the opening of a..television programme, you ‘dolly up’ to its owner. 1989 Japan Times 15 May 7/8 The opening of the new Paragnayan-Japanese Center for the Development of Human Resources took place in August 1988. b. Law. The action of stating a case, etc., to a court before adducing evidence or calling witnesses; a preliminary statement of this type. Cf. open v. 18a. ΘΚΠ society > law > administration of justice > court proceedings or procedure > pleading > [noun] > introductory statement by parties or counsel opening1660 inducement1800 1660 Exact Accompt Trial Regicides (new ed.) 77 [We] cannot hear you to speak that upon your opening, which is treason. 1682 J. Dryden Medall Epist. Whigs sig. a1 You retain'd him onely for the opening of your Cause..your main Lawyer is yet behind. a1734 R. North Examen (1740) i. ii. §80. 72 It was the Case of a Peer..else the Pretence had been refelled upon the Opening; but, for the Cause afore hinted, the Judges thought fit to give their Judgments, seriatim, after solemn Argument had. 1818 W. Cruise Digest Laws Eng. Real Prop. (ed. 2) VI. 132 Lord Chief Justice Eyre said, it was manifest from the opening, that it was intended to be insisted on, that..Sir T. C. lost his old estate. 1881 Spectator 30 Apr. 573 Like the opening of an advocate who has not mastered his brief. 1982 M. M. Belli Mod. Trials III. 490 An effective opening should have the jury seeing the entire case through plaintiff's eyes. c. Chess. A particular sequence of moves at the beginning of a game. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > board game > chess > [noun] > part of game opening1735 endgame1749 development1820 middle game1848 1735 J. Bertin Noble Game of Chess Pref. p. iv Particular instructions..how the player may make the proper openings, to attack, or defend. 1750 tr. G. Greco (title) Chess made easy..with additional games and openings, illustrated with remarks and general rules. 1845 Souvenir Bristol Chess Club 59 This move produces the opening known by the name of ‘The two Knights' game’. 1871 M. Collins Marquis & Merchant III. iv. 120 She remembered it was an evening for chess, and wondered what opening Miss Griffin would choose. 1889 Chambers's Encycl. 166 All openings of repute have distinctive titles, often being named after their inventors. 1915 J. Du Mont tr. E. Lasker Chess Strategy iv. 26 Each opening is characterised by a well-defined pawn formation. 1984 B. Breytenbach Mouroir 19 We placed the chesspieces on the board and started playing. Rab was very keen on the so-called Polish opening. d. Theatre. The introductory or burlesque part of a traditional pantomime preceding the harlequinade. Now historical.The pantomime was first separated into two parts (burlesque and harlequinade) in the early 19th cent. By the end of the 19th cent. the harlequinade had been almost entirely supplanted by the burlesque. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > pantomime > [noun] > part of harlequinade1780 opening1825 rally1853 transformation1859 1825 P. Egan Life of Actor vii. 264 To get up splendid Spectacles; write openings for Pantomimes. 1838 Mem. Grimaldi II. xxii He played Fribble in the opening, and afterwards the Lover. 1859 Illustr. London News 8 Jan. 34/1 The introduction or opening, which, but for the comic masks, differs little from the burlesque or extravaganza. 1894 J. A. Cave Jubilee Dramatic Life (ed. 2) xix. 177 For the openings of my pantomimes I was able, as opportunity occurred, to secure the services of such inimitable burlesque performers as the Vokes family. 1983 Oxf. Compan. Theatre (ed. 4) 635/1 The success of the fairy-tale openings..caused them to be spun out for so long that the harlequinade was relegated to a short scene at the end. e. Originally U.S. The social occasion marking the start of an art exhibition, fashion show, or the like. ΘΚΠ society > communication > manifestation > showing to the sight > exposure to public view > an exhibition > [noun] > opening of exhibition opening1851 1851 J. P. Kennedy (title) Address delivered before the Maryland Institute for the Promotion of the Mechanical Arts, on the occasion of the opening of the Fourth Annual Exhibition, on the 21st October, 1851. 1870 Chicago Tribune 22 Mar. 1/5 (advt.) Grand Opening of French Millinery..hats, bonnets, latest fashions of the cream of the European ‘Beau Monde’. 1905 E. Wharton House of Mirth ii. ix. 442 Beings without definite pursuits or permanent relations, who drifted on a languid tide of curiosity from restaurant to concert-hall.., from ‘art exhibit’ to dress-maker's opening. 1952 D. L. Ames Murder, Maestro, Please xxxv. 255 Geoffrey insists on taking me to Paris for the autumn dress openings. 1972 P. Marks Collector's Choice ii. 62 He never went to museums except for openings. 2000 Ottawa Citizen (Nexis) 4 Aug. (Arts section) e5 Following the opening of the exhibition tomorrow, from noon to 4 p.m., Melo is offering a jam session on Aug. 12, starting at 8 p.m. f. Theatre, etc. (originally U.S.). The first performance of a play, etc.; a première. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > [noun] > a performance > première opening1855 première1877 preem1936 1855 W. B. Wood Personal Recoll. Stage ix. 191 The loss we sustained was less important in a pecuniary view..than in rendering our opening still more embarrassing. 1916 Variety 27 Oct. 12/1 Openings here next week include Marie Tempest in ‘A Lady's Name’ (Plymouth); ‘Sybil’ (Colonial); [etc.]. 1923 H. Ruby Let. 16 Aug. in G. Marx et al. Groucho Lett. (1967) 183 The out-of-town opening..occurred in Fairmont, West Virginia. 1959 J. Thurber Years with Ross xv. 247 I'm having dinner with Aleck and he's taking me to an opening. 1991 Vox July 109/3 French critic Phillippe Garnier described Oliver Stone's film The Doors on its Paris opening last month as ‘un gross merde’ [sic]. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > mammals > group Unguiculata or clawed mammal > family Canidae > hound > [noun] > sound made by > making sound abayc1330 yearning1531 babbling1568 earning?1578 chiding1600 opening1662 tonguing1851 tolling1869 1662 J. A. Comenius Janua Linguarum Trilinguis 86/1 Hounds..seek out by opening [L. nictendo], and chase them [sc. wild beasts] out of the..coverts. 1732 G. Berkeley Alciphron I. v. i. 266 We heard a confused Noise of the opening of Hounds, the winding of Horns, and the roaring of Country Squires. 1826 J. F. Cooper Last of Mohicans I. ix. 127 They sent up a howl, like an opening from so many hounds who had recovered a lost trail. 6. An opportunity; a chance for advantage, success, gratification, etc.; spec. a job vacancy. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > advantage > an opportunity > [noun] chance1297 occasiona1382 leisurec1386 opportunitya1387 advantage1487 portunity1516 in the nick1565 mean1592 vantage?1592 occasionet1593 overture1610 hinta1616 largeness1625 convenience1679 tid1721 opening1752 offer1831 slant1837 show1842 showing1852 show-up1883 window of opportunity1942 op1978 the world > existence and causation > causation > chance or causelessness > [noun] > chance or opportunity chance1297 occasiona1382 opportunitya1387 fair play?a1500 main chance1577 venturea1625 opening1752 ettle1768 slant1837 sporting chance1897 open go1918 a fair crack of the whip1929 society > occupation and work > working > labour supply > [noun] > a vacancy vacation1535 vacand1567 vacancy1693 opening1752 1752 Let. 9 Sept. in Pennsylvania Gaz. 12 Oct. 2/1 This Island is so infested with Privateers, that there is scarce any Openings for Commerce. 1789 J. Bentham Introd. Princ. Morals & Legisl. Pref. 2 Every opening, which promised to afford the lights he stood in need of, was still pursued. 1793 E. Burke Let. to G. Elliot in Corr. (1844) IV. 153 Here is an opening which, if neglected by our government,..they will one day sorely repent. 1805 S. T. Coleridge Coll. Lett. (1956) II. 1171 I had lately a fine Opening in America, which I was much inclined to accept. 1855 J. F. Stephen in Cambr. Ess. 178 She might have made him miss one or two openings in life. 1888 J. Ruskin Præterita III. ii. 69 D'Israeli saw his opening in an instant. 1917 S. Leacock Frenzied Fiction xvi. 250 He had had some training in the iron and steel business, and when I knew him was on the look-out for an opening. 1942 R.A.F. Jrnl. 13 June 23 There will be many openings for pilots when the war is over. 1988 G. Swift Out of this World 80 She looked at me as if this was an opening to tell her the whole story of my life. 7. Canadian. A period of fixed length during which fishing (esp. for herring) is permitted. ΚΠ 1986 W. Clement Struggle to Organize iii. 40 All three techniques are used for salmon; boats using gillnets and seines often catch herring as well during a very short fall opening. 1990 A. Wilkinson Uncommitted Crime in Riverkeeper (1991) 144 Under this new practice fishing seasons were called openings. 1994 Beautiful Brit. Columbia Spring 18/4 (caption) A total tonnage is set for an opening, and the officers need to get estimated catches from the fishboats before they close the opening. II. Senses relating to the action or fact of disclosure. 8. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > intelligibility > meaning > explanation, exposition > [noun] keyeOE undoinga1330 expositiona1340 declarationc1374 declaringc1374 clearingc1380 expoundingc1380 explanationa1382 interpretation1382 exploitingc1390 unfolding1483 explicating1531 explication1537 clearance?1548 elucidation1570 explaining1576 manifestation1576 untwining1577 illustration1581 untwisting1591 eviscerating1599 unclouding1601 enodation1603 opening1611 dilucidation1615 unsnarling1640 declarement1646 enucleation1650 illumination1656 dilucidatinga1660 luciferousness1665 clarifying1677 unravelling1713 disentanglement1751 exegesis1770 disambiguation1827 evisceration1831 keyword1848 clarificationa1866 exponence1880 exponency1880 straightening1900 demystification1964 OE Blickling Homilies 91 Seo openung þæs dæges is swiþe egesfull eallum gesceaftum. ?c1225 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 49 Þu schalt ȝelde þe best for þe puttes openunge. a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) (1965) Ecclus. xxii. 27 Þer is forsoþe acording, out taken putting to of vice & dispit..