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单词 paradise
释义

paradisen.

Brit. /ˈparədʌɪs/, U.S. /ˈpɛrəˌdaɪs/, /ˈpɛrəˌdaɪz/
Forms:

α. Old English paradisus, Old English paradysum, Old English paradysus, Old English parudisam (transmission error), Old English–early Middle English paradisum, Middle English paradyso.

β. Old English–1500s paradis, late Old English–1600s paradys, Middle English parades, Middle English paradese, Middle English paradiȝs, Middle English paradijs, Middle English paradisse, Middle English paradysse, Middle English paridice, Middle English parradis, Middle English parydyse, Middle English peradis (in a late copy), Middle English–1500s paradyce, Middle English–1500s paradyse, Middle English–1700s paradice, Middle English– paradise, 1500s padyce (transmission error), 1500s paradize, 1500s parradice; Scottish pre-1700 paradice, pre-1700 paradis, pre-1700 paradys, pre-1700 paradyse, pre-1700 parradis, pre-1700 parradyce, pre-1700 peradis, pre-1700 1700s– paradise, pre-1700 (1800s archaic) paradyce.

γ. Middle English parais, Middle English paraise, Middle English parays.

Also (esp. in senses 1, 2) with capital initial.
Origin: Of multiple origins. Partly a borrowing from Latin. Partly a borrowing from French. Etymons: Latin paradisus; French paradis, parais.
Etymology: In α. forms < post-classical Latin paradisus, paradysus (see below); subsequently reinforced (compare β. forms) by Anglo-Norman and Old French, Middle French, French paradis < post-classical Latin paradisus , paradysus garden, garden of Eden, the Judaeo-Christian heaven (Vetus Latina) < ancient Greek παράδεισος a (Persian) enclosed park, orchard, or pleasure ground (Xenophon), in Hellenistic Greek also the garden of Eden (Septuagint), the abode of the blessed, heaven, intermediate state where the souls of the just await resurrection (New Testament and Christian writers) < the Old Iranian base of Avestan pairidaēza- enclosure ( < Old Iranian pari around + daiz- to heap up, build; > Persian pālīz walled vegetable plot, Armenian partēz , Hebrew pardês the park of the Persian king (Nehemiah 2:8; also Ecclesiastes 2:5 and Song of Songs 4:13)); Arabic firdaws paradise ( > Persian firdaus ; compare sense 2c) is a back-formation < farādīs (taken as a broken plural) < Byzantine Greek παράδεισος . In γ. forms < Anglo-Norman and Old French parais (first half of the 12th cent. in Anglo-Norman; c1100 as pareis), variant (with loss of intervocalic -d-) of paradis (see above).Compare Portuguese paraíso (9th cent.), Old Occitan paradis (c1070; Occitan paradís ), Spanish paraíso (a1140; also in the second half of the 13th cent. as †paradiso ), Catalan paradís (c1200), Italian paradiso (1210; end of the 12th cent. as paradis ). The Latin word was also borrowed into other Germanic languages, compare Middle Dutch paradijs (Dutch paradijs ), Old Saxon paradīs (Middle Low German paradīs ), Old High German paradīsi (Middle High German paradīse , paradīs , German Paradeis (now archaic), Paradies ), Old Icelandic paradís , Old Swedish paradis (Swedish paradis ), Old Danish paradis (Danish paradis ); the Scandinavian forms are probably ultimately borrowings from a West Germanic language. Among parallel senses of the word in French are: ‘Judaeo-Christian heaven, abode of the blessed’ (end of the 10th cent.; compare sense 2a), ‘state of perfect bliss’ (end of the 11th cent.; compare sense 3b), ‘Garden of Eden’ (c1135; compare sense 1), ‘abode of the pagan gods’ (c1270; compare sense 2d), ‘park’ (16th cent.; compare sense 5), and ‘gallery in the highest part of a theatre’ (1606; compare sense 6). With sense 1 compare also Old French, Middle French, French paradis terrestre (c1200; early 12th cent. in Anglo-Norman as parais terrestre ). With senses 4a and 4b compare parvis n. With paradise apple n. at Compounds 2 (see sense 7) compare Italian †poma paradisa (a1548), mela paradisa (a1597), Middle French, French pomme de paradis (1538; already 1256 in Old French in sense ‘banana’). The Old English and early Middle English forms in -m are after the Latin accusative singular; the Middle English form paradyso is after the Latin ablative singular. In α. forms in Old English also with Latin case inflections (compare quot. OE2 at sense 1α. ). The usual Old English word was neorxnawang ( < a first element of unknown origin + wang wong n.); compare:OE Ælfric Hexameron (Hatton 115) 65 God hi ða gebrohte binnan Paradisum, ðæt we hataþ on Englisc Neorxnawang.
I. Theological uses.
1. The abode of Adam and Eve before the Fall in the biblical account of the Creation; the Garden of Eden.Also called earthly (also †terrenal, terrene, terrestre) paradise to distinguish it from the heavenly paradise (see sense 2a).
ΚΠ
α.
OE Ælfric Old Eng. Hexateuch: Gen. (Claud.) iii. 1 Hwi forbead God eow ðæt ge ne æton of ælcon treowe binnan Paradisum?
OE Wulfstan Cena Domini 237 Be þære bysene þe God on Adame astealde þa þa he hine nydde ut of paradiso.
c1180 Notes to Hexateuch (Claud. B.iv) in A. N. Doane & W. P. Stoneman Purloined Lett. (2011) 20 Me red on boc, be paradisum in Eden þæt is neorxna wanga.
