请输入您要查询的英文单词:

 

单词 parted
释义

partedadj.1

Brit. /ˈpɑːtᵻd/, U.S. /ˈpɑrdəd/
Forms: see part v. and -ed suffix1.
Origin: Formed within English, by derivation. Etymons: part v., -ed suffix1, party adj.
Etymology: < part v. + -ed suffix1. In branch I. influenced semantically by party adj., or perhaps showing formal assimilation of party adj. to the past participle of part v.; compare also part adj.1In sense 3c after post-classical Latin partitus (see partite adj.); compare earlier partite adj.
I. Senses referring to a variety of colouring.
1. Combined together so as to produce a particoloured or variegated effect; divided into parts of different colours; particoloured; variegated, pied; = party adj. 1a. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > colour > variegation > [adjective]
fawa700
medleyc1350
freckledc1380
motleyc1380
pied1382
specked1382
vary1382
partyc1385
parted1393
peckleda1400
polymitec1425
sere-colouredc1425
vairc1425
discoloured?1440
motleyed1447
varying1488
sheld1507
fleckered1508
piet1508
mellay1515
particoloured1530
pickled1552
varied1578
mingled1580
partly coloured1582
chequered1592
medley-coloured1593
mingle-coloured1593
piebald1594
feathered1610
changeable1612
particolour1612
enamelled1613
variousa1618
pie-coloured1619
jaspered1620
gangean1623
versicolour1628
patchwork1634
damasked1648
variously-coloureda1660
variegateda1661
agated1665
varicoloured1665
damaska1674
various-coloureda1711
pieted1721
versicoloured1721
diversicoloured1756
mosaic1776
harlequin1779
spanged1788
calico1807
piety1811
varied-coloured1811
discolorate1826
heterochromous1842
jaspé1851
discolor1859
discolorous1860
jasperoid1876
damascened1879
heterochromatic1895
variotinted1903
batik1914
varihued1921
rumbled1930
damasky1931
pepper-and-salt1940
partihued1959
1393 in W. H. Stevenson Rec. Borough Nottingham (1882) I. 254 (MED) Unum slop de blwe velvet partid cum whit camaca vetus, ad ij s.
1418 in F. J. Furnivall Fifty Earliest Eng. Wills (1882) 37 Hewk of grene and other melly parted.
c1425 (c1400) Laud Troy-bk. 8047 (MED) The robes were of mochel prys: Thei were parted, with riche palle.
c1450 (c1425) Brut (Cambr. Kk.1.12) 347 (MED) Þay presentid hym with a mylke-white stede, sadelled and brydilled & trapped with white cloth of golde and red parted togadir.
a1500 (c1380) J. Wyclif Eng. Wks. (1880) 471 (MED) Herfore biddiþ god in his lawe þat his men shulden not be cloþid in wollun & lynnun partid to-gidere.
1569 R. Grafton Chron. II. 383 Two fayre steedes, trapped in riche cloth of Golde, parted of red and white.
1570 T. North tr. A. F. Doni Moral Philos. (1888) 70 So goodly a beaste..with his parted hide (halfe blacke, halfe white) and blased starre in the foreheade.
1607 E. Topsell Hist. Foure-footed Beastes 115 Their belly is parted with blacke strakes and drops.
2. Heraldry. Divided into parts of different tinctures; = party adj. 2a. Frequently in parted per pale.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > indication > insignia > heraldic devices collective > lines or edges > [adjective] > divided in two
parted1395
partyc1460
counterly1486
1395 in F. J. Furnivall Fifty Earliest Eng. Wills (1882) 6 (MED) Also I deuyse to the same Alienore, a round bassin of siluer, which hath a scochon of my lordes armys and of myn Iparted.
1478 in Trans. Shropshire Archæol. Soc. (1909) 9 384 A shild of azure and pourpll parted in pale.
1486 Blasyng of Armys sig. dvj, in Bk. St. Albans In armys partit it is requyrit alway that the partys of the colouris be equall.
