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单词 paid
释义

paidadj.

Brit. /peɪd/, U.S. /peɪd/
Forms: see pay v.1; also 1500s paed.
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: English paid.
Etymology: < paid, past participle of pay v.1
1.
a. In predicative use: pleased, satisfied, content. Formerly frequently with of; now only in ill-paid, well-paid adj. 1. Now rare (in later use Scottish and Irish English).
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > pleasure > contentment or satisfaction > [adjective]
paidc1225
well-queemc1225
well-paidc1230
apaid1297
well-apaidc1300
setea1350
pleaseda1382
contentc1400
agreed1417
well-pleased1423
well begonea1425
well-contenta1438
well-contented1461
satisfied1477
contentful1542
unrepining1559
satisfied1566
sufficed1590
contented1597
undispleased1598
perfecta1616
complacential1658
in humour1673
beneplacit1678
comfortable1770
gratified1818
wishless1820
like a possum up a gum tree1840
chuffc1860
all right1882
gruntled1938
chuffed1957
c1225 (?c1200) Hali Meiðhad (Bodl.) (1940) 389 (MED) Eiðer is allesweis ipaiet [a1250 Titus ipaied] of oðer.
a1250 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Nero) (1952) 127 Sulement luue is god; beo wel ipaied [c1230 Corpus Cambr. wilcweme] & gled þerof.
c1300 Havelok (Laud) (1868) 184 (MED) Þe king was payed of that Rede.
c1330 Seven Sages (Auch.) (1933) 1734 (MED) Swithe sore sche him atraid; Certes, he was wel iuel ipaid.
?a1400 (a1338) R. Mannyng Chron. (Petyt) ii. 70 (MED) William was not paied, þat falle mad him ofright.
c1450 (?a1400) Duke Rowland & Sir Otuell (1880) 640 (MED) Damesell, arte þou payed of me?
a1500 in C. Horstmann Yorkshire Writers (1896) II. 456 (MED) Of couetos men I am noȝt payde.
c1580 ( tr. Bk. Alexander (1921) II. ii. 3898 I hald me pait [Fr. apaiez me tenroie].
1603 in G. Donaldson Court Bk. Shetland (1954) 104 Thir summes..quhairoff I hald me compleitlie peyit.
1825 J. Jamieson Etymol. Dict. Sc. Lang. Suppl. (at cited word) ‘I'm verra ill paid for ye’, I am very sorry for you; Aberd.
1880 J. Jamieson Etymol. Dict. Sc. Lang. (new ed.) (at cited word) I'm weel paid wi' the bargain.
1953 M. Traynor Eng. Dial. Donegal 208/2 To be ill-paid, to be sorry. It's ill-paid ye'll be for that.
b. slang. Drunk, intoxicated. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > drink > thirst > excess in drinking > [adjective] > drunk
fordrunkenc897
drunkena1050
cup-shottenc1330
drunka1400
inebriate1497
overseenc1500
liquor1509
fou1535
nase?1536
full1554
intoxicate1554
tippled1564
intoxicated1576
pepst1577
overflown1579
whip-cat1582
pottical1586
cup-shota1593
fox-drunk1592
lion-drunk1592
nappy1592
sack-sopped1593
in drink1598
disguiseda1600
drink-drowned1600
daggeda1605
pot-shotten1604
tap-shackled1604
high1607
bumpsy1611
foxed1611
in one's cups1611
liquored1611
love-pot1611
pot-sick1611
whift1611
owl-eyed1613
fapa1616
hota1616
inebriated1615
reeling ripea1616
in one's (or the) pots1618
scratched1622
high-flown?1624
pot-shot1627
temulentive1628
ebrious1629
temulent1629
jug-bitten1630
pot-shaken1630
toxed1635
bene-bowsiea1637
swilled1637
paid1638
soaken1651
temulentious1652
flagonal1653
fuddled1656
cut1673
nazzy1673
concerned1678
whittled1694
suckey1699
well-oiled1701
tippeda1708
tow-row1709
wet1709
swash1711
strut1718
cocked1737
cockeyed1737
jagged1737
moon-eyed1737
rocky1737
soaked1737
soft1737
stewed1737
stiff1737
muckibus1756
groggy1770
muzzeda1788
muzzya1795
slewed1801
lumpy1810
lushy1811
pissed1812
blue1813
lush1819
malty1819
sprung1821
three sheets in the wind1821
obfuscated1822
moppy1823
ripe1823
mixed1825
queer1826