β. OE Homily: Ded. Church (Tiber. C.i) in P. Clemoes Anglo-Saxons (1959) 274 We þe ferworden wæran..þurh adam þone ærestan man þe þurh his giltas hine sylfne and us ealle forð mid him ferworhte fram þam paradise to þyssum woroldlicum life.lOE St. Nicholas (Corpus Cambr.) (1997) 89 Ure ealdefæder Adam..wæs geworpen ut of Paradyse for his misdæda into þisum middanearde.c1180 Notes to Hexateuch (Claud. B.iv) in A. N. Doane & W. P. Stoneman Purloined Lett. (2011) 34 Seth wuneda on ana munte beside paradise.a1225 ( Ælfric's Homily De Initio Creaturae (Vesp. A.xxii) in R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies (1868) 1st Ser. 221 God þa hine brohte into paradis [OE Royal neorxnawange].a1225 (?OE) MS Lamb. in R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies (1868) 1st Ser. 129 Heo weren ipult ut of paradise.?a1300 Iacob & Iosep (Bodl.) (1916) 200 (MED) Al þat euere Eue brac in paradis Oure leuedi hit bette.1340 Ayenbite (1866) 50 Ase he dede to euen and to Adam in paradys terestre.c1400 (?a1300) Kyng Alisaunder (Laud) (1952) 5676 (MED) Biȝonde þe dragouns, gripes, and beste, Paradys terrene is riȝth in þe est, Where God almiȝtty..Fourmed Adam.a1475 Sidrak & Bokkus (Lansd.) (Ph.D. diss., Univ. of Washington) (1965) 3384 (MED) For envie Adam þat was vnwys Loste þe ioye of Paradys.1481 W. Caxton tr. Hist. Reynard Fox (1970) 78 Bytwene the grete Inde and erthly paradyse.c1540 (?a1400) Gest Historiale Destr. Troy 5496 Evfraton & þe flode Tyger..passyn out of peradis.1588 R. Parke tr. J. G. de Mendoza Comm. Notable Thinges in tr. J. G. de Mendoza Hist. Kingdome of China 397 The riuer Ganges, one of the foure that comme foorth of paradice terrenall.1614 W. Raleigh Hist. World i. i. iii. §i. 33 The Lord God planted a garden, Eastward, in Eden... Of this seate and place of Paradise, all ages haue held dispute.1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost iv. 132 He..to the border comes Of Eden, where delicious Paradise..Crowns with her enclosure green..the champain head Of a steep wilderness. View more context for this quotation1727 D. Defoe Ess. Hist. Apparitions i. 9 So even in Paradise the Devil assum'd a Shape.1786 R. Burns Poems & Songs (1968) I. 171 Ye [sc. Satan] cam to Paradise incog, An' play'd on man a cursed brogue.1850 N. Hawthorne Scarlet Let. xx. 268 She was fair and pure as a lily that had bloomed in Paradise.1885 Encycl. Brit. XVIII. 236/2 The earthly paradise, as developed by Christian fancy, is the old garden of Eden, which lay in the far East beyond the stream of Ocean, raised so high on a triple terrace of mountain that the deluge did not touch it.1898 E. von Arnim Elizabeth & her German Garden 22 If Eve had had a spade in Paradise and known what to do with it, we should not have had all that sad business of the apple.1975 R. Howard tr. E. M. Cioran Short Hist. Decay iii. 121 When Adam was expelled from paradise, instead of vituperating his persecutor, he busied himself baptizing things.2003 Providence (Rhode Island) Jrnl.-Bull. (Nexis) 12 July d05 John Steinbeck's epic novel..reinterprets the Biblical tale of Adam and Eve exiled from Paradise, and of their sons, Cain and Abel.γ. a1225 (?OE) MS Lamb. in R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies (1868) 1st Ser. 129 Þet wes, eorðliche parais.?a1300 (a1250) Harrowing of Hell (Digby) (1907) 157 (MED) Þou ȝeue ous leue to loken parais, And we hit lokeden al amis.a1325 St. Michael (Corpus Cambr.) 759 in C. D'Evelyn & A. J. Mill S. Eng. Legendary (1956) 427 (MED) Oure Louerd..hadde ferst man ymad and in parais ido.
2.
a. The Judaeo-Christian heaven, the abode of God and his angels and the final abode of the redeemed.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > deity > heaven > [noun]
bliss971
heavenOE
paradiseOE
towera1240
seatc1275
heavenwarda1300
Abraham's bosomc1300
tabernaclea1340
wonea1350
sanctuary1382
pasturec1384
firmament1388
sky?1518
Canaan1548
welkin1559
happy land1562
sphere?1592
heavenwards1614
afterworld1615
patria1707
god-home1848
overworld1858
the invisible1868
the world > the supernatural > deity > heaven > [noun] > paradise
paradiseOE
Eden1382
Garden of Eden1535
Garden of God1535
α.
OE West Saxon Gospels: Luke (Corpus Cambr.) xxiii. 43 Todæg þu bist mid me on paradiso [c1200 Hatton on paradise, c1384 Wycliffite, E.V. in paradys, 1526 Tyndale in paradise; L. in paradiso, Gk. ἐν τῷ παραδείσῳ].
OE tr. Vision of St. Paul 65 Ðara manna sawla becumað into parudisam [read paradisum].
?a1425 (?c1350) Northern Passion (Rawl.) 1961 (MED) Þan sall þi fader com fra payne And dwell in paradyso o-gayne.
β. OE Ælfric Hexameron (Hatton 115) 71 Crist..of deaðe aras on ðam ðriddan dæge and awende ðæt swurd of ðam wæge mid ealle ðæt we inn moton gaan to ðam upplican Paradise.c1225 (?OE) Soul's Addr. to Body (Worcester) (Fragm. D) l. 37 Forloren þu hauest þeo ece blisse, binumen þu hauest þe paradis.a1250 in C. Brown Eng. Lyrics 13th Cent. (1932) 3 (MED) Þu me hauest..ibrouht of helle in-to paradise.c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1978) 12037 Þat he..ȝefen heom his paradis.1340 Ayenbite (1866) 14 (MED) Lif wyþ-oute ende..is þe blisse of paradis.a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) 8146 (MED) Þe night fore-neist o paradis Him thoght in sueuen he was.a1475 Sidrak & Bokkus (Lansd.) (Ph.D. diss., Univ. of Washington) (1965) 1583 (MED) Þo þat to paradys or to helle goo, Shullen þei euere come out þerfro?1484 W. Caxton tr. Subtyl Historyes & Fables Esope v I haue dremed that the Angels had led one of yow in to paradys or heuen.1587 A. Fleming et al. Holinshed's Chron. (new ed.) III. Contin. 1352/1 If he vouchsafe to call you into paradise, how blessed shall you be.1635 A. Stafford Femall Glory To Feminine Rdr. sig. b5v You..shall at length arrive at the Celestiall Paradice.1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost iii. 478 They who to be sure of Paradise Dying put on the weeds of Dominic, Or in Franciscan think to pass disguis'd. View more context for this quotation1738 C. Wesley Easter Hymn iii Death in vain forbids His rise; Christ hath opened Paradise.1819 W. Scott Ivanhoe II. xiv. 256 The lessons of Miriam, daughter of the Rabbi Manasses of Byzantium, whose soul is in Paradise, have made thee skilful in the art of healing.1858–60 J. Gardner Faiths World II. 11 The Jewish Rabbis teach that there is an upper and a lower paradise or heaven.1862 F. W. Faber Hymns vii. 423 O Paradise! O Paradise..Where loyal hearts, and true, Stand ever in the light..In God's most holy sight.1905 Baroness Orczy Scarlet Pimpernel xxxi. 301 Was she dreaming? Were those great, stony cliffs the gates of paradise? Was the fragrant breath of the breeze suddenly caused by the flutter of angels' wings, bringing tidings of unearthly joys to her, after all her sufferings?1994 Homiletic & Pastoral Rev. Feb. 32/1 Martyrdom is necessary and sufficient to gain immediate entrance into Paradise.γ. a1225 MS Lamb. in R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies (1868) 1st Ser. 61 To bon in heuene fuliwis In touþe sete of parais.c1225 (?c1200) St. Margaret (Bodl.) (1934) 30 (MED) Paraise [c1225 Royal paraises] ȝeten aren ȝarewe iopenet te nu.c1300 (c1250) Floris & Blauncheflur (Cambr.) (1966) l. 76 Him þuȝte he was in parais.c1325 in R. Morris Old Eng. Misc. (1872) 195 Leuedi quene of parays.a1400 in F. J. Furnivall Polit., Relig., & Love Poems (1903) 257 (MED) Þe ȝates of Parais Þoruth eue weren iloken.
