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单词 pansy
释义

pansyn.adj.

Brit. /ˈpanzi/, U.S. /ˈpænzi/
Forms:

α. late Middle English (in a late copy)–1500s 1800s pensee, late Middle English–1700s pancy, 1500s pancee, 1500s pancie, 1500s pauncye, 1500s paunsie, 1500s pawnsey, 1500s pawnsy, 1500s pensy, 1500s–1600s pauncie, 1500s–1600s paunsey, 1500s–1800s pansie, 1500s– pansy.

β. 1500s pauncre (perhaps transmission error), 1500s paunse, 1500s pawnce, 1500s–1600s pance, 1500s–1600s panse, 1500s–1600s (1900s– archaic) paunce; Scottish pre-1700 pance, 1900s– paunce (archaic).

Origin: A borrowing from French. Etymon: French pensée.
Etymology: < Middle French pensée (1460–6; French pensée; 1874 or earlier in sense ‘pansy-coloured’), transferred use of pensée thought (see pensee n.1).The β. forms have no parallel in French; some of them may represent forms with tonic final -e.
A. n.
1. Originally: heartsease, Viola tricolor (now more fully wild pansy). Later: any of various plants of the genus Viola (family Violaceae), generally differing from violets in the form of the style and certain other characteristics; esp. (a) the garden hybrid V. × wittrockiana, bearing large velvety flowers in numerous colours, often with a dark central blotch; (b) (usually with modifying word) any of several related wild plants with smaller yellow, cream, purple, or particoloured flowers. Also: a flower of such a plant; a representation of such a flower as a decoration or ornament.Heartsease or wild pansy, V. tricolor, has also been known locally by various names, as kiss-me-at-the-garden-gate, love-in-idleness, three-faces-under-a-hood, etc.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > ornamental art and craft > pattern or design > [noun] > flowers
flowerc1230
flourishingc1384
fleuronc1385
rose1415
pansyc1450
columbine1459
lily1459
fleur-de-lis1475
heartseasea1542
honeysuckle1548
flower-work1601
floretry1615
branching1652
fleuret1811
anthemion1816
rosace1823
fleur1841
flowering1862
flowerage1864
millefleurs1908
rosette1931
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular cultivated or ornamental plants > particular flower or plant esteemed for flower > [noun] > pea flowers > violet and allied flowers > allied flowers
pansyc1450
heartsease1530
pansy flower1530
three (also two) faces under (or in) a (or one) hood1548
bulbous violet1578
love-in-idleness1578
sweet violet1578
pensea1592
cull-me-to-you1597
dog's tooth violet1597
dog violet1597
kiss-me-ere-I-rise1597
live in idleness1597
wild violet1597
yellow violet1597
love-and-idle1630
love-in-idle1664
trinity1699
fancy1712
wood violet1713
marsh violet1753
tree violet1753
kiss-me-at-the-gate1787
bird's-foot violet1802
Parma violet1812
Johnny-jump-up1827
stepmother1828
Neapolitan violet1830
garden gate1842
butterfly pea1848
kissa1852
pinkany-John1854
viola1871
kiss-me1877
pink-eyed John1877
face and hood1886
roosterhead1894
trout-lily1909
α.
c1450 C. d'Orleans Poems (1941) 168 (MED) The lynyng of hit was with nedille wrought..With litille, litille flowris soft, The soven and the daisy, But most of pancy.
1532 (a1475) Assembly of Ladies 62 in W. W. Skeat Chaucerian & Other Pieces (1897) 382 Margarettes growing in ordinaunce..Ne-m'oublie-mies and sovenez also; The povre pensees were not disloged there.