& openyng [L. revelatione] of priuyte & treccherous veniaunce. a1475 in A. Clark Eng. Reg. Godstow Nunnery (1906) ii. 401 (MED) The forsaid ij placis of good pastures..longe afore þe publisshyng or openyng of the statute aforsaid, were I-gote of olde fundacion to the chirche. 1543 J. Bale Yet Course at Romyshe Foxe (title page) A dysclosynge or openynge of the Manne of synne. 1560 in tr. E. Roesslin Byrth of Mankynde (new ed.) sig. A.iv In the other printes, there lacked matter necessary to the openyng and declaration of the figures. 1611 M. Smith in Bible (King James) Transl. Pref. 2 If it pertaine..to the opening and clearing of the word of God. 1701 T. Beverley Grand Apoc. Question 42 All which speak the Openings, and Glancings [printed Glaneings] out of the Kingdom of Christ. b. In Quaker use: a divine disclosure or revelation; an intuitive insight (into the nature of God, etc.). ΘΚΠ society > faith > aspects of faith > spirituality > inspiration or revelation > [noun] > among Quakers opening1650 light1653 1650 I. Penington (title) An eccho from the great deep: containing further inward openings, concerning divers other things, upon some whereof the principles and practises of the mad folks do much depend. 1663 W. Gibson (title) A salutation of the Fathers love, unto the young men and virgins, who are in the openings of the prophesies in visions and in revelations. c1675 G. Fox Jrnl. (1952) i. 11 After I had received that opening from the Lord that to be bred at Oxford or Cambridge was not sufficient to fit a man to be a Minister of Christ, I regarded the priests less. a1713 T. Ellwood Hist. Life (1714) 45 I now saw, in and by the farther Openings of the Divine Light in me. 1786 J. Scott Jrnl. (1798) 130 The Lord my gracious Preserver..is learning me to depend on and attend to his shuttings as well as his openings. 1855 Friends' Intelligencer 12 May 113/2 It was as though it had been spoken to me, ‘If I restore thee, go to Pennsylvania’. To which, the answer of my soul was,—Wherever thou pleasest. This opening appeared strange to me at that time. 1947 Friends' Q. Jan. 9 The Puritans..distrusted the ‘openings’ and the ‘experiences’ by which the Quaker claimed to receive revelation. 1975 R. Hetherington Sense of Glory vi. 64 The Society of Friends has never had a priesthood. Instead, they have put the ‘openings’ of individuals within the context of the group. 1987 D. A. Hart in C. Jones et al. Stud. Spirituality 477 [Woolman] slowly learned the art of speaking lucidly and concisely in Quaker meetings, rising only when he was convinced he was responding to a divine ‘opening’. III. Physical senses. 9. a. A vacant space between portions of solid matter; a gap, hole, or passage; an aperture. Also: †a wound (obsolete). ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > condition of being open or not closed > an opening or aperture > [noun] holec725 thirla900 eyeOE opena1200 opening?c1225 overturec1400 overta1425 wideness?c1425 howe1487 hiatus1563 vent1594 apertion1599 ferme1612 notch1615 sluice1648 gape1658 aperture1661 want1664 door1665 hiulcitya1681 to pass through the eye of a needle (also a needle's eye)1720 vista1727 light1776 ope1832 lacuna1872 doughnut hole1886 ?c1225 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 202 Þi flesch hwet frut bereð hit inalle his openunges. a1250 Lofsong Lefdi (Nero) in R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies (1868) 1st Ser. 207 (MED) Ich bide þe..bi þe sore wunden..bi his side openunge. c1350 (a1333) William of Shoreham Poems (1902) 119 (MED) [Christ] of hyre y-bore he was, Ase þe sonne passeȝt þorȝ þe glas Wyþ-outen on openynge. c1384 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(2)) Amos iv. 3 By opnyngis ȝe shuln go out. a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 259v Þe openynge of þe owelis yhe is moche, and þe openynge of þe egles yhe is litel. 1487 (a1380) J. Barbour Bruce (St. John's Cambr.) xii. 109 Quhen thai the douglas saw at hand Thai wandyst and maid ane opnyng. a1560 Arundel MS in J. A. W. Bennett Devotional Pieces (1955) 242 Þe..maist largnes of thy marcy quhilk thow furth schaw in þe opnyng of þi syd. 1632 J. Hayward tr. G. F. Biondi Eromena 51 A..hood which covers the face, saving the eyes; for whose use there is an opening. 1690 J. Locke Ess. Humane Understanding ii. xi. 72 Methinks, the Understanding is not much unlike a Closet wholly shut from light, with only some little openings left, to let in external visible resemblances, or Ideas of things without. 1769 W. Falconer Universal Dict. Marine Opening, a passage, or streight, between two adjacent coasts or islands. 1858 D. Lardner Hand-bk. Nat. Philos.: Hydrostatics, Pneumatics, & Heat (new ed.) 141 This lateral circular opening is surrounded by a horizontal wheel. 1881 Trans. Amer. Inst. Mining Engineers 1880–1 9 160 Openings, the parts of coal mines between the pillars, or the pillars and ribs. 1965 J. Kosinski Painted Bird (1972) viii. 84 I pried off a board in the rear of the barn and squeezed through the opening. 1996 P. Trynka Rock Hardware 140/1 (Gloss.) Keywork, mechanism which opens or closes openings in the body of a woodwind instrument. b. An aperture in the body; a bodily orifice.