b. In Christian and late Jewish theology: an intermediate place or state where the departed souls of the righteous await resurrection and the Last Judgement. Cf. limbo n.1 1a and Abraham's bosom n. at Abraham n. 2. Now rare.In modern quots. chiefly with allusion to Luke 23:43.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > deity > heaven > [noun] > intermediate abode of the blessed
paradiseOE
OE Homily: De Sancto Iohanne (Corpus Cambr. 198) in Englische Studien (1885) 8 477 Paradisum nis naðor ne on heofonum ne on eorþan... Paradisus hangað betwynon heofonan and eorþan wundorlice.
c1300 St. Patrick's Purgatory (Laud) 551 in C. Horstmann Early S.-Eng. Legendary (1887) 216 (MED) Ech man þat in-to heuene schal þoruȝ purgatorie mot And sethþe into eorþeliche parays..ar heo to heouene come.
c1450 (?c1400) tr. Honorius Augustodunensis Elucidarium (1909) 23 (MED) Where dwellide he [sc. Jesus]..aftir his resureccioun or he steiȝe up to heuene?..In erþely paradijs [v.r. paradijs terestre].
a1475 Sidrak & Bokkus (Lansd.) (Ph.D. diss., Univ. of Washington) (1965) 1586 (MED) Whi gon not þe soules þat ben wys Vnto þe erthely paradys?
a1710 G. Bull Wks. (1846) I. 55 Then..he [sc. St Paul] saw also the intermediate joys of paradise, wherewith the souls of the faithful are refreshed until the resurrection.
1713 A. Campbell Primitive Doctr. Reviv'd 64 After his Death, he was to be..in an Intermediate or Middle State, a happy State of Expectation and certain Hope of future Reward... This State is what is called Paradise or Abraham's Bosom.
1753 J. Orton Doddridge's Family Expositor IV. 523 He was also caught up into Paradise, that Garden of God, which is the Seat of happy Spirits in the intermediate State, and during their Separation from the Body.
1776 J. Wesley Let. to Miss Bishop 17 Apr. In Paradise, in the intermediate state between death and the resurrection.
a1806 S. Horsley Serm. (1811) 395 Paradise was certainly some place where our Lord was to be on the very day on which he suffered, and where the companion of his sufferings was to be with him. It was not heaven.
1835 J. H. Newman Parochial Serm. (1837) III. xxv. 412 Paradise is not the same as Heaven, but a resting-place at the foot of it.
1885 W. E. Addis & T. Arnold Catholic Dict. (ed. 3) 518 The Limbus Patrum is the Paradise of Luc. xxiii. 43, so called because it was a place of rest and joy, though the joy was imperfect.
c. In Islamic theology: the Garden of Eden; heaven.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > deity > heaven > [noun] > non-Christian
heaveneOE
other worldOE
paradise?a1425
pantheon?1545
Olympus1582
Hesperidesa1592
tian1613
afterworld1615
Swarga1734
goddery1811
Pure Land1819
Reinga1820
Tir-na-nog1889
Jodo1901
sand-hill1949
?a1425 (c1400) Mandeville's Trav. (Titus C.xvi) (1919) 84 (MED) Sarazines..seyn..paradys..is a place of delytes, where men schull fynde all maner of frutes.
1615 G. Sandys Relation of Journey 58 It is..more then conjectured, that Mahomet grounded his devised Paradise, upon the Poets invention of Elisium.
1652 T. Urquhart Εκσκυβαλαυρον 121 In an Alcoranal paradise.
1702 N. Rowe Tamerlane iv. i. 1766 Prophet, take notice I disclaim thy Paradice.
1816 Ld. Byron Siege of Corinth xii. 19 Secure in paradise to be By Houris loved immortally.
1841 E. W. Lane tr. Thousand & One Nights I. 20 Some assert Paradise to be in the seventh heaven, and, indeed, I have found this to be the general opinion of my Muslim friends.
1899 N.E.D. at Houri A nymph of the Mohammedan Paradise.
1960 L. Durrell Clea i. iii. 57 The ‘nubk’ forms the great circular palisade of trees which encircles the Moslem Paradise.
1992 Time 17 Feb. 69/1 In all ancient Arabia, the most fabled land was the city of Ubar. As legend had it, one Shaddad ibn Ad created the jewel-encrusted oasis town in the southern deserts to stand as an ‘imitation of Paradise’.
d. In other religions: a place or state analogous to heaven.
ΚΠ
c1450 (c1386) G. Chaucer Legend Good Women Prol. 564 I [sc. the God of Love] mot goon hom..To paradys.
1690 J. Locke Ess. Humane Understanding i. iii. 18 The Virtues, whereby the Tououpinambas believed they merited Paradise, were, Revenge, and eating abundance of their Enemies.
1768 T. Gray Fatal Sisters in Poems 79 (note) The Valkyriur..conducted them to Valkalla, the hall of Odin, or paradise of the Brave.
1780 Encycl. Brit. V. 3288/1 That their great Odinus excluded all those from his valhalla, or paradise, who [etc.].
1879 J. Dowson Classical Dict. Hindu Mythol. 20 The Apsarases..are fairylike beings... They are the rewards in Indra's paradise held out to heroes who fall in battle.
1976 San Antonio (Texas) Express 14 Oct. 3- g/1 Rikka is the oldest established form [of flower arrangement], dating back five centuries. It is a complex style with 11 main branches presenting a stylized representation of the landscape of Buddhist paradise.