1553 in J. Raine Wills & Inventories Archdeaconry Richmond (1853) 76 I beqhweytt and gyff to my broder Constable my pawnsy of golde with the ruby in it.
1597 J. Gerard Herball ii. 705 Harts ease is named..Pansies, Liue in Idlenes.
1638 J. Milton Lycidas in Obsequies 24 in Justa Edouardo King The pansie freakt with jeat.
1697 J. Dryden tr. Virgil Pastorals ii, in tr. Virgil Wks. 8 Pancies to please the Sight, and Cassia sweet to smell.
1719 G. London & H. Wise J. de la Quintinie's Compl. Gard'ner (ed. 7) ix. 286 Purple, violet colour'd and panached or striped yellow, and violet Pansies.
1771 J. Langhorne Violet & Pansy in Fables of Flora 32 On that fair bank a Pansy grew, That borrowed from indulgent skies A velvet shade and purple hue.
1822 A. Eaton Man. Bot. (ed. 3) 514 Viola tricolour, garden violet, hearts-ease, pansy.
1868 L. M. Alcott Little Women I. vi. 93 A cluster of grave yet cheerful pansies, on a deeper purple ground, was pronounced very appropriate and pretty.
1900 W. Robinson Eng. Flower Garden (ed. 8) 859/1 No family has given our gardens anything more precious than the numerous races of Pansies and the various kinds of large, showy, sweet-scented Violets.
1925 Woman's World (Chicago) Apr. 37/2 The embroidered sprays between the cretonne panels are pansies in satin stitch, in the same shades as the pansies on the cretonne.
1993 Times 23 Aug. 14/1 There are many flowers among the stubble: creamy-yellow field pansies, scarlet pimpernels, and the bright blue and white eyes of the sprawling fields of speedwell.
1996 Chiltern Seeds Catal. 241 A cottage garden flower if ever there was, the Viola differs from the Pansy in having smaller flowers on more compact plants and in being very free-flowering.
β. 1548 W. Turner Names of Herbes sig. H.v Called in english two faces in a hoode or panses.1579 E. Spenser Shepheardes Cal. Apr. 142 The pretie Pawnce And the Cheuisaunce, Shall match with the fayre flowre Delice.1601 P. Holland tr. Pliny Hist. World II. xxi. x. 92 The purple March Violet..after them the Panse [Fr. pensees].a1637 B. Jonson Vision of Delight 183 in Wks. (1640) III The shining Meads Doe boast the Paunce, the Lillie, and the Rose.1909 Westm. Gaz. 13 Feb. 2/3 My fancy, forestalling the sun..tinctured with opulent dyes Of the lily, the rose, and the paunce The sombre, the tenebrous skies.1947 ‘H. MacDiarmid’ Kist of Whistles 33 Chaucer's ‘floures white and rede’ Gave way in Spenser's April eclogue To pinks, columbines, gillyflowers,..Paunce and chevisaunce.
2. The colour of a pansy; spec. a deep shade of blue or purple. Cf. Compounds 2.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > colour > named colours > blue or blueness > [noun] > purplish blue
lavender-blue1794
lavender1882
hyacinth1891
pansy1891
wistaria1911
the world > matter > colour > named colours > purple or purpleness > [noun] > bluish purple
violeta1400
blue-violet1783
pansy1891
petunia1891
1891 Daily News 19 Jan. 3/1 Woollen materials..in dark tones of red, russet,..violet, pansy, dahlia, petunia, &c.
1914 J. Joyce Dubliners 227 A red-faced young woman, dressed in pansy.
1926 Eaton's News Weekly 26 June 13/1 Bathing suit..in blue, cardinal, pansy, black.
