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单词 providence
释义

providencen.

Brit. /ˈprɒvᵻd(ə)ns/, U.S. /ˈprɑvəˌdɛns/, /ˈprɑvəd(ə)ns/
Forms: Middle English prouydence, Middle English prouydens, Middle English prouydense, Middle English providens, Middle English–1500s prouidens, Middle English–1500s provydence, Middle English–1600s prouidence, Middle English– providence, 1600s prouidance, 1700s providance; Scottish pre-1700 prouidance, pre-1700 prouidence, pre-1700 prouidens, pre-1700 prouydence, pre-1700 proviedence, pre-1700 provindence (transmission error), pre-1700 prowidens, pre-1700 1700s– providence.
Origin: Of multiple origins. Partly a borrowing from French. Partly a borrowing from Latin. Etymons: French providence; Latin prōvidentia.
Etymology: < Anglo-Norman and Middle French providence (French providence ) foreknowledge (c1165 in Old French, with reference to pagan gods directing the course of events), anticipation of and preparation for the future, prudent management (end of the 12th cent.), God's supreme wisdom by which he directs all things (early 13th cent.), thing which is provided, supply (14th cent. in the passage translated in quot. c1450 at sense 3), (usually with capital initial) God as exercising prescient and beneficent power and direction (second half of the 15th cent. or earlier; rare before the late 17th cent.) and its etymon classical Latin prōvidentia power of seeing in advance, foresight, forethought, provision, power who or which exercises prescient and beneficent power and direction, in post-classical Latin also foreknowing and beneficent care and government of God (early 3rd cent.), purveyance, supply (from 13th cent. in British sources) < prōvidēnt- , prōvidēns , present participle of prōvidēre provide v. + -ia -ia suffix1; compare -ence suffix. Compare Old Occitan providenza (13th cent.; also providencia ), Catalan providència (14th cent.), Spanish providencia (first half of the 13th cent.), Portuguese providência (14th cent. as prouidencia ), Italian provvidenza (a1250). Compare earlier purveyance n., provision n., and (with senses 3 and 4) later providance n.With special providence at sense 5a compare post-classical Latin providentia specialis (a1308 in Duns Scotus, used in opposition to providentia generalis ). With sense 6c compare French providence (1718 in this sense).
1.
a. Foresight; anticipation of and preparation for the future; prudent management, government, or guidance. Also: an instance of this. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > undertaking > preparation > [noun]
yarkingc1000
forgraithinga1300
apparellingc1315
ordinancec1330
purveyancec1330
graithinga1340
purveying1340
providencea1382
making readyc1384
preparationa1393
paring1393
provisiona1398
parelc1425
apparelc1430
parelling?a1440
ablingc1450
munition1480
preparing1497
arraya1500
readyinga1500
repurveancea1500
ordaining1509
apparation1533
preparementa1538
apprest1539
preparaturea1540
preparance1543
order1545
apparance1546
prepare1548
fore-preparationa1586
ettlingc1600
apparelment1607
parationa1617
comparation1623
address1633
apparatus1638
prep1920
the mind > mental capacity > expectation > foresight, foreknowledge > provident foresight, prudence > [noun] > instance of
providencea1382
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) Wisd. vi. 17 In hys weies it shal shewen itself to þem, & gladsumly in alle prouydence [a1425 L.V. puruyaunce; L. providentia] or bifore ordeynyng [1611 in every thought, R.V. purpose], it shal aȝen comen to þem.
a1450 (?c1421) J. Lydgate Siege Thebes (Arun.) (1911) 2982 (MED) Wher prudence can fynde no socour And prouidence haueth no favour, Farwel wisdam.
a1475 Sidrak & Bokkus (Lansd.) (Ph.D. diss., Univ. of Washington) (1965) 10703 (MED) Good wisdom and prouidence Most be chef parcel of thi deffence.
1485 Malory's Morte Darthur (Caxton) i. vi. sig. av The Archebisshop..by Merlyns prouydence lete purueye thenne of the best knyghtes that they myghte gete.
