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单词 relic
释义

relicn.

Brit. /ˈrɛlɪk/, U.S. /ˈrɛlɪk/
Forms:

α. Middle English relikke, Middle English relyc, Middle English relykke, Middle English rerikes (plural, transmission error), Middle English–1500s relyk, Middle English–1600s relicke, Middle English–1600s relik, Middle English–1600s relike, Middle English–1600s relyke, Middle English– relic, 1500s realycke, 1500s relyck, 1500s–1800s relick; Scottish pre-1700 relicke, pre-1700 relik, pre-1700 relyk, pre-1700 relyke, pre-1700 rilik, pre-1700 1700s–1800s relick, pre-1700 1700s– relic.

β. Middle English reliqe, Middle English relyqe, Middle English–1600s relyque, Middle English– relique (now poetic), 1500s rellyque, 1500s–1600s relicque, 1500s–1600s rellique; also Scottish pre-1700 relicque, pre-1700 reliquik.

γ. late Middle English releck, late Middle English relek, late Middle English releke, late Middle English releqe, 1500s releque; Scottish pre-1700 releick, pre-1700 releque.

δ. 1500s relliek, 1500s rellyck, 1500s rellycke, 1500s–1600s rellick, 1500s–1600s rellicke, 1500s–1600s rellike; Scottish pre-1700 rellyk, pre-1700 rillik, pre-1700 rillyk.

ε. late Middle English relyquyt (perhaps transmission error), 1500s raylect (in Relic Sunday n. at Compounds 2).

