单词 | ravel |
释义 | raveln.1ΚΠ 1467 Registrum de Dunfermelyn 359 And keip thar boundis hafand nettis in the ald stell alslang as the Inglismen oys fornent thaim ay quhill the kingis water balȝe mak revlis in the watir. 2. Scottish. ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > a building > parts of building > stairs > [noun] > handrail ravel1548 ravelin1626 rail1663 handrail1675 handrailing?1762 baluster-rail1906 1548 in J. B. Paul Accts. Treasurer Scotl. (1911) IX. 259 Ane spar..to be ane ravill to the turnpik. 1583 Edinb. Dean of Guild Accts. 184 Fyr sparris to be rawellis for the skaffaldis. 1632 W. Lithgow Totall Disc. Trav. vi. 264 A foure squared stone; inclosed about with an yron Reuele, on which..the dead body of our Sauiour lay, and was imbalmed. 1702 R. Wodrow Analecta 1842 I. 33 He was going up the Tolbooth stair, which then wanted a ravell. 1792 New Year's Morning 12 A cellar, upo' the high street, But ony ravel, bare. 1821 J. Galt Ayrshire Legatees v. 124 We then ran..up an old timber-stair with a rope ravel. 1840 G. Webster Ingliston xxxv. 333 He hauled aff his big coat, and flung't ower the ravel o' the stair that gangs doun to the kitchen. 1841 Laird of Logan 55 An inside stair, that had what is called a wooden ravel. b. The parapet of a bridge. Now rare. ΚΠ 1695 in D. D. Black Hist. Brechin (1839) v. 92 [The] east ravell [of the bridge is ordered to be repaired]. 1722 in J. Grant et al. Rec. County of Banff (1922) 368 The said bridge..must be twenty foot of an arch in widness betwixt the land stools, nine foot on the top betwixt the revels. 1920 A. Robb Memories of Mormondside in Sc. National Dict. (1968) VII. 362/1 I gaed the length o' the brig and sat doon on the ravel to think fat I wad dae. 3. Chiefly Scottish and Irish English (northern). The horizontal beam in a byre, to which the tops of the vertical stakes for the cows' tethers are fastened. Frequently attributive, esp. as ravel-tree (cf. rail tree n. at rail n.2 Compounds 2). ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > farming > animal husbandry > keeping of cattle > [noun] > housing or sheltering of cattle > cattle house > part of settle-gangc1000 ravel1707 settle1799 1707 in Sc. National Dict. (1968) VII. 362/1 Byre with two couples, all sufficient, with stocks revells and doors. 1751 Session Papers in Sc. National Dict. (1968) VII. 362/1 To Nolt Stakes and Ravel-trees, Hecks, and Mangers..6s. 0d. 1880 W. H. Patterson Gloss. Words Antrim & Down 82 Rannel-tree, Raivel-tree, the cross-beam in a byre to which the cows' stakes are fastened. 1894 R. O. Heslop Northumberland Words 568 Ravel-tree, ravel-stick, the cross beam in a byre, to which the cow stakes are fastened. 1903 S. MacManus Lad of O'Friels x. 74 Bein' short of a revel-tree in his byre, he cut wan off a sciog bush and fitted it in. 1929 M. Mulcaghey Ballymulcaghey 15 ‘I'll hang him,’ sez he, ‘on the reviltree in the byre.’ 1996 C. I. Macafee Conc. Ulster Dict. 272/1 Ravel, revel, raivel,..also ravel-tree, revel-tree, raivel-tree, the cross-beam in a byre to which the vertical stakes are fastened. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2008; most recently modified version published online March 2022). raveln.2α. 1600s 1800s– ravel; English regional 1800s raul (Shropshire), 1800s revel (southern), 1800s– raivel (Northumberland), 1900s– reavel (northern), 1900s– reeavel (Northumberland), 1900s– rivel, 1900s– rivvel; Scottish 1800s raevl (Shetland), 1800s– raivel, 1800s– ravel, 1900s– raevel (Shetland), 1900s– ravl (Shetland), 1900s– reevel (Aberdeenshire), 1900s– revel, 1900s– revil (southern); Irish English (northern) 1900s– raivel, 1900s– ravel. β. Scottish (southern) 1800s rewl, 1800s reyle, 1900s– riel (Dumfriesshire), 1900s– rile (Dumfriesshire). γ. English regional 1900s– raffle (Northumberland); Scottish (Orkney and Shetland) 1900s– raeffle, 1900s– raffle, 1900s– raifle, 1900s– reffle. δ. Scottish 1900s– raivellt, 1900s– ravelt. 