1548 Hall's Vnion: Edward IV f. clxxxixv In compassyng and bryngyng greate thynges to passe, there lacked no industrie, nor prouidence.
1590 W. Segar Bk. Honor & Armes A 2v No prouidence can preuent the questions and quarrels that daylie happen among Gentlemen and others professing Armes.
1622 F. Bacon Hist. Great Brit. in Wks. (1879) I. 796/1 In this matter the providence of king Henry the seventh was in all men's mouths.
1702 Eng. Theophrastus 379 This is not to exclude that providence of tracing premisses into consequences and causes into their effects.
1768 J. Wesley Let. 26 Nov. (1931) V. 113 There seems to have been a particular providence in Hannah Harrison's coming to Beverley, especially at that very time when a peace-maker was so much wanting.
1867 F. D. Maurice Patriarchs & Law-givers (1877) vi. 134 The creature who bears His image is intended to exercise providence.
1881 R. L. Stevenson Virginibus Puerisque 174 Into the views of the least careful there will enter some degree of providence.
2003 National Rev. (Nexis) 10 Mar. One important way to exercise this providence is to take care not to foul our habitat.
b. spec. Regard for future needs in the management of resources; thrift, frugality.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > retaining > sparingness or frugality > [noun] > thrift or economical management > for the future
providence1608
1608 T. Heywood Rape of Lucrece sig. F v We must be carefull and with prouidence Guide his domestick busines.
1620 Horæ Subseciuæ 105 They that spend more then they haue, want gouernment: they that spend all, Prouidence.
1743 J. Downes Serm. preached in Sheffield, 26th Aug. 1742 27 I should flatter you to say there are not some amongst you who, though they have the Diligence of the Bee, yet want the Providence of the Ant.
1848 J. S. Mill Princ. Polit. Econ. I. i. xiii. §1. 226 [It] renders the increase of production no longer exclusively dependent on the thrift or providence of the inhabitants themselves.
1857 J. Ruskin Polit. Econ. Art i. 8 When there should have been providence, there has been waste.
1885 Ld. Pembroke in Pall Mall Gaz. 23 May 2/1 The providence which is all that is necessary in a rich country like ours to bring material prosperity to the labouring class.
1941 P. Hamilton Hangover Square v. iv. 160 Unlike herself.., he had a curious but ineraseable streak of providence, and possessed a certain sum of money in his bank.
2000 Guardian (Nexis) 25 Mar. 9 Isas were introduced to make savers out of everyone and encourage prudence and providence.
2. In full providence of God (also nature, etc.) , divine providence. The foreknowing and protective care of God (or nature, etc.); divine direction, control, or guidance.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > expectation > foresight, foreknowledge > provident foresight, prudence > [noun]
purveyancec1300
forelook1357
providencea1382
purveyinga1382
provisiona1398
advice?a1439
prospiciencea1500
fore-wit?1504
forecasta1542
providency1602
forethoughtfulness1647
prospection1659
forethought1719
the world > the supernatural > deity > Christian God > activities of God > [noun] > divine providence
the ways of GodeOE
providencea1382
purveyinga1382
purveyancec1385
(God's, divine) foresighta1400
prudencec1425
proviancec1460
provisionc1460
pronoia1874
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) Wisd. xiv. 3 Þou..fader, gouernyst bi prouydence [L. providentia, Gk. πρόνοια; a1425 L.V. puruyaunce].
c1450 (?c1400) Three Kings Cologne (Cambr. Ee.4.32) (1886) 35 God, whos prouidence in his ordinance faileþ noȝt.
1483 W. Caxton tr. J. de Voragine Golden Legende 121/2 He was in hys chyldhode sette to studye whereby dyuyne prouydence he floured in double science.
a1500 (c1400) St. Erkenwald (1977) 161 Þe prouidens of þe prince þat paradis weldes.
1553 tr. Erasmus Epist. Perswade Young Ientleman Mariage in T. Wilson Arte of Rhetorique i. f. 31 Nature by her prouidence, myndeth vnto vs a certain immortalitie.
