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单词 out of mind
释义

> as lemmas

out of mind
d. out of mind (also †from mind): forgotten. Chiefly in phrases to be out of mind, †to go of mind, †to pass from (also out of) mind: to be no longer remembered, to be forgotten; †to set (something) out of mind: to forget about (something); to put (something) out of mind (also out of one's mind): to ignore or disregard (something, esp. something unpleasant or distressing).Frequently in the proverb out of sight, out of mind (cf. out of prep. 11, sight n.1 10b), and variants.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > mental health > mental illness > be or become mad [verb (intransitive)]
dwelec900
wedec900
awedeeOE
starea1275
braidc1275
ravea1325
to be out of mindc1325
woodc1374
to lose one's mindc1380
madc1384
forgetc1385
to go out of one's minda1398
to wede (out) of, but wita1400
foolc1400
to go (also fall, run) mada1450
forcene1490
ragec1515
waltc1540
maddle?c1550
to go (also run, set) a-madding (or on madding)1565
pass of wita1616
to have a gad-bee in one's brain1682
madden1704
to go (also be) off at the nail1721
distract1768
craze1818
to get a rat1890
to need (to have) one's head examined (also checked, read)1896
(to have) bats in the belfryc1901
to have straws in one's hair1923
to take the bats1927
to go haywire1929
to go mental1930
to go troppo1941
to come apart1954
the mind > mental capacity > memory > faulty recollection > forgotten [phrase]
out of sight, out of mindc1325
the mind > mental capacity > memory > faulty recollection > [adjective] > forgotten
out of memorya1275
of minda1325
out of mindc1325
forlainc1330
unrememberedc1425
oblivious1535
forgotten1600
unretained1666
unrecollected1733
unrecalled1742
buried1806
evanished1829
unmemoried1829
unrevived1877
spark out1882
c1325 (c1300) Chron. Robert of Gloucester (Calig.) 725 (MED) Þou ssalt vor þin vnkundhede be out of al min munde.
c1390 Roberd of Cisyle (Vernon) (1930) 64 Kyng Robert lafte out of mynde.
a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) ii. 2226 (MED) Whanne he stod on dreie ground..He sette his trowthe al out of mynde.
c1395 G. Chaucer Merchant's Tale 2390 Now dame..lat al passe out of mynde.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Trin. Cambr.) 3196 (MED) Þi dede shal neuer of mynde go.
c1450 Art Nombryng in R. Steele Earliest Arithm. in Eng. (1922) 43 Lest any thynge sholde be ouer-hippede and sette out of mynde.
a1500 tr. Thomas à Kempis De Imitatione Christi (Trin. Dublin) (1893) 30 (MED) Whan man is oute of siȝt, sone he passiþ oute of mynde.
a1525 Crying ane Playe 89 in W. A. Craigie Asloan MS (1925) II. 152 Ane thousand ȝere Is past fra mynd Sen I was generit of his kynd.
1545 R. Taverner tr. Erasmus Prouerbes (new ed.) sig. Dviv Oure Englyshe prouerbe..Out of syght, out of mynde.
1557 Earl of Surrey et al. Songes & Sonettes sig. Dd.iv As the watry showers delay the raging winde, So doth good hope clene put away dispayre out of my minde.
a1605 T. Hoccleve Complaint (Durh.) 80 in Minor Poems (1892) i. 98 Forgeten I was, all owte of mynde a-way.
1662 in R. W. Ambler et al. Farmers & Fishermen (1987) 156 Old hay... Corne upon the ground... Not seen and out of mind 6[d].
1700 J. Dryden tr. G. Boccaccio Sigismonda & Guiscardo in Fables 128 The Cavern-mouth alone was hard to find, Because the Path disus'd was out of mind.
1704 M. Henry Friendly Visits 16 Though they are out of sight they are not out of Mind.
1722 D. Defoe Moll Flanders 358 The good Man having made a very Christian Exhortation to me, not to let the Joy of my Reprieve, put the Remembrance of my past Sorrow out of my Mind.
1816 W. Scott Antiquary III. viii. 175 If they steek me up here, my friends are like eneugh to forget me—out o' sight out o' mind is a true proverb.
1819 W. Scott Ivanhoe III. iii. 87 But what now, Isaac? art dead? art stupefied? hath the payment of a thousand crowns put thy daughter's peril out of thy mind?
1878 H. James Watch & Ward vi. 112 Dear Roger, I have been extremely vexed and uneasy. I have fancied you were ill, or, worse,—that out of sight is out of mind.
1915 C. P. Gilman Herland in Forerunner June 154/2 When a woman chose to be a mother, she allowed the child-longing to grow within her... When she did not so choose she put the whole thing out of her mind.
1960 H. Lee To kill Mockingbird (1963) ii. xxv. 243 He was not out of mind: I missed him.
1987 G. Keillor Leaving Home (1989) 120 When he left five children and a wife in the middle of the night..he was put out of mind and his name disappeared.
