单词 | perish |
释义 | perishn.ΘΚΠ the world > matter > condition of matter > bad condition of matter > deteriorated in condition [phrase] > on point of perishing upon the perish1823 1823 W. Cobbett Rural Rides in Cobbett's Weekly Polit. Reg. 13 Sept. 656 Everything seems upon the perish. 2. Australian colloquial. a. to do a perish: to reach or be in a state of extreme privation; to suffer hardship; to die, esp. of thirst. ΚΠ 1894 Argus (Melbourne) 28 Mar. 5/4 When a man or party has nearly died through want of water he is said to have ‘done a perish’. 1929 K. S. Prichard Coonardoo v. 60 But we near done a perish for water, You. 1953 D. Stivens Gambling Ghost 3 You'll do a perish, mate, and no mistake. You're two hundred miles as the crow flies from anywhere. 1984 Overlander Apr. 29 It must have been mighty reassuring for him to know he had that water to fall back on..even though he might have to do a ‘perish’ while covering the intervening distance. b. A period or state of extreme privation, esp. a period of drought. ΚΠ 1914 Bulletin (Sydney) 18 June 16/4 The sheep were still alive... Their six-day perish, with not one succumbing, must go close to a record. 1935 H. H. Finlayson Red Centre iii. 28 The constant struggle out of one ‘perish’ into another. 1964 D. Lockwood Up Track 52 Not that they ever stopped laughing, even at the height of the ‘perish’. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2005; most recently modified version published online June 2022). perishv.α. Middle English perijs (northern), Middle English peris (chiefly northern), Middle English perise (chiefly northern), Middle English perisse, Middle English perissi, Middle English perissy, Middle English perys (chiefly northern), Middle English peryss; Scottish pre-1700 peiris, pre-1700 pereis, pre-1700 pereise, pre-1700 peres, pre-1700 perice, pre-1700 peris, pre-1700 perise, pre-1700 periss, pre-1700 perisse, pre-1700 perisz, pre-1700 perreis, pre-1700 perreiss, pre-1700 perres, pre-1700 perris, pre-1700 perus, pre-1700 peryis, pre-1700 perys, pre-1700 peryse. β. Middle English peresch, Middle English peresche, Middle English periche, Middle English perichis (transmission error), Middle English perichse, Middle English perisch, Middle English perische, Middle English perischi, Middle English perissch, Middle English perresh, Middle English perriche, Middle English perrisch, Middle English perrysh, Middle English perryssch, Middle English perych, Middle English perysche, Middle English peryssche, Middle English peyrede (past tense, transmission error), Middle English pirisch, Middle English–1500s peresh, Middle English–1500s perishe, Middle English–1500s perissche, Middle English–1500s perissh, Middle English–1500s perisshe, Middle English–1500s perysch, Middle English–1500s perysh, Middle English–1500s peryshe, Middle English–1500s perysshe, Middle English–1600s perrish, Middle English– perish, 1500s pearish, 1500s pearishe, 1500s peressh, 1500s periszshe; Scottish pre-1700 pereische, pre-1700 pereish, pre-1700 peresche, pre-1700 perisch, pre-1700 perische, pre-1700 perishe, pre-1700 perreche, pre-1700 perreisch, pre-1700 perreishe, pre-1700 perresh, pre-1700 perrisch, pre-1700 perrische, pre-1700 perych, pre-1700 perysch, pre-1700 perysche, pre-1700 1700s– perish. γ. Middle English peersche, Middle English perce, Middle English perch, Middle English perche, Middle English perhid (past participle, transmission error), Middle English persch, Middle English persche, Middle English perse, Middle English persh, Middle English pershe, Middle English persi, Middle English perss, Middle English perssch, Middle English perssh, Middle English persshe, 1900s– persh (U.S. regional (southern)). δ. Middle English paris (northern), Middle English parisch, Middle English parshe, Middle English parysche, Middle English paryssh, 1900s– parish (U.S. regional (southern) and Irish English); English regional (northern and north midlands) 1800s– parish, 1800s– parrish; Scottish pre-1700 pairisch, pre-1700 pareis, pre-1700 parich, pre-1700 paris, pre-1700 parisch, pre-1700 parische, pre-1700 parish, pre-1700 parishe, pre-1700 paroch, pre-1700 parreisch. I. To suffer death, destruction, or damage. 1. a. intransitive. Of a person, animal, or plant: to suffer a violent, sudden, or untimely death; to die; to be killed. ΘΚΠ the world > life > death > manner of death > die in specific manner [verb (intransitive)] > die violently perishc1275 to shed blood?1473 to die in one's shoes1694 to come to a sticky end1904 the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > destroy [verb (intransitive)] > be destroyed, ruined, or come to an end losec888 fallOE forlesea1225 perishc1275 spilla1300 to go to wreche13.. to go to the gatec1330 to go to lostc1374 miscarryc1387 quenchc1390 to bring unto, to fall into, to go, put, or work to wrakea1400 mischieve?a1400 tinea1400 to go to the devilc1405 bursta1450 untwindc1460 to make shipwreck1526 to go to (the) pot1531 to go to wreck (and ruin)a1547 wrake1570 wracka1586 to hop (also tip, pitch over, drop off, etc.) the perch1587 to lie in the dusta1591 mischief1598 to go (etc.) to rack (and ruin)1599 shipwreck1607 suffera1616 unravel1643 to fall off1684 tip (over) the perch1699 to do away with1769 to go to the dickens1833 collapse1838 to come (also go) a mucker1851 mucker1862 to go up1864 to go to squash1889 to go (to) stramash1910 to go for a burton1941 to meet one's Makera1978 society > faith > aspects of faith > spirituality > reprobation > suffer reprobation [verb (intransitive)] losec888 leesec1175 perishc1275 to go to supper with the devil1529 damn1620 c1275 Kentish Serm. in J. Hall Select. Early Middle Eng. (1920) I. 219 (MED) Hise deciples hedde gret drede of þise tempeste..and seiden to him, lord, saue us, for we perisset. c1325 (c1300) Chron. Robert of Gloucester (Calig.) 6936 Ȝif ich of eni gulti am..ich mote þoru þis fure Brenne bi neþe & perissy [v.rr. persi; a1400 Trin. Cambr. perischi]. c1450 (c1350) Alexander & Dindimus (Bodl.) (1929) 452 (MED) Þei þat sailen on þe see..In gret peril ben iput, and perichen ful ofte. 1484 W. Caxton tr. Subtyl Historyes & Fables Esope v. viii The mooste parte of the corne..perysshed that same yere by cause of the grete rayne that felle. 1535 Bible (Coverdale) 2 Kings ix. 8 That all the house of Achab maye periszshe. 1572 (a1500) Taill of Rauf Coilȝear (1882) 20 In point thay war to parische. 1620 tr. G. Boccaccio Decameron I. v. iii. f. 187v Fearing to bee deuoured (in the night time) by some wilde beast, choosing rather to let his Horsse perish, then himselfe. 1671 J. Milton Samson Agonistes 676 The common rout, That..Grow up and perish, as the summer flie. View more context for this quotation 1725 ‘C. Johnson’ Gen. Hist. Pyrates (ed. 3) Introd. 36 Captain Hornigold..was cast away upon Rocks, a great Way from Land, and perished. 1836 W. Irving Astoria III. 252 Who..lingered in the wilderness to perish by the hands of savages. 1866 A. Trollope Belton Estate I. i. 2 His son Charles was now dead,—had perished by his own hand. 1938 Amer. Home Jan. 63/1 Those alpines..; plants that all too often perish solely because of their solitary grandeur. 2002 N. Drury Dict. Esoteric 287/2 The three sea-nymphs hurled themselves into the sea and perished. b. intransitive. (Only in present participle). To be coming gradually nearer death; to be suffering extremely (from cold or hunger) (frequently in hyperbolical use). Frequently with with. Cf. perishing adj. 2a.Cf. sense 12b. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > properties of materials > temperature > coldness > be cold [verb (intransitive)] > be cold or have sensation of cold > perish with cold freeze1390 starve1602 perish1750 bestormed1837 1750 Bible (Challoner) Job xxxi. 19 If I have despised him that was perishing for want of clothing, and the poor man that had no covering. 1788 L. MacNally Critic upon Critic (ed. 2) iii. i. 64 You know how long I have been dangling after you, attending upon your convenience, perishing with cold in your hall. 1798 S. T. Coleridge Wanderings of Cain ii, in Poems 289 I must never die again, and yet I am perishing with thirst and hunger. 1861 C. Dickens Great Expectations I. iii. 39 When a man's alone on these flats, with a light head and a light stomach, perishing of cold and want, he hears nothin' all night, but guns firing, and voices calling. 1885 A. Edwardes Girton Girl III. i. 11 You have given me hot coffee when I was perishing with cold. 1930 W. S. Maugham Cakes & Ale viii. 96 Isn't it awful, the weather? You must be perishing. 2003 Observer (Nexis) 7 Dec. (Mag.) 82 I do recall spending many a winter's afternoon perishing with cold. 2. intransitive. To incur spiritual death; to suffer moral or spiritual ruin; to be damned. ΘΚΠ society > morality > moral evil > moral or spiritual degeneration > degenerate [verb (intransitive)] > suffer moral or spiritual ruin perishc1275 c1275 Kentish Serm. in J. Hall Select. Early Middle Eng. (1920) I. 220 (MED) Yef se deuel us wille a cumbri þurch senne..sigge we..lord, sauue us þet we ne perissi. c1350 Athanasian Creed (BL Add. 17376) in K. D. Bülbring Earliest Compl. Eng. Prose Psalter (1891) 193 (MED) Þe which [faith] bot ȝif ichon kepe hole & nouȝt de-fouled, wyþ-outen drede he shal peris wyþ-outen ende [1548–9 Bk. Common Prayer without doubt he shal perishe euerlastingly]. c1400 Bk. to Mother (Bodl.) 182 Anticrist worcheþ now misterie of wickidnes to hem þat parshen, for þei receyuen not charite þat þei myȝten be saued. ?c1450 (?a1400) J. Wyclif Eng. Wks. (1880) 370 Ȝif þe gospel is hid, it is hid to hem þat perschen [c1384 Bible ( (Wycliffite, E.V.) ): 2 Cor. iv. 3 perischen], in þe whiche god of þis worlde haþ blyndid þe mynde of unfeiþful men. 1562 N. Winȝet Certain Tractates (1888) I. 6 He..sall require the blude oute of ȝour handis of the smallaste ane that sall perise throw ȝour negligence. 1611 Bible (King James) John iii. 15 That whosoeuer beleeueth in him, should not perish, but haue eternall life. View more context for this quotation 1644 J. Milton Of Educ. 1 The reforming of Education..for the want whereof this nation perishes. 