II. Extended uses.
3.
a. A place or region of surpassing beauty or delight, or of supreme bliss. Now also: a peaceful unspoilt place. Also figurative.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > deity > heaven > [noun] > paradise > place compared to
paradise?a1300
the mind > emotion > pleasure > happiness > supreme or heavenly happiness > [noun] > place of supreme happiness
heaveneOE
Edena1225
paradise?a1300
Garden of Eden1535
eutopia1553
happy land1562
Arcady1590
Hesperidesa1592
Elysiuma1616
God's own country1807
lotusland1856
Adamless Eden1876
summerland1895
Shangri-La1941
?a1300 Sayings St. Bernard (Digby) in F. J. Furnivall Minor Poems Vernon MS (1901) ii. 762 (MED) Hoere paradis by [read hy] nomen here, And nou þey lien in helle I-fere.
c1300 St. Brendan (Harl.) 150 in C. Horstmann Early S.-Eng. Legendary (1887) 224 (MED) To a stede ȝe schulle hunne wende..Þat is foweles parays, a wel ioyful place.
c1385 G. Chaucer Knight's Tale 1237 Ful blisfully in prisoun maistow dure, In prisoun, certes nay, but in paradys.
c1395 G. Chaucer Merchant's Tale 1332 Wyf is mannes help and his confort, His paradys terrestre, and his disport.
c1450 (?a1400) Wars Alexander (Ashm.) 3217 (MED) Þe palais a paradyce semed.
c1450 (a1400) Libeaus Desconus (Calig. A.ii) (1969) 1431 (MED) Whan he seyȝ her face Hym þouȝ he was Jn paradys alyue.
1553 R. Eden tr. S. Münster Treat. Newe India sig. Bvij A man woulde thinke it were a very Paradyse of pleasure.
1555 R. Eden Of Pole Antartike in tr. Peter Martyr of Angleria Decades of Newe Worlde f. 245 Yf there bee any earthely Paradyse in the worlde, it can not bee farre from these regions of the south.
1590 E. Spenser Faerie Queene ii. xii. sig. Aa6v There the most daintie Paradise [sc. the Bowre of Blisse] on ground, It selfe doth offer to his sober eye.
?a1603 E. Grymeston Miscelanea (1604) sig. H3v A faire woman is a paradise to the eie, a purgatorie to the purse and a hell to the soule.
a1684 J. Evelyn Diary anno 1662 (1955) III. 522 Signor Verrios..now settled in his Majesties Garden of St. James's, which he had made now a very delicious Paradise.
1721 A. Ramsay Mary Scot iii When Mary Scot's become my marrow, We'll make a paradise on Yarrow.
1745 P. Thomas True Jrnl. Voy. South-Seas 297 Among their Buildings are many which..appear..perfect Paradises.
1814 P. Hawker Diary (1893) I. 123 These gardens are the most perfect paradise I ever saw.
1891 E. Kinglake Austral. at Home 136 [Australia] is a rather overdone Paradise of the working man.
1915 W. S. Maugham Of Human Bondage xxxviii. 178 To Mr. Goodworthy..the capital of France was a paradise of the joyously obscene.
1969 N. Coward Diary 9 Feb. (2000) 675 Now we are back in our earthly paradise; everything is a-growing and a-blowing, including, at the moment, a norther, but not a bad one.
1990 Today 9 Feb. 8 A massive oil spill which threatens to swamp a surfing and wildlife paradise was caused by a tanker hitting its own anchor.
b. A state or condition of supreme bliss or happiness; the enjoyment of this. See also fool's paradise n.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > pleasure > happiness > supreme or heavenly happiness > [noun]
blissc1175
Edena1225
heaven bliss?c1225
joyc1275
blessedheada1300
blissfulheada1340
third heavenc1384
paradisec1395
benisona1400
blessednessa1400
heavena1413
jocundnessc1426
everlastingness1434
jocundityc1450
beatitudea1492
beatification1502
blessedfulness1526
beautitude1578
Elysiuma1616
suavitya1617
seventh heaven1786
heaven of heavens1885
c1395 G. Chaucer Merchant's Tale 1265 Wedlok is so esy and so clene That in this world it is a paradys.
a1425 (?a1400) G. Chaucer Romaunt Rose (Hunterian) 1325 Ther nys so good paradys As to have a love at his devys.
1548 Hall's Vnion: Henry VII f. vi This poore priest brought into this foolishe paradice through his awne fantasticall ymaginacion.
1594 E. Spenser Epithalamion xx. sig. H5v For greedy pleasure, carelesse of your toyes, Thinks more vpon her paradise of ioyes, Then what ye do.
a1682 Sir T. Browne Christian Morals (1716) iii. 114 The Delights wherein mere Pleasurists place their Paradise.
1747 T. Gray Ode Eton Coll. 8 Thought would destroy their Paradise.
1814 M. Edgeworth Patronage III. xxix. 175 As she seemed entering the paradise of love and hope.
1897 ‘Ouida’ Massarenes xl I shall deny him the paradise of your embrace.
1902 A. M. Fairbairn Philos. Christian Relig. i. ii. 79 Comfort..seems to many Englishmen the only real paradise.
1975 I. McEwan First Love, Last Rites (1976) 20 She tasted paradise on earth.
c. Association Football. colloquial. With capital initial. A nickname for: Celtic Park, Glasgow, the home ground of Celtic Football Club (traditionally composed of Roman Catholic players and enjoying Roman Catholic support).
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > football > association football > [noun] > specific ground
stadium1928
paradise1946
1946 C. A. Oakley Second City iii. 168 Celtic Park..seemed so palatial, in odd comparison with an adjacent graveyard, that it was described as the ‘Paradise’.
1958 C. Tully Passed to You xxii. 92 One of the best things about being at Paradise is that you're pretty certain to move in good company... You'll go a long way before you meet a better bunch than the Tims of Parkhead.
1991 S. Cosgrove Hampden Babylon (BNC) 91 Nicholas could not face the prospect of signing for a team that wore the same colour of shirts as Rangers, and so he returned to Celtic Boys Club to await his calling from Paradise.
4.
a. A garden, esp. an enclosed one; an orchard; an enclosed area or court in front of a building, esp. a church. Cf. parvis n. 1a.Now only in place names.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > gardening > garden > [noun] > pleasure garden
paradise1374
pleasance1509
lust-garden1589
viridariumc1660
pleasure ground1755
1374–5 in J. T. Fowler Extracts Acct. Rolls Abbey of Durham (1898) I. 180 (MED) In reparacione muri circa Paradis, 18 d.
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) Song of Sol. iv. 13 Þyn owt sendingis paradis of powmgarnetis with þe frutes of appelis.
1432 in J. Raine Testamenta Eboracensia (1855) II. 22 (MED) To ye Goddes house in Paradise a rough felt.
a1500 (c1340) R. Rolle Psalter (Univ. Oxf. 64) (1884) Prol. 3 This boke is cald garthen closed, wel enseled, paradyse ful of all appils.
1557 in D. Yaxley Researcher's Gloss. Hist. Documents E. Anglia (2003) 147 The litel soler on the sowthe ende of here chaumber stondyng in to the paradise.
1610 P. Holland tr. W. Camden Brit. ii. 111 Minding to replant it like unto a certaine garden or Paradise.
a1684 J. Evelyn Diary anno 1662 (1955) III. 325 Another Parterr there is [at Hampton Court] which they call Paradise in which a pretty banqueting house, set over a Cave or Cellar.