Origin: A borrowing from French. Etymon: French relique.
Etymology: < Anglo-Norman relike, reliqe, rilike, rilique, Anglo-Norman and Old French, Middle French relique (French relique ) physical remains of, or articles associated with, a saint, martyr, etc. (c1100 in Old French; also in plural), (in plural) remains, remnants (a1389) < classical Latin reliquiae (plural) remains (see reliquiae n.). Compare Old Occitan reliquia (13th cent.), Catalan relíquia (1403), Spanish reliquia (10th cent.), Portuguese relíquia (13th cent.), Italian reliquia (1319). Compare relict n., which shows considerable semantic overlap; the sense development of the two words has probably shown considerable mutual influence. Compare also earlier reliquiae n., reliquies n.Compare also Old English relic , in sense 1a, which is attested only in the compound relic-gang (probably) the bearing of relics in procession, especially on Rogation Days, an instance of this ( < relic (probably shortened < reliquies n.) + gang n.):OE Old Eng. Martyrol. (Julius) 25 Apr. 63 On ðæm dæge [sc. Lętania Maiora] eall Godes folc mid eaðmodlice relicgonge sceal God biddan þæt he him forgefe ðone gear siblice tid.OE Old Eng. Martyrol. (Julius) 4 May 80 Ymb þas dagas utan, hwilum ær, hwilum æfter, beoð þa þry dagas on ðæm godes ciricum, ond Cristes folc mærsiað lętanias, þæt is þonne bene ond relicgongas [corrected to relicquiagongas by later scribe], foran to Cristes uppastignesse. Old English relic perhaps represents a fully naturalized colloquial shortening of the semi-naturalized learned loan reliquias reliquies n. (compare the later scribal emendation in quot. OE2); it is possible that the Middle English word may partly be the reflex of this, reinforced by subsequent borrowing of the Anglo-Norman and Old French word. In ε. forms perhaps influenced by relict n.
1.
a. In the Christian Church, esp. the Roman Catholic and Orthodox churches: the physical remains (as the body or a part of it) of a saint, martyr, or other deceased holy person, or a thing believed to be sanctified by contact with him or her (such as a personal possession or piece of clothing), preserved as an object of veneration and often enshrined in some ornate receptacle. Also figurative.In plural sometimes denoting the whole body of the person, or its parts: see sense 3. In singular sometimes applied to both the relic and the receptacle containing it: cf. sense 1c.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > artefacts > portable shrines or relics > relic > [noun]
relic?c1225
corsaint1303
reliefc1449
relict1535
the mind > attention and judgement > esteem > respect > reverence > quality of inspiring reverence > [noun] > object
relic?c1225
relica1400
shrinec1460
idol1484
icon1833
?c1225 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 18 To þe relikes luteð oðer cneoleð.
c1300 Holy Cross (Laud) 567 in C. Horstmann Early S.-Eng. Legendary (1887) 17 (MED) Þe bischop wuste þis holie blod ase relikes riche and guode.
a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1865) I. 381 (MED) Þe chief of alle suche relikes is i-holde Iesus his staf.
?a1450 Metrical Life Christ (1977) 35 (MED) Saynt Elyne..Fond þe holy crosse..And helden hit a relyc ful holy.
c1480 (a1400) St. James Great 255 in W. M. Metcalfe Legends Saints Sc. Dial. (1896) I. 104 His printes..stal away þe body..and þai aryvyt with þat relik of spanȝe, in-to þe kynrik.
1490 W. Caxton tr. Foure Sonnes of Aymon (1885) iii. 112 Bryng afore me your reliques and hallowes, that I shall swere [etc.].
1511 Pylgrymage Richarde Guylforde (Pynson) f. vij Many Relyques, as the hed, & the Arme of seynt Blase whiche is there Patron.
1530 St. German's Secunde Dyaloge Doctour & Student xxx. f. lxxixv Then shall he suspende the chyrche and take awaye the relykes.
1617 F. Moryson Itinerary i. 175 The Friars keepe for a holy relike the Thorne wherewith Christ was crowned.
1619 M. Drayton Idea in Poems (rev. ed.) 272 You..whose deare remembrance in my Bosome lyes, Too rich a Relique for so poore a Shrine.
1673 J. Ray Observ. Journey Low-countries 243 In this City are many..Churches..furnished with rich Altar-pieces, Reliques,..and other Ornaments.
1757 tr. J. G. Keyssler Trav. IV. 212 The only part wanting in their relique is the middle finger of the right hand.
1781 E. Gibbon Decline & Fall III. xxviii. 96 The worship of saints and relics corrupted the pure and perfect simplicity of the Christian model.
1845 J. Lingard Hist. & Antiq. Anglo-Saxon Church (ed. 3) II. xiv. 331 A supply of relics for the foundation of churches.
1850 A. Jameson Legends Monastic Orders 79 His copy of Ambrose,..covered with his blood, was exhibited..as a relic.
1872 Times 15 May 6/3 On examining the relics in the church of St. Martino, I was shown a small sealed bottle, in which was enclosed some hair of the Madonna.
1968 N. Mosley Impossible Object 128 There are side-chapels with relics of the founder: his hair-shirt, his spiked belt, the lash with which he flogged himself.
1979 Antiquaries Jrnl. 59 364 Pope Sergius..rediscovered a very important relic of the True Cross..in a dark and dusty corner of the sacristy at St. Peter's.
2000 E. Cameron in A. Hastings et al. Oxf. Compan. Christian Thought 400/1 Late medieval western Catholicism leaned heavily on..sacramental penance, masses for the soul, the veneration of saints, and the cult of relics.
b. An object or artefact held sacred by some other religion or culture (as those of the ancient world, or Judaism, Buddhism, etc.).
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > artefacts > implement (general) > [noun]
halidomc1000
relica1400
utensil1650
chapel1862
bondieuserie1941
the mind > attention and judgement > esteem > respect > reverence > quality of inspiring reverence > [noun] > object
relic?c1225
relica1400
shrinec1460
idol1484
icon1833
a1400 (c1303) R. Mannyng Handlyng Synne (Harl.) 4998 (MED) Yn þys ark were þre þynges..Moyses table..Aarons ȝerd, and a potte of golde; þese þre relykes þey helde ful holde.