1548 Hall's Vnion: Henry IV f. xij One sorte had the vambrases the pacegardes the grandgardes the poldren, the pollettes, parted with golde and azure.
1562 G. Legh Accedens of Armory 44 Parted per Pale.
1610 E. Bolton Elements of Armories sig. N4 They are all parted per pale, or (to vse Scohiers word) mi-partie, that is, parted long-wise in the midst.
a1695 A. Wood Surv. Antiq. City of Oxf. (1899) III. 129 Over his head are his armes engraven... Over hers in lozenge, parted per fess, a lozenge counterchanged [etc.].
1704 J. Harris Lexicon Technicum I. at Traverse There is also a Partition of an Eschucheon used in Heraldry of this Figure, which they call Parted per Pile [printed Pale] Traverse, Argent and Gules.
1728 S. Kent Banner Display'd II. 764 Some Blazoners hold..that then such Bearing is more aptly termed Parted per Cross.
1823 J. Rutter Delineations of Fonthill p. xxi Beckford, Parted per Pale Gules, and Azure.
1838 Penny Cycl. XII. 142/1 [A shield Fusily] if parted per pale and per bend, would be either Lozengy-bendy, or Fusily-bendy, according to the width of the space between the lines.
1936 P. W. Lovell & W. M. Marcham Village of Highgate ix. 55 A lion likewise parted and counter-coloured.
1969 J. P. Brooke-Little Fox-Davies's Compl. Guide Heraldry viii. 78 A coat divided per pale or per chevron is so described, and whilst the Scottish field of this character is officially termed Parted [per pale, or per chevron], the English equivalent is Party.
1988 T. Woodcock & J. M. Robinson Oxf. Guide Heraldry 202 (Gloss.) Impale, to arrange two coats of arms side by side in one shield divided (or parted) per pale.
II. Senses referring to division or separation.
3.
a. With singular noun. Divided into two or more parts; split, severed, cloven. Now rare.In quot. a1475: (of a legal document) cut into two parts along a zigzag line, indented.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > separation > action of dividing or divided condition > [adjective] > divided
departedc1386
parteda1398
distinct1434
divided1565
partite1570
shedded1575
dismembered1578
severed1581
splitted1594
shared1598
distract1609
disparted1633
split1648
dipartited1825
splitten1832
dipartite1885
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 327 Þe euene nombre is diuidid in þis wise: som is parted and som is vnparted.
a1475 in A. Clark Eng. Reg. Godstow Nunnery (1905) i. 357 (MED) To this partid charter they put to ther seales.
1561 J. Heywood tr. Seneca Hercules Furens iii. sig. G8 From hens a double parted streame From one wellspryng doothe floe.
1581 J. Studley tr. Seneca Hippolytus ii, in T. Newton et al. tr. Seneca 10 Trag. f. 64v No stones nor slakes set vp in field did stint the parted ground.
1600 W. Shakespeare Midsummer Night's Dream iv. i. 188 Me-thinks I see these things, with parted eye, When euery thing seemes double. View more context for this quotation
1718 M. Prior Solomon on Vanity i, in Poems Several Occasions (new ed.) 400 While the fantastic Tulip strives to break In two-fold Beauty, and a parted Streak.
1810 G. Crabbe Borough xi. 153 Three powerful Spirits fill'd a parted Case.
1814 E. S. Erskine Isabel ii. 62 When near, a sudden light there broke, Emerging from the parted rock.
1841 R. W. Emerson Ess. 1st Ser. (Boston ed.) iii. 86 The parted water re-unites behind our hand.
1925 F. S. Fitzgerald Great Gatsby vii. 152 The telephone book slipped from its nail... Gatsby examined the parted string.