† opening of the head n. Anatomy Obsolete = open of the head n. at open n. 1a. ΚΠ a1425 (?a1400) G. Chaucer Romaunt Rose (Hunterian) 544 By mesure large were The openyng of hir yen clere. 1568 T. Hacket tr. A. Thevet New Found Worlde xx. 32 This fish is named Marsouin,..he hath..on the heade a certayne cundite or opening, by the which he yawnneth or purgeth, euen as the Whale. 1585 J. Higgins tr. Junius Nomenclator 443/1 Vulneris os,..the mouth, opening, or widenesse of a wound. 1684 tr. S. Blankaart Physical Dict. 281 A pair of Muscles that proceed from the Cartilage..and extending themselves forward to the Sides of the Arytænoides..serve to..close the opening of the Larynx. 1774 O. Goldsmith Hist. Earth II. 45 The blood..goes through the..heart, by an opening called the foramen ovale. 1851 W. D. Esrey Treat. Anat. & Physiog. 44 The fontanelles are six in number, two on the middle line of the head above, and two on either side. The anterior, known in common language as the ‘opening of the head’, is the largest. 1866 T. H. Huxley Lessons Elem. Physiol. (1869) vi. 166 The opening of the gullet into the stomach, termed the cardiac aperture. 1898 B. P. Colton Physiol. vii. 215 Such rings of muscular fibers, guarding openings, are called Sphincter Muscles. 1899 Proc. Philos. Soc. Glasgow 31 39 The openin' o' the heid is in the infant anterior fontanelle. 1941 R. Headstrom Adventures with Microscope xl. 148 Tracheæ..receive the air through a number of outside openings (spiracles) placed along each side of the body. 1993 Guardian 21 Sept. i. 4/8 Endocoscopes—fibre optic viewing tubes linked to television monitors—can be passed through the mouth or other openings. c. An aperture in a building; a door or gateway. ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > a building > parts of building > window or door > [noun] > door > doorway door1382 openinga1450 door-place1552 door-stead1552 doorway1799 door-arch1886 a1450 (c1410) H. Lovelich Hist. Holy Grail xvii. 381 A chambre..he let Ordeyne The most Merveillous that men herd of seyne, That non Man Cowde knowen the openinge, Nether thenre ne Owt-Goyng. a1500 ( in J. S. Brewer Monumenta Franciscana (1858) 525 (MED) [No] wyndoys ne opynyng shall be made in the forsayd walls toward the sayd churche ȝarde. 1609 W. Shakespeare Troilus & Cressida ii. iii. 83 We saw him at the opening of his tent. View more context for this quotation 1793 J. Smeaton Narr. Edystone Lighthouse (ed. 2) §274 The center stone was made large enough to admit of an opening, from floor to floor, or Man-Hole, to be made through it. 1851 T. H. Turner Some Acct. Domest. Archit. I. 14 At Coningsburgh castle the opening of the chimney is square, with shafts in the jambs. 1921 Conquest May 291/2 Houses built on the ‘Unit’ construction system... The concrete blocks are made of a standard size, the dimensions of windows and door openings being made multiples of the block size. 1990 Field Feb. 94/2 Along one of the side walls below the penthouse are a number of openings called galleries—obviously corridor openings or doors in the original building. d. The mouth or estuary of a river; a bay, a gulf. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > land > land mass > shore or bank > bend in coast > [noun] > bay or gulf bay1385 bosomc1400 gulfc1400 gouffre1477 break?1520 reach1526 bight1555 opening1576 sine1605 breach1611 cod1611 traversea1645 sinus1684 embayment1815 1576 R. Hakluyt Voyages (1889) XII. 35 To proue by experience of Sundry Mens trauiles the opening of this Northwest Passage, whereby good hope remaineth of the rest. 1587 R. Hakluyt tr. R. de Laudonnière Notable Hist. Voy. Florida 9 [Captaine Ribault] commanded the ankers to be weighed and to set things in order to returne vnto the opening of the river. 1699 W. Dampier Voy. & Descr. ii. vi. 124 Six Leagues West..there is another large Opening out into the Sea; and it is reported to have a Communication by a small Creek with this River of Alvarado... And at this Opening is a small Fishing Village. 1719 D. Defoe Farther Adventures Robinson Crusoe 83 Entring that Opening of the Sea. 1763 W. Roberts Acct. First Discov. Florida 13 There is some difficulty in finding this opening, by reason of the many islands and lakes before and about it. 1796 H. Hunter tr. J.-H. B. de Saint-Pierre Stud. Nature (1799) I. 159 These bays, or openings, are formed in the ice, merely by the influence of the nearest adjacent lands. 1803 A. Ellicott Jrnl. 266 We sailed into a large opening which we supposed led into the Sound. 1855 H. D. Thoreau Cape Cod (1862) 851 An opening in the beach, forming the entrance to Nauset Harbor. 1962 M. N. Hill Sea xvi. 635 If the wind blows from the side of the main opening of the sea, the water flowing inward from the opening during the rising stage of the surge will experience a Coriolis force. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > architecture > arch > [noun] > parts of coin1350 pendant1359 voussoir1359 springer1435 spandrel1477 spring?1553 pitch1615 kneeler1617 gimmalsa1652 face1664 of the third point1672 turn1677 sweep1685 hance1700 skew-back1700 summering1700 springing1703 tympan1704 hip1726 reins1726 rib1726 third point1728 quoin1730 archivolt1731 opening1739 soffit1739 shoulder1744 extrados1772 intrados1772 haunch1793 arch-stone1828 twist1840 coign1843 architrave1849 escoinçon1867 pulvino1907 pin1928 1739 C. Labelye Short Acct. Piers Westm. Bridge 44 The lower an Arch is, in proportion to its Opening. f. A pair of facing pages in a book. ΘΚΠ society > communication > book > leaves or pages of book > [noun] > page > two pages facing one another opening1906 1906 E. Johnston Writing & Illuminating vi. 110 Parchment sheets should have their smooth sides so placed together that each ‘opening’ of the book has both its pages rough or both smooth. 1914 Trans. Bibliogr. Soc. 12 239 A line of type at the top of a page..is called a ‘head-line’; or, if it consists of the title of the book..on every page or every ‘opening’ (i.e., two pages facing one another), sometimes a ‘running-title’. 1963 Listener 21 Mar. 522/1 A good example of his elaborate book-production is The Book of Ruth, with alternate openings in full colour and in golds and greys. a1995 Guidebk. Trinity Coll. Lib., Dublin (BNC) There are normally two volumes [of the Book of Kells] on display.., one opened at a completely illuminated page and the other showing pages of text. The openings are changed regularly. 10. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > land > landscape > fertile land or place > land with vegetation > [noun] > clearing sladec893 riddingOE wood lay?c1225 wood lind?c1225 wood rise?c1225 laund1340 cockshoot1353 gladea1535 cock-glade1574 nether vert1598 cock-roada1613 opening1678 opening1743 patana1854 1678 Hempstead Rec. (1896) I. 319 To John Bedell all the comon medow betwen the hether-must spring at the first oponing and the spring at Cos medow. 1685 in Early Rec. Town of Providence (Rhode Island) (1895) VIII. 149 A highway shall be & Remaine from the Lane..Eastward through the place called the second opening of the great swampe. 1704 in Early Rec. Town of Providence (Rhode Island) (1894) V. 206 The place comonly Called the first opening of the great swampe. 1839 in Michigan Agric. Soc. Trans. 7 358 Ridges of sandy ‘openings’ and detached prominences or islands..are intersected by long bands of marsh. b. Chiefly North American. A tract of ground in a wood or forest, having widely spaced trees; a glade. Cf. oak opening n. at oak n. Compounds 3. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > land > landscape > fertile land or place > land with vegetation > [noun] > clearing sladec893 riddingOE wood lay?c1225 wood lind?c1225 wood rise?c1225 laund1340 cockshoot1353 gladea1535 cock-glade1574 nether vert1598 cock-roada1613 opening1678 opening1743 patana1854 1743 M. Catesby Nat. Hist. Carolina II. ii In woods of Pine-Trees are frequently seen Glades or Openings, occasioned by the Fall of Trees. 1745 P. Thomas True Jrnl. Voy. South-Seas 35 Hills..covered with..Groves of Trees, interspersed with many Openings and ever-green Valleys. 1798 C. Williamson Descr. Genesee iv The openings, or large tracts of land, found frequently in this country free of timber, and showing great signs of having been once in a state of cultivation, are singularly curious. 1819 W. Scott Ivanhoe II. vi. 85 The servants of Cedric..arrived at a small opening in the forest, in the centre of which grew an oak-tree of enormous magnitude. 1839 F. Marryat Diary in Amer. II. 46 The term used here to distinguish this variety of timber land from the impervious woods is oak openings. 1851 M. Reid Scalp Hunters II. ix. 150 We debouched through the mountain pass into a country of ‘openings’. 1900 E. Bruncken N. Amer. Forests 9 There were also light groves, called openings, in many places in the uplands. 1952 D. F. Putnam Canad. Regions 434/2 Grassy openings are found also in the intermountain sections, throughout the northern Cordillera. 1993 Equinox Oct. 22/1 The mountain—its alpine meadows, lodgepole forests, prairie openings, aspen-covered alluvial fans, its bighorn sheep and prairie falcons—had been placed on the altar of development. IV. With adverbs, corresponding to phrasal verbs s.v. open v. 11. a. opening up n. the action of opening something up. Cf. to open up at open v. Phrasal verbs. ΚΠ 1762 A. Dickson Treat. Agric. ii. xiii. 244 The English writers on agriculture, when giving directions about the opening up of grass-ground, always suppose that the land is to be summer-fallowed. 1887 Spectator 4 June 759/1 The opening-up of a market almost as great as India itself. 1932 Ann. Reg. 1931 ii. 47 ‘Cimarron’..a fine dramatisation of the opening up of Oklahoma. 1988 J. Frame Carpathians x. 67 In every street there were groups who sat talking about ‘caring’ and ‘parenting’ and ‘opening up.’ b. opening out n. the action of opening something out. Cf. to open out at open v. Phrasal verbs. ΚΠ 1846 Southern Q. Rev. Jan. 164 I wish a man could see..from some observatory, these formidable Jesuits; perhaps, in their free cordiality, in their simple openings out, in the loyal joy of their conversations, he would no longer recognize them. 1931 Amer. Jrnl. Bot. 18 370 The next stage involves a very rapid shortening of the spireme, the opening out of the spirals, and the transition to an interwoven thread system. 