1781 W. Cowper Expostulation 95 When nations are to perish in their sins, 'Tis in the church the leprosy begins. 1782 J. Priestley Hist. Corruptions Christianity I. iii. 295 Jerom..thought that no christian would finally perish. 1856 J. Ruskin Mod. Painters IV. 69 Knowledge is good..yet man perished in seeking knowledge. 1885 E. Arnold Secret of Death 23 Thou Scorned'st to tread the path of wealth, wherein The foolish perish. 1953 K. M. Briggs Personnel of Fairyland Gloss. 212 Mermaids..are supposed to be very anxious to gain a human soul. Their lives are long, but when they die they perish utterly. 1989 D. Levertov Door in Hive ii. 47 Out of the stasis in which we perish, the sullen immobility to which the lead weight of our disbelief condemns us, only your rushing wind can lift us. 3. intransitive. Of a ship: to founder, to sink; to be shipwrecked. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > shipwreck > suffer shipwreck [verb (intransitive)] > sink sinkOE adrenchc1230 perishc1350 founder1600 to go to the bottom1812 c1350 Apocalypse St. John: A Version (Harl. 874) (1961) 63 (MED) Þe þrid part of þe shippes perissht [v.rr. perischiden, perescht]. a1439 J. Lydgate Fall of Princes (Bodl. 263) ix. 892 With sodeyn tempest assailed & dirknesse, His barge pershid bi great aduersite. c1515 Ld. Berners tr. Bk. Duke Huon of Burdeux (1882–7) lii. 158 The shyppe..pereshyd, and all my company. 1589 R. Hakluyt Princ. Navigations i. 188 Through meere dissolute negligence shee [sc. a ship] perished on a sand. 1654 J. Lamont Diary (1830) 78 A passage boate..perished a litell without the beacon. 1662 J. Dauncey Eng. Lovers ii. xii. 153 It is rather to be supposed that the French ship perished in the vast Ocean. 1725 G. Burnet Hist. Own Time IV. v. 100 Their whole Fleet had perished, if their Admiral, Calembourg, had not ordered them to drop their Anchors. 1789 Trans. Soc. Arts (ed. 2) 1 222 That vessel perished..in Dunbar Bay, and..was thought to be sanded up. 1807 J. Barlow Columbiad (note) 388 The ship probably perished in the ice. 1867 W. H. Smyth & E. Belcher Sailor's Word-bk. 570 Upon respondentia the lender must be paid his principal and interest, though the ship perish, provided the goods be safe. 1923 J. Masefield Let. from Pontus in Poems (1946) 803 Suppose the ship should perish in the harbour, Or I fall sick and be refused aboard? 1988 D. A. Thomas Compan. Royal Navy iii. 289/2 The surviving Allied warships of the battle of the Java Sea..all perished in a series of actions. 4. intransitive. Of an immaterial thing, esp. a belief, custom, or institution: to come to an end; to expire; to pass out of use. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > existence > non-existence > be non-existent [verb (intransitive)] > end or cease to exist tirec725 endOE forfareOE goc1175 fleec1200 to wend awayc1225 diea1240 to-melta1240 to pass awaya1325 flit1340 perishc1350 vanisha1375 decorre1377 cease1382 dispend1393 failc1400 overshakec1425 surcease1439 adrawc1450 fall1523 decease1538 define1562 fleet1576 expire1595 evanish1597 extinguish1599 extirp1606 disappear1623 evaporatea1631 trans-shift1648 annihilate1656 exolve1657 cancela1667 to pass off1699 to burn out, forth1832 spark1845 to die out1853 to come, go, etc. by the board1859 sputter1964 c1350 Psalter (BL Add. 17376) in K. D. Bülbring Earliest Compl. Eng. Prose Psalter (1891) xl. 5 (MED) He shalle dien, and his name shal peris. ?a1475 (?a1425) tr. R. Higden Polychron. (Harl. 2261) (1874) V. 281 (MED) Valentinianus themperour..dredenge Aecius..causede hym to be sleyne at Cartago, with whom the fortune of the Weste pereschede [a1387 J. Trevisa tr. fil doun; L. occubuit]. a1525 A. Cadiou tr. A. Chartier Porteous Noblenes in W. A. Craigie Asloan MS (1923) I. 175 He that has na honour..his loving perisis and gud name levis him. 1643 Sir T. Browne Religio Medici (authorized ed.) i. §6. 15 For indeed heresies perish not with their authors. View more context for this quotation 1690 J. Locke Ess. Humane Understanding iii. vi. 224 Besides the greatest part of mixed Modes, being Actions, which perish in their Birth, are not capable of a lasting Duration as Substances. 1739 D. Hume Treat. Human Nature I. iv. 320 Let our first belief be never so strong, it must infallibly perish by passing thro' so many new examinations. 1763 J. Brown Diss. Poetry & Music v. 78 Bards of ancient Greece, whose Songs have perished in the Wreck of Time. 1856 A. P. Stanley Sinai & Palestine (1858) vi. 271 The Phœnician power which the Prophets denounced, has entirely perished. 1892 A. Bierce Tales of Soldiers & Civilians 131 The old belief in the malevolence of the dead body was lost from the creeds, and even perished from tradition. 1920 D. H. Lawrence Women in Love xvii. 255 The joy went out of their lives, the hope seemed to perish as they became more and more mechanised. 1989 P. van der Merwe Origins Pop. Style x. 97 The survival in folk or popular music of matrices that have perished in ‘art’ music. 