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单词 rechange
释义

rechangen.

Brit. /riːˈtʃeɪn(d)ʒ/, U.S. /riˈtʃeɪndʒ/
Forms: late Middle English–1500s rechaunge, 1500s rechaynge, 1500s– rechange; also Scottish pre-1700 rechene, pre-1700 recheng, pre-1700 rechenȝe.
Origin: Formed within English, by derivation. Etymons: re- prefix, change n.
Etymology: < re- prefix + change n. Compare later rechange v.With sense 2 compare French rechange (1419 in this sense; c1330 in Middle French in sense ‘change’), and also re-exchange n., recamby n.
1. The action or an act of re-exchanging money or goods. Frequently in change and rechange. Now historical.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > barter > [noun] > re-exchanging
rechange1487
society > trade and finance > financial dealings > types of money-dealing > [noun] > money-changing > types of
rechange1487
foreign exchange1623
outchange1695
forex1947
swapping1957
swap1963
1487 Rolls of Parl.: Henry VII (Electronic ed.) Parl. Nov. 1487 §28. m. 11 (heading) An acte agaynst exchaunge and rechaunge without the kynges lycence.
1503 Rolls of Parl. VI. 525/1 Money in Golde or Silver, whiche..cannot come to the proffete of the Kyngs Realme..without exchaynge or rechaynge made in the Landes beyond the See.
1570 J. Dee in H. Billingsley tr. Euclid Elements Geom. Math. Præf. sig. *iij Certaine and generall Rules for Exchaunge of money, and Rechaunge.
1622 G. de Malynes Consuetudo 371 The benefit or profit of exchange is never known directly but by the rechange thereof.
a1641 T. Mun England's Treasure (1664) xx. 216 The fraud of some rich goods not entred into the Custom-house, the gain which is made here by Strangers by change and re-change.
1702 Conveyancer's Assistant & Director 333 Bond where the Obligator hath taken up Money by Exchange at Antwerp for the Obligee, to be returned by Rechange to London.
1800 A. Cullen Princ. of Bankrupt Law i. ii. 10 Persons dealing in exchange and rechange, and gaining a profit by drawing and redrawing bills of exchange.
1933 Amer. Econ. Rev. 23 441 Freedom to carry on the business of exchange and rechange would tend to reduce rather than increase the outflow of specie.
1962 P. Einzig Hist. Foreign Exchange ii. viii. 84 A change..that was liable to occur between the moment he bought the bill and the moment he was able to complete the rechange.
1994 L. Hutson Usurer's Daughter i. i. 26 In 1531 Thomas Cromwell revived a proclamation to forbid exchanges and rechanges.
2. = re-exchange n. 1. Cf. recamby n. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > financial dealings > types of money-dealing > [noun] > use of bills of exchange > types of
re-exchange1480
dry exchange1485
recamby1489
rechange1489
redrawing1671
short-exchange1866
1489 in Acts Lords of Council Civil Causes (1839) I. 130/1 Þe recheng interess dampnage & expensis sustenit be þe said reuerent faider extending..to þe soume of xijxx of ross noblis.
1492 in R. Arnold Chron. (c1503) f. xliij/1 Alle maner costis lossis and damagis whiche shall happen too falle for lac of payment at the daye aforesayde of the principall somme aboue sayde be it bee exchaunge rechaunge or other wyse.
1538 in R. G. Marsden Sel. Pleas Court Admiralty (1894) I. 72 To pay change and rechaunge after the use and custum of merchants.
1601 G. de Malynes Treat. Canker Englands Commonw. ii. 27 Notwithstanding to pay them exchange, rechange, and interest.
1682 J. Scarlett Stile of Exchanges 294 Not the bare Re-change only, which is the Monyes that exceeds the Value of the first Bill.
1728 E. Chambers Cycl. at Exchange What we call Rechange, is the due, or Premium of a second Exchange, when a bill is protested.
1756 R. Rolt New Dict. Trade at Exchange The..Gibellins are said to be the inventors of the rechange, on account of damages and interests, when bills of exchange..are not paid, but returned on protest.
3. The action or an act of changing back or again; reversion or remodification. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > change > [noun] > again
rechangec1540
c1540 Image Ipocrysy i, in J. Skelton Poet. Wks. (1843) II. 416 Which chaunge and rechaunge Of fastinges and of feestes.
a1586 Sir P. Sidney Arcadia (1590) iii. i. sig. Ii5v Neuer the Muses more tired, then now with changes & rechanges of his deuises: fearing howe to ende, before he had resolued how to begin, mistrusting ech word, condemning eche sentence.
1643 J. Spelman View of Printed Bk. sig. E3v With in the space of 500 yeares..how many changes [printed thinges] and rechanges had they of their Gouernment.
1661 G. Wither Triple Paradox 8 Both Changes and Rechanges I have view'd; Seen new things old become, old things renew'd.
1780 J. Brett tr. B. J. Feijóo y Montenegro Ess. II. 352 All the gracefulness..in the church canticles of these times, consists in..puerile changes and rechanges.
1857 Times 3 Sept. 8/4 There have been changes and rechanges (if I may coin the word) of the Ministry.
1890 J. R. Lowell Inscription Bust Fielding in Atlantic Monthly Sept. 322 He..saw the Sphinx, now bestial, now divine, In change and rechange.
1958 Shakespeare Q. 9 431 Two separate sequences of thought are interrupted by the insertion of irrelevant material to give time for the rechange.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2009; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