1587 Sir P. Sidney & A. Golding tr. P. de Mornay Trewnesse Christian Relig. ix. 151 What else is Prouidence, than the will of God vttered foorth with Reason, and orderly disposed by vnderstanding?
1632 W. Lithgow Totall Disc. Trav. x. 471 Thy Bookes..are miraculously Translated by her [sc. the Virgin Mary's] speciall prouidence.
1663 J. Spencer Disc. Prodigies (1665) 298 Those..signs with which the Providence of Nature..was noted to preface her works of greater note.
1676 W. Hubbard Happiness of People 36 Creation and providence are the issues of the same Being and Power.
1727 D. Defoe Ess. Hist. Apparitions iv. 37 Providence..which is..the administration of Heaven's Government in the World.
1776 E. Gibbon Decline & Fall I. Notes p. lxxxv/1 The providence of the gods..for the most part destroyed the books of the Pyrrhonians and Epicureans.
1808 Ld. Erskine in Parl. Deb. 1st Ser. 10 929 Surrounded by that impregnable moat with which the Divine Providence has fortified this island.
1854 H. H. Milman Hist. Lat. Christianity I. iii. vii. 469 That the ordinary providence of God gave place to a perpetual interposition of miraculous power.
1883 Pall Mall Gaz. 19 Nov. 12/2 Calmly, lovingly, and indulgingly trusting to God's providence.
1930 Amer. Mercury Jan. 6/1 The next step was an accident, one of a series that has displayed God's providence to Mormonry.
1963 M. L. King Strength to Love viii. 60 The Israelites, through the providence of God, crossed the Red Sea.
2000 D. Allen in A. Hastings et al. Oxf. Compan. Christian Thought 538/2 Biblical history is directed by divine providence toward the realization of the Kingdom of God.
3. That which is provided; a supply, a provision. Cf. providing n. 2, providance n. 1. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > supply > [noun] > that which is supplied > a supply
purveyance1340
substance?c1425
providencec1450
provisionc1451
furnish1500
supply1567
reply?1592
purvey?1615
product1647
sorting1785
c1450 tr. G. Deguileville Pilgrimage Lyfe Manhode (Cambr.) (1869) 74 (MED) Memorie..is thing riht necessarie to alle thilke that wolen make here ordinaunce and here prouidence [Fr. providence] of any wit or science.
a1470 T. Malory Morte Darthur (Winch. Coll.) 947 Whan he kneled downe to drynke of the welle, there he saw grete provydence of the Sankgreall.
c1484 (a1475) J. de Caritate tr. Secreta Secret. (Takamiya) (1977) 141 (MED) To por folk..þat haue chyldyr lyckely to lernne, þi prouydens schuld help to þer fyndyng.
1706 Phillips's New World of Words (new ed.) Providentia, Providence... In some old Records, Provision of Meat or Drink.]
4. The action of providing something; provision, preparation, arrangement. Chiefly in to make providence. Cf. providance n. 2. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > supply > [noun] > action of providing or supplying > providing beforehand
purveyancec1300
purveying1340
provisiona1398
providence?a1475
repurveancea1500
?a1475 (?a1425) tr. R. Higden Polychron. (Harl. 2261) (1879) VII. 115 God schalle make providence [for a king] after hym [ Trevisa God schal purveie, L. providebit Deus].
1488 (c1478) Hary Actis & Deidis Schir William Wallace (Adv.) (1968–9) ix. 77 Gud Wallace than has maid his prouidance.
a1533 Ld. Berners tr. A. de Guevara Golden Bk. M. Aurelius (1546) sig. R.iijv Sodeyn death came to the fathers, and no prouidence made for the doughters.
1547 tr. A. de Marcourt Bk. Marchauntes (new ed.) e v b That they maye make suche prouidens and remedy that the vengeaunce of God do not fall on the poore peopel.
2004 Herald (Torquay) Express (Nexis) 11 June 16 An efficient business makes providence for future expected upkeep and does not squander current income.