1991 Newsday (Nexis) 28 Dec. 25 Having chosen the color, she poetically refers to them as pansy, palm, peach and peacock.
3. slang.
a. A remarkable or outstanding person. Cf. daisy n. 5. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > goodness and badness > quality of being good > excellence > [noun] > excellent person
gemc1275
blooma1300
excellence1447
mirrorc1450
man of mena1470
treasure?1545
paragon1548
shining light1563
Apollo's swan?1592
man of wax1597
rara avis1607
Titan1611
choice spirita1616
excellency1725
inestimable1728
inimitable1751
cock of the walk1781
surpasser1805
shiner1810
swell1816
trump1819
tip-topper1822
star1829
beauty1832
soarer1895
trumph1895
pansy1899
Renaissance man1906
exemplum virtutis1914
museum piece1920
superman1925
flyer1930
pistol1935
all-star1949
1899 G. Ade Fables in Slang 63 The Parishioners did not seem inclined to seek him out after Services and tell him he was a Pansy.
1920 G. Ade Hand-made Fables 62 For every Pansy in this conservative Town there were 14 Rutabagas.
b. A homosexual man; an effeminate man; a weakling. Frequently derogatory.
ΘΚΠ
the world > people > person > man > [noun] > effeminate man
badlingeOE
milksopc1390
cockneyc1405
malkina1425
molla1425
weakling1526
tenderling1541
softling1543
niceling1549
woman-man1567
cocknel1570
effeminate1583
androgyne1587
meacock1590
mammaday1593
hermaphrodite1594
midwife1596
nimfadoro1600
night-sneaker1611
mock-mana1625
nan1670
she-man1675
petit maître1711
old woman1717
master-miss1754
Miss Molly1754
molly1785
squaw1805
mollycoddle1823
Miss Nancy1824
mollycot1826
molly mop1829
poof1833
Margery?c1855
ladyboy1857
girl1862
Mary Ann1868
sissy1879
milk1881
pretty-boy1881
nancy1888
poofter1889
Nancy Dawson1890
softie1895
puff1902
pussy1904
Lizzie1905
nance1910
quean1910
maricon1921
pie-face1922
bitch1923
Jessie1923
lily1923
tapette1923
pansy1926
nancy boy1927
nelly1931
femme1932
ponce1932
queerie1933
palone1934
queenie1935
girlie-man1940
swish1941
puss1942
wonk1945
mother1947
candy-ass1953
twink1953
cream puff1958
pronk1959
swishy1959
limp wrist1960
pansy-ass1963
weeny1963
poofteroo1966
mo1968
shim1973
twinkie1977
woofter1977
cake boy1992
hermaphrodite-
the world > physical sensation > sexual relations > sexual orientation > homosexuality > [noun] > a homosexual person > male
badlingeOE
nan1670
molly1708
Miss Molly1754
Miss Nancy1824
molly mop1829
poof1833
Margery?c1855
Mary Ann1868
pretty-boy1881
cocksucker1885
poofter1889
queer1894
fruit1895
fairy1896
homosexualist1898
puff1902
pussy1904
nance1910
quean1910
girl1912
faggot1913
mouser1914
queen1919
fag1921
gay boy1921
maricon1921
pie-face1922
bitch1923
Jessie1923
tapette1923
pansy1926
nancy boy1927
nelly1931
femme1932
ponce1932
punk1933
queerie1933
gobbler1934
jocker1935
queenie1935
iron1936
freak1941
swish1941
flit1942
tonk1943
wonk1945
mother1947
fruitcake1952
Mary1953
twink1953
swishy1959
limp wrist1960
arse bandit1961
leather man1961
booty bandit1962
ginger beer1964
bummer1965
poofteroo1966
shirtlifter1966
battyman1967
dick-sucker1968
mo1968
a friend of Dorothy1972
shim1973
gaylord1976
twinkie1977
woofter1977
bender1986
knob jockey1989
batty boy1992
cake boy1992