rechangev.

Brit. /riːˈtʃeɪn(d)ʒ/, U.S. /riˈtʃeɪndʒ/
Forms: see re- prefix and change v.
Origin: Formed within English, by derivation; perhaps modelled on a French lexical item. Etymons: re- prefix, change v.
Etymology: < re- prefix + change v., perhaps after Anglo-Norman and Middle French rechanger to change, alter (c1175 in Old French), to exchange (a1190), to change back (c1300 or earlier in Anglo-Norman). Compare earlier rechange n.
1. transitive. To re-exchange (goods or money). Frequently in to change and rechange. Also used intransitively. Now historical.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > barter > [verb (transitive)] > re-exchange
rechange1551
society > trade and finance > financial dealings > types of money-dealing > [verb (transitive)] > exchange
changec1400
wissel1483
rechange1551
exchange1614
1551 King Edward VI Jrnl. in Lit. Remains (1857) II. 406 Liberty was gevin to the marchauntis to exchaung and rechaung money for money.
1622 J. Mabbe tr. M. Alemán Rogue ii. 239 There is no negociating now adayes, but with it [sc. honesty] and with money; changing and rechanging as the market goes.
1623 G. Malynes Center of Circle of Commerce v. 121 No man shall make any exchanges by Bills or otherwise, for moneys to be paied in forreine parts, or to be rechanged towards this Realme vnder the true Par or value for value of our moneys.
1745 S. M. Leake Hist. Acct. Eng. Money (ed. 2) 331 Farthing Tokens, and all others formerly made of Copper only, were to be rechanged into the current Monies and Coins of the Kingdom.
1817 R. Ruding Ann. Coinage II. 251 The said Farthing Tokens..should be from time to time rechanged into the current Money of the said Kingdoms.
1891 A. L. Perry Princ. Polit. Econ. vi. 476 The money would have to be rechanged into gold in the future for repurchases abroad.
1938 M. Beer Early Brit. Econ. vii. 109 The foreign money brought home by our exporters can only be rechanged with a loss.
1997 A. MacKay in A. MacKay & D. Ditchburn Atlas Medieval Europe 213 In theory..it was possible for a bill to be dishonoured at its destination and then to be rechanged back to its place of origin at a different exchange rate and at a profit.
2. To change or alter again. Also: to change back.
a. intransitive.
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > change > change [verb (intransitive)] > again
rechange1578
1578 J. Lyly Euphues f. 34v Helen of Greece..chaunged and rechaunged at hir pleasure I graunte.
1594 T. Bowes tr. P. de la Primaudaye French Acad. II. 155 It..addeth thereunto or diminisheth, changeth and rechangeth.
1668 Duchess of Newcastle Grounds Nat. Philos. (ed. 2) xii. xxv. 209 They are of a Metamorphosing Nature, as to change and rechange.
1682 J. Bunyan Holy War 129 How often hast thou changed and rechanged . View more context for this quotation
1773 J. Robertson Poems (rev. ed.) 90 In a moment's fleeting span, I saw myself re-chang'd to Man.
1787 C. Dodd Curse of Sentiment I. xxvii. 141 Her face, from extreme paleness, was instantly flushed with the bloom of the rose—and as quickly rechanged.