b. Of the hair, wool, etc.: divided by a parting. Cf. part v. 8c.
ΚΠ
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost iv. 302 Hyacinthin Locks Round from his parted forelock manly hung Clustring. View more context for this quotation
1757 J. Dyer Fleece i. 23 In teizing fly-time,..With unctuous liquids, or the lees of oil, Rub their [sc. the sheep's] soft skins, between the parted locks.
1803 R. Percival Acct. Ceylon xiv. 291 The rillow is a very large species [of monkey]... It is distinguished by long parted hair lying flat in its forehead.
1817 J. Keats Poems 48 Light feet, dark violet eyes, and parted hair.
1878 H. Bonar My Old Lett. xi. 304 The light steals in upon her parted hair.
1933 D. C. Peel Life's Enchanted Cup i. 6 I remember, too, that the smooth, parted front hair was ‘bandolined’ with a stick of some white greasy composition.
1985 E. Leonard Glitz iv. 40 He liked her hair. Sun-streaked, natural looking, sort of parted.
2000 N.Y. Mag. 18 Sept. 49/1 Swarms of stylists in yellow-tinted aviators are..re-parting her perfectly parted hair.
c. Botany. Divided into distinct but not entirely separate parts; cleft nearly to the base. Frequently with a number indicating the number of parts.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > part of plant > part defined by form or function > [adjective] > divided, segmented, slashed, or lobed
lobated1703
quinquefid1703
lobousa1722
biparted1725
tripartite1753
lobate1760
octofid1760
septemfid1777
parted1785
triquadrifid1833
rimiform1837
slashed1839
lobulate1862
bipartite1864
palmilobed1876
pentafid1882
segmented1883
lobose1885
torn1888
triquinate1891
sectile1899
1785 T. Martyn tr. J.-J. Rousseau Lett. Elements Bot. xxviii. 439 The corol is six-parted; and the stamens are usually eighteen.
1847 J. F. Royle Man. Materia Med. 614 Corolla with outer limb 3-parted.
1880 A. Gray Struct. Bot. vi. §5 245 The calyx or corolla..is said to be parted (3-parted, 5-parted, etc.).
1900 H. L. Keeler Our Native Trees 32 Leaves—Alternate, compound, three-parted.
1957 Fassett's Man. Aquatic Plants (rev. ed.) 250 Pod 3-parted..; pits on the seed coat with angled ends.
1997 Bot. Rev. 63 182 The crown of leaves is parted into two groups (a tuft of young leaves and a group of old, horizontal or drooping leaves).
4. Departed, gone away; spec. dead. Now formal.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > death > dead person or the dead > [adjective]
deadOE
lifelessOE
of lifeOE
storvena1225
dead as a door-nail1362
ydead1387
stark deadc1390
colda1400
bypast1425
perishedc1440
morta1450
obita1450
unquickc1449
gone?a1475
dead and gone1482
extinct1483
departed1503
bygonea1522
amort1546
soulless1553
breathless1562
parted1562
mortified1592
low-laid1598
disanimate1601
carcasseda1603
defunct1603
no morea1616
with God1617
death-stricken1618
death-strucken1622
expired1631
past itc1635
incinerated1657
stock-dead1662
dead as a herring1664
death-struck1688
as dead as a nit1789
(as) dead as mutton1792
low1808
laid in the locker1815
strae-dead1820
disanimated1833
ghosted1834
under the daisies1842
irresuscitable1843
under the sod1847
toes up1851
dead and buried1863
devitalized1866
translated1869
dead and done (for, with)1886
daid1890
bung1893
(as) dead as the (or a) dodo1904
six feet under1942
brown bread1969
1562 A. Brooke tr. M. Bandello Tragicall Hist. Romeus & Iuliet f. 78 That so our parted sprites, From light that we see here, In place of endlesse light and blisse, May euer liue yfere.