5.
a. An act or instance of divine intervention; an event or circumstance which indicates divine dispensation. special providence, a particular act of direct divine intervention.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > deity > [noun] > activities of god(s) > intervention > act of
special providencec1540
the world > the supernatural > deity > Christian God > activities of God > [noun] > divine providence > act of
providencec1540
providential1659
dispensation1665
c1540 J. Bellenden tr. H. Boece Hyst. & Cron. Scotl. xii. xvi. f. clxxxv/1 Ye haly croce..was not cumin but sum heuinly prouydence.
a1632 T. Taylor Christs Victorie over Dragon (1633) 807 Wee meane those speciall providences, by which the former floods were dryed up.
1651 Mrq. Ormonde in E. Nicholas Papers (1886) I. 279 The King being by an eminent and high providence escaped the bloody hands of the Rebells is arived at Paris.
1719 D. Defoe Life Robinson Crusoe 175 How can he sweeten the bitterest Providences.
1784 E. Allen Reason x. §1. 347 Admitting the three first propositions to be true, to wit, that there are three Gods..their essences and providences would interfere.
1801 W. Huntington God Guardian of Poor Ded. p. iii Those providences which appear rather out of the common line are hard nuts in the mouth of a weak believer.
1857 Harper's Mag. Dec. 84/1 [It] made it seem like a special providence that the great water-doctor should have been born in a country where douches and bandages were so convenient.
1871 J. Tyndall Fragm. Sci. iii. 43 The miracle of the Thundering Legion was a special providence.
1911 J. Munro F. J. Furnivall: Rec. p. xvii A special providence seems to have guarded over Furnivall on his remigatory excursions.
1976 P. Donovan Relig. Lang. iv. 40 Particular phenomena like miracles, providences, answered prayers, prophetic utterances and conversions.
1999 A. Walsham Providence in Early Mod. Eng. v. 229Special providences’ and miracles were not spontaneous or impromptu interventions; they were events for which God had foreseen the need.
b. Chiefly U.S. regional (eastern). A fatality or disastrous accident, regarded as an act of God. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > adversity > calamity or misfortune > [noun] > misfortune or ill-luck > instance of misfortune or ill-luck > regarded as act of God
judgementa1400
providence1645
cross-providence1720
1645 New Haven Colonial Rec. 162 The judgem[en]t of the Court was thatt itt was an afflicting providence of God w[hi]ch the said Barnes was to beare himselfe.
1684 I. Mather Ess. for Recording Illustrious Providences xi. 339 There hapned a most awful providence at Farmington in Connecticot Colony.
1721 Essex Inst. Coll. 60 289 Mr. Nathl. Higginson... Dyed on March 10... An awfull Providence this is to..Madm. Higginson & the family of the Higginson.
1740 J. Wesley Wks. (1872) I. 290 I was informed of an awful providence.
1809 E. A. Kendall Trav. Northern Parts U.S. III. lxxxv. 292 The phrase a providence..in New England..appears to be more frequently used for that which is disastrous but which is at the same time to be regarded and submitted to as the act of God.
1814 Connecticut Courant 1 Mar. 3/2 Distressing Providence.—On Wednesday last as John N. Olcott..was scating on Connecticut river..he..broke in and drowned.
1837 S. S. Arnold in Proc. Vermont Hist. Soc. (1940) 8 129 In the morning a dreadful providence occurred. The Charlestown stage with 5 passengers and the driver fell with Cold river bridge, while crossing, into the stream.
1865 Herald & Torch Light (Hagerstown, Maryland) 7 June We tender to his surviving family our..profound sympathies in the afflicting Providence which has deprived our people of one of the best of men.
1954 Landmark (Statesville, N. Carolina) 16 Mar. 2/3 Many of the strange and terrible providences of God..may be punishment.