1993 C. Tilley Interpretative Archaeol. 20 This constitutes a move towards a deterritorialization of the past as traditionally constituted, a fresh opening out of that past to the desiring machine of the present. Compounds (Cf. also opening adj. Compounds.) opening hours n. the times during which something is regularly open; esp. the times (often as permitted by law or licence) during which a shop, public house, etc., is open for business. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > trading place > place where retail transactions made > [noun] > shop hours of business early closing1825 opening hours1849 Sunday closing1850 1849 Amer. Rev. Jan. 83/1 Teach me to know the gaudy flowers; Their slumber times, and opening hours. 1936 Jrnl. Royal Statist. Soc. 99 93 [Cinemas] substantially group themselves into two principal categories—the one in which the opening hours are from about 2 p.m. to nearly 11 p.m., and the other [etc.]. 1996 New Statesman 26 July 54/2 Day trippers could come from Cologne to Sunday-shop in Bluewater, escaping Germany's Lutheran opening hours. opening machine n. any machine for opening; spec. = opener n. 3a. ΚΠ 1875 E. H. Knight Amer. Mech. Dict. II. 1561/2 Opening-machine for loosening the tussocks of cotton as it comes from the bale. 1969 A. J. Hall Standard Handbk. Textiles (ed. 7) iii. 116 In opening machines the cotton is assisted in its travel by suction. 1989 W. Flynt Poor but Proud ii. iii. 104 Three men, called ‘openers’, unwrapped the bale, picking and cleaning debris from the outside. An opening machine started the cleaning process. opening time n. (a) the time at which a shop, office, public house, etc., opens for business; (b) the time that a device takes to open. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > drink > drinking > [noun] > drinking intoxicating liquor > drinking times bever1499 the sun is over the yardarm (also foreyard)1839 opening time1841 chucking-out time1909 permitted hours1919 stop-tap1938 happy hour1951 the world > matter > physics > electromagnetic radiation > electricity > circuit > circuit-breaker > [noun] > time taken to activate opening time1943 1841 W. M. Thackeray Hist. Samuel Titmarsh iv, in Fraser's Mag. Sept. 338/1 I did not go to the office till half an hour after opening time... I was not sorry to let Hoskins have the start of me, and tell the chaps what had taken place. 1943 Gloss. Terms Electr. Engin. (B.S.I.) 66 Opening time, applied to a circuit-breaker: the time interval from the instant of application of the tripping power when in the closed position to the instant of separation of the arcing contacts. 1992 Holiday Which? Sept. 191/3 Gardens of England and Wales 1992..has opening times and descriptions of private and public gardens. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2004; most recently modified version published online June 2022). openingadj. 1. That opens, in various senses of open v. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > condition of being open or not closed > [adjective] > opening or unclosing disclosing1628 opening1645 unclosing1661 evolving1700 the world > animals > mammals > group Unguiculata or clawed mammal > family Canidae > hound > [adjective] > (not) making sound mute1677 yearning1706 opening1810 the mind > mental capacity > understanding > intelligence, cleverness > [adjective] keena1000 nimbleOE wittya1100 smeighc1200 understandingc1200 aperta1330 skillwisea1340 witted1377 intelligiblea1382 well-feelinga1382 knowinga1398 finec1400 large?a1425 well-knowingc1425 of understanding1428 capax1432 sententiousc1440 well-wittedc1450 intellectual?a1475 clean1485 industriousc1487 intellective1509 cleanlyc1540 ingenious?a1560 fine-headed1574 conceited1579 conceitful1594 intelligenced1596 dexter1597 ingenuous1598 intelligent1598 senseful1598 parted1600 thinking1605 dexterical1607 solert1612 apprehensivea1616 dexterous1622 solertic1623 intelligential1646 callent1656 cunning1671 thoughtful1674 perceptive1696 clever1716 uptaking1756 spiritual1807 bright1815 gnostic1819 knowledgeable1825 brainy1845 opulent1851 opening1872 super-cerebral1916 brainiac1976 the mind > emotion > aspects of emotion > capacity for emotion > fellow feeling > [adjective] > becoming sympathetic opening1872 eOE tr. Bede Eccl. Hist. (Tanner) iv. xi. 288 Ða geseah heo, swa swa mid gyldnum rapum he in þa uplecan ahefen wære, oðþæt þe openiendum heofonum in gelæded wæs. 1645 J. Milton Lycidas (rev. ed.) in Poems 76 The opening eye-lids of the morn. 1691 Satyr against French 4 So quick they tumble from his opening mouth, They one another bruise in coming forth. 1702 N. Rowe Tamerlane i. i. 108 Watchful they stood expecting op'ning day. 1744 ‘J. Love’ Cricket i. 5 The Ball, close cushion'd, slides askew, And to the op'ning Pocket runs, a Cou. 1805 Z. Allnutt Considerations on Navigation Thames 23 A Plan of an opening Weir across the Thames. 1810 W. Scott Lady of Lake i. 6 Yelled on the view the opening pack..An hundred dogs bayed deep and strong. 