1. A tangle, a knot; a tangled mass, a cluster. Also in extended use: a confused or muddled state or situation. Chiefly Scottish and literary in later use. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > disorder > confusion or disorder > entanglement or entangled state > [noun] > that which is entangled > a tangle node1572 knarl1598 snarl1609 rivel1625 ravel1634 snick-snarl1649 mare1688 harla1697 tangle1757 round turn1769 fankle1824 twist1858 twitter1876 taut1887 1634 T. Jackson Knowledg of Christ Jesus vii. xxvi. §1 The thread which we are to unwind as far as possibly we can without knot or ravel. 1853 W. Jerdan Autobiogr. IV. 150 The act by which numerous political ravels seemed to be so happily disentangled. 1858 G. Roy Generalship 34 This yarn she had left in the cats' way, who left it in one mass of unreddable raivels. 1891 J. M. Barrie Little Minister I. iii. 47 Mr. Urquhart was in sic a ravel after it. 1913 D. H. Lawrence Sons & Lovers xiii. 380 There was a lovely yellow ravel of sunflowers in the garden. 1934 J. M. Caie Kindly North 50 I'm thinkin' that ye'd best come aff yer deece An' try tae redd the raivel up an' quaiten their din. 1975 M. Bradbury Hist. Man (1979) xii. 208 A mysterious ravel of knitting, with needles sticking through it. 1996 G. Goodland Littoral 31 With cold fingers I undo the ravels of her hair. 2. A broken or frayed thread; a loose end; (also) the fact of becoming unravelled. Also figurative. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > textile fabric or an article of textile fabric > textile fabric > textile fabric manufactured in specific way > [noun] > woven > thread(s) > frayed or unravelled ravelling1577 ravel1825 1825 J. Jamieson Etymol. Dict. Sc. Lang. Suppl. 272/2 Ravels,..ravelled thread. 1832 T. Carlyle Note Bk. in J. A. Froude T. Carlyle: First Forty Years (1882) II. xiii. 307 Great is self-denial... Life goes all to ravels and tatters where that enters not. 1838 A. M. Hall Groves of Blarney i. iii. 16 in B. Webster Acting National Drama IV. Uli. Why did you not tell me this before? Mab. The nearer the stocking's end the worse the ravel; comprenez vous, as the Frinch says. 1847 J. O. Halliwell Dict. Archaic & Provinc. Words II Revels, the broken threads cast away by women at their work. 1894 R. O. Heslop Northumberland Words 568 Stop till aa tyek that raivel off yor cwot. 1957 Oxnard (Calif.) Press-Courier 12 Oct. 10/3 Untwist the strands and spread them out over the cap. By clipping and arranging the rope ravels you can make all sorts of hair styles. 1988 M. Atwood Cat's Eye (1989) xl. 214 He's got on..his V-neck maroon sweater with the ravels coming off the elbows. 2007 Ventura County (Calif.) Star (Nexis) 4 Feb. Premium, 100-percent nylon fiber is fused into a tough but flexible vinyl backing to eliminate edge ravel. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2008; most recently modified version published online March 2022). raveln.3 Weaving. Chiefly Scottish. = raddle n.3 2. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > textile manufacture > manufacture textile fabric or that which consists of > manufacture of textile fabric > [noun] > weaving > loom > reed or slay slayc1050 reed1595 raddle1648 niffler1752 evener1785 ravel1805 sniffle1805 separator1831 rave1888 shed-stick1910 shed-rod1968 1805 J. Austin in Trans. Soc. Arts 23 242 An universal ravel or sniffle, useful at the beaming of all kinds of webs. 1831 G. R. Porter Treat. Silk Manuf. 220 The threads of the warp being separated and guided by means of the ravel. 1860 Chambers's Encycl. I. 772/1 The beamer has merely to take a ravel (a comb-like utensil) with the corresponding number of teeth in the breadth required for the web, and filling each tooth successively with its respective pin, the spreading is completed. 1898 A. M. Earle Home Life Colonial Days x. 219 There is a removable loom attachment which when first shown to me was called a raddle... This attachment is also called a ravel or raivel. 