rosined1828
shot in the neck1830
tight1830
rummy1834
inebrious1837
mizzled1840
obflisticated1840
grogged1842
pickled1842
swizzled1843
hit under the wing1844
obfusticatedc1844
ebriate1847
pixilated1848
boozed1850
ploughed1853
squiffy?1855
buffy1858
elephant trunk1859
scammered1859
gassed1863
fly-blown1864
rotten1864
shot1864
ebriose1871
shicker1872
parlatic1877
miraculous1879
under the influence1879
ginned1881
shickered1883
boiled1886
mosy1887
to be loaded for bear(s)1888
squiffeda1890
loaded1890
oversparred1890
sozzled1892
tanked1893
orey-eyed1895
up the (also a) pole1897
woozy1897
toxic1899
polluted1900
lit-up1902
on (also upon) one's ear1903
pie-eyed1903
pifflicated1905
piped1906
spiflicated1906
jingled1908
skimished1908
tin hat1909
canned1910
pipped1911
lit1912
peloothered1914
molo1916
shick1916
zigzag1916
blotto1917
oiled-up1918
stung1919
stunned1919
bottled1922
potted1922
rotto1922
puggled1923
puggle1925
fried1926
crocked1927
fluthered1927
lubricated1927
whiffled1927
liquefied1928
steamed1929
mirackc1930
overshot1931
swacked1932
looped1934
stocious1937
whistled1938
sauced1939
mashed1942
plonked1943
stone1945
juiced1946
buzzed1952
jazzed1955
schnockered1955
honkers1957
skunked1958
bombed1959
zonked1959
bevvied1960
mokus1960
snockered1961
plotzed1962
over the limit1966
the worse for wear1966
wasted1968
wired1970
zoned1971
blasted1972
Brahms and Liszt?1972
funked up1976
trousered1977
motherless1980
tired and emotional1981
ratted1982
rat-arsed1984
wazzed1990
mullered1993
twatted1993
bollocksed1994
lashed1996
1638 J. Shirley Royall Master ii. i. sig. D3v Jaca. Heele be drunke presently... [Bombo drinks on]..Piet. Hees paid, the King will come this way... Bom. Dee heare no body say he saw me, I wonnot Be seene yet. (He reeles in.)
2. Remunerated or recompensed with money; in receipt of pay. In early use chiefly in ill-paid, well-paid adj. 2.Recorded earliest in well-paid adj. 2.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > worker > workers according to conditions > [adjective] > in receipt of pay
feed1579
paid1590
society > trade and finance > fees and taxes > payment for labour or service > [adjective] > paid by wages
hiredc1230
wagedc1440
pensionary1548
paid1590
bepaid-
1590 J. Smythe Certain Disc. Weapons Ded. 4 b Souldiours well payd, and chiefly being subiects to the Prince that they serue.
1657 in J. M. Beale Hist. Burgh & Parochial Schools Fife (unpubl. thesis, Edinb. Univ.) 138 He told he wes verie ill payed.
1715 R. South 12 Serm. IV. 163 The Legerdemain of a well packed and paid Jury.
1827 E. Ryan & W. Moody Cases Nisi Prius 31 (margin) In an action by executors, a paid legatee is a competent witness to increase the estate.
1866 D. Greenwell Ess. (1867) 60 The exchange of paid for voluntary labour.
1925 Amer. Mercury Aug. 398/2 The excessively energetic paid helpers who are so eager to help us.
1959 Bulletin (Sydney) 6 May 16/2 They are now holding their jobs long enough to get paid annual holidays at native resorts.
1994 Sunday Times 6 Mar. (Mag. section) x. 12/2 Our first paid gig was in Chattanooga.
3.
a. Of a debt or sum of money: that has been discharged or paid. Of a cheque, bill, etc.: for which the requisite money has been given.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > payment > [adjective] > (fully) paid
paid1826
paid-up1836
1826 J. Poole Paul Pry (new ed.) ii. ii. 21 I dare say your master has his tailor's bill for the last twelvemonth, with paid at the bottom of it.
1866 A. Crump Pract. Treat. Banking iv. 96 The law..seems to be that a paid cheque is the absolute property of the customer.