1991 Time 25 Nov. 72/1 Many Americans found it easy to put AIDS out of mind.
extracted from mindn.1
out of mind
(b)out of mind: from time immemorial (obsolete); esp. in time out of (formerly also †a) mind: from a time or during a period beyond human memory; from time immemorial; (occasionally) for an inconceivably long future time, indefinitely. Also with preceding prepositions in same sense, as from time out of mind, since time out of mind, etc.
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > relative time > the past > oldness or ancientness > [adverb] > from time immemorial
out of mind1387
immemorially1614
since Adam was a boy1722
1387–8 Petition London Mercers in R. W. Chambers & M. Daunt Bk. London Eng. (1931) 35 As out of mynde hath be vsed.
1416 in H. M. Flasdieck Mittelengl. Originalurkunden (1926) 54 (MED) Wyche tenementes..ever haue be owte of myende.
1432 Petition in Rotuli Parl. (1767–77) IV. 417/1 (MED) Tyme oute of mynde..there were wont many diverse Shippes..to come..yn to the saide Havenes.
a1475 in A. Clark Eng. Reg. Godstow Nunnery (1905) i. 70 (MED) All his successours bin bounde fro time oute of minde for j yerdelonde.
?a1475 Ludus Coventriae (1922) 165 (MED) Þat blysse ffor to restore Whiche hath be lost fro oute of mende.
c1523 J. Rastell tr. Tenuris sig. A.iiiv Ye tenure in villenage shal make no fre man villeyn if it be not contynued syth tyme out of mynd.
a1525 ( Coventry Leet Bk. (1908) II. 460 Ther haue ben Chirchewardens..tyme out of mynde electyff yerely.
1567 W. Painter Palace of Pleasure II. xxiii. f. 193 My..slepinge body vnder toumbe, shall dreame time out of minde.
1599 W. Shakespeare Romeo & Juliet i. iv. 70 Grub, time out a mind, the Fairies Coatchmakers. View more context for this quotation
1623 T. Scott High-waies of God 12 To follow that faith which his forefathers professed time out of minde.
1703 Acct. Theatre of War in France 3 Time out of mind, the French have been distinguish'd into Langue d'Ouy, and Langue d'Oc.
1766 J. Cunningham Poems 144 Since time out of mind..Both [actors and Jews] lawless, alike, have been sentenc'd to wander.
a1849 J. Keegan Legends & Poems (1907) 263 From time out of mind, this parish has been famous for its dances.
1898 G. W. E. Russell Coll. & Recoll. xxii. 292 A favourite theme of satirists time out of mind.
1923 G. C. Williamson Curious Survivals xvi. 244 In 1605 a charter of King James admitted that the City for time out of mind had exercised the conservation of the Thames.
1961 Times 28 July 11/4 Has it [sc. the tune ‘Chopsticks’] been handed on since time out of mind by generations of elder brothers and sisters on wet afternoons?
1991 Washington Post (Nexis) 31 May (Weekend section) 55 Her commentary..has been convulsing her descendants for 135 years. That it will continue to do so for time out of mind is partly because of [etc.].
2007 S. Sohmer Shakespeare for Wiser Sort iii. 34 Shakespeare's time-setting for Hamlet..has vexed commentators time out of mind.
extracted from mindn.1
out of (also without) mind
b. out of (also without) mind: more than one can calculate or comprehend. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
c1450 (?a1400) Wars Alexander (Ashm.) 3018 (MED) He had of men out of mynde many mayn hundreth.
a1470 T. Malory Morte Darthur (Winch. Coll. 13) (1990) I. 172 She wepte and made grete sorow oute of mynde.
?a1525 (?a1475) Play Sacrament l. 79 in N. Davis Non-Cycle Plays & Fragm. (1970) 60 There myght ys withouton mynd to mene.