5. a. intransitive. Of an object or substance: to decay, deteriorate, or rot; to fall into ruin or disrepair. Also: to be destroyed or devastated. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > condition of matter > bad condition of matter > deteriorate in condition [verb (intransitive)] > be decayed > decay to-dreseOE forbraidc1220 perisha1382 fret1486 to fall awayc1510 decay1511 pallc1560 the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > destroy [verb (intransitive)] > be destroyed, ruined, or come to an end > of material things perisha1382 a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) (1969) Jer. xlviii. 8 Pershen shul valeis, & wastid shul ben wilde feldis. c1384 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(2)) (1850) John vi. 27 Worche ȝe not mete that perischith, but that dwellith in to euerlastinge lyf. R. Misyn tr. R. Rolle Mending of Life 108 (MED) Qwhy ȝernis þou with grete desire þingis þat sall perys? c1480 (a1400) St. Mary Magdalen 76 in W. M. Metcalfe Legends Saints Sc. Dial. (1896) I. 258 Bot martha, þat was rycht wyse, wald nocht thole þare landis perice, bot bathe þar partis wysly steryt. 1533 J. Gau tr. C. Pedersen Richt Vay 36 The kingis of the vardil ar vntit with olie quhilk perisis. 1588 T. Kyd tr. T. Tasso Housholders Philos. f. 19 His substance, which beeing in the manurance and handling of an ignorant, or ouerweener, dooth not only decrease, but perisheth. 1642 Sir T. Browne Religio Medici (new ed.) 71 I beleeve that the whole frame of a beast doth perish, and is left in the same state after death, as before it was materialled unto life. 1762 G. G. Beekman Let. 25 Oct. in Beekman Mercantile Papers (1956) I. 421 Cheese they think and say is Lyable to Perish without giting wett. 1776 E. Gibbon Decline & Fall I. p. xlvii/1 (note) The Roman libraries have long since perished. 1857 J. Ruskin Polit. Econ. Art ii. 120 Giotto's frescos at Assisi are perishing..for want of decent care. 1883 J. A. Symonds Shakspere's Predecessors (1900) vii. 197 They [sc. the plays] perished in thumbed MSS..before arriving at the honours of the press. 1939 Ann. Brit. School Athens 1935–6 36 2 In many places..the surface has perished to some extent. 1989 A. P. Dobson Sale of Goods & Consumer Credit (ed. 4) iv. 46 We have just considered the problem of who is to bear the loss when goods perish. b. intransitive. Of rubber: to lose its characteristic elastic property and become brittle or sticky. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > condition of matter > bad condition of matter > deteriorate in condition [verb (intransitive)] > be decayed > decay > specifically of rubber perish1879 1879 T. Connolly in Soc. of Arts Artisan Rep. Universal Exhib. 1878 609 A sample of inch common vulcanised tube..had began to ‘perish’. 1884 Queen 29 Mar. (advt.) A flat elastic section (which, unlike rubber elastic, will not heat the person or perish in wear). 1910 Bradshaw's Railway Guide Apr. facing p. xv (advt.) Self-filling fountain pen... No rubber to perish. 1971 C. M. Blow Rubber Technol. & Manuf. ii. 36 Familiar to all is the liability of rubber to ‘perish’, to harden and crack or soften to a sticky residue. 1992 C. Wildwood Aromatherapy Massage with Essent. Oils (BNC) 6 Certain essential oils, cedarwood in particular, can cause rubber to perish into a sticky mess. II. To destroy, kill, damage, etc. (originally and frequently in past participle with to be: see note in etymology). a. transitive. In past participle with to be. = sense 4. Obsolete. ΚΠ a1325 Prologue (Corpus Cambr.) 20 in C. D'Evelyn & A. J. Mill S. Eng. Legendary (1956) 1 (MED) Oþer martirs ek..schadde hare blod for Cristendom, þat it yperissed nere. a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) 22250 (MED) O rome Imparre, þe dignite Ne mai na wai al perist be. R. Misyn tr. R. Rolle Fire of Love 88 Woo be to þame qwhos..ȝeris with haste ar parischyd with-outen fruytt of charite. a1470 T. Malory Morte Darthur (Winch. Coll.) 999 In such maner entred the Sonne of God into the wombe of Maydyn Mary, whos virginite ne was perisshed ne hurte. a1500 Gospel of Nicodemus (Harl. 149) (1974) 115 (MED) Alle thy joye ys peryssched for be-cause that thou dedyst hange Jhesu on the crosse. 1567 Compend. Bk. Godly Songs (1897) 88 Saif vs, gude Lord, and succour send, For perysit is halynes. 1701 J. Prince Danmonii Orientales Illustres 506 There were several other Volumes of Manuscripts..which all miscarried in the time of the late Civil Wars..so that the very Titles and Arguments of them are perished likewise. 1734 B. Franklin in Pennsylvania Gaz. 20 June 1/2 All the Loveliness of its Countenance fled for ever. Death sits heavy upon it, and the Sprightliness and Vigour of Life is perished in every Feature. 1873 W. D. Howells Poems 94 With sullen throbs of the pendule Sighed the time-worn clock for the death of the days that were perished. b. transitive. In active use with object. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > destroy [verb (transitive)] > bring to ruin or put an end to undoc950 shendOE forfarea1000 endc1000 to do awayOE aquenchc1175 slayc1175 slayc1175 stathea1200 tinea1300 to-spilla1300 batec1300 bleschea1325 honisha1325 leesea1325 wastec1325 stanch1338 corrumpa1340 destroy1340 to put awayc1350 dissolvec1374 supplanta1382 to-shend1382 aneantizec1384 avoidc1384 to put outa1398 beshenda1400 swelta1400 amortizec1405 distract1413 consumec1425 shelfc1425 abroge1427 downthringc1430 kill1435 poisonc1450 defeat1474 perish1509 to blow away1523 abrogatea1529 to prick (also turn, pitch) over the perka1529 dash?1529 to bring (also send) to (the) pot1531 put in the pot1531 wipea1538 extermine1539 fatec1540 peppera1550 disappoint1563 to put (also set) beside the saddle1563 to cut the throat of1565 to throw (also turn, etc.) over the perch1568 to make a hand of (also on, with)1569 demolish1570 to break the neck of1576 to make shipwreck of1577 spoil1578 to knock on (in) the head (also rarely at head)1579 cipher1589 ruinate1590 to cut off by the shins1592 shipwreck1599 exterminate1605 finish1611 damnify1612 ravel1614 braina1616 stagger1629 unrivet1630 consummate1634 pulverizea1640 baffle1649 devil1652 to blow up1660 feague1668 shatter1683 cook1708 to die away1748 to prove fatal (to)1759 to knock up1764 to knock (or kick) the hindsight out or off1834 to put the kibosh on1834 to cook (rarely do) one's goose1835 kibosh1841 to chaw up1843 cooper1851 to jack up1870 scuttle1888 to bugger up1891 jigger1895 torpedo1895 on the fritz1900 to put paid to1901 rot1908 down and out1916 scuppera1918 to put the skids under1918 stonker1919 liquidate1924 to screw up1933 cruel1934 to dig the grave of1934 pox1935 blow1936 to hit for six1937 to piss up1937 to dust off1938 zap1976 1509 A. Barclay Brant's Shyp of Folys (Pynson) f. ccxxxviiv We coueyte nat to perysshe theyr fame in any wyse. 1628 O. Felltham Resolves: 2nd Cent. ii. 4 The best way to perish discontentments. 1643 J. Steer tr. Fabricius Exper. Chyrurg. xiii. 48 That they grow not..to a pin and webbe, or else cleane perish the sight. 7. To destroy, wreck, or ruin (a physical thing, esp. a ship or building). a. transitive. In past participle with to be. ΚΠ c1325 (c1300) Chron. Robert of Gloucester (Calig.) 4648 Þe relikes nolde hii noȝt bileue, ac bere wiþ hom vor fere; Vor raþer hii wolde ymartred be þan hii yperissed [ B yspersched; v.r. yperced] were. a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 157v Scilla and caribdis ben two perilouse places in þat see, in þe whiche many shippes be perisshed. ?a1425 (a1400) Brut (Corpus Cambr.) 313 (MED) Trees & housyng wiþ sodeyn tempest & strong lightnyng were yperisshed. 1474 W. Caxton tr. Game & Playe of Chesse (1883) iii. ii. 91 A shippe is soone perisshid and lost by a lityll tempest. a1908 H. C. Hart MS Coll. Ulster Words in M. Traynor Eng. Dial. Donegal (1953) 210/1 The estates 'ill be perished altogether. 1991 Hansard Commons 1 Nov. 154 We must all hope fervently that..great cities such as Dubrovnik do not fall to be perished, as others have. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > destroy [verb (transitive)] to bring to noughteOE forspillc893 fordilghec900 to bring to naughtOE astryea1200 stroyc1200 forferec1275 misdoa1325 destroyc1330 naught1340 dingc1380 beshenda1400 devoida1400 unshapea1400 to wend downa1400 brittenc1400 unloukc1400 perishc1426 defeat1435 unmake1439 lithc1450 spend1481 kill1530 to shend ofc1540 quade1565 to make away1566 discreate1570 wrake1570 wracka1586 unwork1587 gaster1609 defease1621 unbe1624 uncreate1633 destructa1638 naufragate1648 stifle1725 stramash1788 disannul1794 destructify1841 locust1868 to knock out1944 dick1972 c1426 J. Audelay Poems (1931) 108 Y wyl send ȝoue..Gret fuyrus and leytis ȝoue fore to bren, Al euelys to perysche ȝour lobors þen, ȝour cornes, ȝour froytis, ȝour vynus, ȝour tren. c1450 (c1415) in W. O. Ross Middle Eng. Serm. (1940) 247 (MED) It falleþ oft tymes þat þe sonne perreshis þe cloudes and dissolues hem and turneþ hem oft in-to dropes of dewe. 1543 ( Chron. J. Hardyng (1812) 78 (MED) Great pyles of tree and yron sette hym again, His shippes to peryshe [v.r. perse]. c1600 Wriothesley's Chron. Eng. (1877) II. 10 A fire at Broken wharfe..brent and perished aboue six howses. 1622 R. Hawkins Observ. Voiage South Sea lxi. 143 Another [wound] through the arme perishing the bone, and cutting the sinewes. 1790 R. Burns Tam o' Shanter 168 in Poems & Songs (1968) II. 562 For mony a beast to dead she shot, And perish'd mony a bony boat. 1844 Hood's Mag. Jan.–June 103 Many foul blights Perish'd his hardwon gains. 