a1413 (c1385) G. Chaucer Troilus & Criseyde (Pierpont Morgan) (1881) i. l. 153 Thei hadde a relyk hight Palladion, That was hire tryst a bouen euerichon.
c1475 (c1450) P. Idley Instr. to his Son (Cambr.) (1935) ii. B. 1437 (MED) In this arke were laied three thyngis; Gretter reliquis at that day were noon.
1513 G. Douglas tr. Virgil Æneid xiii. x. 96 O happy cite..With quham sa gret rellykis remane sall.
1582 R. Stanyhurst tr. Virgil First Foure Bookes Æneis ii. 27 Yf this relliek by you to the cittye wer haled, Then, loa, the stout Troians in wars should glorye triumphing.
1606 G. W. tr. Justinus Hist. xxiv. 90 The Priests of all the Temples..with..the sacred reliques in their hands.
1734 J. Richardson & J. Richardson Explanatory Notes Paradise Lost 518 This Ark was now a Relick, and what a magnificent Shrine was it Deposited in!
1788 tr. I. Mouradgea d'Ohsson Oriental Antiq. 500 Besides these relicks which are relative to the Prophet, there are others... The chief of them are, a prayer-carpet, Sedjéadé, of the Kaliph Ebu-Bekir, [etc.].
1887 J. M'Clintock & J. Strong Cycl. Biblical, Theol., & Eccl. Lit. Suppl. II. 222/2 The left canine tooth of Buddha, the most celebrated relic in the possession of his followers.
1908 Notes & Queries 10th Ser. 10 400/1 There is a collection of unique Jewish relics, including a Sepher case reputed to be years old.
1998 Guardian (Nexis) 21 Nov. (Travel section) 12 The Topkapi Palace [of Istanbul],..notable for the Topkapi dagger..and sacred relics of the Prophet Muhammad.
c. A precious or valuable object or thing, esp. a sacred ornament (cf. reliquary n.); (figurative) a precious or beloved person. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > goodness and badness > quality of being good > worth > [noun] > thing of worth
treasurec1200
margaritea1325
druery1340
store1410
relica1425
gemc1560
Jew's eye1593
worthy1598
wealth1650
gold dust1690
nugget1853
white gold1921
a1425 (?a1400) G. Chaucer Romaunt Rose (Hunterian) (1891) l. 2907 It is thyng most amerous..To sene his lady by the morwe For it is a full noble thing Whanne thyne eyen haue metyng With that relike precious.
a1439 J. Lydgate Fall of Princes (Bodl. 263) iv. 3465 (MED) The ryng, the anker of gret excellence..Appollo..Sent hym thes reliques of synguler aqueyntaunce.
a1475 (?a1350) Seege Troye (Harl.) (1927) 991 (MED) The kyng cheses precious stonys, Ryche relikis..Plente of siluer and of gold.
c1500 (c1386) G. Chaucer Legend Good Women (Trin. Cambr.) (1879) Prol. l. 321 What dos thow here So nygh myn owne flour..Hyt ys my relyke dygne And delytable And thow my foo.
1508 Golagros & Gawane (Chepman & Myllar) sig. cii*v Armyt in rede gold and rubeis sa round With mony riche relikis riale to se.
c1540 (?a1400) Gest Historiale Destr. Troy (2002) f. 188v Tho lordes..Shotton into ship mong shene knightes, With the tresowre of þe toune..Relikes full Rife & miche ranke godes.
1602 tr. G. Corrozet Memorable Conceits 123 William Rufus king of England..pilled the Churches and Monasteries of his Realme,..taking away their Chalices & other Reliques of gold and siluer, which he found in them.
1792 J. Bristow Narr. Sufferings 45 I saw him return by day, not only undiscovered, but furnished with a dozen of the silver relicks which he had safely purloined.
1878 Times 17 July 10/6 In 1874 I saw these relics in gold and silver, some jewelled and of considerable value.
d. Something kept as a remembrance, souvenir, or memorial; a historical object relating to a particular person, place, or thing; a memento.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > memory > reminder, putting in mind > [noun] > keepsake, souvenir
tokenc1385
remembrance1424
memory?c1425
memoranda1450
remembrancer1593
momento1600
relic1611
memorandum1679
memento1768
souvenir1776
keepsake1790
ricordo1821
a present from ——1853
1611 W. Barksted Hiren sig. C6v And for my loues vnkindly Tragedy, A thousand Citties for her death shall mourne, And as a relicke to posterity, Our priests shall keep her ashes in their vrne.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Julius Caesar (1623) ii. ii. 89 Great men shall presse For Tinctures, Staines, Reliques, and Cognisance. View more context for this quotation
1664 in G. Miege Relation of Three Embassies (1669) 265 He blessed Prince..even as to this matter had prepared a Letter which I yet preserve among His other Reliques.
1719 D. Defoe Life Robinson Crusoe 330 When I took leave of this Island, I carry'd on board for Reliques, the great Goat's-Skin-Cap I had made, my Umbrella, and my Parrot.
1751 S. Johnson Rambler No. 83. ⁋9 This regard, which we..pay to the meanest relique of a man great and illustrious.
1836 J. Murray Hand-bk. for Travellers on Continent 350/1 Luther's..apartment..contains his portrait, bible, and other relics.
1863 A. P. Stanley Lect. Jewish Church I. vii. 164 Two lesser objects of interest were laid up..in front of it, both relics of Sinai.
1880 Marine Engineer July 84/1 A Relic of Her Majesty's Ship ‘Orpheus’.
1903 Wilson Bull. 15 4 I recall the fact that I possessed..a battered pair of field glasses cherished until that moment as a relic of the Civil War.
1930 Times 30 Apr. 13/2 The Nelson Collection at the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, has recently been enriched by a further relic of the great Admiral.
1993 Huntington Libr. Q. 56 43 Since these descendants of Harriet seem to have kept tightly guarded every other relic associated with her and the poet, one can only speculate that the commonplace book also was in their possession.
2.
a. In plural. That which remains or is left behind, esp. after destruction or wasting away; the remains or remaining fragments of a thing; the remnant, residue of a nation or people. Also in singular in same sense.In Middle English also: †the descendants of a particular people (obsolete).
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > wholeness > incompleteness > part of whole > that which is left or remainder > [noun] > remains > after destructive agency > decayed remnant(s)
relicsc1350
ruinc1425
ruins1544
decays1582
debris1708
wreck1713
shard1786