1845 J. H. Parker Gloss. Terms Archit. (ed. 4) I. 270 Paradise..; also the garden of a convent: the name was likewise sometimes given to an open court, or area in front of a church.
1878 H. C. Adams Wykehamica xxiii. 429 Paradise, a small patch of trees in the outer court of the College, opposite the Warder's door, and against the wall of the stable-yard.
1902 J. S. Farmer & W. E. Henley Slang V. 138/2 Paradise, a grove of trees outside St. John's College, Oxford.
b. A room or chamber, esp. one on an upper storey. Frequently used as a proper name for a particular room or apartment. Cf. parvis n. 1b. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > a building > parts of building > room > types of room generally > [noun] > others
hell1310
summer hall1388
summer parloura1425
paradise1485
fire room1591
garden room1619
ease-room1629
portcullis1631
divan1678
but?1700
sluttery1711
rotunda1737
glass casea1777
dungeon1782
hall of mirrors1789
balcony-chamber1800
showroom1820
mirror room1858
vomitorium1923
mosquito room1925
refuge room1937
quiet room1938
Florida room1968
roomset1980
wet room1982
1485 Rolls of Parl. VI. 372/2 The Keping of the Houses called Paradyse and Hell, within the Hall of Westmynster.
a1552 J. Leland Itinerary (1710) I. 39 I saw in a litle studiyng Chaumber ther caullid Paradice the Genealogie of the Percys.
a1552 J. Leland Itinerary (1710) I. 46 One thing I likid excedingly yn one of the Towers that was a study caullid Paradise.
1659 in E. Law Hist. Hampton Court Palace (1888) II. App. C. 281 In Paradice Roome..one paire of Creepers.
1673–4 in D. G. Vaisey Probate Inventories Lichfield & District 1568–1680 (1969) 227 In the cocklofts... In the paradice 2 fether beds, 6 bolsters [etc.].
1841 Punch 18 Dec. 265/2 [The examination candidate] is told he may retire, and is conducted by Mr. Belfour into ‘Paradise’, the room appropriated to the fortunate ones, which the curious stranger may see lighted up every Friday evening as he passes through Lincoln's-inn Fields.
5. A park, esp. one enclosing wild animals such as those constructed by rulers of the Ancient Near East.
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the world > food and drink > farming > animal husbandry > zoo > [noun]
vivarya1631
vivariumc1660
menagerie1676
zoological garden1827
zoological1831
zoo1835
park1887
paradise1900
petting zoo1965
1613 S. Purchas Pilgrimage 75 Betweene Orpha and Caramit, was the Paradise of Aladeules, where he had a fortress destroyed by Selim.
1628 R. Burton Anat. Melancholy (ed. 3) ii. ii. iv. 252 A Persian Paradise, or Parke, could not bee more acceptable in his sight.
1724 A. Pope Let. to R. Digby 12 Aug. For as to the hanging Gardens of Babylon, the Paradise of Cyrus, and the Sharawaggi's of China, I have little or no Idea's of 'em.
1775 R. Chandler Trav. Asia Minor lxx. 237 He had, moreover, an extensive paradise or park, full of wild beasts.
1865 G. Rawlinson Five Great Monarchies III. i. 34 Semiramis built a palace, and laid out a paradise.
1900 Daily News 3 Aug. 5/1 A ‘paradise’ is the technical term for a preserve in which attempts are made with more or less success to acclimatize foreign birds and animals. The three most successful paradises in England are Haggerstone Castle, near Beale; Leonardslee, in Sussex; and Woburn Abbey.
6. slang. The gallery of a theatre. Cf. god n. 4a. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > the theatre or the stage > a theatre > auditorium > [noun] > gallery
gallery1690
sky-parlour1747
amphitheatre1859
paradise1864
peanut gallery1876
nigger heaven1878
1864 J. C. Hotten Slang Dict. (new ed.) 195 Paradise, French Slang for the gallery of a theatre, ‘up amongst the Gods’.
III. Other uses.
7. More fully paradise apple. A very old European variety of apple, having yellow fruit borne on a small tree; the fruit of this tree. Also (more fully paradise stock): any of several varieties of dwarfing rootstock developed from this, later used in the production of Malling rootstocks.Paradise apple can also refer to other fruit: see paradise apple n. at Compounds 2.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > fruit and vegetables > fruit or a fruit > apple > [noun] > eating-apple > types of
costardc1390
bitter-sweet1393
Queening?1435
richardine?1435
blaundrellc1440
pear apple1440
tuberc1440
quarrendenc1450
birtle1483
deusan1570
apple-john1572
Richard1572
lording1573
greening1577
queen apple1579
peeler1580
darling1584
doucin1584
golding1589
puffin1589
lady's longing1591
bitter-sweeting1597
pearmain1597
paradise apple1598
garden globe1600
gastlet1600
leather-coat1600
maligar1600
pome-paradise1601
French pippin1629
gillyflower1629
king apple1635
lady apple1651
golden pippin1654
goldling1655
puff1655
cardinal1658
green fillet1662
chestnut1664
cinnamon apple1664
fenouil1664
go-no-further1664
Westbury apple1664
seek-no-farther1670
nonsuch1676
calville1691
passe-pomme1691
fennel apple1699
queen1699
genet1706
fig-apple1707
oaken pin1707
nonpareil1726
costing1731
monstrous reinette1731
Newtown pippin1760
Ribston1782
Rhode Island greening1795
oslin1801
fall pippin1803
monstrous pippin1817
Newtown Spitzenburg1817
Gravenstein1821
Red Astrachan1822
Tolman sweet1822
grange apple1823
orange pippin1823
Baldwin1826
Sturmer Pippin1831
Newtowner1846
Northern Spy1847
Blenheim Orange1860
Cox1860
McIntosh Red1876
Worcester1877
raspberry apple1894
delicious1898
Laxton's Superb1920
Macoun1924
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular types of fruit > [noun] > apple > eating-apple > types of
costardc1390
bitter-sweet1393
pippin?1435
pomewater?1435
Queening?1435
richardine?1435
blaundrellc1440
pear apple1440
tuberc1440
quarrendenc1450
birtle1483
sweeting1530
pomeroyal1534
renneta1568
deusan1570
apple-john1572
Richard1572
lording1573
russeting1573
greening1577
queen apple1579
peeler1580
reinette1582
darling1584
doucin1584
golding1589
puffin1589
lady's longing1591
bitter-sweeting1597
pearmain1597
paradise apple1598
garden globe1600
gastlet1600
leather-coat1600
maligar1600
pomeroy1600
short-start1600
jenneting1601
pome-paradise1601
russet coat1602
John apple1604
honey apple1611
honeymeal1611
musk apple1611
short-shank1611
spice apple1611
French pippin1629
king apple1635
lady apple1651
golden pippin1654
goldling1655
puff1655
cardinal1658
renneting1658
green fillet1662
chestnut1664
cinnamon apple1664
fenouil1664
go-no-further1664
reinetting1664
Westbury apple1664
seek-no-farther1670
nonsuch1676
white-wining1676
russet1686
calville1691
fennel apple1699
queen1699
genet1706
fig-apple1707
oaken pin1707
musk1708
nonpareil1726
costing1731
monstrous reinette1731
Newtown pippin1760
Ribston1782
Rhode Island greening1795
oslin1801
wine apple1802
fall pippin1803
monstrous pippin1817
Newtown Spitzenburg1817
Gravenstein1821
Red Astrachan1822
Tolman sweet1822
grange apple1823
orange pippin1823
Baldwin1826
wine-sap1826
Jonathan1831
Sturmer Pippin1831
rusty-coat1843
Newtowner1846
Northern Spy1847
Cornish gilliflowerc1850
Blenheim Orange1860
Cox1860
nutmeg pippin1860
McIntosh Red1876
Worcester1877
raspberry apple1894
delicious1898
Laxton's Superb1920
Melba apple1928
Melba1933
Mutsu1951
Newtown1953
discovery1964
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular fruit-tree or -plant > [noun] > apple tree