1594 W. Shakespeare Henry VI, Pt. 2 iii. ii. 161 A timely parted ghost, Of ashie semblance, pale and bloodlesse.
1597 W. Warner Albions Eng. (new ed.) i. i. 3 Their parted fathers Ghost.
1661 S. Pordage Mundorum Explicatio ii. 221 Parca asunder cut their vital thread: Their parted souls then to this region flew.
1749 W. Collins Ode Death Thomson ix. 7 Yet once again, dear parted shade, Meek nature's child, again adieu!
1796 R. Southey Joan of Arc viii. 93 And hymn the requiem to his parted soul.
1823 T. Campbell Last Man 35, in New Monthly Mag. 8 273 Yet mourn I not thy parted sway, Thou dim discrowned king of day.
1824 C. G. Garnett Night before Bridal i. ix. 10 Her lips were parted rubies.
1892 Ld. Tennyson Wanderer 4 You will not speak, my friends, Unfriendly of your parted guest.
1979 Washington Post (Nexis) 14 Oct. b6 Conducting services for our late parted Brother.
2003 Times Union (Albany, N.Y.) (Nexis) 13 Mar. b10 The Boght Community Fire Co. will meet Friday evening at 7 p.m. to pay respects to their parted brother.
5. With plural or collective noun. Drawn, placed, or set apart; separated, sundered.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > separation > [adjective] > separate or separated
sunderedc1230
ysondredc1380
discretea1398
divisec1420
dissevered1471
separate?a1475
separated1535
semoted1542
dissociate1548
dirempt1580
dissundered1580
severed1581
parted1595
dividual1598
twain1600
sejunct1602
disassociated1611
dissociated1611
dividenta1616
entire to itselfa1618
interstinct1623
disjected1647
segregant1647
severized1649
divided1658
separate1667
secrete1678
disaffiliated1839
dirempted1900
1595 H. Chettle Piers Plainnes Prentiship sig. H3 A storme..assailed vs, driuing our smal boate against a rocke, where splitting in sunder our wether-beaten bodies were with the parted sides of the boate seperated.
?1609 G. Chapman tr. Homer Twelue Bks. Iliads v. 91 So soone, his wounds parted sides ran close in his recure.
1645 G. Wither Vox Pacifica 41 Who can unite again a Broken-bone, Whose parted ends, are set the fromward way.
1727 J. Gay Fables I. xxxiv. 117 A-while the parted warriors stood.
a1777 F. Fawkes tr. Apollonius Rhodius Argonautics (1780) ii. 112 The parted rocks at once concurrent stood, Fix'd on one firm foundation in the flood.
1879 W. Black Macleod of Dare xli. 372 With her saucy eyes and her laughing and parted lips.
1904 J. Conrad Nostromo i. viii Men and women emerged tottering..to lean..with staring eyes and parted lips.
1929 E. Bowen Joining Charles 73 Lulu's hands hung between his parted knees; he kept wringing and chafing his hands together.
1992 C. Fowler Red Bride (BNC) (1993) 249 Neighbours had watched discreetly through parted net curtains.
2002 Birmingham Evening Mail (Nexis) 27 June 3 A parted couple who were said to be involved in a tug-of-love battle were today confirmed as the victims of a huge fire.
6. Divided between two or more; shared. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > giving > distributing or dealing out > [adjective] > dividing and sharing > divided and shared
ydeled1297
parted1596
participated1614
divideda1616
dividual1667
1596 E. Spenser Second Pt. Faerie Queene vi. ii. sig. Bb So off he did his shield, and..Him vp thereon did reare, And twixt them both with parted paines did beare. View more context for this quotation
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2005; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