faulturea1821
detritus1834
c1350 Psalter (BL Add. 17376) in K. D. Bülbring Earliest Compl. Eng. Prose Psalter (1891) xxxvi. 40 (MED) Þe vnriȝtful, forsoþe, shul ben desparplist, and þe relikes [L. reliquiae] of þe wicked shul dien.
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) (1963) 2 Kings xxi. 2 Gabanytes ben not of þe sones of israel but þe relikes [a1425 L.V. relikys; v.r. leeuyngis; L. reliquiae] of Amoreis.
a1400 Psalter (Vesp.) xxxvi. 39 in C. Horstmann Yorkshire Writers (1896) II. 169 (MED) Þa ere relikes [L. reliquiae] to man þat paisful es, And vnrightwise samen forworth þai sal, And relikes ofe wicke sal sterue with-al.
1480 W. Caxton Chron. Eng. ci. 52 b The reliques of his body shall bene brought fro Rome, and translated in Britaigne.
a1586 Sir P. Sidney Arcadia (1593) i. sig. A3 That smoake was but a small relique of a great fire.
a1599 E. Spenser View State Ireland 31 in J. Ware Two Hist. Ireland (1633) Whatsoever reliques there was left of the land-bred people.
1615 G. Sandys Relation of Journey 194 An hundred paces farther..there are the relikes of a Church.
1642 H. Parker Observ. His Majesties Answers 40 They [sc. the Dutch]..being but the torn relique of a small Nation.
1656 J. Smith Compl. Pract. Physick 271 The reliques of the Quick-silver will stick to the gold.
1712 A. Pope tr. Statius First Bk. Thebais in Misc. Poems 41 Dust yet white upon each Altar lies; The Relicks of a former Sacrifice.
1774 T. Pennant Tour Scotl. 1772 9 The priory..stood near the bridge, but not a relique exists.
1788 E. Gibbon Decline & Fall III. xlix. 143 After a bloody conflict of eight years.., the relics of the nation submitted.
1817 Ld. Byron Manfred iii. iv. 68 I stood within the Coloseum's wall, 'Midst the chief relics of almighty Rome.
1834 Hogg Let. in Sotheby's Sale Catal. 22–6 Feb. (1897) 42 He is..the only relic I know of the real intimate acquaintances of Burns.
1851 D. Wilson Archæol. & Prehistoric Ann. Scotl. iii. vi. 455 It is only in this last period..that we..find the relics of the war-chariot among the contents of the tomb.
1907 Times 16 Apr. 9/6 There are still four or five acres of garden ground, the last relic of a plot of 40 acres.
1991 S. Winchester Pacific (1992) 88 The shores are littered with the relics of stranded vessels.
b. In plural. The remains of a meal or food; remnants, scraps. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > food otherwise characterized > [noun] > left-over food
reliefc1300
ortc1325
broken meatc1384
scrapsa1387
reversionc1450
remissalsc1460
superfluities1483
levet1528
sheet-shaking1543
table crumb1566
relics1576
off-falling1607
analects1623
voiding1680
voidance1740
leftover1866
pot-washings1912
slarts1913
1576 A. Fleming tr. Cicero in Panoplie Epist. 75 We would haue had no fragments or broken scraps left. But now..wee haue sore a doo about those reliques.
a1602 W. Perkins Cases of Consc. (1619) 327 Gather vp the broken meate..these reliques and fragments are part of the creatures.
a1682 Sir T. Browne Christian Morals (1716) i. 5 Treat the poor, as our Saviour did the Multitude, to the reliques of some baskets.
1793 S. Burrell Poems II. 56 The reliques of a sumptuous dinner Are tempting to a young beginner.
1797 W. Boscawen tr. Horace Satires Epist. & Art Poetry 200 Baskets stood piled up with meat, The reliques of a splendid treat.
1816 W. Scott Antiquary I. ix. 192 His sister hastened to silence his murmurs, by proposing some of the reliques of the dinner.
1830 J. F. W. Herschel Prelim. Disc. Study Nat. Philos. 2 His food [being] worms..varied with occasional relics, mangled by more powerful beasts of prey.
1917 Education May 575 Orange and banana peels, apple cores and other relics of the dinner pail and luncheon hour.
c. Biology. = relict n. 3e.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > biology > taxonomy > taxon > [noun] > species or sub-species
shapec1400
species1608
subspecies1681
semispecies1825
infima species1843
conspeciesa1856
incipient species1859
relic1873
biological species1876
biological race1878
microspecies1897
clan1916
Jordanon1916
twin species1931
supraspecies1938
sibling species1940
species pair1942
phenon1943
biospecies1953
ochlospecies1962
the world > life > biology > taxonomy > taxon > [noun] > species or sub-species > relict species
relict1811
relic1873
1873 Jrnl. Linn. Soc. 6 6 Species No. 1 may be a relic left at spots A and B.
1947 R. F. Daubenmire Plants & Environment x. 377 A species may suffer one or more catastrophes which destroy all but a fragment of the total population. The remnants are called relics, epibiotics, or depleted species.
1967 G. G. Simpson Meaning Evol. (rev. ed.) iv. 43 The Agnatha declined almost to extinction, and yet a few peculiar types survived as relics through the millions of years to the present time.
2002 M. Boulter Extinction vi. 169 Ancient plant lineages have relics like redwood and tree ferns which have dwindled to tiny vestiges of their former widespread glory.
3.
a. In plural. The remains of a person; the body, or part of the body, of a deceased person (sometimes implying sense 1).
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > dead body > [noun]
lichc893
dust?a1000
holdc1000
bonesOE
stiff onea1200
bodyc1225
carrion?c1225
licham?c1225
worms' food or ware?c1225
corsec1250
ashc1275
corpsec1315
carcass1340
murraina1382
relicsa1398
ghostc1400
wormes warec1400
corpusc1440
scadc1440
reliefc1449
martc1480
cadaverc1500
mortc1500
tramort?a1513
hearse1530
bulk1575
offal1581
trunk1594
cadaverie1600
relicts1607
remains1610
mummya1616
relic1636
cold meat1788
mortality1827
death bone1834
deader1853
stiff1859
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 168v Þere reste þe relikes of seint John Baptiste.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) 21215 (MED) Þei did sent andru relikes and him [sc. St Luke] Bring to constantinopolim.
1483 W. Caxton tr. J. de Voragine Golden Legende 237/2 I shalle ensigne the of eueriche by symylitude to knowe the tombes and reliques of eche of us.