1911 A. Warrack Scots Dial. Dict. Raivel,..a weavers' instrument for spreading yarn. 1979 E. Broudy Bk. of Looms viii. 157/2 A raddle (also called a rake, ravel or wrathe) kept the bouts from tangling during the ‘thumbing in’ or threading of the heddles. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2008; most recently modified version published online March 2022). raveladj.1 Chiefly English regional (south-eastern). Now historical. Of bread: made from wholemeal flour, or from flour with the bran left in. Formerly also in extended use. Cf. ravelled adj.1 ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > dishes and prepared food > bread > [adjective] > wholemeal wheaten1530 ravelled1577 ravel1591 1591 J. Florio Second Frutes 51 Here is cheate bread, rauel bread, manchet bread, and houshold bread. 1608 T. Cocks Diary (1901) 37/4 Mr. Deanes boye, that brought me a ravell loafe. a1690 S. Jeake Λογιστικηλογία (1696) 74 Bread made of the whole Wheat is sometime called Cribble or fine Ravel Bread. 1701 W. Kennett Cowell's Interpreter (new ed.) Panis vocat, Blackwhytlof, Bread of a middle sort, between white and brown, such as in Kent is called Ravel-bread. c1736 S. Pegge Alphabet of Kenticisms (1876) 43 Ravel-bread, a middling sort of bread, neither white nor brown, but mixt. 1797 J. Nichols Illustr. Manners & Expences Antient Times Eng. 312 There are the same terms for paper respectively [in the North and in Kent], viz. whity-brown paper, and ravel paper. 1887 W. D. Parish & W. F. Shaw Dict. Kentish Dial. 126 Ravel-bread, white-brown bread. 1931 W. E. Mead Eng. Medieval Feast iii. 66 Ravel bread was made of unbolted flour, along with bran. 1982 S. K. Penman Sunne in Splendour (1984) ii. ix. 440 She'd breakfasted on the coarser-grained ravel bread of unbolted flour and bran. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2008; most recently modified version published online March 2022). † raveladj.2 Obsolete. rare. Perhaps: verbose or rambling. ΚΠ a1603 T. Cartwright Confut. Rhemists New Test. (1618) Pref. sig. F2 Your Dirigie groats, and Trentall money, will make you lauish and rauill in your translation. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2008; most recently modified version published online June 2021). ravelv.1α. 1500s–1600s rauel, 1500s–1800s ravell, 1600s rauell, 1600s ravill, 1600s ravle, 1600s reauel, 1600s rouell, 1600s– ravel; English regional 1800s ravvle (Suffolk), 1800s– raivel (Northumberland), 1800s– ravle, 1800s– reavel (northern), 1800s– reavell (Cumberland), 1800s– reavvel (Cumberland), 1800s– reeavle (Westmorland), 1800s– revel (midlands), 1900s– reavvle (Cumberland); Scottish pre-1700 rawel, pre-1700 rawil, pre-1700 reuel, pre-1700 1700s 1900s– revel, pre-1700 1700s– ravel, pre-1700 1800s reavil, 1700s reavel, 1800s rayvle, 1800s reval, 1800s revell, 1800s reyvled (past participle), 1800s– raivel, 1900s– raevel, 1900s– ravl (Shetland), 1900s– reavle, 1900s– reevel, 1900s– reevlan (Orkney, present participle); also Irish English (northern) 1900s– revel. β. English regional 1600s– raffle (chiefly northern and midlands), 1900s– raaffle (Yorkshire), 1900s– raafle (Yorkshire); Scottish 1800s raeffle (Shetland), 1900s– raffel (Orkney), 1900s– raffle (chiefly Orkney). γ. English regional 1800s– raul (southern and south-western), 1800s– ryle (Cumberland), 1900s– reyle (Cumberland); Scottish 1700s reill, 1800s rail, 1800s reul, 1800s rewayl, 1800s– rael, 1800s– rewl, 1800s– reyle, 1800s– rile, 1800s– ryle, 1900s– rewel, 1900s– rowl. I. To entangle or disentangle. 1. a. transitive. To entangle; to confuse, perplex; to render incoherent or muddled. Also (occasionally) intransitive. In later use chiefly with up, except in Scottish and Irish English (northern). See also ravelled adj.2 1. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > disorder > confusion or disorder > entanglement or entangled state > entangle or make tangled [verb (transitive)] windc1315 harlc1400 snarlc1440 tangle1530 ravela1540 crawl1548 entangle1555 intertangle1589 enroot1600 impester1601 fasel1636 perplex1642 fankle1724 warple1768 hankle1781 intertwist1797 taffle1840 the world > relative properties > order > disorder > confusion or disorder > entanglement or entangled state > complication or complexity > make complicated [verb (transitive)] entrike?c1425 envolde1451 involve1533 perplex1547 enfold1605 daedalizea1618 fasel1636 interpuzzle1650 puzzle1652 ravel1656 intriguea1677 complicate1832 to twist up1864 a1540 (c1460) G. Hay tr. Bk. King Alexander (1974) 1388 Quhill thair battallis with schot sa maglit ware And with hurt horsis rawillit, thai my na mare. 1582 R. Stanyhurst in tr. Virgil First Foure Bookes Æneis To Rdr. sig. Bv Many good verses would bee rauelde and dismembred. 1598 E. Guilpin Skialetheia iii. sig. D3 Like Weauers shuttles which runne to and fro, Rau'ling their owne guts with their running so. a1634 W. Austin Devotionis Augustinianæ Flamma (1635) 282 When we have crauled, and ravel'd our Soules into Knots, at last..wee fall, like a Weaver, to Cutting. 1656 R. Vines Treat. Lords-supper (1677) 130 The words which are so ravelled and perplexed by contrary senses. 1675 V. Alsop Anti-Sozzo iii. 102 An odde word dropt from his Pen at unawares, that had like infinitely to have ravel'd all his Affairs, and to have quite marred the Musick of this Paragraph. 1706 D. Defoe Jure Divino viii. 30 Those wild, unhappy, Self-defending Few, If not destroy'd in Time, will ravel all the Clew. 1727 G. Berkeley Let. 27 June in Wks. (1871) IV. 145 My affairs were ravell'd by the death of his Majesty. 1796 G. D. Harley Poems 56 That jarring dæmon, Discord, shall..Confuse and ravel every strained string. 1832 A. Henderson Sc. Prov. 22 Fools ravel, and wise men redd. 1845 P. Fairbairn Typology Script. I. i. v. 197 It so ravels and complicates the meaning of the prophecies. 1894 R. O. Heslop Northumberland Words 560 ‘'Twad raffle a magistrate.’ Newcastle saying. 1896 J. M. Barrie Sentimental Tommy xxix Make a clerk of him and he would only ravel the figures. 1907 ‘A. Hilliers’ Fanshawe of Fifth xxxiii. 307 The scheme to assassinate Buonaparte which was ravelled up with it [sc. the plan]. 1920 G. P. Dunbar Peat Reek 16 He raivel't the bairns wi' their coonts an' sums. 1928 A. E. Pease Dict. Dial. N. Riding Yorks. 100/2 Bless t'bairn! sha's raafl'd oop aal me woostid. 1993 P. N. Dunn Spanish Picaresque Fiction vi. 229 If we disentangle the temporal sequence that Cervantes has deliberately raveled up, we find that [etc.]. 1996 C. I. Macafee Conc. Ulster Dict. 272/1 Ravel, revel,..entangle (yarn, etc.); also figuratively. 2000 Standardization in Lowlands-L (Electronic mailing list) 30 Aug. This verra problem raivelt the spellin comatee an aa. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > disorder > confusion or disorder > entanglement or entangled state > become tangled [verb (intransitive)] rivelOE tangle1575 ravela1585 snarl1600 harl1609 twine1658 reeve1821 foul1835 taffle1840 a1585 A. Montgomerie Flyting with Polwart 511 Litill tent to their time the toone leit them take, Bot ay..[they] raveld in their reeles. a1616 W. Shakespeare Two Gentlemen of Verona (1623) iii. ii. 52 As you vnwinde her loue from him; Least it should rauell,..You must prouide to bottome it on me. View more context for this quotation 1671 J. Milton Samson Agonistes 305 By thir own perplexities involv'd They ravel more. View more context for this quotation ΘΚΠ the world > movement > motion in specific manner > irregular movement or agitation > agitate [verb (transitive)] > make dust rise in confusion ravel1647 1647 J. Windet To Authour in J. Hall Poems sig. A6v Summon thy lungs, and with an angry breath Ravell the curious dust. 1647 J. Hall Poems ii. 100 Dust, ravel'd in the Aire will fly Up high. 2. a. intransitive. Frequently with out. Originally: of a skein of yarn, a spool or reel of thread, etc.: to become unwound. Later (now more usually): (of fabric, an item of clothing, etc.) to fray; to unravel. Also figurative and in figurative context. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > textile fabric or an article of textile fabric > textile fabric > [verb (intransitive)] > ravel out rivel1530 ravel1603 fuzz1702 fray1721 sleaze1777 the world > space > shape > curvature > coil > uncoiling or unwinding > become uncoiled or unwound [verb (intransitive)] uncurl1594 outwind1596 ravel1603 unravel1643 unwind1656 unreel1749 to wind off1760 unwrap1833 uncoil1854 reel1906 1603 T. Powell Welch Bayte to Spare Prouender sig. C4 This vulgar's like a skaine of many threds Running into a rownd and looser liste, It rauels, and it opens ere ye wiste. 1606 J. Marston Parasitaster ii. i. sig. D Do's my Lord rauell out, do's he fret? 1622 F. Beaumont & J. Fletcher Phylaster (new ed.) v. 71 Your Royalty shall rauell. 1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory iii. 97/2 Ravell—when threads come out of the edges of the cloth. 1710 J. Groome Dignity & Honour Clergy iv. 47 'Tis the strong Hem which keeps all the Cloth from ravelling out. 1759 News-readers Pocket-bk. 95 The End..is made fast with Marline wove into the Yarns, to keep the Rope from raffling out. 1791 R. Sadler Wanley Penson III. ix. 236 What then is reason?—A child's garter—knitting at one end, ravelling at the other. ?1862 Trans. Philol. Soc. 1860–1 32 The hem of a garment is that which binds it round, and prevents it from ravelling out. 1937 Life 1 Nov. 134/3 (advt.) A Brown's Beach Jacket is perfectly quiet in the woods, can't catch on brush, won't ravel or tear. 1987 William & Mary Q. 44 189 The network of frontier exchange stitched by inhabitants over the previous decades was beginning to ravel. 1997 Toronto Star (Nexis) 18 Sept. e5 I bought some multi-color tweed..but now I see that it is extremely loosely woven and stretches and ravels badly. b. transitive. To cause (a garment, piece of woven fabric, etc.) to unravel or fray; to unpick. Also with out, †away. Frequently figurative. ΚΠ 1607 T. Middleton Revengers Trag. ii. sig. D3 You shall haue one woman knit more in a hower then any man can Rauell agen. 1642 S. Hartlib tr. J. A. Comenius Reformation of Schooles 8 It [sc. philosophy] is..busied altogether in tying of such knots which cannot be loosed, and in raveling out, what her selfe hath woven. 1672 R. Steele Plain Disc. Uprightness iii. 144 Hath he [sc. God], if not the most, yet the heartiest of your thoughts? When your ends are raffled to the bottom, do they end at him, or self? 1726 E. Fenton in A. Pope et al. tr. Homer Odyssey IV. xix. 173 The night still ravell'd, what the day renew'd. 1791 W. Cowper tr. Homer Odyssey in Iliad & Odyssey II. 29 She wove the ample web, and by the aid Of torches ravell'd it again at night. 1809 M. Edgeworth Manœuvring vii, in Tales Fashionable Life III. 169 A fool, who ravels, as fast as one weaves, the web of her fortune! 1889 Cent. Mag. Apr. 841 A favorite gown had been woven by her maids, of cotton, striped with silk procured by raveling the general's discarded stockings. 1914 E. W. Wilcox Poems of Probl. 56 Are you ravelling out the wonderful fabric knit by Time, And throwing away the threads? 1995 Vancouver Sun (Nexis) 16 Sept. e16 Pull the threads away from around the perimeters of the cut shapes, ravelling the edge while forming a decorative fringe. c. transitive. Frequently with out (formerly also †away). To draw or pull out (a thread, strand, etc.) by unravelling or unwinding. Also figurative and in figurative context. ΘΚΠ the world > space > shape > curvature > coil > uncoiling or unwinding > uncoil or unwind [verb (transitive)] > untwine or untwist untwinec1407 outtwinea1500 untwist1538 unknit1599 unravel1603 ravel1607 spret1832 the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > separation > separation or detachment > loosening or unfastening > loosen, unfasten, or untie [verb (transitive)] > untwist, unravel, etc. untwinec1407 unlacea1450 untwindc1460 untwist1538 unweave1542 distwine1562 feaze1568 unpleat1572 unspin1587 unplat1589 unwreathe1591 unreave1593 unravel1603 ravel1607 unwrithe1611 uncluea1616 unwork1623 unperplex1660 untwirla1703 unlay1726 disentwine1814 unbraid1828 unmesha1849 disintertwine1861 unplait1865 tiffle out1880 unleeze1889 1607 J. Marston What you Will 252 The Sisters ravell out our twine. a1627 T. Middleton & W. Rowley Spanish Gipsie (1653) ii. sig. C4 A stich in a mans stocken not taken up in time ravells out all the rest. 1629 Bp. J. Hall Reconciler 3 That any occasion should be taken by ought of mine, to ravell but one thred of that seamless coat. 1650 W. Brough Sacred Princ. 