1922 ‘R. Werther’ Female-impersonators iii. v. 151 Three short, smooth-faced young men approached and introduced themselves as Roland Reeves, Manon Lescaut, and Prince Pansy—aliases, because few refined androgynes would be so rash as to betray their legal name in the Underworld.]
1926 Life 20 May 23 All About Sex..at the Greenwich Village Theatre... A series of sketches dealing with gentlemen hiding under beds and spectacular numbers showing the different kinds of pansies in the world's history.
1928 in J. N. Katz Gay/Lesbian Almanac (1983) 447 All around the den, luxuriating under the little colored lights, the dark dandies were loving up their pansies.
1956 L. McIntosh Oxf. Folly vii. 103 ‘He was—you know—one of those’... ‘What, a pansy?’ ‘That's right,’ said Julian, ‘he was camp.’
1976 N. Botham & P. Donnelly Valentino vii. 52 A group of degenerate art students, most of whom he considered pansies.
2003 Time Out N.Y. 27 Feb. 14/1 Was I the victim of a hack massage therapist, or am I just a pansy?
4. South African. In full pansy shell. A sand dollar, Echinodiscus bisperforatus, with a flower-like purple marking on the shell.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > invertebrates > subkingdom Metazoa > grade Triploblastica or Coelomata > phylum Echinodermata > [noun] > subphylum Eleutherozoa > class Echinoidea > order Clypeastroidea > member of
sand dollar1884
sea-biscuit1949
pansy1954
1954 K. H. Barnard S. Afr. Shore-life 45 A particular kind of Cake-urchin is called the Two-slit Cake-urchin or Pansy Shell.., and is common in many sandy bays on the south coast.
1976 Het Suid-Western (George, S. Afr.) 8 Sept. A pansy is born male and then becomes female at a later stage in order to lay eggs already fertile by itself.
2003 Mail on Sunday (Nexis) 5 Jan. 83 We were dropped on Pansy Island [sc. Mozambique], so called because of the proliferation of pansy shells, or sand dollars as the Yanks call them.
B. adj.
colloquial (frequently derogatory). Affected; effeminate; homosexual.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > sex and gender > female > effeminacy > [adjective]
womanly?c1225
ferbleta1300
effeminatea1393
nicea1393
softc1450
manlessa1529
unmanly1534
cockney1573
effeminated1580
unmanlikea1586
milky1602
enervate1603
womanizing1615
emasculate1622
womanized1624
softly1643
womanlish1647
unmasculine1649
emollid1656
ladylike1656
enervated1660
emasculated1701
petticoated1708
tea-faced1728
effeminized1789
invirile1870
epicene1881
sissyish1889
sissified1898
devirilized1901
cockless1902
camp1909
pansy1929
campy1932
queenly1933
poncy1937
pansyish1941
swishy1941
moffie1954
poofy1956
femme1963
poofed-up1964
minty1965
ponced-up1970
lavender1979
1929 J. Devanny Riven xvii. 112 ‘Thanks. Don't bother.’ The voice was warm... A rich telephone voice. To an artist a pansy voice; a purple pansy.
1934 M. Hodge Wind & Rain iii. 83 She'll forget all about it, in the arms of Roger Cole! I think he's pansy, anyhow.
1942 P. Larkin Let. 12 Aug. in Sel. Lett. (1992) 41 Thought I'd give you a taste of this new pansy notepaper I had for my birthday on Sunday. Don't apologise. My sister gave it me.
1971 Daily Tel. 21 Aug. 3/4 ‘Most of these new designs are too pansy, too effeminate,’ said Leading Seaman Robert Nelson.
1989 R. MacNeil Wordstruck iv. 115 We played that pansy game..? No wonder they kicked the British out. Bowled a maiden over? Jesus!

