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单词 palled
释义

palledadj.1

Brit. /pɔːld/, U.S. /pɔld/, /pɑld/
Forms: see pall v.1 and -ed suffix1; also late Middle English palde, 1600s pald, 1600s pallat, 1600s pawld.
Origin: Formed within English, by derivation. Etymons: pall v.1, -ed suffix1.
Etymology: < pall v.1 + -ed suffix1.
Now rare.
1. Enfeebled, weakened; impaired. Now archaic and poetic.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > harm or detriment > [adjective] > harmed or affected detrimentally
annoyedc1330
infectc1384
palledc1390
harmedc1440
hinderedc1440
weakened1548
maimed1570
interessed1598
crazy1601
impaired1611
wronged1632
appaired1637
deboist1641
sunken1642
vitiated1660
crippled1674
wounded1692
etiolated1847
injured1857
murdered1876
dicked-up1967
the world > health and disease > ill health > [adjective] > in state of ill health or diseased > weak > weakened
swundenc1275
yfebleda1387
palledc1390
forfeebled1513
indebilitate1529
macerate1541
feebled1573
macerated1587
eclipsed1607
enfeebleda1657
tenuinea1660
reduced1689
unstrung1690
indebilitated1696
unbraced1760
wrecky1925
the mind > goodness and badness > badness or evil > worse > [adjective] > declining or deteriorating > in character or quality
infecta1387
palledc1390
rustyc1390
degeneratea1513
withered1561
bastardlike1577
degenerated1581
degenerous1600
bastardized1611
degenerating1611
wormy1611
autumnal1616
blood-shrunk1634
degenered1637
reduced1689
lowered1730
eviscerated1858
labefact1874
disbloomed-
the mind > emotion > fear > cowardice or pusillanimity > [adjective] > spiritless > made weak (of hearts)
palleda1513
the world > matter > colour > state or mode of having colour > absence of colour > [adjective] > pale
blackeOE
blokec1200
blakec1275
fadec1290
bleykea1300
palisha1398
wanned1494
ashy?1541
wearish-coloured1548
wanny1555
wheyish1560
bleak1566
paly1568
ghastly1574
blankish1580
sick1599
palled1601
ashied1613
lurid1656
lunar1742
wax-like1748
ashen1808
unbrightened1827
waxy1835
peely-wally1895
waxen-hued1916
c1390 G. Chaucer Manciple's Tale 55 So vnweldy was this sory palled [v.rr. appalled, forpallid, pilled, palles, pale] goost.
c1415 (c1390) G. Chaucer Shipman's Tale (Corpus Oxf.) 1292 An olde palled [v.r. appalled] knight.
a1456 (a1407) H. Scogan Moral Balade (Ashm.) 145 in F. J. Furnivall Chaucer's Minor Poems (1879) iii. 430/2 Whane youþe passeþe his saysoun, Comþe croked and vnweldy palled age.
a1500 (a1450) tr. Secreta Secret. (Ashm. 396) (1977) 101 (MED) Who also with stabilnesse liften vp the liddes of thair palled eyen..wrath-full it sheweth them to be.
a1513 R. Fabyan New Cronycles Eng. & Fraunce (1516) I. ccxlv. f. clxvii Than began the Trumpettys and Tabours to blowe, whiche reuyued the palled hartys.
1601 P. Holland tr. Pliny Hist. World I. xii. xii. 364 The colour is more pallat and weake [L. colore languido] inclining to white.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Antony & Cleopatra (1623) ii. vii. 80 Ile neuer follow Thy paul'd Fortunes more. View more context for this quotation
1668 N. Culpeper & A. Cole tr. T. Bartholin Anat. (new ed.) ii. vi. 100 It receives the Liver blood..which..is become pauled and sluggish, and has lost its heat.
1711 E. Ward Life Don Quixote II. xxxvii. 389 Who, at his loath'd Approach, fell down, Palled and senseless, in a Swoon.
1752 W. Kenrick Fun viii. 37 The Spirits pall'd and sick with Study, Turn all to Nonsense, and the Town despise.
1833 A. Domett Poems 215 Its maddening muteness mocks the wretch who gave It birth—its palled Creator now its Slave!
1906 C. M. Doughty Dawn in Brit. IV. xiii. 54 Those..soon overrun Few herding folk and old palled wights; for all The hardy strength of Dobuni is in field.
1908 A. P. Graves Irish Poems 79 My sad, sleeping lake! My mad, leaping lake! When the palled tempest powers Into agony break.
2. Of a fermented or aerated drink: that has lost its freshness or strength; flat, stale, insipid. Also (occasionally) of food. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > taste and flavour > insipidity > [adjective]
wallowc897
smatchless?c1225
unsavoury?c1225
fresha1398
savourlessa1398
wearish1398
wershed1398
fond?c1430
unsavoured1435
palled1440
mildc1450
walsh1513
wallowish1548
dead1552
waterish1566
cold1585
flatten1594
seasonless1595
wersha1599
blown1600
flash1601
fatuous1608
tasteless1611
flat1617
insipid1620
ingustable1623
flashy1625
flatted1626
saltless1633
gustless1636
remiss1655
rheumatical1655
untasteable1656
vapid1656
exolete1657
distasted1662
vappous1673
insulse1676
toothless1679
mawkisha1697
intastable1701
waugh1703
impoignant1733
flavourless1736
instimulating1740
deadish1742
mawky1755
brineless1791
wishy-washy1791
keestless1802
shilpit1814
wish-washy1814
sapidless1821
silent1826
slushy1839
bland1878
spendsavour1879
wish-wash1896
dolled1917
spiceless1980
the world > food and drink > drink > intoxicating liquor > types or qualities of intoxicating liquor > [adjective] > rendered flat or stale
palled1440
appalled1601
dispirited1659
Promptorium Parvulorum (Harl. 221) 379 Pallyd, as drynke, emortuus.
a1475 J. Russell Bk. Nurture (Harl. 4011) in Babees Bk. (2002) i. 129 Be ware þat ye geue no persone palled drynke.
c1475 (a1449) J. Lydgate Order of Fools (Harl.) in Select. Minor Poems (1840) 168 (MED) Who forsakithe wyne and drynkithe ale pallid [c1475 Laud appalid], Suche foltisshe foolis, God lete hem never the!
a1500 in J. Ritson Anc. Songs from Henry III to Revol. (1790) p. xxxv Bryng us home no sydyr, nor no palde wyne.
a1552 A. Barclay Eclogues (1928) ii. 77 Whether thou demaunde wine, palled ale or beare, Yet shalt thou not drinke when thou hast nede & thirst.
1630 P. Massinger Picture sig. L4 With a spoonefull of pal'd wine pour'd in their water.
1673 M. Stevenson Poems 4 Is this your Sack? Dam' ye 'tis pald, 'tis dead, 'Tis flat, 'tis worse, 'tis horspox'd with a stum Beneath the Vault of Vituperium.
1711 E. Ward Vulgus Britannicus (ed. 3) ii. 58 Or that the Turky..Should..Be pall'd, o'er-roasted, and unfit, For such a Fine-mouth'd Saint to eat.
1757 C. Arnold Osman iii. i. 46 Like the Turtle, shall our Empire's Head (Perhaps too issueless) confine his Appetite To one cool, pall'd Repast.
1783 H. B. Dudley Magic Picture v. i. 80 They leap at a barley crust, and hold cheese-parings, With a spoonful of pall'd wine pour'd in their water, For festival dainties.
1847 J. H. Ingraham Paul Perril I. xix. 85 When he found the soda palled, he added Port wine to their glasses.
1884 Longman's Mag. Feb. 384 Her high spirits were as flat as palled soda-water.
3. Deadened to pleasant tastes or impressions; jaded, satiated, cloyed. Now literary and poetic.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > suffering > feeling of weariness or tedium > [adjective] > satiated or surfeited
sadOE
fullc1300
asadc1306
satiate1440
saturatea1450
glutteda1586
overcloyed1589
surfeit1597
cloyed1599
palled1607
jaded1631
sated1640
1607 J. Marston What you Will iii. sig. E Now are the Lawne sheetes fum'd with Vyolets, To fresh the pawld lasciuious appetite.
1690 J. Dryden Amphitryon iii. 25 Pall'd in Desires, and surfeited of Bliss.
1709 R. Steele Tatler No. 54. ⁋1 Pall'd Appetite is humorous, and must be gratify'd with Sauces rather than Food.
1729 C. Johnson Village Opera iii. i. 55 Variety, with you, makes the Feast, and points the palled Appetite.
1795 R. Southey Vision Maid of Orleans ii. 112 The epicure Here pampers his foul frame, till the pall'd sense Loathes at the banquet.
1834 W. A. Caruthers Kentuckian in N.Y. II. iii. 49 Italian music is only suited to those double-refined and palled tastes.
1859 C. Kingsley Misc. (1860) I. 222 The palled taste of an unhealthy age.
a1924 M. Ghose Adam Alarmed in Paradise in Coll. Poems (1970) ii. vi. ii. 338 On my palled taste serve Horror up to me.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2005; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