1892 I. Zangwill Big Bow Myst. 134 I..found a paid cheque made out for £25 in the name of Miss Dymond.
1909 Webster's New Internat. Dict. Eng. Lang. Reading-notice, in a newspaper or periodical, a paid advertisement so set up as to have the appearance of regular news or editorial or contributed matter.
1936 E. A. Powell Aerial Odyssey xi. 151 Such gestures..do more to give the visitor a favourable initial impression of a country than any amount of paid advertising.
1991 Sc. Banker Aug. 30/2 The paid cheques along with the duplicate statement or invoice can suffice for audit purposes.
1997 Washington Times 10 Oct. 17 Village officials will not let you close until you've proved that you are current on your utility bills. They may charge you anywhere from $10 to $25 for each copy of a paid bill, including water, sewer, garbage or electricity.
b. As second element in compounds where the first element is that which has been paid.all-expense(s)-, duty-, post-, reply-paid: see the first element.
ΚΠ
1888 Westm. Rev. July 58 An association of capitalist shareholders, exploiting their wage-paid labourers.
1977 Audubon Sept. 26/2 The price, postage-paid, is $19.95.
1993 Globe & Mail (Toronto) 13 July a2/6 Finance estimated that tax-paid cigarette consumption would fall by 16 per cent over a period of months and 12 per cent over a period of years.

Compounds

C1.
paid companion n. = companion n.1 7.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > subjection > service > servant > personal or domestic servant > attendant or personal servant > [noun] > confidential servant or companion
troutc1661
companion1697
dame de compagnie1784
souffre-douleur1845
paid companion1853
1853 C. Brontë Villette II. xxvii. 278 I would not be Paulina's nominal and paid companion.
1948 R. M. Ayres Missing Tide v. 164 She was no longer a lady of leisure in her own house but a paid companion with irksome duties to perform.
1994 Richmond (Va.) Times-Dispatch 7 Nov. d36/1 If you employ someone regularly at home, you probably owe a payroll tax... It covers housecleaners, gardeners, caretakers, paid companions and health aides as well as people who provide child care.
C2. Forming adjectives with adverbs or prepositions, corresponding to phrasal verbs s.v. pay v.1 (formerly also colloquial, forming nouns denoting the objects of these verbs).
paid-off adj.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > lack of work > [adjective] > dismissing or discharging > dismissed or discharged
discarded1631
time-expired1822
paid-off1894
sacked1934
pink-slipped1957
1740 C. Davies Life & Adventures ii. 80 We ripp'd up old Stories, and were as merry as so many new-paid-off Sailors.]
1894 H. Nisbet Bush Girl's Romance xi. 100 They were mostly the paid-off shearers and extra stockmen whom he had met.
1962 B. J. Friedman Stern iii. 85 All eight countermen would..trap Stern against the paperback books, hitting him in the stomach a few times and then holding him for a paid-off patrolman.
1991 Times 16 Dec. 9/4 I've got a lot of the paid-off journalist hacks that are working on the East Coast with their recipied political theories.
paid on n. and adj. Obsolete
ΚΠ
1883 Daily News 10 Sept. 2/5 The consignor, when he has not been paid for his goods, instructs the carrier to collect for him the price thereof, and this is called the ‘paid on’.
1898 E. B. Ivatts Railway Managem. at Stations (ed. 3) 553 Paid on’ vouchers, a printed form of voucher for taking receipts for ‘paid ons’ paid out to a carter or previous carrier.
paid-out n. and adj.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > management of money > expenditure > [noun] > expenses
costningc1275
spense1297
costagesa1325
misesa1325
spenses1377
dispensec1380
expensesc1384
pensiona1387
costsc1390
resaillec1450
chargec1460
charges1514
outgiving1556
disbursement1607
going-outs1607
defalcation1622
outgoing1622
expense1632
outgoa1641
damage1755
outset1755
expenditure1791
outspend1859
ex1864
paid-out1883
outs1884
x's1894
1883 Pall Mall Gaz. 7 Sept. 2/2 The annual repairs..would amount to at least £10,000, and the paids-out above mentioned to about £25,000.
1991 Motor Boat & Yachting Jan. 156/1 Logs have come a long way since the days of sandglasses and paid-out knotted ropes.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2005; most recently modified version published online June 2022).
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adj.c1225
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