383 How then darest thou ravell away that pretious threed. 1727 P. Longueville Hermit iii. 204 Having Twine to twist, and Thread to ravel out..kept him imploy'd till the following Spring. 1747 W. Arderon in Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 44 429 Whenever it [sc. a spider] ascended, it wound its Thread with its Feet into a sort of Coil, and when it descended only ravelled it out again. 1856 J. A. Froude Hist. Eng. (1858) II. vii. 164 We find a commission sitting at Lambeth..ravelling out the threads of a story. 1914 Jrnl. Afr. Soc. 13 126 The recipient of a new cloth sets to work to ravel out the thread at the ends and knot it..into a fringe. 1939 H. Footner Charles' Gift xvi. 216 She used to appropriate the castoff bathing suits and sweaters..and, after raveling out the wool, would proceed to knit herself strange, particolored underdrawers. 1966 Daily Rev. (Hayward, Calif.) 18 Sept. ii. 3/4 When you ravel the yarn to reknit the ribbing..you will find that it is quite kinky. d. intransitive. Of (a piece of) thread, yarn, etc.: to unravel; †to unwind (from a reel) (obsolete). ΚΠ 1653 I. Walton Compl. Angler viii. 154 With such a nick..as may keep the line from any more of it ravelling from about the stick than so much of it as you intend. View more context for this quotation a1657 G. Daniel Trinarchodia: Richard II lxxxvii, in Poems (1878) III. 158 Shee gives the Clue: and if it can but ravel To the Thred's End, wee seeke no farther travel. 1794 W. Anderson Piper of Peebles 6 Upo' their spindles, near the tap, They biggit ay a bulgy knap O'thread, cross-brath'd, firm to defend The rest frae reav'ling o'er the end. 1873 A. G. Murdoch Lilts on Doric Lyre 13 The threed in Tammie's shuttle Gaed raivelling aff the pirn. 1925 Amer. Mercury Jan. 16/1 She..broke off a thread that had raveled from the lining of her coat. 1955 Syracuse (N.Y.) Herald-Jrnl. 19 Aug. Running through the ‘off Broadway’ scene like a glaring red thread raveling from a theater curtain. 2002 Grand Rapids (Mich.) Press (Nexis) 23 June b3 Threads ravel. Stitches loosen. Knots fray. 3. a. transitive. With out. To disentangle, make plain or clear (a matter, a story, etc.); to explicate; to puzzle out. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > intelligibility > meaning > explanation, exposition > expound, explain [verb (transitive)] arecchec885 unloukOE overrunOE sutelec1000 trahtnec1000 unfolda1050 belayc1175 openc1175 onopena1200 accountc1300 undo?a1366 remenea1382 interpret1382 unwrap1387 exploitc1390 enlumine1393 declarec1400 expoundc1400 unplait?c1400 enperc1420 planea1425 clearc1440 exponec1440 to lay outc1440 to give (also carry) lightc1449 unwind1482 expose1483 reducea1500 manifest1530 explicate1531 explaina1535 unlock?1536 dilucidate1538 elucidate1538 illustrate1538 rechec1540 explicate1543 illucidate1545 enucleate1548 unsnarl1555 commonstrate1563 to lay forth1577 straighten1577 unbroid1577 untwist1577 decipherc1586 illuminate1586 enlighten1587 resolvec1592 cipher1594 eliquidate1596 to take (a person) with one1599 rivelc1600 ravel1604 unbowel1606 unmist1611 extricate1614 unbolta1616 untanglea1616 enode1623 unperplexa1631 perspicuate1634 explata1637 unravel1637 esclarea1639 clarify1642 unweave1642 detenebrate1646 dismystery1652 undecipher1654 unfork1654 unparadox1654 reflect1655 enodate1656 unmysterya1661 liquidatea1670 recognize1676 to clear upa1691 to throw sidelight on1726 to throw (also cast, shed) light on (also upon)1731 eclaircise1754 irradiate1864 unbraid1880 predigest1905 to get (something) straight1920 disambiguate1960 demystify1963 1604 W. Shakespeare Hamlet iii. iv. 170 Let him..Make you to rouell [1623 rauell] all this matter out. View more context for this quotation 1608 W. Shakespeare Richard II iv. i. 218 Must I rauell out My weaud vp Folly. a1658 J. Cleveland Wks. (1687) 11 Then roll up, Muse, what thou hast ravel'd out. 1779 H. Cowley Albina iv. 63 A single glance to his suspicious eye, Would be a clue to ravel out our secret. 