palledadj.2

Brit. /pɔːld/, U.S. /pɔld/, /pɑld/
Forms: 1700s palld, 1800s palléd, 1800s– palled.
Origin: Formed within English, by derivation. Etymons: pall v.3, -ed suffix1; pall n.1, -ed suffix2.
Etymology: Either < pall v.3 + -ed suffix1, or < pall n.1 + -ed suffix2. Compare Middle French pallé (14th cent.).
Chiefly literary and poetic. Now rare.
Covered or cloaked with a pall; (formerly) spec. robed in rich cloth.In quot. a1729, implying formal investiture as an archbishop: see pall n.1 6a.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > wearing clothing > [adjective] > wearing clothing for body (and limbs) > wearing loose clothing > other
frocked?c1550
palleda1729
tunicked1756
plaided1763
caftaned1863
peplosed1875
the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > covering > [adjective] > covered > with or as with (specific) textile
clouted1579
palleda1729
listed1827
draped1833
blanketed1835
silked1837
black-draped1845
baized1882
rugged1888
a1729 E. Taylor Metrical Hist. Christianity (1962) 215 He must be Palld that to Ordain hath leave.
1823 J. Neal Randolph II. 4 I met the apparition of Juliet,—palled—her veil over her face.
1845 P. J. Bailey Festus (ed. 2) 303 Swathed in clouds As though in plumed and palléd state.
1850 Ld. Tennyson In Memoriam lxviii. 96 Palled shapes In shadowy thoroughfares of thought. View more context for this quotation
1905 W. H. Hunt Pre-Raphaelitism II. 19 Like palled shapes in a heavy dream, detached by moonlight and moonshade.
1937 D. Jones In Parenthesis iii. 30 Girls with baskets, linen-palled.
1996 Church Times 13 Sept. 15/2 His illumination of a palled coffin from the Office of the Dead..is repeated in the British Museum..breviary.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2005; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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adj.1c1390adj.2a1729
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更新时间:2024/12/24 0:01:41