| 释义 | 
		† ordn.Origin: A word inherited from Germanic. Etymology: Cognate with Old Frisian ord   point, place, beginning (West Frisian oarde   place, oard   a quarter of a particular denomination of money or measure), Middle Dutch ort  , oort  , ord   point, edge, corner, piece of land, a quarter of a particular denomination of money or measure (Dutch oord   place), Old Saxon ord   point, spear (Middle Low German ōrt  , oort   point, edge, place, beginning, a quarter of a particular denomination of money or measure), Old High German ort   point, edge (Middle High German ort   point, edge, corner, place, beginning, a quarter of a particular denomination of money or measure, German Ort   place), Old Icelandic oddr   point of a weapon, front, leader (Icelandic oddur   point, tip), Old Swedish odder  , udder   point (Swedish udd  ), Danish od   point, probably  <  the same Indo-European base as Albanian usht   unripe spike of corn, and perhaps (with different root extension) Lithuanian usnis   thistle. Compare odd n.1, odd n.2Old Swedish ordh  , orth   corner, a quarter of a particular denomination of money or measure (Swedish ort   place, a quarter of a particular denomination of money or measure), early modern Danish ort   place, a quarter of a particular denomination of money or measure, are probably borrowings from Middle Low German. The sense ‘a quarter of a particular denomination of money or measure’ found in some languages apparently arises from the pointed shape of the segments formed when a coin is divided into four crosswise. The base is a common element in Germanic personal names, compare Old English Ordbyrht  , Ordgār  , etc., Frankish Ortger  , Ortleib  , etc., Old Icelandic Oddgeirr  , Oddrún  , Þóroddr  , etc., Gepid Usdibadus  . With the pairing of ord   and edge   in Old English poetry (compare quots. OE1, OE1 at sense  1) compare Old Icelandic oddr ok egg   point and edge. The early Scandinavian word represented by Old Icelandic oddr   was also borrowed into Middle English as odde   (one isolated attestation) in sense ‘point of a nail’:1451–1500						 (c1400)						    Vision of Tundale 916  				Her tayles were full of smal broddes, As weþerhokes were þe oddes. In β.  forms   probably influenced by word n.  Obsolete. society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > sharp weapon > 			[noun]		 > pointed weapon society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > sharp weapon > 			[noun]		 > point society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > sharp weapon > spear or lance > 			[noun]		 eOE    King Ælfred tr.  Gregory  		(Hatton)	 		(1871)	 xl. 297  				Ne ofstong he hiene no mid ðy speres orde. OE     1548  				Breostnet broden; þæt gebearh feore, wið ord ond wið ecge. OE     		(1942)	 59  				Us sceal ord and ecg ær geseman. a1250						 (?a1200)						     		(Nero)	 		(1952)	 26  				Men weorreð..med scheotunge, mid speres ord, & mid sweordes egge. c1275						 (?a1200)						    Laȝamon  		(Calig.)	 		(1978)	 10307  				Turnden heo heore ordes. c1330						 (?a1300)						     		(Auch.)	 		(1973)	 7449 (MED)  				He hit him wiþ þe speres ord. c1390    in  F. J. Furnivall  		(1901)	  ii. 616  				Þi fruit is prikked wiþ speres ord. a1400						 (a1325)						     		(Vesp.)	 7770 (MED)  				Þan drogh saul self his suord And ran him-self a-pon þe ord. a1400						 (a1325)						     		(Vesp.)	 10626 (MED)  				Hir wijt, hir vertu, hir loueword, Mai naman writte wit penned ord [a1400 Trin. Cambr. poynt]. c1450						 (a1400)						     		(Calig. A.ii)	 		(1969)	 1923 (MED)  				Hys sword..Was scharp of egge and ord. the world > existence and causation > causation > source or origin > 			[noun]		 the world > relative properties > order > order, sequence, or succession > beginning > 			[noun]		 eOE    King Ælfred tr.  Gregory  		(Hatton)	 		(1871)	 xlix. 385  				Gebid ðu..oð ðu wite ðæt ðin spræc hæbbe ægðer ge ord ge ende. OE    Ælfric  		(Cambr. Gg.3.28)	 xii. 125  				Se leahter is ord and ende ælces yfeles. c1175     		(Burchfield transcript)	 l. 18621  				Godess sune ankennedd. Wass aȝȝ occ aȝȝ wiþþ utenn ord. a1225						 (?c1175)						    Poema Morale 		(Lamb.)	 85 in  R. Morris  		(1868)	 1st Ser. 165  				He is hord buten horde and ende buten ende. ?1316    Short Metrical Chron. 		(Royal)	 174 in  J. Ritson  		(1802)	 II. 277 (MED)  				Y schal telle ord and ende The rihte sothe. a1400						 (?c1300)						     		(Egerton)	 l. 293  				Tolde boþ worth and ende [c1330 Auch. Þe mesager..Al a seide, ase ȝhe him tolde]. c1400     		(Laud 622)	 		(1878)	 763 (MED)  				He wroot oord & ende. a1450						 (a1400)						    Feast of Corpus Christi 		(Bodl.)	 in   		(1889)	 82 310 (MED)  				Þou myȝt þer-of vndirstond þe ende & þe ord. a1500						 (?a1325)						     		(1935)	 1320 (MED)  				Y schall ȝow telle euery word, how it be-gan, ende and ord, The stryf.  This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2004; most recently modified version published online December 2021). <  n.eOE |