单词 | pricker |
释义 | prickern. 1. a. A person who spurs or rides a horse; a rider, a horseman; a mounted warrior or soldier, esp. a light horseman employed as a skirmisher or scout. Now chiefly historical.In later use esp. with reference to horsemen engaged in skirmishing and raiding in the Scottish Borders, as part of either a military force or a marauding gang. ΘΚΠ society > travel > transport > riding on horse (or other animal) > rider > [noun] styera1340 upstyerc1340 prickera1350 chevalier1377 sittera1382 ridera1400 horsemanc1400 horse-rider1580 cavalier1596 equestrian1791 bestrider1830 Macadamite1860 society > armed hostility > warrior > soldier > soldier by branch of army > [noun] > mounted soldier > light-armed hobblerc1308 prickera1350 genetorc1440 stradiotc1515 light horse1524 hussar1532 light horseman1544 demi-lancer1552 demi-lancea1556 estradiot1577 argoletier1579 argoletc1580 Cossack1587 jennet1676 hobbler-archer1786 a1350 in R. H. Robbins Hist. Poems 14th & 15th Cent. (1959) 7 (MED) Al is piked of þe pore, þe prikyares prude. c1400 (a1376) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Trin. Cambr. R.3.14) (1960) A. x. 8 A proud prikere [v.r. preker; c1400 B text pryker; c1400 C text prikyere] of Fraunce, princeps huius mundi. c1440 (?a1400) Morte Arthure 355 Send prekers to þe price toun, and plaunte there my segge. a1470 T. Malory Morte Darthur (Winch. Coll.) 232 I had levir have be toryn with four wylde horse than..ony page other prycker sholde wynne of me the pryce in this felde gotyn. 1519 W. Horman Vulgaria xxx. f. 258 The pryckers be gone to spye, what oure ennemyes go aboute. a1572 J. Knox Hist. Reformation Scotl. in Wks. (1846) I. 210 The Erle of Warwik and the Lord Gray..perceaving the host to be molested with the Scotishe preakaris. a1600 King & Barker 30 in W. C. Hazlitt Remains Early Pop. Poetry Eng. (1864) I. 5 A preker abowt..yn maney a contre. a1639 J. Spottiswood Hist. Church Scotl. (1655) vi. 401 Iohnston..after the Border fashion, sent forth some prickers to ride, and make provocation. 1785 F. Grose in Archaeologia (1787) 8 113 This sort of spur [having only one very long and very thick point] was worn by a body of light horsemen in the reign of Henry VIII. thence called prickers. 1808 W. Scott Marmion v. xvii. 267 Northumbrian prickers wild and rude. 1894 W. Tweedie Arabian Horse iii. i. 165 What the cleverest collie is to the Cheviot shepherd gives but a faint idea of what his mare is to the desert pricker. 1924 R. B. Cunninghame Graham Vanished Arcadia (new ed.) x. 268 The varied knowledge of a country which of old made Border horsemen and Northumbrian prickers formidable upon the Scottish marches. 1995 K. Durham Border Reivers 38/1 Wharton, watching from the vantage point of Arthuret Heights with his Cumbrian prickers, watched the main strength of the Scottish army advance towards the River Esk. b. A mounted attendant at a hunt; a huntsman. Also more fully yeoman pricker. Now historical. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > hunter > [noun] huntc1000 huntera1325 cacherec1340 pricasourc1387 waithmanc1425 chaser1470 huntsman1567 pricker1575 Nimrod1623 venator1656 fieldmana1683 sportsman1699 coureur de bois1700 sporting parson1757 chasseur1796 jäger1823 shikari1827 venerer1845 hunting-man1859 gamer1887 hunterman1891 veldman1895 the world > food and drink > hunting > hunter > [noun] > attendant at hunt pricker1575 yeoman pricker1586 shikari1827 ghillie1832 1575 G. Gascoigne Noble Arte Venerie xxxviii. 103 If the Hart be accompanyed with any other Deare, then the pricker on horsebacke must ryde full in the face of him, to trie if he can part them or not. 1586 T. Randolph in H. Ellis Orig. Lett. Eng. Hist. (1827) 2nd Ser. III. 123 To lend him..a cowple of her Majesties Yeomen prickers and a cowple of the Groomes of the Leese. 1616 J. Bullokar Eng. Expositor Pricker, a Huntsman on horse~backe. 