1872 W. R. Greg Enigmas (1882) v. 184 To the opening mind..it [sc. life] seems like a delicious feast. a1940 F. S. Fitzgerald Last Tycoon (1941) iv. 64 A wedge of light came out the opening door. 1992 Machine Knitting Monthly (BNC) June 76 The stem of the other flower is Swiss darned in green and the two opening buds are achieved with orange Swiss darning and white straight stitches. 2. a. That opens something; spec. that opens the bowels; laxative. Now rare.Recorded earliest in the compound opening medicine. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > medicines or physic > medicines for specific purpose > cleansing or expelling medicines > [adjective] > purgative outrunningeOE laxativea1398 purgativea1398 openinga1400 abstersive?a1425 purging?c1425 solublec1503 minorative1543 purgy1562 relaxing1562 solutive1564 benedict1576 aperitive1582 scouring1597 apertive1605 dejective1605 relaxative1611 subductory1620 calastic1621 aperient1626 cathartic1639 dejectory1640 relaxant1651 spurginga1652 cathartical1656 anastomotic1657 ecphractic1657 ecphractical1657 rhyptical1657 rhyptic1659 loosening1665 eccathartic1681 fluxing1702 chalastic1704 loosinga1722 hypactic1753 evacuatory1789 evacuant1800 relaxatory1925 a1400 tr. Lanfranc Sci. Cirurgie (Ashm.) (1894) 257 If it [sc. deafness] comeþ of humours þat stoppiþ nerues..caste in his erre oile of bittir almaundis & oþere medicyns þat ben openynge. ?c1425 tr. Guy de Chauliac Grande Chirurgie (Paris) (1971) 147 (MED) When þe aposteme is matured..breke it wiþ þe nayles..or wiþ maturatyf and openynge gargarisimus. 1620 T. Venner Via Recta vi. 94 Vinegar that is made of White-wine, is more opening, and that which is made of Claret, more binding. 1727 R. Bradley Chomel's Dictionaire Oeconomique (Dublin ed.) at Almond Bitter-Almonds are of an opening and detersive nature. 1796 C. Lamb Let. 3 Oct. in Lett. C. & M. A. Lamb (1975) I. 50 I may dismiss immediately both Doctor and Apothecary, retaining..an opening draught or so for a while. 1824 J. Clare Let. 20 Apr. (1985) 294 I have gave up doctering save the taking opening pills occasionly. b. Initial; introductory; first. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > order, sequence, or succession > beginning > [adjective] > that forms the beginning opening1806 1806 E. Bath Poems sig. E3 The glittering icicles Which decorate the opening morn of life. 1816 J. Austen Emma I. xvii. 300 She had not even a share in his opening compliments.—Her name was not mentioned. View more context for this quotation 1851 R. A. Willmott Pleasures of Lit. (1857) iv. 15 It contained the opening letter of Junius. 1904 J. London Sea-wolf xii. 119 These two affairs were only the opening events of the day's programme. 1937 V. Bartlett This is my Life x. 144 When the Irish Free State was admitted [to the League of Nations]..President Cosgrave made his opening speech in Gaelic. 1989 Face Jan. 94/3 ‘Boozers of the world Unite’ ran the opening editorial. 1997 T. Morrison Paradise 185 She supposed old Natha DuPres would deliver the opening remarks once again. c. Cricket. Designating or relating to the batters who open the innings, or the bowlers who open the attack. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > cricket > cricketer > [adjective] > opening player opening1929 1929 P. G. H. Fender Turn of Wheel iii. 92 Hendry..had a habit of..retreating when facing Larwood, and that would never do, especially in an opening batsman. 1952 J. H. Morgan Glamorgan County Cricket facing p. 64 (caption) Arnold Dyston, a stylish opening bat. 1971 Times 15 Feb. 8/2 Their opening partnerships for the seven Test matches have averaged as much as 75. 1977 Times 29 Nov. 12/5 Geoffrey Arnold's two for 95 were the best figures by a recognized opening bowler in three Tests. 1991 Independent 5 Jan. 47/3 Dennis Amiss, the former England opening batsman, has been appointed chairman of Warwickshire's cricket sub-committee. 2000 D. Adebayo My Once upon Time (2001) x. 222 First Fuller and Montague, the West's opening batsmen, blinking at the light,..swinging their lengths of willow in anticipation. Compounds (Some of these may be understood as compounds of opening n.) ΚΠ 1875 E. H. Knight Amer. Mech. Dict. II. 1561/2 Opening-bit, a broach or reamer. A tapering tool with anuglar sides for widening an aperture. opening credits n. a list or sequence of credits shown at the beginning of a film or television programme, typically identifying only the most prominent people involved in the production; (also) the part of a film or programme during which these appear; cf. credit n. 16. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > cinematography > a film > [noun] > accompanying text on screen > credit credit1919 credit title1922 opening credits1931 credit list1935 title sequence1936 end credits1948 closing credits1952 credit line1984 1931 Los Angeles Times 12 Oct. i. 9/2 Instead of the usual opening credits on the new film.., studio executives should have used the following: ‘Columbia Presents Jack Holt's Standing Story With a New Locale.’ 1952 Dixon (Illinois) Evening Tel. 29 Apr. 4/2 Ricky and David Nelson..are billed this way in UI's opening credits for their movie. 