Compounds

C1. General attributive and objective (in sense A. 1), as pansy flower, pansy-growing, etc.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular cultivated or ornamental plants > particular flower or plant esteemed for flower > [noun] > pea flowers > violet and allied flowers > allied flowers
pansyc1450
heartsease1530
pansy flower1530
three (also two) faces under (or in) a (or one) hood1548
bulbous violet1578
love-in-idleness1578
sweet violet1578
pensea1592
cull-me-to-you1597
dog's tooth violet1597
dog violet1597
kiss-me-ere-I-rise1597
live in idleness1597
wild violet1597
yellow violet1597
love-and-idle1630
love-in-idle1664
trinity1699
fancy1712
wood violet1713
marsh violet1753
tree violet1753
kiss-me-at-the-gate1787
bird's-foot violet1802
Parma violet1812
Johnny-jump-up1827
stepmother1828
Neapolitan violet1830
garden gate1842
butterfly pea1848
kissa1852
pinkany-John1854
viola1871
kiss-me1877
pink-eyed John1877
face and hood1886
roosterhead1894
trout-lily1909
1530 J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 251/2 Pancy floure, menve pencee [cf. 231/1 Hertesease, menve pensee].
1548 Hall's Vnion: Henry VIII f. lxxxi The Frenche kyng & his bend..with garlondes of friers knottes of white satten, and in euery garlond .liii. paunse flowers, whiche signified, thinke on Fraunces.
a1841 J. Clare in Overland Monthly (1873) 10 139/1 And there these pansy flowers Came shining in the dews of spring.
1865 R. Buchanan Sutherland's Pansies iv But pansy-growing made his heart within Blow fresh.
1895 Daily News 23 May 7/5 The Marchioness of Ailesbury's dress was carried out entirely in pansy tints, the train being in mauve velvet,..while the petticoat was yellow satin.
1897 Westm. Gaz. 26 Jan. 10/1 There has just died..on of the most successful of amateur pansy growers... He turned his attention to pansy-culture [etc.].
1992 Garden Answers Jan. 26 (caption) ‘The Pansy Flower’, with innumerable variations, most of which she cruelly mangled.
1994 Detroit Free Press (Nexis) 13 Feb. 1 k American pansy growers on the east coast sowed seeds in sand in July.
C2.
a. attributive. Designating a colour or shade of colour reminiscent of that in a pansy.
pansy blue n. and adj.
ΚΠ
1827 G. Darley Sylvia iv. iii. 123 Strew! strew ye, Maidens! strew Sweet flowers, and fairest! Pale rose, and pansy blue, Lily the rarest!
1887 R. Thorpe Ringing Ballards 80 The bright pansy blue has gone out of her eyes.
1993 D. Wakoski Jason the Sailor 169 You could never stop wondering about the drawerful of poppy red, orchid pink, pansy blue, datura white scarves.
pansy purple n. and adj.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > colour > named colours > purple or purpleness > [adjective] > bluish purple
violet1370
blue-violeta1382
blue-purple?a1425
violet-coloured1552
bluish-purple1578
ianthine1609
amethystine1651
amethyst1807
pansy purple1814
violety1831
violescent1847
violetish1871
pansy-coloured1891
1814 P. Syme Werner's Nomencl. Colours 25 Pansy Purple, is indigo blue with carmine red, and a slight tinge of raven black.
1898 Daily News 11 May 4/4 A gown of pansy-purple velvet.
1940 C. Day Lewis tr. Virgil Georgics iv. 89 Eridanus, than which through fertile lands no river Rushes with more momentum to the pansy-purple sea.
1991 B. Howell Dandelion Days (BNC) 128 She did look fetching in her fuchsia velour jumpsuit that deepened her speedwell eyes to a pansy purple.
pansy yellow n. and adj. Obsolete rare
ΚΠ
1893 Daily News 25 Dec. 2/3 A charming dress is in palest pansy yellow satin with an over dress of green crêpe.
b.
pansy-coloured adj. of a colour resembling that of a pansy; cf. sense A. 2.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > colour > named colours > purple or purpleness > [adjective] > bluish purple
violet1370
blue-violeta1382
blue-purple?a1425
violet-coloured1552
bluish-purple1578
ianthine1609
amethystine1651
amethyst1807
pansy purple1814
violety1831
violescent1847
violetish1871
pansy-coloured1891
1891 Daily News 22 June 6/2 A yoke of pansy-coloured velvet.
1909 Daily Chron. 18 Mar. 10/3 Lady Kenmare in black and Georgiana Lady Dudley, tall and beautiful in pansy-coloured cloth, were Lady Mayo's assistants.
2000 People 2 Oct. 135 Leeza Gibbons..sported a pansy-colored ensemble at a recent premiere.
pansy-dark adj. poetic (Obsolete) of a dark colour redolent of a pansy.
ΚΠ
1862 G. M. Hopkins Poems (1967) 9 Their pansy-dark or bronzen locks were strung With coral, shells.
1883 Harper's Mag. June 135/2 It was a broken bit of ivory, and on it the upper part of a face, sketchily done, with pansy-dark eyes and blush-rose skin.
1901 K. Tynan Poems 6 Under a mountain pansy-dark, Loved of the eagle and the lark.
C3.
pansy boy n. derogatory an effeminate man; (also) a homosexual man.
ΚΠ
1934 New Statesman 15 Sept. 318/2 Reminiscences of the fate of Heines and Röhm were reflected in shouts about ‘pansy-boys’.
1971 ‘A. Cross’ Theban Myst. (1972) viii. 101 Everything was fine until that pansy boy hid out here to avoid defending his country.
2001 Harper's Bazaar (Nexis) 1 Apr. 166 The audience sees Hitler as a big pansy boy.
pansy violet n. the wild pansy Viola tricolor.
ΚΠ
a1856 J. G. Percival Poet. Wks. (1859) I. 156 (note) Viola tricolor, the Pansy Violet;—the flower of Napoleon.
1941 Sci. Monthly Dec. 583/2 In pansy violet..and other violets, the pods first split into three valves and then each valve brings pressure to bear on the enclosed seeds to pinch them out.