1733 tr. B. Morando Rosalinda ii. 61 The Forests rang with the Shouts of the Prickers, and the Sound of their Horns. 1760 R. Heber Horse Matches ix. 23 50 l. was run for, free only for the Huntsmen, Yeomen Prickers, and Keepers of Windsor Forest. 1837 T. Carlyle French Revol. I. i. ii. 17 Who is it that the King..now guides? His own huntsmen and prickers. 1891 Daily News 12 June 3/1 At Ascot..the Royal procession..was headed by Lord Coventry, the Master of the Buckhounds, and the whips and yeomen prickers in their picturesque uniform of green and scarlet. 1931 J. Buchan Blanket of Dark vi. 128 The prickers' horns sounded to recall the hounds. 2002 Spectator (Nexis) 22 June 45 Until..the beginning of the 20th century, the racecourse was administered by the Master of the Buckhounds and his stalwart Yeoman Prickers, whose forest-green livery is still echoed today in the picturesque togs of the gatemen. 2. a. A person who pricks or goads someone or something. Also figurative: a person who incites, provokes, or stimulates another. ΘΚΠ the mind > will > motivation > [noun] > incitement or instigation > one who incites or instigates prickera1382 stirrerc1384 enticerc1386 exciter1387 risera1398 solicitor1412 erterc1440 prompter1440 stirrer?1533 motionerc1535 author1546 onsetter1549 stinger1552 setter-on1560 incentor1570 incensora1575 mover1578 whetter1579 out-hounder1596 hounder1597 egger on1598 inciter1598 instigator1598 urger1598 motive1600 fomenter1607 inflamer1609 fetcher in?1611 provokera1616 putter-ona1616 monitor1616 spurrer1632 outputter1639 poddera1640 commoter1646 impulsor1653 shaker and mover1874 agent provocateur1888 impeller1889 sooler1935 spark plug1941 a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) (1969) Jer. xlvi. 20 Þe prickere [L. stimulator] fro þe norþ shal come to þee. 1552 R. Huloet Abcedarium Anglico Latinum Prycker or stynger, stigator. 1565 T. Cooper Thesaurus Stimulator..a pricker or stirrer forwarde. 1836 W. Hamilton in Edinb. Rev. Oct. 108 For a few holders of the plough, there are many prickers of the oxen. 1923 J. C. Bailey Continuity of Lett. 73 He shows himself..a pricker of all bubbles of unreality even about himself. 1977 New Yorker 10 Oct. 192/3 As a pricker of such balloons, he was without parallel. 1994 Observer (Nexis) 4 Sept. 4 He never flattered and he never kow-towed, and he was a keeper and pricker of consciences for two generations. b. spec. A person who professed to discover if a woman were a witch by sticking pins into her (see prick v. 1d). Scottish. Now historical. ΘΚΠ the world > the supernatural > the occult > sorcery, witchcraft, or magic > sorcerer or magician > witch > [noun] > one who detects witches pricker1661 witch-pricker1841 1661 in R. Pitcairn Criminal Trials Scotl. III. 602 The Magistrat and Minister caused Johne Kinkaid, the comon pricker, to prik hir, and found tuo marks upon hir, which he called the Devill his markis. 1678 G. Mackenzie Laws & Customes Scotl. i. 91 The Devils mark..is given..by a nip in any part of the body, and it is blew... This mark is discovered amongst us by a Pricker..they alleadge that if the place bleed not, or if the person be not sensible, he or she is infallibly a Witch. 1709 W. Steuart Coll. & Observ. Church Scotl. iii. iv. 212 The Devils Mark is not per se relevant, unless it be Confess'd by them... The prickers say, If the place Bleed not, [etc.]. 1865 ‘G. Eliot’ in Fortn. Rev. May 48 It was the regular profession of men called ‘prickers’ to thrust long pins into the body of a suspected witch in order to detect the insensible spot which was the infallible sign of her guilt. 1927 J. Buchan Witch Wood xvi. 271 The pricker fand the Deil's mark on her back, and stappit a preen intil it up to the head and nae bluid came. 1997 Med. Post (Nexis) 24 June 9 Prickers were on commission and so became an ingenious lot... False pricking instruments..appeared with retractable blades, ensuring a bloodless procedure and guaranteeing charges of witchcraft would be laid. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > farming > animal husbandry > general equipment > [noun] > goad goadeOE prickleOE yardc1000 prickc1225 gad1289 gorea1325 brodc1375 brodyke1471 pricker?a1475 gad-wand1487 gadstaff1568 stimule1583 goad prick1609 ankus1768 goad stick1773 sjambok1790 driving stick1800 prod1828 sting1842 quirt1845 garrocha1846 gad-stick1866 romal1904 ?a1475 Promptorium Parvulorum (Winch.) (1908) 346 Pryk, or prykkar, stimulus. a1657 G. Daniel Trinarchodia: Henry IV cclxxxviii, in Poems (1878) IV. 73 The Sharpest prickers for his vse, To drive the Restive Lords. 4. a. Any sharply pointed instrument or tool used for pricking or piercing. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > piercing or boring tools > [noun] > for piercing or pricking broachc1305 puncheonc1425 prickera1500 prong1591 prog1615 prick punch1678 a1500 in T. Wright & R. P. Wülcker Anglo-Saxon & Old Eng. Vocab. (1884) I. 682/37 Hoc punctorium, a prykker. 1546 T. Langley tr. P. Vergile De Invent. iii. x. 77 The Squire the Lyne the Shaue the Pricker or Punche were diuysed by Theodor a Samian. 1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory iii. iii. 151/1 Needles of all sorts and sizes set in sticks, after the manner of Prickers: called Etching Tooles. 1748 J. Dinsdale tr. Art Fortific. i. vi. 20 The Needle, or Pricker, to be of several Uses, ought to be made of two Pieces, which are joined by a Screw. 1806 C. Hutton Course Math. (ed. 5) I. 80 With the point of a fine pin or pricker, prick through all the corners of the plan to be copied. 1875 T. Seaton Man. Fret Cutting 145 One of the best instruments to use as a pricker is a bit of a knitting needle put into a stout handle, and ground to a fine point. 1884 Nat. Museum Bull. No. 27. 778 Splicer or pricker... Used for splicing trawl-lines. 1961 K. Reisz Technique Film Editing (ed. 9) xi. 173 A long-handled ‘pricker’ is pushed in from out of picture and finishes unplugging the tap-hole. 1999 Needlecraft Mar. 79/1 (advt.) Hand-turned bobbins, prickers & pin lifters. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > device for discharging missiles > firearm > equipment for use with firearms > [noun] > priming-wire primer1497 priming-iron?1592 priming wire1598 pricker1611 picker1710 1611 J. Florio Queen Anna's New World of Words at Agúcchia Amongst gunners a pricker or [priming] iron. 1754 H. Sharpe Let. 10 Dec. in W. H. Browne Arch. Maryland (1888) VI. 141 I wish you could..order up thither some..wire for Screws & prickers Flints & match for the Carriage Guns. 1799 H. Grace Code Mil. Standing Regulations Bengal Establishm. I. xxiv. 301/2 If any sepoy wilfully or carelessly looses or spoils any of his arms or accoutrements, stoppages shall be made out of his pay..at the following rates: For a musket, 20 rupees..A worm, 2 annas, A pricker, 1 ditto. 1842 S. Lover Handy Andy iii Dick poking the touch-hole of the pistol with a pricker. c. An awl; a bradawl (cf. prickal n.). Also: a tool for making holes in sails. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > piercing or boring tools > [noun] > for piercing or pricking > awl awlc885 elsina1300 pricker1678 naul1724 1678 J. Moxon Mech. Exercises I. vi. Explan. Terms 111 Pricker, is vulgarly called an Awl. 1788 W. Marshall Provincialisms E. Yorks. in Rural Econ. Yorks. II. 346 Pricker, a brad-awl. 1794 D. Steel Elements & Pract. Rigging & Seamanship I. 88 Pricker, a small instrument, like a marline~spike..,to make the holes with. 1858 P. L. Simmonds Dict. Trade Products 357/1 Stabber, a marling-spike; a sailmaker's pricker. 1984 J. Seymour Forgotten Arts (1985) 115/1 He measured each of the four sides of the sail in turn, pulling the cloth tight as he did so by driving a pricker, a steel pin set in a handle, through each corner, spread-eagling the sail on the floor. 