extracted from mindn.1
out of mind
c. out of one's mind (also †out of mind) and variants: having lost control of one's mental faculties; insane, deranged, delirious. Now also in weakened use (with a preceding past participle): suffering from a particular condition to a very high degree, as stoned (also bombed, pissed, etc.) out of one's mind (slang): stupefied, extremely intoxicated, or incapacitated by drink or drugs. bored out of one's mind: beside oneself with boredom, etc.out of one's tiny mind: see tiny adj. d.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > mental health > mental illness > [adjective] > insanity or madness > affected with
woodc725
woodsekc890
giddyc1000
out of (by, from, of) wit or one's witc1000
witlessc1000
brainsickOE
amadc1225
lunaticc1290
madc1330
sickc1340
brain-wooda1375
out of one's minda1387
frenetica1398
fonda1400
formada1400
unwisea1400
brainc1400
unwholec1400
alienate?a1425
brainless1434
distract of one's wits1470
madfula1475
furious1475
distract1481
fro oneself1483
beside oneself1490
beside one's patience1490
dementa1500
red-wood?1507
extraught1509
misminded1509
peevish1523
bedlam-ripe1525
straughta1529
fanatic1533
bedlama1535
daft1540
unsounda1547
stark raving (also staring) mad1548
distraughted1572
insane1575
acrazeda1577
past oneself1576
frenzy1577
poll-mad1577
out of one's senses1580
maddeda1586
frenetical1588
distempered1593
distraught1597
crazed1599
diswitted1599
idle-headed1599
lymphatical1603
extract1608
madling1608
distracteda1616
informala1616
far gone1616
crazy1617
March mada1625
non compos mentis1628
brain-crazed1632
demented1632
crack-brained1634
arreptitiousa1641
dementate1640
dementated1650
brain-crackeda1652
insaniated1652
exsensed1654
bedlam-witteda1657
lymphatic1656
mad-like1679
dementative1685
non compos1699
beside one's gravity1716
hyte1720
lymphated1727
out of one's head1733
maddened1735
swivel-eyed1758
wrong1765
brainsickly1770
fatuous1773
derangedc1790
alienated1793
shake-brained1793
crack-headed1796
flighty1802
wowf1802
doitrified1808
phrenesiac1814
bedlamite1815
mad-braineda1822
fey1823
bedlamitish1824
skire1825
beside one's wits1827
as mad as a hatter1829
crazied1842
off one's head1842
bemadded1850
loco1852
off one's nut1858
off his chump1864
unsane1867
meshuga1868
non-sane1868
loony1872
bee-headed1879
off one's onion1881
off one's base1882
(to go) off one's dot1883
locoed1885
screwy1887
off one's rocker1890
balmy or barmy on (or in) the crumpet1891
meshuggener1892
nutty1892
buggy1893
bughouse1894
off one's pannikin1894
ratty1895
off one's trolley1896
batchy1898
twisted1900
batsc1901
batty1903
dippy1903
bugs1904
dingy1904
up the (also a) pole1904
nut1906
nuts1908
nutty as a fruitcake1911
bugged1920
potty1920
cuckoo1923
nutsy1923
puggled1923
blah1924
détraqué1925
doolally1925
off one's rocket1925
puggle1925
mental1927
phooey1927
crackers1928
squirrelly1928
over the edge1929
round the bend1929
lakes1934
ding-a-ling1935
wacky1935
screwball1936
dingbats1937
Asiatic1938
parlatic1941
troppo1941
up the creek1941
screwed-up1943
bonkers1945
psychological1952
out to lunch1955
starkers1956
off (one's) squiff1960
round the twist1960
yampy1963
out of (also off) one's bird1966
out of one's skull1967
whacked out1969
batshit1971
woo-woo1971
nutso1973
out of (one's) gourd1977
wacko1977
off one's meds1986
a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1865) I. 421 (MED) He..sigh aboue a grisliche kynde, And fil anon out of his mynde.
c1390 G. Chaucer Pardoner's Tale 494 He seith he kan no difference fynde Bitwix a man that is out of his mynde And a man which that is dronkelewe.
c1425 J. Lydgate Troyyes Bk. (Augustus A.iv) i. l. 4276 (MED) Almost for wo he went out of his mynde.
a1500 (?a1450) Gesta Romanorum (Harl. 7333) (1879) lxix. 317 (MED) Þe maister of þe ship was halfe out of mynde.
a1617 P. Baynes Comm. Epist. First Chapter Paul to Ephesians (1618) viii. 208 Through phrenzie out of our right mindes.
1780 S. Lee Chapter of Accidents v. i. 82 It must be Bedlam; for the old gentleman is out of his mind, that's a sure thing!
1849 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. I. v. 663 He was drunk, they said, or out of his mind, when he was turned off.
1867 G. MacDonald Ann. Quiet Neighbourhood I. vii. 191 Miss Oldcastle thought she was out of her mind, and spoke of an asylum.
1948 T. Heggen Mister Roberts xi. 140 At night, awakening him from sleep, an object dropped on the deck overhead would send him nearly out of his mind with rage.
1964 N.Y. Times Mag. 23 Aug. 64/2 He was bombed out of his mind.
1968 Listener 28 Nov. 735/2 He would only be taken in charge if he was drunk: were he to spend his ten shillings on getting stoned out of his mind the police would happily accommodate him.
1984 B. MacLaverty Cal (new ed.) 95 When I saw matches being lit in that cottage I was terrified out of my mind.
1987 E. Newby Round Ireland in Low Gear x. 169 She was bored out of her mind, she said, by winter in Glengarriff.
1992 J. MacKenna Summer Girl in Fallen 62 Not when I'm pissed out of my mind.
1995 P. McCabe Dead School (1996) 175 ‘What do you think you're doing!’ he would yell at him. ‘Are you out of your mind?’
1999 I. Rankin Dead Souls xi. 67 The members of the public sat there with hands clasped between knees, or with heads angled to the ceiling, bored out of their minds.
extracted from mindn.1
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as lemmas
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