单词 | outrageously |
释义 | outrageouslyadv. 1. In an outrageous manner; so as to cause outrage. ΘΚΠ the mind > goodness and badness > badness or evil > heinousness > [adverb] foullyOE ranklyOE awly?c1225 wickc1330 deeplyc1384 cursedlyc1386 outrageouslya1387 wickeda1400 outragelya1425 heinouslyc1440 enormly1538 arrantly?1548 enormouslya1617 flagitiously1622 enormiouslya1641 flagrantly1756 atrociously1765 society > morality > moral evil > wickedness > [adverb] > heinously foullyOE deeplyc1384 outrageouslya1387 outragelya1425 heinouslyc1440 rankly?1534 enormly1538 enormouslya1617 flagitiously1622 enormiouslya1641 atrociously1765 the world > relative properties > quantity > sufficient quantity, amount, or degree > excessive amount or degree > [adverb] > excessively or immoderately too971 unimeteOE unmethelyOE overmetec1225 un-i-methc1225 unmeetly?c1225 unmethc1225 overgarta1333 outrageouslya1387 outrageousc1390 unreasonablyc1400 outragelya1425 unmoderately?a1425 inordinatelyc1450 unrulilyc1456 dismeasurably1474 immoderately1482 overharda1500 unreasonable1535 furiously1555 intemperately1576 overliberally1578 unconscionably1583 unconscionable1596 exorbitantlya1635 undulya1779 owdaciously1848 a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1872) IV. 205 Þere þre ȝere and seven monþes he dede outrageousliche [?a1475 anon. tr. vsede insolence] aȝenst þe customs and of fredom of Rome. 1415 T. Hoccleve Addr. to Sir John Oldcastle l. 270 in Minor Poems (1970) i. 17 He is thyn handwerke, lord! refuse him noght, Thogh he thee haue agilt outrageously. ?a1425 (c1400) Mandeville's Trav. (Titus C.xvi) (1919) 157 (MED) Þei make no money nouþer of gold nor of syluer, And þerfore he may despende ynow & outrageously. 1474 W. Caxton tr. Game & Playe of Chesse (1883) ii. iv. 47 Whiche supposid that hit had ben his squyer that he entretid so outragiously. 1517 R. Torkington Oldest Diarie Englysshe Trav. (1884) 59 All nyght it blew owtrageowsly. 1549 J. Olde in M. Coverdale et al. tr. Erasmus Paraphr. Newe Test. II. Ephes. Prol. sig. .iiii Whan was excessyue riotous bankettyng, pottecompanyonyng, and belychearynge more outragiously vsed? 1577 R. Holinshed Chron. II. 1030/1 Neither did the townesmen of S. Albones..thus outragiously misdemeane themselues. 1603 J. Florio tr. M. de Montaigne Ess. i. xxx. 105 These prisoners..outragiously defie, and injure them [sc. their keepers]. 1625 K. Long tr. J. Barclay Argenis iv. ii. 239 No body durst speake to him thus outragiously fuming. 1687 C. Sedley Bellamira iii. i, in Wks. (1778) II. 152 I went home drunk, and scour'd outragiously. 1720 D. Manley Power of Love vi. 304 Her Women-attendants shriek'd, and wept..outragiously. 1794 T. Holcroft Adventures Hugh Trevor II. xiv. 203 Hector and Andrews began to swear outrageously. 1824 W. Irving Tales of Traveller I. 278 Laughing outrageously at a broad story. 1854 T. De Quincey On War in Select. Grave & Gay IV. 283 It gives a colourable air of justice..to a war which is, in fact, the most outrageously unjust. 1885 Cent. Mag. July 380/2 Violet flirted so outrageously with young Orpiment that even Verona's placid spirit was ruffled. 1914 M. Sinclair Three Sisters li. 304 People had not been prepared for intimacy with a Vicar separated so outrageously from his third wife. 1923 W. Cather Lost Lady i. vi. 79 She mocked outrageously at the proprieties she observed. 1990 J. Wambaugh Golden Orange vii. 86 The black leather chaise..clashed outrageously with the costly kitsch her husband had collected. 2. Modifying an adjective, in weakened sense as an intensifier: extremely, exceedingly; shockingly; very.In modern use frequently in a positive context. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > expectation > surprise, unexpectedness > [adverb] unmindlingOE unsupposedc1425 unweeninglyc1480 ex improviso1521 unprovidedly1539 unexpectedly1605 unhopedly1611 unimagined1614 inexpectedly1626 startlinglya1645 surprisingly1667 unhoped1667 astonishingly1668 staggeringlya1682 shockingly1741 outrageously1749 funnily1837 shockingly1883 amazingly1928 the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > high or intense degree > [adverb] > extremely or exceedingly swithlyc888 micklelyeOE swith971 hardOE un-i-fohOE sevenfoldlOE unmeet?c1225 innerlyc1330 horribly1340 too1340 sore1474 horriblec1475 vehemently1483 outrageous1487 done?a1513 exquisite1529 strangely1532 exceeding1535 exceedingly1535 angardlyc1540 angerlyc1540 choicec1540 vengeable1542 vengeably?1550 extremelya1554 monstrous1569 thrice1579 amain1587 extremea1591 damnably1598 fellc1600 tyrannically1602 exquisitely1603 damnedly1607 preciously1607 damnablea1616 impensively1620 excellingly1621 main1632 fearful1634 vengeancelya1640 upsy1650 impensely1657 twadding1657 vastly1664 hideous1667 mainly1670 consumed1707 consumedly1707 outrageously1749 damned1757 nation1771 shockingly1777 deuced1779 darn1789 darned1807 felly1807 varsal1814 awful1816 awfy1816 frightfully1816 deucedly1819 dogged1819 awfully1820 gallowsa1823 shocking1831 tremendously1832 everlasting1833 terribly1833 fearfully1835 ripping1838 poison1840 thundering1853 frighteninglyc1854 raring1854 hell's own1863 goldarned1866 goddamned1870 doggone1871 acutely1872 whooping1874 stupidly1878 everlastingly1879 hideously1882 densely1883 storming1883 good and1885 thunderingly1885 crazy1887 tremendous1887 madly1888 goldarn1892 howling1895 murderously1916 rasted1919 goddam1921 bitchingly1923 Christly1923 bitching1929 falling-down1930 lousy1932 appallingly1937 stratospherically1941 Christ almighty1945 effing1945 focking1956 dagnab1961 drop-dead1980 hella1987 totes2006 1749 H. Fielding Tom Jones vi For sure the most outrageously rigid among her sex will excuse her pitying a man whom she saw miserable on her own account. 1779 F. Burney Let. 30 May–1 June (1994) 296 We were most outrageously merry! 1817 T. F. Dibdin Bibliogr. Decameron I. 380 A very long note might grow out of this observation, but there is no necessity to be outrageously wire-drawn upon it. 1843 E. J. Knox Let. 16 Nov. in W. Blake Mem. Vanished Generation (1909) viii. 205 C. S. is very constant in his visits, though he has not inflicted any outrageously long ones on us since you left. 1888 Dict. National Biogr. V. 1007/2 In this famous speech there is nothing outrageously bombastic. 1925 W. Cather Professor's House i. vi. 76 You aren't, after all, outrageously rich. 1984 S. Steward & S. Garratt Signed Sealed & Delivered i. 27/1 Reasonably priced, but outrageously fashionable outfits arrived. 2001 FHM Feb. 75/1 Hidden under her coat should be some outrageously slutty gear such as a red basque, 6-inch heels and crotchless panties. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2004; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < adv.a1387 |
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