apple treeOE
malec1384
mele?1440
applea1500
paradise stock1706
1598 J. Florio Worlde of Wordes Meloparadiso, the paradise apple.
1629 J. Parkinson Paradisi in Sole iii. xix. 586 The Paradise or dwarfe apple tree..whatsoever fruit shall be grafted on it, will keep the graft low like vnto it selfe.
1676 J. Worlidge Vinetum Britannicum 159 The Paradice-Apple is a curious Fruit, produced by grafting a Permain on a Quince.
1706 G. London & H. Wise Retir'd Gard'ner I. i. xvii. 82 An Apple upon a Paradise Stock.
1731 P. Miller Gardeners Dict. I. at Malus The Paradise Apple hath of late Years greatly obtain'd for Stocks to graft or bud upon.
1824 J. C. Loudon Encycl. Gardening (ed. 2) iii. i. 698 The first consideration is the choice of stocks;..paradise apples, or doucins, from layers or cuttings, for low dwarfs and trained.
1861 Amer. Agriculturist July 197/3 The Paradise and Doucain stocks are small distinct varieties of hard sweet apples, propagated from cuttings, layers and shoots. The Paradise is preferred.
1917 Jrnl. Royal Hort. Soc. 42 362 Trees worked on the Paradise were expected to be remunerative early.
1956 Dict. Gardening (Royal Hort. Soc.) (ed. 2) I. 148/1 The principal types of Paradise stocks used were known as the Broad-leaved English Paradise, the Nonsuch, the French Paradise, and the Doucin.
1993 J. Morgan & A. Richards Bk. of Apples ii. 46 Jean Baukin..said that he had received grafts of the Paradise apple from both Montpellier and Lyon.
8.
a. Used with of in the names of plants and animals, as apples, bird, grains, king bird, superb bird, tree of paradise, etc.: see the first elements.
b. The plumage of a bird of paradise (see paradise plume n. at Compounds 2, bird n. Phrases 4). Now rare.
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the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > headgear > parts of headgear > [noun] > plume (of feathers, etc.)
crestelc1320
crestc1380
plumach1494
plumasse1494
plume1530
plumage1565
panache1584
plumassery1613
kalgi1715
hackle1816
heckle1855
panache-crest1864
osprey1885
paradise1905
1905 E. Wharton House of Mirth ii. x. 461 Mrs. Trenor's hat? The one with the green Paradise?
1928 Daily Express 24 May 5/3 The same firm was responsible for wonderful curls of shaded paradise,..toning from dark to palest beige tones.

Compounds

C1.
paradise body n.
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1691 R. Baxter Glorious Kingdom of Christ i. 10 Some think that the [resurrection body] is to be a Paradise body, like Adams before he sinned.
1873 Appletons' Jrnl. 4 Oct. 242/2 Through him our paradise body was restored, it waits for us on the other side of the grave.
1964 ELH 31 193 The poem prospects the redemption of the body, or nature's paradise-body.
paradise garden n.
ΚΠ
1592 A. Fraunce 3rd Pt. Countesse of Pembrokes Yuychurch f. 51 O paradise-garden, fit for so louely a gardner.
1889 Scribner's Mag. Sept. 381/2 It [sc. Lincoln's Inn Fields] is all brightness to them; it is a very Paradise garden.
2000 N.Y. Times 3 Aug. f10/3 Organizing space around an axis harks back to Persian paradise garden traditions.
paradise island n.
ΚΠ
1822 P. B. Shelley Hellas 51 Like the shapes of a dream, What Paradise islands of glory gleam!
2000 A. Sayle Barcelona Plates 174 You get the hacks locked up on some paradise island for a week.
paradise weather n. Obsolete
ΚΠ
1875 W. Cory Lett. & Jrnls. (1897) 381 Last week was a marvel of paradise weather.
C2.
paradise apple n. (a) see sense 7; (b) [after Dutch †paradijsappel (1596 in the passage translated in quot. 1598); compare Old French poume de paradis (1256), Spanish †mançana del paraíso (1519), both in sense ‘banana’] a banana (obsolete rare); (c) a grapefruit or shaddock (obsolete rare).Sense (c) is apparently only attested in dictionaries or glossaries.
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the world > food and drink > food > fruit and vegetables > fruit or a fruit > citrus fruit > [noun] > grapefruit
paradise apple1598
pomelo1803
grapefruit1814
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular types of fruit > [noun] > citrus fruit > pampelmouse or pomelo
paradise apple1598
pompion1678
pampelmoes1697
shaddock1707
pomelo1803
1598 W. Phillip tr. J. H. van Linschoten Disc. Voy. E. & W. Indies i. lv. 99/2 This fruite [sc. banana] is called Paradise Apples [Du. Paradijs appelen]..partly for the pleasantnes of taste, smell and colour.
1857 R. G. Mayne Expos. Lexicon Med. Sci. (1860) Paradise Apple, common name for the fruit of the Citrus Paradisi.
paradise bird n. = bird of paradise n. 1.
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the world > animals > birds > order Passeriformes (singing) > larger song birds > [noun] > family Paradisaeidae (bird of paradise)
bird of paradise1569
paradise bird1617
magnificent bird of paradise1782
1617 K. Throgmorton in State Papers (Colonial) (1870) 50 [Sends presents, including] a ‘paradise bird’.
1869 A. R. Wallace Malay Archipel. II. xxxviii. 414 The great Epimaque, or Long-tailed Paradise Bird (Epimachus magnus).
1997 Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) (Nexis) 9 July a5 On all four days, we'll have a bird show with mystical paradise birds on stage three times daily.
paradise crane n. the blue or Stanley crane, Anthropoides paradisea, of southern Africa.