partedadj.2

Brit. /ˈpɑːtᵻd/, U.S. /ˈpɑrdəd/
Origin: Formed within English, by derivation. Etymons: part n.1, -ed suffix2.
Etymology: < part n.1 + -ed suffix2. Compare overparted adj.
1. Having abilities or talents of a specified kind; gifted, accomplished. Usually with modifying adverb. Cf. part n.1 15. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > ability > [adjective] > gifted or talented
able1520
ingenuous1598
parted1600
gifted1644
magic-gifted1811
talented1827
the mind > mental capacity > understanding > intelligence, cleverness > [adjective]
keena1000
nimbleOE
wittya1100
smeighc1200
understandingc1200
aperta1330
skillwisea1340
witted1377
intelligiblea1382
well-feelinga1382
knowinga1398
finec1400
large?a1425
well-knowingc1425
of understanding1428
capax1432
sententiousc1440
well-wittedc1450
intellectual?a1475
clean1485
industriousc1487
intellective1509
cleanlyc1540
ingenious?a1560
fine-headed1574
conceited1579
conceitful1594
intelligenced1596
dexter1597
ingenuous1598
intelligent1598
senseful1598
parted1600
thinking1605
dexterical1607
solert1612
apprehensivea1616
dexterous1622
solertic1623
intelligential1646
callent1656
cunning1671
thoughtful1674
perceptive1696
clever1716
uptaking1756
spiritual1807
bright1815
gnostic1819
knowledgeable1825
brainy1845
opulent1851
opening1872
super-cerebral1916
brainiac1976
1600 B. Jonson Every Man out of his Humor Dram. Pers. sig. Aiii Macilente. A Man well parted, a sufficient Scholler. View more context for this quotation
1628 J. Earle Micro-cosmogr. xxiii. sig. E5 A Detractor..commonly some weake parted fellow.
a1668 W. Davenant News from Plimouth ii, in Wks. (1673) 7/1 Better parted, more polite and vers'd in The rules of Courtship.
1686 P. Ellis 2nd Serm. preach'd before King & Queen F6 The most Witty and best Parted Men of the Gentiles, were the most serious Enquirers after this Verity.
1754 Z. Grey Crit., Hist. & Explanatory Notes Shakespeare II. 217 The like observation was made by a wag, upon a low-parted gentleman. Put him on (says he) a double buttoned coat, and I'll hold any wager, that he does not know his right hand from his left.
2. Assigned a dramatic part or character; cast. Usually with modifying adverb. Cf. overparted adj. rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > actor > [adjective] > cast, type-cast, or miscast
parted1612
under-parted1890
overparted1896
type-cast1946
1612 T. Heywood Apol. for Actors sig. C3v I haue seene Tragedyes, Comedyes,..publickly acted, in which the Graduates..haue bene specially parted.
1904 N.E.D. (at cited word) I have seen Sir Henry better ‘parted’ a score of times, and Miss Ellen Terry a hundred times.
1983 Daily Tel. 16 Dec. 11/4 Barbara Carrera (Fatima) is poorly parted and Kim Basinger (Domino), though looking lovely, makes little mark.

Derivatives

partedness n. Obsolete rare the condition of possessing talents or accomplishments.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > understanding > intelligence, cleverness > [noun]
i-witc888
anyitOE
understandinga1050
ferec1175
skillwisenessa1200
quaintisec1300
brainc1325
cunning1340
reder1340
cunningnessa1400
sentencec1400
intelligence?1435
speculation1471
ingeny1474
cunningheadc1475
capacity1485
pregnancyc1487
dexterity1527
pregnance?1533
shift1542
wittiness1543
ingeniousness1555
conceitedness1576
pate1598
conceit1604
ingeniosity1607
dexterousness1622
talent1622
ingenuousness1628
solertiousnessa1649
ingenuity1651
partedness1654
brightness1655
solerty1656
prettiness1674
long head1694
long lega1705
cleverness1755
smartness1800
cleverality1828
brain power1832
knowledgeability1834
braininess1876
cerebrality1901
the world > action or operation > ability > [noun] > ability or talent > quality of possessing
virtuousnessa1398
giftishness1654
partedness1654
giftedness1660
1654 R. Whitlock Ζωοτομία 12 Wisdome, though but knavery, men afford so many grains of esteem, as to term partednesse, and cunning.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2005; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
<
adj.11393adj.21600
随便看

 

英语词典包含1132095条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

Copyright © 2004-2022 Newdu.com All Rights Reserved
更新时间:2025/1/11 9:46:00