a1522 G. Douglas tr. Virgil Æneid (1957) v. ii. 11 Sen that the reliqueis [Sm. reliquies, Ruddim. reliquis] and bonys infeir Of my dyvyne fader we erdyt heir.
1596 J. Dalrymple tr. J. Leslie Hist. Scotl. (1888) I. 110 The reliques of S. Andro..quhilkes out of Grece he brocht.
1658 Sir T. Browne Hydriotaphia: Urne-buriall Ep. Ded. sig. A2 Men took a lasting adieu of their interred Friends,..having no old experience of the duration of their Reliques.
1691 A. Wood Athenæ Oxonienses I. 156 How long he lived after that year, I cannot tell, nor where his reliques were lodg'd.
1718 M. Prior Solomon on Vanity iii, in Poems Several Occasions (new ed.) 495 Say: shall our Relicks second Birth receive?
1725 A. Pope tr. Homer Odyssey III. xiv. 156 He..welters on the wave, Or food for fish, or dogs, his reliques lye.
1775 J. Adair Hist. Amer. Indians 183 They go along with those beloved relicks of the dead..till they arrive at the bone-house.
1813 P. B. Shelley Queen Mab vii. 94 All around The mouldering relics of my kindred lay.
1854 H. H. Milman Hist. Lat. Christianity I. iii. v. 381 The reliques of those martyrs whom the Romans burned with fire.
1927 A. Conan Doyle Case-bk. Sherlock Holmes 296 We opened such a coffin... As to the old relics which we took out, we could not leave them on the floor of the crypt.
1938 Times 30 Nov. 21/1 Many human remains were found in a condition that suggested hasty interment. It is possible that these were relics of the hanged rebels.
2002 TASS (Nexis) 24 May Buried there are the relics of a Soviet soldier who died near the village of Krykovo.
b. In singular in the same sense. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > dead body > [noun]
lichc893
dust?a1000
holdc1000
bonesOE
stiff onea1200
bodyc1225
carrion?c1225
licham?c1225
worms' food or ware?c1225
corsec1250
ashc1275
corpsec1315
carcass1340
murraina1382
relicsa1398
ghostc1400
wormes warec1400
corpusc1440
scadc1440
reliefc1449
martc1480
cadaverc1500
mortc1500
tramort?a1513
hearse1530
bulk1575
offal1581
trunk1594
cadaverie1600
relicts1607
remains1610
mummya1616
relic1636
cold meat1788
mortality1827
death bone1834
deader1853
stiff1859
1636 E. Pagitt Christianographie (ed. 2) iii. 93 The taking up of the Relique of Editha thirteene yeare after her death.
1682 T. Ken Serm. at Funeral of Lady Mainard 18 This poor relique of Clay, which in a few minutes must be restor'd to its native earth.
1814 J. West Alicia de Lacy IV. 258 Those neglects to which this unsepulchred relic of his illustrious father bore a shameful testimony.
1928 Times 21 Apr. 11/2 The preservation of the relic being due entirely to the chemical properties of the..soil in which the body had been interred.
4.
a. A surviving trace of some practice, fact, idea, quality, etc. In early use usually in plural; now usually in singular.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > indication > marking > a mark > trace or vestige > [noun]
signa1382
stepa1382
ficchingc1384
marka1400
tracesc1400
scentc1422
footstep?a1425
tidinga1440
relicc1475
smell?a1505
stead1513
vestigy1545
print1548
token1555
remnant1560
show1561
mention1564
signification1576
footing?1580
tract1583
remainder1585
vestige1602
wrack1602
engravement1604
footstepping1610
resent1610
ghost1613
impression1613
remark1624
footprint1625
studdle1635
vestigium1644
relict1646
perception1650
vestigiary1651
track1657
symptom1722
signacle1768
ray1773
vestigia1789
footmark1800
souvenir1844
latent1920
c1475 tr. C. de Pisan Livre du Corps de Policie (Cambr.) (1977) 173 (MED) A wyse man wolde take peyne to gete the leste fauour [read sauour; Fr. goute] of the reliques of wysedom.
1533 T. More 2nd Pt. Confut. Tyndals Answere iv. p. lvii Saynt Poule in hys pystle to ye Romayns, speketh of the pronytye and mocyons in the fleshe remaynynge, as the relyques of orygynall synne.
a1586 Sir P. Sidney Arcadia (1590) iii. ix. sig. Nn4v Doubting some reliques of the late mutinie.
1612 T. Taylor Αρχὴν Ἁπάντων: Comm. Epist. Paul to Titus (i. 13) 267 An infirmitie is a rellike of sinne.
1678 R. Barclay Apol. True Christian Divinity iv. §2. 101 There were some Reliques of the Heavenly Image left in Adam.
1712 E. Budgell Spectator No. 365. ¶3 A Relique of a certain Pagan Worship.
1795 W. Paley View Evidences Christianity (ed. 3) I. i. vii. 132 No reliques appear of any story substantially different from the present.
1824 W. Irving Tales of Traveller I. 349 It is a rich relique of a more poetical age.
1865 E. B. Tylor Res. Early Hist. Mankind i. 2 A relic of a ruder mental condition.
1908 Times 20 Jan. 9/3 The last battered relic of what was once a great and coherent policy.
1938 Times 17 May 12/5 Our present law regarding suicide is a relic of the old ecclesiastical law.
1951 C. Hare Eng. Murder viii. 90 Such things as titles and peerages are interesting relics of the past, no more.
2006 Countryman Dec. 16/1 Kissing under the mistletoe may be a relic of an ancient fertility rite.
b. An object vested with interest because of its age or historical associations; an artefact.
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > relative time > the past > oldness or ancientness > [noun] > object from the past or antique
antique1530
relic1605
relict1646
venerable1803
morceau de musée1896
period piece1909
1605 M. Drayton Poems sig. Ii3 A goodly table that was massie gold, A relique kept at Windsor many a day.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Twelfth Night (1623) iii. iii. 19 What's to do? Shall we go see the reliques of this Towne? View more context for this quotation
1632 W. Lithgow Totall Disc. Trav. v. 208 My Interpreter shewed me..one of the doores of the Temple of Salomon,..being indeede a relicke of wonderfull bignesse.
1787 T. Jefferson Writings (1859) II. 317 The good, old and venerable fabric, which should have been preserved even as a religious relique.
1841 W. Spalding Italy & Ital. Islands I. 200 The crowds of reliques which..have reappeared to adorn the modern galleries.
1872 M. Collins Princess Clarice II. ix. 109 It is a sleepy village..with many curious relics.