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the world > animals > birds > order Gruiformes > [noun] > family Gruidae (cranes) > genus Anthropoides > anthropoides paradisea (paradise crane)
Stanley crane1867
paradise crane1906
1906 Daily Chron. 8 May 7/6 His consignment..included..three paradise cranes, five wolves and seven baboons.
1958 E. T. Gilliard Living Birds of World 146/1 Other species [of crane] are named for their ornamental plumage, coloration, wattles or geographical ranges—as, for example..the Paradise or Stanley Crane..of southern Africa; and the Crowned Crane.
paradise duck n. New Zealand the paradise shelduck, Tadorna variegata.
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the world > animals > birds > freshwater birds > order Anseriformes (geese, etc.) > subfamily Merginae (duck) > [noun] > member of genus Tadorna (sheldrake)
sheldrakec1325
bergander1544
skeeling-goose1578
scaledrake1600
burranet1602
sheld-fowl?1606
burrow-duck1678
vulpanser1706
shelduck1707
mountain duck1711
sly-goose1776
Brahminy duck1813
paradise duck1813
red goose1848
stock annet1852
1813 R. Williams Rep. Sept. in R. McNab Murihiku (1909) 196 We found the large bay..covered with paradise ducks which induced me naming it Duck Bay.
1882 Pall Mall Gaz. 29 June 4/2 He is pretty sure of a good bag of pigeons, with as many paradise ducks as he cares to carry.
1992 B. Anderson Portrait of Artist's Wife (1993) xvi. 290 A pair of paradise ducks had lifted from the wide gravel river-bed beside the road.
paradise fish n. (a) a small fish of the genus Polynemus, probably the paradise threadfin, valued as a food fish in India (obsolete); (b) a labyrinth fish of the genus Macropodus (family Belontiidae), esp. the small, hardy, and aggressive M. opercularis of South-East Asia, kept as an aquarium fish.
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the world > food and drink > food > animals for food > seafood > [noun] > fish > other edible fish
dogdrave1227
lamprey1297
lingc1300
loach1357
tench1390
carpc1440
rougetc1485
anchovy1582
pompano1598
tai1620
alewife1633
tug-whitingc1650
weakfish1686
ten-pounder1699
fire-flaira1705
tusk1707
porgy1725
katsuo1727
rockfish1731
tautog1750
sea bass1765
Albany beef1779
sable1810
Murray cod1843
paradise fish1858
spot1864
strawberry bass1867
nannygai1871
maomao1873
spotfish1875
strawberry perch1877
milkfish1880
tarwhine1880
tile-fish1881
latchett1882
tile1893
anago1895
flake1906
branzino1915
rascasse1921
lampuki1925
red fish1951
the world > animals > fish > superorder Acanthopterygii (spiny fins) > order Perciformes (perches) > [noun] > suborder Anabantoidei > family Anabantidae > member of (Siamese fighter)
labyrinth fish1835
paradise fish1858
gourami1878
Siamese fighting fish1929
kissing gourami1935
fighting fish-
1804 G. Shaw Gen. Zool. V. i. 147 Paradise Polyneme... The Fish of Paradise.]
1858 P. L. Simmonds Dict. Trade Products 275/2 Paradise-fish, a species of Polynemus, which is esteemed excellent food in India.
1885 C. F. Holder Marvels Animal Life 18 In Siam there is found a fish..known to science as the Macropodus or paradise-fish, on account of its curiously-shaped fins.
1931 E. G. Boulenger Fishes xvi. 135 The beautiful little Paradise Fish (Macropodus viridi-auratus) of China makes a fairylike abode of bubbles..producing at the same time a sticky saliva which causes the frothy structure to set.
1992 J. Silverberg & J. P. Gray Aggression & Peacefulness 16 Francis..used paradise fish to test the hypothesis that individual differences in ‘aggressive motivation’ are responsible for the patterns of wins and losses in a dominance matrix.
paradise flycatcher n. any of a number of monarch flycatchers comprising the genus Terpsiphone, having very long middle tail feathers.
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the world > animals > birds > order Passeriformes (singing) > family Muscicapidae (thrushes, etc.) > [noun] > subfamily Monarchinae > other types of
white-eared flycatcher1851
paradise flycatcher1862
1862 J. Richardson Mus. Nat. Hist. 334/1 The Paradise Flycatcher (Tchitrea paradisi).—This elegant species is found in all parts of India and in Ceylon.
1942 E. Afr. Ann. 1941–2 81/2 A pair of Paradise Flycatchers were..rearing two youngsters on a branch... Interesting birds these; for hereabouts the cock only reaches the cinnamon coloured stage of the long tail, which is pure white in birds from about 4,000 ft. down to the coast.
1992 Holiday Which? Sept. 184/3 You may be lucky enough to catch sight of the black paradise flycatcher, one of the world's most threatened birds.
paradise grains n. [compare post-classical Latin granum paradisi (frequently from 1303 in British sources), Spanish granos de paraíso (1450), granos del paraíso (1527–61)] = grains of Paradise at grain n.1 4a.
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the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > medicinal and culinary plants > medicinal and culinary plant or part of plant > [noun] > fruit or seed > grain of paradise
grains of Paradise?a1366
amomuma1398
malagueta1568
paradise grains1705
1705 tr. W. Bosman New Descr. Coast of Guinea xvi. 305 Malagueta, otherwise called Paradise-Grains [Du. Grein] or Guinea Pepper.
1876 J. Greenwood Low-life Deeps 194 No paradise grains [in a sample of gin].
1993 D. Wakoski Jason the Sailor 122 Burning, dark, paradise grains which take bland white flesh, marbled red meats or crisp green vegetables and snapshot spice into their daily texture?
paradise grosbeak n. Obsolete the red-headed finch of southern Africa, Amadina erythrocephala (family Estrildidae).
ΚΠ
1781 J. Latham Gen. Synopsis Birds I. i. 122 Paradise Gr[osbeak].
1859 S. G. Goodrich Illustr. Nat. Hist. Animal Kingdom II. 159 Under the genus Loxia Bechstein includes the following: the Paradise Grosbeak.
paradise kingfisher n. any of several tropical Australasian forest kingfishers of the genus Tanysiptera, with brightly coloured plumage and greatly elongated tail feathers.
ΚΠ
1967 A. L. Rand & E. T. Gilliard Handbk. New Guinea Birds 294 Paradise Kingfisher. The adults of this genus are immediately recognized by the greatly elongated central tail feathers.
2002 Courier Mail (Brisbane) (Nexis) 11 Oct. d4 This is jungle visited by Paradise kingfishers—spectacular birds with extravagant tail feathers which migrate from Papua New Guinea.
paradise parrot n. a predominantly red, brown, and turquoise parrot of eastern Australia, Psephotus pulcherrimus, now possibly extinct.