1832 J. Bree St. Herbert's Isle 89 What there she did, took me full thrice as long To ravel out. 1870 W. Morris Earthly Paradise: Pt. IV 195 Asking words from these To ravel out his tale for him. 1973 M. L. Settle Prisons viii. 125 Thankful and I found it hard to ravel out for the others. One day we were an army and subject to military law; on another we were free men with a right to speak. 1988 M. Brodsky X in Paris 166 Less a succession than..an imbrication impossible to ravel out, of story events in their primordial perfection. 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 the world > action or operation > harm or detriment > disadvantage > uselessness > misuse > [verb (transitive)] > waste spilla1000 scatter1154 aspilla1250 rospa1325 waste1340 spend1390 consumec1425 waste1474 miswenda1500 forsumea1510 to cast away1530 to throw away1561 embezzle1578 squander1593 palter1595 profuse1611 squander1611 ravel1614 sport1622 to fool away1628 to stream out1628 to fribble away1633 sweal1655 frisk1665 to fiddle away1667 wantonize1673 slattera1681 swattle1681 drivel1686 swatter1690 to muddle away1707 squander1717 sot1746 slattern1747 meisle1808 fritter1820 waster1821 slobber1837 to cut to waste1863 fringe1863 potter1883 putter1911 profligate1938 to piddle away1942 haemorrhage1978 spaff2002 1614 T. Adams Diuells Banket ii. 72 As many sell their tame beasts in the Countrie, to enrich their wilde beasts in the Citie; so you haue others, that to reuell at a Christmas, will rauell out their Patrimonies. a1627 W. Rowley & T. Middleton Wit at Severall Weapons v. i, in F. Beaumont & J. Fletcher Comedies & Trag. (1647) sig. Llllll4/1 Shelter, shelter, if you be seene All's ravell'd out agen. 1660 N. Ingelo Bentivolio & Urania iv. 259 [They] slighted those mean Sports which ravell out the time of other people. a1708 W. Beveridge Private Thoughts Relig. (1709) 182 Why..should I spend and ravel out my Thoughts upon that which will destroy my Soul? a. transitive. To reduce or strip back to a rudimentary or original state. Obsolete. ΚΠ 1648 C. Walker Relations & Observ. ii. 139 To rauell back all Governments, to the first principles of nature. 1670 M. Medbourne tr. Molière Tartuffe iii. iii. 32 'Tis onely you Madam, can support me, Or ravel me back agen to my first nothing. b. intransitive. To regress; to go back in time. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > backward movement > move backwards [verb (intransitive)] reversec1450 recoil1483 back1486 regressa1525 retire1542 flinch1578 retrograde1613 recur1616 retrocede1638 ravel1656 backen1748 regrede1800 regrade1811 retrogress1812 1656 W. Sanderson Compl. Hist. Mary & James VI 487 Let us ravel back to the memory of the Black Prince. 1669 T. Shadwell Royal Shepherdess ii How do men ravel back to childhood. 1716 Enq. Orig. Constit. Eng. & Scotl. 34 It will be needless to ravel so far back as the Year 1637. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > separation > separation or breaking up into constituent parts > separate into constituents [verb (transitive)] > take apart to-lithec1000 unjoinc1400 joint1530 unpart1536 disjoin1579 disjoint1587 untruss?1605 untack1641 ravela1658 disartuate1660 to take apart1744 demount1756 disarticulate1808 dismount1859 disassemble1881 destructure1951 deconstruct1973 a1658 J. Cleveland To his Hermaphrodite in Wks. (1687) 20 Ravel thy Body, and I find In every Limb a double kind. 6. transitive. figurative and in figurative contexts: to knit or bring together. Frequently with up or in opposition to unravel.With quot. 1948 cf. quot. a1616 at ravelled adj.2 2. ΚΠ 1833 H. R. Cary tr. Pindar Pindar in Eng. Verse 67 If any speak in season due, And ravel up into a few His many ends combin'd. 1866 N.