8. To cause the death of; to kill, put to death. ΘΚΠ the world > life > death > killing > kill [verb (transitive)] swevec725 quelmeOE slayc893 quelleOE of-falleOE ofslayeOE aquellc950 ayeteeOE spillc950 beliveOE to bring (also do) of (one's) life-dayOE fordoa1000 forfarea1000 asweveOE drepeOE forleseOE martyrOE to do (also i-do, draw) of lifeOE bringc1175 off-quellc1175 quenchc1175 forswelta1225 adeadc1225 to bring of daysc1225 to do to deathc1225 to draw (a person) to deathc1225 murder?c1225 aslayc1275 forferec1275 to lay to ground, to earth (Sc. at eird)c1275 martyrc1300 strangle1303 destroya1325 misdoa1325 killc1330 tailc1330 to take the life of (also fro)c1330 enda1340 to kill to (into, unto) death1362 brittena1375 deadc1374 to ding to deathc1380 mortifya1382 perisha1387 to dight to death1393 colea1400 fella1400 kill out (away, down, up)a1400 to slay up or downa1400 swelta1400 voida1400 deliverc1400 starvec1425 jugylc1440 morta1450 to bring to, on, or upon (one's) bierc1480 to put offc1485 to-slaya1500 to make away with1502 to put (a person or thing) to silencec1503 rida1513 to put downa1525 to hang out of the way1528 dispatch?1529 strikea1535 occidea1538 to firk to death, (out) of lifec1540 to fling to deathc1540 extinct1548 to make out of the way1551 to fet offa1556 to cut offc1565 to make away?1566 occise1575 spoil1578 senda1586 to put away1588 exanimate1593 unmortalize1593 speed1594 unlive1594 execute1597 dislive1598 extinguish1598 to lay along1599 to make hence1605 conclude1606 kill off1607 disanimate1609 feeze1609 to smite, stab in, under the fifth rib1611 to kill dead1615 transporta1616 spatch1616 to take off1619 mactate1623 to make meat of1632 to turn up1642 inanimate1647 pop1649 enecate1657 cadaverate1658 expedite1678 to make dog's meat of1679 to make mincemeat of1709 sluice1749 finisha1753 royna1770 still1778 do1780 deaden1807 deathifyc1810 to lay out1829 cool1833 to use up1833 puckeroo1840 to rub out1840 cadaverize1841 to put under the sod1847 suicide1852 outkill1860 to fix1875 to put under1879 corpse1884 stiffen1888 tip1891 to do away with1899 to take out1900 stretch1902 red-light1906 huff1919 to knock rotten1919 skittle1919 liquidate1924 clip1927 to set over1931 creasea1935 ice1941 lose1942 to put to sleep1942 zap1942 hit1955 to take down1967 wax1968 trash1973 ace1975 a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1876) VI. 41 A Cristen man þat comeþ þer liȝtliche i-persed [read is i-persed; L. periclitatur], but a Saracan gooþ awey hoel and sound. 1389 in J. T. Smith & L. T. Smith Eng. Gilds (1870) 117 (MED) If he dey, yat is for to say, if he be perichee be water or be lond, yen schal is gyld brethere gare seke him. a1500 Gospel of Nicodemus (Harl. 149) (1974) 67 (MED) Moyses also preyed for youre fadrys, that they schuld not be peryssched. 1533 J. Bellenden tr. Livy Hist. Rome (1901) I. 111/2 Thai..slang him in the wattir..quhare he was perist. 1640 in J. Nicholson Minute Bk. War Comm. Covenanters Kirkcudbright 3 Nov. (1855) 76 The poore sogers are almost perisched..for want of schoes and clothes. 1758 R. Eastburn Faithful Narr. 15 Friday morning, was almost perished with cold. 1818 I. Lickbarrow Lament upon Death of Princess Charlotte 12 They are perished together in their loveliness. a1822 P. B. Shelley Homer's Hymn to Mercury lii, in Posthumous Poems (1824) 312 I wished the race of cows were perished. b. transitive. In active use with object. Now chiefly Australian. †to perish one's life: to lose one's life (obsolete). ΚΠ a1400 (a1325) Chron. Robert of Gloucester (Trin. Cambr.) (1887) App. Z. 825 (MED) O gret wolf me fond þer þat hefd ywuste hadde, Þat none oþere bestes yperissched hit nadde. ?c1425 tr. Guy de Chauliac Grande Chirurgie (Paris) (1971) 4 It byfalleþ a good leche..to saue þe body and nouȝt to perische [?a1425 N.Y. Acad. Med. slee; L. perimere] it. 1494 Loutfut MS f. 29, in Dict. Older Sc. Tongue at Peris Drownit or devourit thaim that is to say perist thaim. c1540 (?a1400) Gest Historiale Destr. Troy 7614 The grekes..hade faren fro home To put hom in perell to perysshe þere lyues. 1598 G. Wateson Cvres of Diseased sig. A3 Such other Diseases, as haue perished your Maiesties people in the Southerne parts. 1632 W. Lithgow Totall Disc. Trav. viii. 355 Their Burser..had almost perished his owne life. 1651 J. Tatham Distracted State iii. i. 17 They like Moales have work'd..to set the Kingdome In such a flame that might both Perish you And all your friends. 1898 W. P. Ridge Mord Em'ly xv. 228 Chrise, I'll perish you, if you ain't careful. 1938 G. Korson Minstrels Mine Patch (1964) 195 Oh, a sudden flash and a deafening sound..Which perished those four miner boys. 1975 B. Fuller Ghan 75 ‘I'll perish you,’ he threatened. ‘I'll put a half-moon in your belly.’ a. transitive. In active use with object. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ society > morality > moral evil > moral or spiritual degeneration > degrading or impairing morally > degrade or impair morally [verb (transitive)] > ruin or damage morally perishc1390 marc1400 ruin1558 c1390 G. Chaucer Parson's Tale 75 Oure swete lord god of heuene that no man wole perisse, but wole that we comen alle to the knoweleche of hym and to the blisful lyf that is perdurable. ?a1475 Lessons of Dirige (Douce) 322 in J. Kail 26 Polit. Poems (1904) 131 (MED) My flesshe, the worlde..These ben myn enemyes, lord, echone, Euer aboute to perysshe me. 1750 Student 1 No. 8. 