ΚΠ
1929 A. H. Chisolm Birds & Green Places 98 The paradise-parrot, of central and southern Queensland and the north of New South Wales.
1991 Courier-Mail (Brisbane) 9 July 3/3 One of Australia's most beautiful birds, the paradise parrot, was reported on a Dalby property last week after not having been seen for more than 60 years.
paradise plum n. Caribbean (chiefly Trinidad and Tobago) a hard, sugar-coated, boiled sweet plum.
ΚΠ
1824 Edinb. Advertiser 16 Nov. 316/3 Lord Mayor's Day... General Bill of Fare... Desserts..83 plates dried fruits and preserves, 83 ditto rout cakes &c. four ditto paradise plums.
1903 Daily Gleaner (Kingston, Jamaica) 17 Dec. 18/2 (advt.) At Kingston Drug Depot You can buy..4 lb tins Paradise Plums 2s 3d.
2000 Gleaner (Jamaica) 8 Mar. Downstairs was a tiny shop, where we sold a little paradise plum, mint balls, pinda cake, a half-pint of kerosene oil, two pence of codfish and a half a pound of flower [sic].
paradise plume n. now rare a plume of feathers from the bird of paradise, used as a decoration for hats, headdresses, etc.
ΚΠ
1790 World 3 May No. 1039 Rare and beautiful Oriental, Argilla, and Paradise Plumes, which for lightness, ease and elegance far surpass any head-dress ever seen in Europe.
1801 Farther Excursions Observant Pedestrian III. 12 Instead of exulting in a Paradise-plume, be contented with the sable pageant that will one day wave over thy unambitious head.
1852 ‘R. Archer’ Island Home xvii. 176 The giant..wore a paradise plume on his head, and a girdle of the claws and beaks of birds around his waist.
1906 Lady's Realm 19 539/1 A grey chip hat, with..a grey waving paradise plume caught with an old wrought silver and gold buckle.
1936 Times 19 Oct. 17/6 The arrogant richness of the osprey and the paradise plume.
paradise rifle bird n. a rifle bird, Ptiloris paradiseus, of the rainforests of south-east Queensland and north-east New South Wales, the male of which is velvet-black with areas of iridescence and a slim, downcurved beak.
ΚΠ
1859 S. G. Goodrich Illustr. Nat. Hist. Animal Kingdom II. 99 The Paradise Rifle-Bird, P. paradiseus, is the most gorgeous in its plumage of the Australian birds.
1941 C. Barrett Australia 85 Paradise rifle-birds frequent the palm brush.
1975 Ecos vi. 7/1 The paradise rifle-bird, rufous scrub-bird, and Albert's lyrebird live only in subtropical rainforests.
paradise shelduck n. a brightly coloured New Zealand shelduck, Tadorna variegata, whose wings have black, green, white, and orange areas.
ΚΠ
1923 J. C. Phillips Nat. Hist. Ducks I. 250 (heading) New Zealand or Paradise Sheldrake Carsaca Variegata (Gmelin).]
1954 J. Delacour Waterfowl World xii. 246 Paradise Shelducks have much the same habits as their relatives.
1976 Wildlife—a Rev. No.7. 8 Paradise shelduck are unique amongst New Zealand's game waterfowl, for all others are extremely mobile and move around much of the country.
1998 Southland (N.Z.) Times (Nexis) 16 Mar. 1 Survey data from the annual paradise shelduck moult counts indicated the coastal population had stabilised.
paradise stock n. see sense 7.
paradise threadfin n. a small fish, Polynemus paradiseus (family Polynemidae), found commonly in coastal and estuarine waters of South Asia; also called mango fish.
ΚΠ
1997 G. Jennings Asian Freshwater Fishes II. 156 Giant Threadfin/Paradise Threadfin... Frequency: Not uncommon. Range: Throughout the Indian Ocean... Good eating.
2002 Ichthyol. Res. 49 311/1 (heading) Polynemus paradiseus Linnaeus, 1758. (English name: paradise threadfin).
paradise tree n. (a) a tree supposedly growing in or associated with paradise; spec. the tree of life; cf. tree of Paradise n. at tree n. Compounds 3b; (b) any of several tropical trees, chiefly American, esp. a simaruba, Simarouba glauca, and the gumbo-limbo, Bursera simaruba.
ΚΠ
1651 E. Davies Of Times & Seasons Pref. sig. A2v This Paradise Tree, this hidden Manna, consisting of Times Mystery and Seasons; breathed by the Father the breath of life.
1846 H. Smith Poet. Wks. 39 Then earth..thrill'd in her depths with a shudder profound, That wither'd each Paradise tree to its root, And shook down for ever and ever its fruit.
1890 Cent. Dict. 4274/3 Paradise-tree, a small American tree, Simaruba glauca, ranging from southern Florida to Brazil.
1908 N. L. Britton N. Amer. Trees 584 Gumbo Limbo, known also as Bitter-wood, Paradise tree, and on the Bahama islands as Ash, inhabits southern Florida, the Bahamas and Jamaica.
1914 J. D. Sawyer How to make Country Place iii. 88 In the background is the Paradise Tree or Tree of Heaven, the unfairly maligned though odorous root-spreading ailanthus.
1962 C. Day Lewis Compl. Poems (1992) The dancing fountains That leapt and wept for him like paradise trees In diamond leaf—he tainted them.
1993 J. V. O'Brien Transformation of Hera vi. 181 The motif of a Paradise tree, rare in Greek thought but common in Near Eastern myth, appears in a fragment of the Athenian mythographer Pherecydes, who describes ‘the garden of the gods.’
2003 Chem. & Industry (Nexis) 2 June s4 I also hope to carry out some research on ‘Edible oil from Simarouba glauca (paradise tree) kernels.’

Derivatives

ˈparadise-like adj.
ΚΠ
1664 B. Gerbier Counsel to Builders (new ed.) i. sig. c3 Your Lordships Paradise-like-Garden at Neewnem.
1895 Harper's Mag. Sept. 627/2 Its fragrant paradiselike gardens.
1989 Speculum 64 991 In the long chain of laudes urbium Kugler discovers a type of text, such as the Annolied, in which the literary topos assumes a religious, Paradise-like dimension.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2005; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

paradisev.

Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: paradise n.
Etymology: < paradise n. Compare imparadise v. N.E.D. (1904) gives the pronunciation as (pæ·rădəis) /ˈpærədaɪs/.
Obsolete. rare.
transitive. To make a paradise of; = imparadise v.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > deity > heaven > [verb (transitive)] > make heavenly
paradise1593
heaven1614
celestify1646
celestialize1830
1593 G. Harvey Pierces Supererogation 173 Your Verticall Starre; that..Paradiseth the Earth with the ambrosiall dewes of his incomprehensible witt.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2005; most recently modified version published online December 2021).
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n.OEv.1593
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