1933 Classical Jrnl. 28 488 Before every class, students old and new may be seen studying the Roman relics.
1998 B. Olsen N. Calif. 30 The trail is three miles long and contains some interesting relics from the old gold-mining days.
c. With of. A physical reminder or surviving trace of some occurrence, period, people, etc.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > record > memorial or monument > [noun]
mind tokena1382
remembrancec1425
relic1624
denkmal1877
the mind > mental capacity > memory > retrospection, reminiscence > [noun] > old memories > something preserved from past
tracesc1400
record1563
relic1624
vestigea1660
1624 H. Wotton Elements Archit. 51 [These arches] ought to bee..left to their first inuentors, the Gothes or Lumbards, amongst other Reliques of that barbarous Age.
1695 J. Woodward Ess. Nat. Hist. Earth 35 Others..thought that they [sc. shells] were only Reliques of some former great Inundations of the Sea.
1812 Cowper's Yardley Oak (new ed.) in W. Hayley Life & Posthumous Writings Cowper (new ed.) IV. 423 Hollow-trunk'd..and with excoriate forks deform, Relics [1804 Relicts] of ages.
1832 G. R. Porter Treat. Manuf. Porcelain & Glass 268 These curious relics of ancient times have also been discovered decorated with coloured glass beads.
1855 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. IV. xx. 522 The swords were rusty reliques of Edge Hill and Marston Moor.
1871 E. A. Freeman Hist. Norman Conquest IV. xviii. 212 Those great roads which abide as the noblest relics of the days of Roman dominion.
1923 National Geographic Mag. Jan. 6/1 This relic of medieval Pisan rule is in an excellent state of preservation, with its coat of arms..and iron-bound portcullis.
1958 R. Liddell Morea iii. ii. 243 A Gothic revival school building was a relic of the British protectorate.
2003 ‘A. Pendragon’ & C. J. Stone Trials of Arthur xvi. 221 The King's Stone brooded in a patch of forgotten ground, behind a wrought-iron fence, a relic of a bye-gone age.
d. colloquial (humorous or derogatory). An old, outmoded, or outdated person or thing; someone or something left over from an earlier era, or having the characteristics of a former time.
ΘΚΠ
the world > people > person > old person > [noun]
oldeOE
morea1382
olderc1450
ancient1502
mouldy chopsa1640
antediluvian1648
prediluvian1690
emerit1710
pelt1757
old fogey1793
antique1801
relic1832
old head1838
oldster1846
elderling1863
the Ancient of Days1935
senior citizen1938
OAP1942
golden ager1948
coffin dodger1954
wrinkly1972
crumbly1976
geriatric1977
1832 W. Scott Castle Dangerous in Tales of my Landlord 4th Ser. III. 327 ‘Now hang thee,’ thought Fabian to himself, ‘for an old relic of the wars, stuffed full of conceit.’
1869 ‘M. Twain’ in Buffalo Express 21 Aug. 1/3 I came upon a noble Son of the Forest sitting under a tree, diligently at work on a bead reticule... I addressed the noble relic as follows.
1893 Music 4 324 Who would you have advised as a proper man for the position?.. Not Zerrahn, because he is a ‘relic of the past’.
1904 E. F. Heddle Strangers in Land i. 8 A dear old early Victorian governess, left over from the last century; a relic, like elastic-sided boots and side curls!
1975 D. Bagley Snow Tiger xix. 135 Eric Peterson stoked up the old-fashioned pot-bellied stove..and commented, ‘I'm glad we didn't get rid of this relic.’
1993 Men's Health Oct. 90/2 He believed that women were good for nothing more than taking notes and making coffee. He was a relic.
2002 Globe & Mail (Toronto) (Nexis) 13 Apr. a16 The [railway] tracks are lousy, the passenger cars are relics from the 1950s.
e. Linguistics. An archaic word, form, particle, etc., surviving from an earlier language or period; a relict (see relict n. 3f).
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > [noun] > linguistic change > specific features or processes involved in
analogy1569
deflection1603
epenthesis1656
sandhi1806
relic1835
anamorphosis1862
metanalysis1914
drift1921
adstratum1939
grammaticalization1955
relexification1962
1835 Q. Rev. Sept. 322 The termination ter or der is a relic of an ancient word denoting tree.
1881 Amer. Jrnl. Philo. 2 56 The n is either a phonetic affix to prevent hiatus or a relic of the old accusative ending m.
1890 Mod. Lang. Notes 5 236/2 This word, the only relic in Middle English of the old medio-passive voice, should be fully explained.
1943 Language 19 257 Nowhere..was there an indication of the genuine vitality of this set of suffixes, which, divested of any specific function, had become mere meaningless relics.
1951 Amer. Speech 26 252 The occurrences of clabbered milk in the northern counties of the state are probably explained as a sporadic relic.
1997 P. H. Matthews Conc. Oxf. Dict. Linguistics 29 Latin fertis ‘you are carrying’ is a relic of an athematic formation in Indo-European.
5. regional (chiefly Scottish). The widow of a man; a relict. Now rare.Perhaps by confusion with relict n. 1: see the etymology.
ΚΠ
1526–7 in J. Imrie et al. Burgh Court Bk. Selkirk (1960) 84 Jenot Huntar, the relyk of umquhill Thomas Trumbull.
1552–3 in J. S. Clouston Rec. Earldom of Orkney (1914) 247 Me Helen Lesk, the relik of umquhile Thomas Flattay.
1672 in Bk. Old Edinb. Club VI. 117 Releick of the deceist.
1689 in W. R. Scott Rec. Sc. Cloth Manufactory New Mills (1905) 210 Orders that..make a finall end with Major Whyt's relick.
1701 in Aberdeen Jrnl. Notes & Queries (1913) 6 199 Elspit Murrou, relick of the deceised Wm. Paull.
1881 Good Words 22 84 His relic was a lady of like dignity and virtue, convinced (as all Barum people are) of the vast superiority of that town.
1906 ‘H. Foulis’ Vital Spark xviii. 130 John—that's the depairted, I'm his relic.
6. An example left by a person. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > behaviour > a standard of conduct > [noun] > a pattern or model of conduct > left by a person
relic1610
1610 J. Boys Expos. Domin. Epist. in Wks. (1622) 133 Here then is a notable relique for women to behold.
1610 J. Boys Expos. Domin. Epist. in Wks. (1622) 555 This her relique is worth our obseruing also.