299 Wishing God to perish his body and soul, if ever he appear'd on the scaffold to do the act or lift up his hand against him. b. transitive. In past participle with to be. = sense 2. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the mind > goodness and badness > wrongdoing > immorality > [verb (transitive)] > and ruin perisha1400 society > morality > moral evil > moral or spiritual degeneration > degrading or impairing morally > degrade or impair morally [verb (transitive)] > corrupt corrumpa1340 corrupt1382 perisha1400 cankera1450 gangrenate1532 putrefy?1548 cankerfret1585 debauch1603 fly-blow1605 bebauch1607 perjurea1616 ulcer1642 dross1648 deboise1654 gangrene1658 a1400 Prose Life Christ (Pepys) (1922) 61 (MED) Jesus ansuered þat mychel of þat folk schulden be perisshed, and many Sarazenes on euerych syde of þe werlde schulden ben saued. c1450 Alphabet of Tales (1904) I. 106 (MED) He had so many thoghtis of syn in his mynde þat he was like to be perisshid þerwith. 1490 W. Caxton tr. Eneydos xxiii. 86 In my priue closet, where I was perisshed. 1555 E. Bonner Certaine Homelyes ii. 11 When we were peryshed he saved vs. 10. To cause (a material thing) to rot or decay; to cause to deteriorate, esp. as the result of exposure to weather or injurious conditions. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > condition of matter > bad condition of matter > deteriorate in condition [verb (intransitive)] > be decayed perish1529 1529 T. More Dialogue Heresyes i, in Wks. (1557) 132/1 The bodye, kepyng yet stil his shappe & his organis not much perished. 1544 Bp. S. Gardiner Let. 5 July (1933) 123 The letters cam to my handes a lytel perished with water, but they be nevertheles legible for theffecte. 1569 R. Grafton Chron. II. 128 If any were perished by keping, then the Abbot to make them good. 1667 A. Wood Life & Times (1892) II. 113 [Laid] in a by-place expos'd to weather, and thereby are much perish'd, and become not legible. 1794–6 E. Darwin Zoonomia (1801) I. 137 There are many trees, whose whole internal wood is perished, and yet the branches are vegete and healthy. b. transitive. In active use with object. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > condition of matter > bad condition of matter > cause bad condition in [verb (transitive)] > cause to decay decay1536 perisha1549 the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > damage > damage or injure [verb (transitive)] > of environmental or supernatural factors smitea1382 strikec1480 blasta1533 perisha1549 thunderstrike1613 siderate1623 to strike dead, blind1750 a1549 A. Borde Fyrst Bk. Introd. Knowl. (1870) i. 121 There is no wynde nor wether that dothe hurte or peryshe them. a1625 F. Beaumont & J. Fletcher Honest Mans Fortune i. ii, in Comedies & Trag. (1647) sig. Ttttt2v/2 His wants And miseries have perish'd his good face. 1699 L. Meager New Art of Gardening 42 If the Vine stands against damp Walls, the wetness perishes the Clusters that touch it. 1743 W. Ellis Mod. Husbandman (Dublin ed.) June iv. 39 The Winter..and Spring..were so dry, and severely cold, that they perished a great deal of Wheat. 1775 W. Marshall Minutes Agric. 28 Jan. (1778) Will the frost perish the exposed fibres? 1867 S. W. Baker Nile Tributaries Abyssinia iii. 61 The extreme heat of the sun and simoon perishes all vegetation. 1923 Daily Mail 4 July 6 As frost would crack and perish the undried cement. 11. ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > loss > lose [verb (transitive)] losec950 forgarc1175 letc1200 leese?c1225 forgoc1275 tinec1300 wanta1425 lessena1500 becosta1522 amit1525 perish1531 to make shipwreck of1588 to come short of1690 1531 T. Elyot Bk. named Gouernour i. xvii. sig. Jiij Nothinge was perisshed sauue a litle bagage. 1592 Testimoniall 2 June in R. Hakluyt Princ. Navigations (1600) III. 845 This night we perished our maine tressletrees. 1638 J. Ford Fancies iv. 51 If you have not perished all your reason. 1691 J. Wilson Belphegor i. ii One..that has perish'd his own Fortune, to save the Publick. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > management of money > expenditure > waste of money or extravagance > spend money wastefully or extravagantly [verb (intransitive)] > spend all one has to perish the (also one's) pack1656 to run out1692 1656 J. Bramhall Replic. to Bishop of Chalcedon vi. 235 If a Merchant doe reckon only the price which his commodity cost him beyond Sea,..he will soon perish his Pack. 1822 J. Galt Sir Andrew Wylie III. xxii. 193 Her son, perished the pack, and they say has spoused his fortune and gone to Indy. 1878 J. S. Neish Reminisc. Brechin 43 More than once he ‘perished the pack’ when on the spree. 1895 W. C. Fraser Whaups of Durley xii. 160 Davie had ta'en to the bottle and perished the pack. c. transitive. colloquial (chiefly Scottish) To consume (food or drink) rapidly or greedily. Now rare. ΚΠ 1876 J. Smith Archie & Bess 23 Yer faither an' me perished three gills. 1877 W. Cross in Eng. Dial. Dict. IV. 474/1 [Forfarshire] He perish'd a hale platefu' o' porritch. 