-Y. Times 27 Jan. 5/1 The author's ingenuity in raveling and unraveling the intricacies of a carefully-constructed plot. 1948 Eng. Jrnl. 37 346 English could ‘ravel up the sleeve of care’ after all the other departments had torn it to shreds. 2000 Advertiser (Adelaide) (Nexis) 9 Dec. (Mag. section) 21 He here ravels and unravels a grandly intricate tale. 7. intransitive. To examine or inquire into something. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > enquiry > investigation, inspection > investigate, inspect [verb (intransitive)] inquirec1330 aska1382 ensearch1382 questiona1500 investigate?1520 vestigatea1561 to look into ——1561 perpend1568 mouse1575 rake1603 undergo1605 fathom1607 ravel1618 examine1628 inquisition1644 to cast abouta1676 inspect1703 sound1793 disquisitea1823 look-see1862 to cast about one1867 1618 Sir H. May in S. R. Gardiner Fortescue Papers (1871) 46 Being unwillinge to ravell into the memory of those offensive particulers. 1669 W. Simpson Hydrologia Chymica 34 We have already sufficiently ravell'd into the nature of both vitriol and iron. 1710 S. Palmer Moral Ess. Prov. 141 The malicious..ravel into the conduct of a man of honour in the dark. 1749 Rep. High Court Chancery 3 In a Decree of Foreclosure against an Infant, though the Infant has six Months after he comes of Age, to shew Cause, &c. yet he cannot ravel into the Account, nor even redeem, but only shew an Error in the Decree. 8. transitive. Apparently: to turn (a matter) over hurriedly or carelessly. Cf. rabble v.1 2. Obsolete. rare. ΚΠ 1644 K. Digby Two Treat. Ded. They but ravel it over loosely, and pitch upon disputing against particular conclusions. 1755 S. Johnson Dict. Eng. Lang. (citing Digby) Ravel,..to hurry over in confusion. [Also in later dictionaries.]] III. To talk confusedly. 9. intransitive. Originally and chiefly regional (British and Irish English). To talk incoherently or confusedly; to ramble, waffle. ΚΠ 1716 Mem. Life Ambrose Barnes (1867) vii. 155 This Doctor, raffling on, after his wonted manner. 1825 J. Jamieson Etymol. Dict. Sc. Lang. Suppl. (at cited word) To Ravel, to speak in an irregular, unconnected manner; to wander in speech. Aberd[een]. 1914 G. Fitzmaurice Pie-dish in Five Plays 150 He ravelling in his talk as the like of him do. 1991 J. McGahern Power of Darkness 34 What are you ravelling about? 2002 A. Doerr Shell Collector (2003) 20 The voice raveled on. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2008; most recently modified version published online March 2022). † ravelv.2 Obsolete. rare. transitive. To scratch. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > injury > injure [verb (transitive)] > scratch or graze cratchc1320 scrat1340 cramse1440 scratch1474 crutch1481 rata1560 razea1586 gravel1608 ravel1621 graze1701 ruffle1731 skin1795 bark1850 1621 J. Reynolds Triumphs Gods Revenge: 1st Bk. ii. 62 A faire thrust..which onely pierced his shirt, and ravelled his skinne. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2008; most recently modified version published online June 2021). † ravelv.3 Obsolete. rare. transitive. To sift. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > food manufacture and preparation > preparation of grain > [verb (transitive)] > clean grain > by sieve temsec950 ridderOE boltc1175 bunt1340 riddle1440 ree?1523 range1538 succernate1623 ravela1690 reeve1777 a1690 S. Jeake Λογιστικηλογία (1696) 74 Houshold-Bread of the best Wheat unravelled, or ravelled through the coursest Boultel. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2008; most recently modified version published online June 2021). < n.11467n.21634n.31805adj.11591adj.2a1603v.1a1540v.21621v.3a1690 |
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