Phrases

relic of barbarism: a condition or practice which survives from, or is a reminder of, a period characterized by brutality or an absence of culture and civilization.
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > duration > [noun] > long duration or lasting through time > something that remains > reminder of bad times
relic of barbarism1607
1607 B. Jonson Volpone Ep. Ded. sig. ¶3 To see..those antique reliques of Barbarisme retriu'd, with all other ridiculous, and exploded follies.
1751 Constantia II. 72 I esteem it the characteristic of barbarous nations, and so far as it any where remains a relic of barbarism.
1817 Lit. Gaz. 31 May 290/2 They still retain that relic of barbarism, the wearing ear-rings.
1852 Harper's Mag. Dec. 126/2 Railing against the church, against society, against institutions, against ‘relics of barbarisms’.
1921 T. Wolfe Let. 2 Sept. (1956) 16 This ‘point system’ of selecting teachers is a relic of barbarism.
1996 Jrnl. Amer. Hist. 83 822 In contrast to the struggle against slavery, the other relic of barbarism, the war against polygamy was relatively bloodless.

Compounds

C1.
a. General attributive (chiefly in sense 1).
relic box n.
ΚΠ
1591 R. Percyvall Bibliotheca Hispanica Dict. at Relicario A relicke boxe.
1733 tr. Ceremonies & Relig. Customs Var. Nations I. 350 In 811, the Patriarch of Constantinople sent a Gold Relic-Box..to Pope Leo the Third.
1889 Times 8 Apr. 5/6 On January 16 the excavators came on the relic box or coffer.
1910 V. S. Howard tr. S. Lagerlöf Girl from Marsh Croft viii. 235 The treasure-vaults of the churches being filled with golden relic-boxes and jewelled exhibits.
2005 Sydney Morning Herald (Nexis) 1 Oct. 42 Medieval reliquaries, or relic boxes.
relic case n.
ΚΠ
1711 in J. O. Payne Rec. Eng. Catholics of 1715 (1889) 131 Silver relick case.
1866 Cornhill Mag. May 544 In the comparatively petty art of ornamentation, in rings, brooches, croziers, relic-cases, and so on, he has done just enough to show his delicacy of taste.
1954 Western Folklore 13 116 He was restored by the priest putting an offering into the relic case and asking ‘them’ to look with favour upon him.
2008 Pittsburgh (Pa.) Post-Gaz. (Nexis) 15 Sept. c3 There are 800 relic cases of various sizes.
relic building n.
ΚΠ
1664 B. Gerbier Counsel to Builders (new ed.) i. sig. c8 The reformation of a Gotis relick building.
1886 S. Strain in 35th Ann. Rep. Indiana State Board Agric. 1885 293 A large double log house..to be used as an old relic building.
2003 T. M. Finser In Search of Ethical Leadership ii. 35 Saving a few relic buildings for posterity is okay, but we do not need one in every town.
relic chest n.
ΚΠ
?c1450 Life St. Cuthbert (1891) 4248 (MED) He vnclosid þe reliks kyst.
1796 Mod. Gulliver 2 For want of a cradle, as soon as born, I was popped into a relique chest.
1847 R. B. Paul Hist. Germany x. 65 (caption) Shrine or Relic-Chest of the Tenth Century.
1992 Independent (Nexis) 15 Feb. 33 With its relic-chest similar to the size of a coffin,..the [Romanesque] shrine is thought to have been carved by local craftsmen.
relic shrine n.
ΚΠ
1808 W. Scott Marmion ii. iii. 81 The relique-shrine of cost, With ivory and gems embosd.
1929 Washington Post 4 Aug. iv. 9/2 Other parts of the temple are one or more relic shrines.
2007 Church Hist. (Nexis) 1 Dec. This practice, well-attested for other relic shrines as well, allows the sick person to consume a substance that, by contact with the powerful relic, was believed to share its wonderworking property.
relic veneration n.
ΚΠ
1791 Coll. Spiritual Songs xxviii. 76 Where relick veneration, And angels' invocation, Feasts, fasts, lent's celebration, When were they first begun?
1848 J. H. Newman Loss & Gain ii. xix. 284 The doctrine and practice of relic-veneration.
1993 Jrnl. Relig. 73 91 A desire to stay in Ireland combined with the rise in relic veneration reoriented Irish pilgrimage.
relic-worship n.
ΚΠ
1678 T. Tenison Of Idolatry x. 184 Hottinger distributeth the false worship of the Papists into six kinds of Idolatry,..Breadworship;..Relick-worship [etc].
1828 R. Southey Hist. Peninsular War (new ed.) II. ix. 21 Dacianus, holding relic-worship in as much contempt as the Christians did his idolatry, in order to prevent them from indulging in it, burnt the bodies of the martyrs.
1871 E. B. Tylor Primitive Culture II. xv. 139 The conception..would give a rational explanation of much relic-worship otherwise obscure.
1996 Independent (Nexis) 10 Oct. 3 Far from disdaining relic-worship as a rather primitive superstition, the Catholic church has always incorporated it.
b. Objective and instrumental.
relic hunter n.
ΚΠ
1765 A. Maclaine tr. J. L. von Mosheim Eccl. Hist. I. 324 St. Eloi was a zealous relick hunter.
1893 K. Sanborn Truthful Woman S. Calif. 54 The plaster statues have been disgracefully mutilated by relic-hunters.
1995 Post & Courier (Charleston, S. Carolina) (Nexis) 31 July 11 Preservationists... worry relic hunters will dig up sites.
relic hunting n.
ΚΠ
1776 P. Nisbet Abridgem. Eccl. Hist. iii. 138 Such was the spirit for relic-hunting, that many undertook hazardous voyages..in order to procure some part or appendage of departed saints.
1891 A. J. Foster Ouse 139 These were the days of relic-hunting.
1998 J. M. Zenzen Battling for Manassas viii. 115 The Park Service did not have any legal authority to stop the relic hunting because the land was privately owned.
relic-monger n.
ΚΠ
1691 E. Taylor in tr. J. Behmen Theosophick Philos. 239 The Relick-Mongers pretend to some of the Wood of the supposed Cross.
1729 J. Morgan Compl. Hist. Algiers II. xvii. 538 The mangled Carcass was then reduced to Cinders, which were afterwards..cast into the Sea..in order to disappoint the zealous Relic-Mongers.
1854 H. Miller My Schools & Schoolmasters vi. 117 Though not much of a relic-monger, I would hesitate to exchange it.
1923 T. P. Terry Terry's Guide to Mexico (rev. ed.) vi. xliv. 426 Watchful guards are in attendance, and relic-mongers..should think twice before courting the unhappy consequences certain to follow appropriations.
2001 First Things (Nexis) 1 May 59 [Constantine's] mother, Helena, was a relic-monger who went in search of the True Cross and the Seamless Robe.
relic vender n.
ΚΠ
1830 S. Morgan France in 1829–30 II. 146 When St. Louis and the imperial relic-vender..shall no longer be remembered.
1848 E. Bulwer-Lytton Harold II. v. i. 4 Edward was left alone to his monks and relic-venders.
1908 Locomotive Engineers Jrnl. Apr. 284/2 It is possible to go..to the shores of Galilee and to sit there for hours without being disturbed by the importunities of relic venders.
relic vendor n.
ΚΠ
1843 G. M. Musgrave Parson, Pen, & Pencil I. viii. 275 Shrine manufacturers, tombstone-cutters, sculptors, and masons, garland-weavers and relic-vendors.
1900 Mind 7 106 Whatever genuine phenomena may be produced by magnetic healers, faith curers, divine healers, relic vendors, etc.
2007 Evening Sun (Hanover, Pa.) (Nexis) 9 July A firearms and relic vendor at most Gettysburg re-enactments since 1963, Mike Klinepeter said [etc.].
c.
relic-covered adj.
ΚΠ
1807 S. Smith Two Lett. ii. 28 The relic-covered jacket of a Catholic.
2004 J. Campbell et al. USA (Lonely Planet) (ed. 3) 1039/1 A sawdust floor and relic-covered walls.
C2.
relic area n. Linguistics a region noted for the survival of old or archaic language forms.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > a language > [noun] > living, dead, or archaic language > area noted for survival of archaic forms
relic area1943
1943 Language 19 186 In North Carolina one can more easily find relic areas along the coast.
1953 Lang. Learning 4 104 Relic areas..are those whose geographical or cultural isolation, and relative lack of prestige, has caused the retention of older forms or prevented the spread of forms characteristic of these areas.
1990 Amer. Speech 65 198 Rural relic areas and urban ghettos tend to be characterized by non-mainstream speech forms.
relic knife n. a knife containing in its handle a relic of a saint, etc.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > artefacts > portable shrines or relics > relic > [noun] > knife containing
relic knife1854
society > occupation and work > equipment > cutting tool > knife > [noun] > other knives
bollock knifec1400
paring knife1415
spudc1440
pricking-knifec1500
shaving-knife1530–1
by-knifec1570
heading knife1574
stock knife1582
drawing knife1583
bung-knife1592
weeding knife1598
drawing knife1610
heading knife1615
draw knife1679
dressing knife1683
redishing knife1688
mocotaugan1716
skinning knife1767
paper knife1789
draw shave1824
leaf-cutter1828
piece-knife1833
nut-pick1851
relic knife1854
butch1859
straw-knife1862
sportsman's companion1863
ulu1864
skinner1872
hacker1875
over-shave1875
stripping-knife1875
Stanley knife1878
flat-back1888
gauge-knife1888
tine-knife1888
plough1899
band-knife1926
X-Acto1943
shank1953
box cutter1955
ratchet knife1966
ratchet1975
1854 Jrnl. Brit. Archæol. Assoc. 10 89 The knife..is of an earlier period, and may perhaps be regarded as a relic knife.
1996 S. Heaney Spirit Level 44 Healed and martyred Agatha stares down At the relic knife.
Relic Sunday n. [compare post-classical Latin dies Dominica reliquiarum (a1564 in a British source)] now historical a Sunday on which the relics preserved in a church were specially venerated.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > worship > liturgical year > feast, festival > specific Christian festivals > Relic Sunday (3rd after midsummer) > [noun]
Relic Sunday1450
1450–2 in 5th Rep. Royal Comm. Hist. MSS: Pt. 1 (1876) App. 520 in Parl. Papers (C. 1432) XL. 1 For to make a wacchefyre there, the Fryday byfore Relek Sunday, in the 29th year 2d.
c1525 R. Arnold Chron. (new ed.) sig. Cii On Relyk sonday in the aftyr none was a grete thondre and tempest.
1708 Rider's Brit. Merlin On Relique-Sunday (being the Sund. fortnight after Midsum.).
1844 J. Stoughton Notices of Windsor 117 Soon after, on a relic Sunday, when every man appeared with a relic in his hand, this chorister had none.
1995 A. D. Brown Pop. Piety in Late Medieval Eng. x. 236 Robert Testwood had to speak out against the practices of Relic Sunday and the cult of Henry VI.
relic water n. water in which relics have been dipped, regarded as having sacred properties.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > artefacts > portable shrines or relics > relic > [noun] > water in which relics have been dipped
relic water1530
1530 Privy Purse Exp. Hen. VIII (1827) 67 For bringing a glasse of Relike water fro Wyndesor.
1562 Homilies (1859) ii. Idolatry iii. 236 Our idolaters found too much vantage of reliques and relique water to follow St. Chrysostom's counsel.
1852 D. Rock Church our Fathers III. 429 The ‘Canterbury water’ was not the only relic-water known to England.
2001 Providence (Rhode Island) Jrnl.-Bull. (Nexis) 16 Apr. 1 b The ceremony is conducted by the [Buddhist] temple's monks, who bless ‘relic water’ that is kept in a special container.