Derivatives

ˈpansy-like adj. reminiscent of a pansy.
ΚΠ
1891 Atlantic Monthly Aug. 172/1 A flower so small (speedwell?) that its perfect symmetry and purple pansy-like beauty were fully revealed only by the microscope.
1923 Bull. Torrey Bot. Club 50 296 The exquisite, pansy-like blossoms of these plants are found in delicate shades of pink and purple.
1981 Geogr. Rev. 71 255 The steep cinder flanks of the conical Pico de Teide are devoid of plant life except for a pansy-like endemic, viola cheiranthifolia.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2005; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

pansyv.

Brit. /ˈpanzi/, U.S. /ˈpænzi/
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: pansy n.
Etymology: < pansy n.
1. transitive. To clothe or adorn in an affected or effeminate manner. Frequently reflexive and with up.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > beautification > beautification of the person > beautify (the person) [verb (transitive)]
highta1200
atiffe?c1225
tiff?c1225
wyndre?a1366
kembc1386
picka1393
prunec1395
tifta1400
varnishc1405
finea1425
tifflea1425
quaint1484
embuda1529
trick?1532
trick1545
dill1548
tricka1555
prink1573
smug1588
sponge1588
smudge1589
perk1590
primpc1590
sponge1592
tricksy1598
prime1616
sprug1622
briska1625
to sleek upa1625
trickify1678
prim1688
titivate1705
dandify1823
beflounce1824
befop1866
spry1878
lustrify1886
dude1899
doll1916
tart1938
youthify1945
pansy1946
spiv1947
dolly1958
zhuzh1970
the mind > attention and judgement > beautification > beautification of the person > beautify the person [verb (reflexive)]
preenc1395
prunec1395
prank1546
to set oneself out to the life1604
adonize1611
briska1625
tight1775
to make up1778
tighten1786
smarten1796
pretty1868
tart1938
pansy1946
sharpen1952
primp1959
1946 ‘C. Brahms’ & ‘S. J. Simon’ Trottie True 154 Luke Lovelock had pansied himself into a feature of every fashionable production. Luke had such perfect taste.
1951 N. Marsh Opening Night i. 27 The theatre was shut dahn for a long while until they 'ad it all altered and pansied up.
1966 J. Wainwright Crystallised Carbon Pig xxxix. 172 Originally, his hair had been mousy brown. He'd tried to pansy himself up—and failed.
2. intransitive. To act or walk in an effeminate manner. Usually with adverbs, as around, off, etc.
ΘΚΠ
the world > people > person > man > [verb (intransitive)] > effeminate
femalize1674
pansy1972
the world > action or operation > behaviour > affected behaviour or affectation > be affected or act affectedly [verb (intransitive)] > act in camp manner
camp1910
ponce1947
to camp it up1957
pansy1972
1972 M. Kenyon Shooting of Dan McGrew i. 10 It's over a month old..and the last word from McGrew before he went pansying off.
2002 Sunday Herald (Glasgow) 24 Nov. (Seven Days section) 12/6 They don't want to pansy around, or ‘be like girls’.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2005; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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n.adj.c1450v.1946
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