2003 Echoes July 49/2 As the opening credits start to roll, a man with some form of jerri curl wig dances around drunkenly but in complete seriousness in what looks like his pyjamas. opening day n. the first day of an event or season; the first day of operation or business. ΚΠ 1798 Times 11 Dec. 3/2 The agreement between the parties was, that Mr. Kentish should have this stock on his undertaking, and also on his surety undertaking, that it should be replaced on the first opening day. 1899 Steubenville (Ohio) Herald-Star 27 Apr. 8 (advt.) Come and visit us on opening day. You will find our store well worth a visit. 2002 Field & Stream Oct. 40/1 This waning season has none of the raucous camaraderie of opening day. It's always been an especially good time to fish alone. opening gambit n. an introductory remark or stratagem, esp. one designed to make social contact or secure one's own position. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > undertaking > preparation > [noun] > a) preparation(s) > a preliminary action or step introductionc1386 deductiona1535 induction?1544 preamble1548 flourish1552 preludium1563 primordium1577 preparativec1580 exordium1581 introit1583 foregoinga1586 prologuea1586 preface1589 prelusion1597 proem1598 prolusion1601 introductory1646 preliminary1656 prelimination1667 flourishing1687 little go1842 preluding1858 foreword1888 prelim1891 prelimen1898 run-in1900 opening gambit1911 prolegomenon1926 lead-in1928 pipe-openera1936 lead-up1953 intro1964 1911 P. Gibbon Margaret Harding 44 ‘Sun burning plenty; how's Missis?’ was her usual opening gambit. 1992 Vanity Fair (N.Y.) Dec. 186/2 One heard a satirical BBC show broadcast a vignette.., in which an archetypal Cooke-esque opening gambit..was drowned out by an encroaching series of quaaaaacks. opening line n. (a) the first line of a piece of writing, esp. a poem or play; (b) the initiating remark in a conversation; spec. (chiefly North American) the initiating remark made to a stranger to whom one is sexually attracted, a ‘chat-up line’. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > love > courtship or wooing > [noun] > act of courtship > love proposal or declaration > words of temptation or courtship wæling-wordc1175 opening line1824 1824 N. Amer. Rev. Apr. 272 The whole description..resembles the mosaic account not less closely than these opening lines. 1937 D. Thomas Let. c25 Oct. (1987) 261 The line is so stridently an opening line: tum, tum, tum,..a poem is about to begin. 1965 N.Y. Times Mag. 24 Jan. 46 (caption) An acceptable opening line for meeting a strange Russian girl on the street is: ‘Pardon me, dyevushka, would you mind if I asked to become acquainted?’ 2002 Evening Times (Glasgow) (Nexis) 12 July 20 I wish I had better chat-up lines. There must be a great opening line that doesn't leave a guy embarrassed and flagging. opening medicine n. a laxative. ΚΠ a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 103v Openynge medicine..openeþ weyes þat beþ I-stoppid & makeþ þinne humours þat beþ gleymy þicke. 1783 S. Moreau Tour to Cheltenham Spa 47 They..take a gentle dose of Cheltenham salts, or some other opening medicine, as their physician thinks best suited. 1912 More Secret Remedies (B.M.A.) x. 157 Do the bowels act regularly without opening medicine? 2002 Western Mail (Cardiff) (Nexis) 12 Feb. (Features section) 8 I know that Brooklax and Exlax were laxatives (‘opening medicine’ we called them), and Snowfire certainly relieved our chapped hands. opening night n. the first night of a play, film, etc. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > [noun] > a performance > night of performance night1707 opening nightc1814 command-night1826 c1814 (title of play) The opening night; or, the manager hoax'd. 1929 J. B. Priestley Good Compan. ii. iii. 307 I don't care if a man's been fifty years in the business, there's the same old thrill comes back. Opening night—all of a doodah! 1992 New Yorker 18 May 11/1 The opening night of Jim Jarmusch's new film at the Angelika. opening statement n. Law an initial spoken statement made by each side in a trial, summarizing the main points of the case they will present to the jury. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > speech > speech-making > [noun] > a speech > introductory speech or part of speech forespeechc1000 prologuec1350 preamblec1395 preambulationc1395 prooemiumc1485 prolocutiona1525 introduction1529 insinuation1532 preface1532 proem1532 foretalk1565 opening statement1806 insinuance1888 1806 Times 22 Nov. The evidence which was now adduced, fully confirmed the opening statement. 1974 Black Panther 19 Jan. 3/3 Both Mr. Means, an Oglala Sioux, and Mr. Banks, a Chippewa, have wove the right to make opening statements to the jury once they are seated. 2012 New Yorker 2 Jan. 59/2 Cotter, in his opening statement, portrayed Dakotah as a sociopath so callous he was capable of ‘chitchat’..just moments after shooting his grandfather. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2004; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.OEadj.eOE |
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