6.
a. Usually in form Providence. God or nature as exercising prescient and beneficent power and direction.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > deity > Christian God > [noun] > as provident
householder?1387
providence1602
heaven1607
1602 W. Warner Albions Eng. (rev. ed.) xiii. lxxviii. 321 Whom if yee Nature call (saith One) ye call him not amis... Or Prouidence, whose acting Power doth all begin and end.
1691 J. Norris Pract. Disc. Divine Subj. 219 No Man is too little and despicable for the notice of Providence, however he may be overlook'd by his Fellow-Creatures.
1704 D. Defoe Let. ?May in Hist. MSS Comm.: 15th Rep.: App. Pt. IV: MSS Duke of Portland (1897) IV. 88 in Parl. Papers (C. 8497) XLIX. 1 What Providence has reserved for me he only knows.
1782 W. Cowper Conversation in Poems 234 The mind dispatched upon her busy toil Should range where Providence has blest the soil.
1813 T. Jefferson Let. 24 May in Writings (1984) 1272 It has been the will of Providence to raise up..a tyrant.
1842 A. Alison Hist. Europe from French Revol. X. lxxviii. 1013 Moreau expressed a fact of general application, explained according to the irreligious ideas of the French Revolution, when he said, that ‘Providence was always on the side of dense battalions’.
1894 S. Baring-Gould Queen of Love II. 59 I am not one to fly in the face of Providence.
1934 G. B. Shaw Let. in Times 2 Jan. 11/5 An announcer who pronounced decadent and sonorous as dekkadent and sonnerus would provoke Providence to strike him dumb.
1959 M. Spark Memento Mori ix. 120 As if tempting Providence to send them another, avenging, Tempest, they transferred Sister Burstead..to another ward.
1994 T. Clancy Debt of Honor xlvi. 755 Sato thanked Providence for the timing of the event.
b. The lot assigned to an individual by Providence. Obsolete.Apparently an isolated use.
ΚΠ
a1661 T. Fuller Worthies (1662) Cambr. 152 Stephen de Fulborn..Going over into Ireland to seek his Providence (commonly nicknamed his fortune)..became..Bishop of Waterford.
c. colloquial. In extended use: a person who acts as, or appears to have the power of, Providence. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1814 W. Wordsworth Excursion iii. 121 My Guardian;—shall I say That earthly Providence . View more context for this quotation
1856 R. W. Emerson Eng. Traits xi. 195 ‘They might be little Providences on earth,’ said my friend, ‘and they are, for the most part, jockeys and fops.’
1886 P. Robinson Valley Teetotum Trees 28 Man is the Providence of the goose and..it is well that we should..generously condescend to sympathy with it.
1895 Daily News 30 May 6/5 The Providence of the officers who were sent to stay at St. Petersburg was Mlle. Georges.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2007; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

providencev.

Brit. /ˈprɒvᵻd(ə)ns/, U.S. /ˈprɑvəˌdɛns/, /ˈprɑvəd(ə)ns/
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: providence n.
Etymology: < providence n. With sense 1 compare earlier provide v.
rare.
1. transitive. Of a god: to ordain or provide for.
ΚΠ
1656 R. Josselin Diary 7 Sept. (1976) 380 Whether Mordechai might not bee too stiffe in his carriage to Haman though god providenced it unto good.
1912 Catholic Educ. Assoc. Bull. Nov. 498 Were they no more particularly providenced than are secular avocations, we might for the most part let them shape themselves.
1999 Rockford (Illinois) Reg. Star (Nexis) 16 Jan. 1 a I believe this moment was providenced to come and it has.
2. intransitive with it as anticipatory subject. To occur as though by divine providence. Also transitive: to guide or control as though acting the part of Providence.
ΚΠ
1866 Harper's Mag. Dec. 82/2 It chanced—it happened—it providenced, if you say so—that a company of traders..turned considerably out of their road to water just at that hole.
1901 Pall Mall Gaz. 28 May 4/1 She grew up in an obscure country parsonage..providenced by a high-minded..father.
1990 Amer. Lit. 62 309 A sign that one's life is already ‘looked out for’ (as it were, providenced).
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2007; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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