2000 Chicago Tribune (Nexis) 1 July (New Homes section) 1 The carpenter's tools include..levels, whimble bits to bore holes for pegs and mallets to drive them, saws, planes, prickers (awls) [etc.]. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > digging or lifting tools > [noun] > fork > other forks pack-fork1648 pricker1688 pull-to1902 1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory (1905) iii. xxii. 279/2 Sugar Boylers Instruments... A Lofe Pricker or a small Pricker. It much resembles the Shoomakers or Sadlers Aule..being a long slender Iron sharp pointed, set in a wooden round head or haft hooped at the bottom. 1790 Remarks Manuf. Maple Sugar (1791) 8 A few hours after the moulds are unstopped, the prickers should be run up the bottom of them three or four inches, to make way for the..molasses to pass off. 1820 W. Scoresby Acct. Arctic Regions II. 309 When a cask is nearly filled, the packing is completed by the use of a ‘pricker’..; one piece after another being thrust in by this instrument, until it can contain no more. 1836 Uncle Philip's Conversat. Whale Fishery 42 The pricker..is used in packing the blubber in casks. 1851 W. H. G. Kingston Peter the Whaler xxv. 254 Finally, when no more [blubber] can fall in, piece after piece is jambed in by a pricker. e. In blasting: a metal rod placed in the drill-hole during the packing of the charge, leaving when withdrawn a touch hole for firing. Cf. stemmer n.1 ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > equipment for working with other materials > [noun] > with explosives > for making hole through charge pricker1747 needle1838 stemmer1909 1747 W. Hooson Miners Dict. sig. P4v It is best..to put a little Clay on the top of the hole, upon the Raming fast about the Pricker. 1781 C. Clarke True Theory & Pract. Husbandry (new ed.) ii. 297 It is..necessary to let the point of the pricker or spindle deep into the powder. 1824 J. Mander Derbyshire Miners' Gloss. 54 The Pricker is then withdrawn, and a straw filled with gun-powder, is placed in the hole in its stead, which communicates with the powder in the Chamber. 1894 R. O. Heslop Northumberland Words 551 Pricker, a thin pointed rod made of yellow metal, and used for placing and adjusting a blasting cartridge, which it perforates and remains embedded in till the stemming has been tamped round it. When withdrawn, it leaves a touch hole through which the cartridge is fired. 1975 W. T. Shaw Mining Lake Counties (ed. 3) 23 The pricker was then pushed home through this stemming and into the powder. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > keyboard instrument > organ > [noun] > parts conveying action roller1632 roller board1632 sticker1756 tracker1843 pricker1852 trace1852 button1855 trundle1876 fan1880 square1880 trace-rod1880 1852 tr. J. J. Seidel Organ & its Constr. 64 These prickers are small pieces of wood a few inches long and one third of an inch thick. g. A tool, esp. a toothed wheel, used for marking equidistant holes, as for stitching leather. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > equipment for working with skins or leather > [noun] > other leather-working equipment scoring iron1688 paste-horn1834 dresser1853 pricker1858 stitch-wheel1875 try-stick1888 1858 P. L. Simmonds Dict. Trade Products 301/2 Pricker,..a toothed instrument used by workmen for stabbing or marking leather, paper, &c. a1877 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. II. 1787/2 Pricker, (Saddlery),...b. A tool used to mark stitch-holes so as to render them uniform in distance. 1993 Woodworker June 84/1 Various templates were used for ‘marking out’, and a series of wooden handled ‘prickers’ were used for indenting the spacing and positioning of the holes through which the gut was threaded. h. A surgical instrument for piercing or puncturing a part of the body. rare. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > medical appliances or equipment > surgical instruments > [noun] > piercing or boring instruments rinspindlec1392 piercer?a1425 terebellum1678 perforator1739 perforative1740 Terebella1860 pricker1869 burr1899 1869 G. Lawson Dis. Eye 128 If an iridectomy has to be performed, instead of tearing through the lens capsule with the ordinary pricker, a pair of fine iris forceps is introduced through the corneal wound. 1951 Notes & Queries Anthropol. (ed. 6) i. 20 The pricker, either a triangular surgical needle or a ‘blood-gun’, is best kept in a tube of spirit and rubbed with spirit on cotton-wool before and after use. i. Originally Australian. A device studded with sharp points, attached to the side of a horse's snaffle. Frequently in to get (also have) the pricker (Australian and New Zealand colloquial): to be or become angry, irritated, or sulky. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > anger > [verb (intransitive)] wrethec900 anbelgheOE wratha1225 wrakea1300 grievec1350 angera1400 sweata1400 smoke1548 to put or set up the back1728 to have (also get) one's monkey up1833 to get (also have) the pricker1871 to have, get a cob on1937 grrra1963 the mind > emotion > anger > [verb (intransitive)] > become angry wrethec900 wrothc975 abelghec1300 to move one's blood (also mood)c1330 to peck moodc1330 gremec1460 to take firea1513 fumec1522 sourdc1540 spitec1560 to set up the heckle1601 fire1604 exasperate1659 to fire up1779 to flash up1822 to get one's dander up1831 to fly (occasionally jump, etc.) off (at) the handle1832 to have (also get) one's monkey up1833 to cut up rough, rusty, savage1837 rile1837 to go off the handle1839 to flare up1840 to set one's back up1845 to run hot1855 to wax up1859 to get one's rag out1862 blow1871 to get (also have) the pricker1871 to turn up rough1872 to get the needle1874 to blaze up1878 to get wet1898 spunk1898 to see red1901 to go crook1911 to get ignorant1913 to hit the ceiling1914 to hit the roof1921 to blow one's top1928 to lose one's rag1928 to lose one's haira1930 to go up in smoke1933 hackle1935 to have, get a cob on1937 to pop (also blow) one's cork1938 to go hostile1941 to go sparec1942 to do one's bun1944 to lose one's wool1944 to blow one's stack1947 to go (also do) one's (also a) dingerc1950 rear1953 to get on ignorant1956 to go through the roof1958 to keep (also blow, lose) one's cool1964 to lose ita1969 to blow a gasket1975 to throw a wobbler1985 1871 Austral. Town & Country Jrnl. (Sydney) 13 May 601/3 The followers of The Pearl accounted satisfactorily for his Saturday performance, by his having been ridden in ‘prickers’, which cut him so much about the mouth as to completely cow him. 1898 Western Champion (Barcaldine) 15 Feb. 12/1 The charge arose out of the use of a ‘pricker’, which was affixed to Passion Fruit's bridle to prevent his habit of ‘hanging out’. 1945 S. J. Baker Austral. Lang. vi. 121 A man in a temper is said..to have the dingbats, the pricker or the stirks. 1955 D. Niland Shiralee 102 You've got the pricker properly, eh? You'll knock him into next week, will ya? 1984 P. Wilson S. Pacific St. 69 Now don't get the pricker, Len. 2004 Cornishman (Nexis) 22 July 37 On a cab horse..he found what was known as a ‘pricker’ fastened to the bit. This was a piece of leather studded with nails that pierced the animal's cheek. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > tool > types of tools generally > [noun] > in form of bar, pole, rod, etc. stingc725 stakec893 sowelc900 tree971 rungOE shaftc1000 staffc1000 stockc1000 poleOE spritOE luga1250 lever1297 stanga1300 perchc1300 raftc1330 sheltbeam1336 stower1371 palea1382 spar1388 spire1392 perk1396 ragged staff1397 peela1400 slot1399 plantc1400 heck-stower1401 sparkin1408 cammockc1425 sallow stakec1440 spoke1467 perk treec1480 yard1480 bode1483 spit1485 bolm1513 gada1535 ruttock1542 stob1550 blade1558 wattle1570 bamboo1598 loggat1600 barling1611 sparret1632 picket1687 tringle1706 sprund1736 lug-pole1773 polting lug1789 baton1801 stuckin1809 rack-pin1821 picket-pin1844 I-iron1874 pricker1875 stag1881 podger1888 window pole1888 verge1897 sallow pole1898 lat1899 swizzle-stick1962 1875 E. H. Knight Amer. Mech. Dict. III. 1787/2 Pricker,..4. A long slender iron rod used for probing or sounding the depth of a bog or quicksand. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > mountaineering or climbing > [noun] > artificial aid > types of runner1688 runner ring1791 ice axec1800 alpenstock1829 rope1838 climbing-iron1857 piolet1868 snap-link1875 prickera1890 middleman('s) knot (also loop, noose, etc.)1892 chock1894 glacier-rope1897 piton1898 run-out1901 belaying-pin1903 snap-ring1903 ironmongery1904 line1907 Tricouni1914 ice claw1920 peg1920 sling1920 ice piton1926 ice hammer1932 karabiner1932 rock piton1934 thread belay1935 mugger1941 running belay1941 piton hammer1943 sky-hook1951 etrier1955 pied d'éléphant1956 rope sling1957 piton runner1959 bong1960 krab1963 rurp1963 ice screw1965 nut1965 traverse line1965 jumar1966 knife-blade1968 tie-off1968 rock peg1971 whammer1971 Whillans whammer1971 Whillans harness1974 a1890 Ann. Philadelphia & Pennsylvania 2 20 He had iron prickers to the hands and feet to aid in climbing lofty trees. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > light > artificial light > an artificial light > candle > support or holder for a candle > [noun] > candlestick > with spike for candle pricker1552 pricket candlestick1552 prick candlestick1565 1552 in Surrey Archæol. Coll. (1869) 4 89 Item v candilstyckes ij pryckers and ij standardes and one with ij sockes and a pryckett in the myddes. 6. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > fish > subclass Elasmobranchii > order Pleurotremata > [noun] > member of family Cetorhinidae (basking shark) fish-mariner1605 sail-fish1605 pricker1701 sunfish1734 basking-shark1769 bone shark1802 hoe-mother1805 1701 J. Brand Brief Descr. Orkney, Zetland i. 4 When before Peterhead we saw the fins of a great Fish, about an yard above the Water, which they call a Pricker. b. English regional (East Anglian). The spur dog or spiny dogfish, Squalus acanthias, which has venomous spines in front of the dorsal fins. rare. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > fish > subclass Elasmobranchii > order Pleurotremata > [noun] > member of family Squalidae centrine1661 shoveller1664 sagree1752 hoe1805 spine shark1836 skittle-dog1862 pricker1890 dog1924 1890 P. H. Emerson Wild Life xxiii. 99 All we got out of a mass of weed and mud..[were] two prickers, and an old mussel. 7. colloquial and regional (now chiefly U.S.). A thorn, spine, or prickle of a plant. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > part of plant > thorn or prickle > [noun] thornc950 pileOE prickOE pikec1300 spine1430 pricklec1484 brodc1550 sting1567 point1604 spears1607 stob1637 pin1650 pricket1663 spinet1672 aculeus1702 pricker1743 spicula1753 acicula1784 acicule1800 acicle1852 thornlet1882 sticker1889 1743 J. T. Coll. Welch Trav. 19 The Posteriors of the Elm-Tree were most barbarously chastis'd by the Prickers of a Bramble. 1845 ‘R. Carlton’ New Purchase II. xl. 61 The shaking..of a single branch..sent forth all manners..of prickers and scratchers, and thorns. 1887 T. Darlington Folk-speech S. Cheshire I say, wench, cost tha tay me a pricker aït o' my fom? 1907 Dial. Notes 3 196 Boys get prickers in their feet when they go barefoot. 1939 C. Morley Kitty Foyle x. 95 She'd [sc. the catbird] come flying through the whole mess of prickers in one clean swoop. 1969 C. Burke God is Beautiful, Man (1970) 122 That's a very pretty rose... It's got prickers on it. 2002 Arizona Republic (Nexis) 20 Nov. 4 The sharp prickers of local cacti make a pointed statement. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2007; most recently modified version published online June 2022). < |
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