Derivatives

ˈrelic-like adv. and adj.
ΚΠ
1593–1602 J. Donne Satires in Satires, Epigrams & Verse Lett. (1967) 9 The snuffe, Of wasting Candles..(Relique-like [1633 reliquely] kept) perchance buyes wedding geare.
1910 G. Andersson Swedish Climate in Late-Quaternary Period 287 Among the plants that have a relic-like distribution in Central Sweden, are the yew..and the ivy.
1999 St. Louis (Missouri) Post-Dispatch (Nexis) 3 Jan. c3 At first it seems an incongruous matching, these modern designs with these relic-like clay pots.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2009; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

relicadj.

Brit. /ˈrɛlɪk/, U.S. /ˈrɛlɪk/
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: relic n.
Etymology: < relic n. Compare earlier relict adj.
1. Biology and Geology. Esp. of a species or a landform: surviving from a previous age or in changed circumstances after the extinction or disappearance of related forms or structures. Cf. relict adj. 5a, 5b.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > biology > physical aspects or shapes > physical arrangement or condition > [adjective] > relict
relic1889
the world > life > biology > taxonomy > taxon > [adjective] > species or sub-species
univocal1638
specific1650
subspecific1795
conspecific1859
racial1884
co-specific1889
relic1889
relict1899
intraspecific1919
monospecific1921
intraspecies1927
supraspecific1936
infra-specific1939
supraspecies1960
species-uniform1968
1889 Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 3 63 We must assume either that it has been produced in the Baltic or in the lakes, or that, like the other relic-forms, it is a remnant of Arctic fauna.
1903 J. E. S. Moore Tanganyika Probl. 20 The fresh water faunas of the world are relic faunas emanating from the sea.
1926 W. H. Twenhofel Treat. Sedimentation v. 369 The Salton Sink of California is probably an example of a relic sea which appears to have been severed from the Gulf of California in the building of the Colorado River delta.
1940 Jrnl. Genetics 40 72 At this stage it is usual for some or all of the chromosomes to show ‘relic’ coils or spirals. These coils are to be regarded as the remains of the spirals of the previous division.
1976 H. M. French Periglacial Environment v. 95 The presence of obviously relic pingos..in present-day periglacial environments.
1992 M. Atherden Upland Brit. vii. 116 The fresh-water herring is another relic species found in a few Scottish lochs.
2. Astronomy. Designating particles, radiation, and other phenomena which represent traces of past events, esp. the Big Bang; = relict adj. 7.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the universe > [adjective] > origin > specific
chaodical1651
chaotical1664
chaotic1690
relic1966
relict1967
1966 JETP Lett. 3 324 ‘Cold’ relic quarks..which remain..from the first stages of the expansion of the universe..may..be present in the cosmic rays.
1976 J. Kleczek Universe ii. 79 There should be a large quantity of relic neutrinos.
1992 S. P. Maran Astron. & Astrophysics Encycl. 100/1 It is postulated that relic radio sources are ejecta of now-quiescent radio galaxies that have moved away from the scene.
2006 P. G. Ferreira State of Universe xv. 243 The relic radiation has been flying through space from the time when the Universe was only a few hundred thousand years old.

Compounds

relic form n. (a) Biology an animal, species, etc., that is a relic (relic n. 2c); (b) Linguistics a linguistic form that survives as a relic (relic n. 4e).
ΚΠ
1889*Relic form [see sense 1].
1933 L. Bloomfield Lang. xxvii. 479 This may be disclosed by isolated relic forms, or by the characteristic phenomenon of hyper-forms.
1951 Amer. Speech 26 13 The preservation of relic forms is made possible by geographical or cultural isolation.
1968 Amer. Jrnl. Bot. 55 681 The diploid populations appear to be relic forms which are surviving as endemics in relatively restricted ecological zones.
1998 Amer. Speech 73 154 This feature has apparently become an infrequently used relic form in the Anglo-American varieties of Robeson County.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2009; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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n.?c1225adj.1889
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