1904 ‘H. Foulis’ Erchie iv Beer, beer, glorious beer; I'm shair I've perished three gallons this very day. 1959 Bulletin (Glasgow) 23 May 6/1 Seven cats, all with kittens, can perish a queer lot of the stuff [sc. milk]. 12. a. transitive. Of cold, hunger, etc.: to afflict severely. rare. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > diseases of tissue > wasting disease > affect with wasting disease [verb (transitive)] > wither pinch1548 beblast1558 forwelk1593 wither1599 perish1719 mummify1883 1719 D. Defoe Farther Adventures Robinson Crusoe 19 Rains and Cold to benumb and perish their Limbs. 1876 C. C. Robinson Gloss. Words Dial. Mid-Yorks. 100/2 If thou goes out to-night it will perish thee. 1905 N.E.D. (at cited word) The want of sleep perished me. b. transitive. colloquial. In past participle with to be: to be brought near to death (from cold); to be extremely cold. Cf. sense 1b. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > properties of materials > temperature > coldness > make cold [verb (transitive)] > give sensation of cold to > cause to perish with cold starve1574 perish1796 1796 M. G. Lewis Monk I. iii. 179 Throw some logs upon the fire, for the gentleman seems perished with cold. 1845 J. W. Carlyle Lett. I. 313 We were all perished with cold. 1866 E. Fitzgerald Let. 2 Apr. (1980) II. 579 I get perished with the N.E. wind. 1888 ‘R. Boldrewood’ Robbery under Arms xli ‘Dining at the camp!’ says Aileen, looking regularly perished. 1936 N. Streatfeild Ballet Shoes xvi. 248 She told her she was perished and poked the fire. 1995 A. Warner Morvern Callar (1996) 32 Get by the bleezing fire then, yous must be perished the both of yous. Phrases P1. intransitive. In optative subjunctive, in exclamations and imprecations. a. perish the thought (also man, name): may the thought (man, name, etc.) die, be destroyed, be damned, etc. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > expectation > hope > expression of hope [phrase] perish the thought (also man, name)1526 while there's life there's hope1539 good (also braw, etc.) time cominga1780 1526 Bible (Tyndale) Acts viii. 20 Perish thou and thy money togedder. 1600 W. Shakespeare Henry V iv. iii. 72 Perish the man whose mind is backward now. 1697 J. Dryden tr. Virgil Æneis xii, in tr. Virgil Wks. 614 Call them not Trojans: Perish the Renown, And Name of Troy, with that detested Town. 1700 C. Cibber Tragical Hist. King Richard III v. iii. 52 Perish that thought. 1773 O. Goldsmith She stoops to Conquer ii. 31 Perish the baubles! Your person is all I desire. 1810 W. Scott Lady of Lake ii. 89 Perish my name, if aught afford Its chieftain safety, save his sword. 1877 Spirit of Times 15 Dec. 530/1 ‘You do not intend indulging in such a performance, I suppose?’ ‘Perish the thought!’ 1953 R. Macaulay Let. 23 Jan. in Last Lett. to Friend (1962) 75 Which disposes of your notion that I should ever write to Miss Prescott. Perish the thought! 2002 Daily Tel. 30 Jan. 25/7 Perish the thought that sense of occasion is to die. b. perish forbid [after God forbid at forbid v. 2b.] U.S. (frequently humorous colloquial): let it not be considered; let it not happen. ΚΠ 1944 N.Y. Times 23 Jan. 23 (advt.) Love light ain't meant to be hid No! No! No!..perish forbid. 1970 Jrnl. Econ. Lit. 8 765/1 This should not mean an additional course requirement—perish forbid! 2003 K. R. A. DeCandido Destruction of Illusions 205 Of course, he could've just asked me to crack the lock,..but perish forbid an uber ask a kludge for help. P2. or perish in the attempt chiefly hyperbolical : appended to a resolve or promise, indicating that one will risk one's life, or try one's utmost, to carry it out. ΚΠ 1652 C. Manuche Loyal Lovers v. i. 46 Poor Gentlewoman, I will redeem thy Adrastus Or perish in the attempt. a1689 A. Behn Younger Brother (1696) iii. iii. 31 Soft Love, and mightier Friendship seizes all. I'll save him, tho' I perish in the Attempt. 1730 T. Cibber Lover 26 I'm determin'd to overcome 'em [sc. my difficulties] all, or perish in the Attempt. 1793 H. Boyd Helots ii, in Poems 53 To gain that lovely maid in whose blue veins The hopes unite of that old regal line.—I cross him there, or perish in the attempt. 1861 T. Hughes Tom Brown at Oxf. I. ii. 23 [He was] as resolved as ever to get to Sandford and back before hall time, or perish in the attempt. 1870 L. M. Alcott Old-fashioned Girl xvii. 337 He..sternly resolved to be an honor to his family, or perish in the attempt. 1908 L. M. Montgomery Anne of Green Gables xxiii. 256 I shall walk that ridge-pole, Diana, or perish in the attempt. 1938 M. Gervaise Distance Enchanted iv. 73 We'll have a happy Christmas,..or perish in the attempt! 2007 B. Tighe Identity Cards xiv. 132 Jady..was going to make serious amounts of money out of the government's folly or perish in the attempt. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2005; most recently modified version published online June 2022). < n.1823v.c1275 |
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