1811 W. Taylor in Monthly Rev. 65 141 The eye soon sickens of identical furniture, and unvarying imagery... Let us change and rechange.
1941 Mod. Lang. Jrnl. 25 840 The breathless haste of the American ‘progressives’ to experiment and change and reexperiment and rechange.
1961 C. Aldred Egyptians vii. 132 One big Power was played off against the other, vows of loyalty given to both, and sides changed and rechanged with little compunction.
2002 S. Chaudhuri View from Calcutta 155 The idiom of Tagore's writings, both prose and verse, changed and rechanged profoundly throughout his life.
b. transitive.
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > change > change [verb (transitive)] > again
rechange?1592
remodify1763
re-revise1786
reshape1794
to shape over1875
?1592 Trag. Solyman & Perseda sig. A2v Did not I change long loue to sudden hate? And then rechange their hatred into loue.
1644 D. Featley Roma Ruens 7 The whole world shall be changed into a second chaos, and that chaos shall be re~changed into a new world.
1702 D. Jones Life James II 46 In Henry VIII's time, was not the Right of Succession changed and rechanged by Act of Parliament?
1774 O. Goldsmith Grecian Hist. I. v.* 170 By this changing and rechanging the order of battle, nothing farther was done for that day.
1786 S. Johnson Everlasting Punishment Ungodly iii. 197 The renovation or rechanging the visible heavens and earth, with all men and things in them.
1827 W. Scott Life Napoleon V. i. 6 All Europe, then, was to be at the disposal of France, and states created, dissolved, changed and re-changed at her pleasure.
1887 F. W. L. Adams Poet. Wks. 48 Coeneus, once boy, now woman again and by fate rechanged to the old shape.
1896 Daily News 19 Nov. 6/5 Recusancy, or the crime of not being able to change, and even re-change, one's religion at the command of the Privy Council, figures conspicuously.
1908 Folk-lore 19 17 They change bodies and rechange them whenever required, retaining all the while their human faculties.
1960 W. F. Lynch Christ & Apollo vi. 158 Some ‘lonely center of consciousness’..rechanging all realities.
2000 R. G. Kennedy Burr, Hamilton & Jefferson xx. 310 Jefferson was either inconsistent in what he was telling people or changing and rechanging his mind.

Derivatives

reˈchanging n.
ΚΠ
1611 J. Florio Queen Anna's New World of Words at Rimuta A remoouing or rechanging.
1653 S. Hunton Army Armed 3 By holding the Government or Power, they prevent dangers that might happen, by changing and rechanging.
1738 R. Grey New Method learning Hebrew Pref. 4 A great Number of superfluous Vowels, Points, and Accents, and..Rules for the changing and re-changing of them.
1871 C. Hole Life W. W. Phelps I. ii. 13 The changing and rechanging of terminals.
2003 A. Bano Status Women in Islamic Soc. iv. xvii. 242 When he dies or divorces her and she marries another man there is no such nuisance of rechanging of names for the third or fourth times.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2009; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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n.1487v.1551
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