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单词 satyr
释义

satyrn.

Brit. /ˈsatə/, U.S. /ˈsædər/, /ˈseɪdər/
Forms:

α. Middle English satiris, Middle English satirus; plural Middle English satarye, Middle English satiry, Middle English satury, Middle English statery (transmission error), Middle English–1500s satiri, Middle English–1500s satyri.

β. late Middle English satiro.

γ. Middle English satires (plural), Middle English saytowre, Middle English–1700s satyre, 1500s satir, 1500s satyer, 1500s–1700s satire, 1500s– satyr; also Scottish pre-1700 sattier, pre-1700 sattire, pre-1700 sattyre.

Origin: Of multiple origins. Partly a borrowing from Latin. Partly a borrowing from French. Etymons: Latin satyrus; French satyre.
Etymology: Partly < classical Latin satyrus (see below), and partly (in later use) < Middle French satire, satyre (French satyre) (late 14th cent.) < classical Latin satyrus (also saturus (2nd cent. a.d.)) demigod of wild places, such a creature as represented on the stage, kind of ape, (plural) play in which the chorus consisted of satyrs < ancient Greek σάτυρος demigod of wild places, (plural) play in which the chorus consisted of satyrs, in Hellenistic Greek also (singular) kind of ape; of uncertain origin; perhaps a loanword.Compare Spanish sátiro (13th cent.), Old Occitan satiri , Portuguese sátiro , Italian satiro (all 14th cent.). Specific forms. In α. forms directly < classical Latin satyrus, plural satyrī. Specific senses. Sense 1b apparently resulted from confusion between the words satiric adj. and satyric adj., which gave rise to the belief that the satyrs who formed the chorus of the Greek satyric drama had to deliver ‘satirical’ speeches. In sense 4 after satyral n. In sense 5 after scientific Latin Satyridae, family name (see satyrid n., and compare the scientific Latin genus name cited at that entry).
1.
a. Mythology. Any of a class of mythical beings associated with or supposed to inhabit woodland, in classical Greek and Roman times believed to be gods or semi-divine, and having a partly human and partly bestial (usually goat-like) form.These beings were supposed to be the companions of Dionysus or Bacchus; in Greek art they were originally represented as having the form of a man with a horse's ears and tail, often with large genitals, and later sometimes as having some goat-like features; the more usual representation in Roman art was of a man with a goat's ears, tail, legs, and (sometimes only budding) horns (cf. faun n.), and it is in this form that satyrs are now usually represented. They have generally been associated with drunkenness and (especially sexually) uninhibited behaviour.The use of satyr to render Hebrew śāʿīr (plural śĕʿīrīm) in some translations of Isaiah 13:21 and 34:14 (see e.g. quot. 1560) is presumably due to a belief that it denoted a similar creature, although the Hebrew word is now usually understood to refer to goat-like desert spirits or demons.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > deity > classical deity > [noun] > satyr
devila1382
satyra1387
silenc1487
Silenus1572
satyrisk1583
tityrus1607
satyress1831
satyra1850
a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1865) I. 169 Þere is ofte by nyȝte i-seie fire, fauni, and satyri [L. satyri].
a1413 (c1385) G. Chaucer Troilus & Criseyde (Pierpont Morgan) (1882) iv. l. 1544 And this on euery god celestial I swere it yow..On euery Nymphe and deite infernal On satiry and fawny more lesse That halue goddes ben of wildernesse.
1484 W. Caxton tr. Subtyl Historyes & Fables Esope xxii. f. cxvijv The wodewose or Satyre ledde the pylgrym in to his pytte.
1560 Bible (Geneva) Isa. xiii. 21 Ostriches shal dwell there, & the Satyrs [1611 King James Satyres] shal dance there.
1581 G. Pettie tr. S. Guazzo Ciuile Conuersat. (1586) iii. 157 A milkemaide of the countrie, who will haue as good a grace amongst other women, as a Satyre would haue amongst the Nymphes.
1613 G. Markham Second Pt. First Bk. Eng. Arcadia f. 38v The Wood-gods and Satyrs leaue their well-closed thickets to come and be witnesses of our actions.
1666 tr. Horace Ode xix, in A. Brome et al. tr. Horace Poems ii. 77 On Rocks remote I Bacchus chanc'd t'espy,..Listning Nymphs, and Satyrs there With Goat-feet.
1700 W. Congreve Way of World iii. i. 49 Sure I was born with budding Antlers like a young Satyre.
1781 W. Cowper Anti-Thelypthora 199 The Fauns and Satyrs, a lascivious race.
1848 A. Jameson Sacred & Legendary Art (1850) 64 The head has the god-like ugliness and malignity of a satyr.
1967 R. Sutcliff Outcast vi. 92 Her magenta veil making a path of crude colour against the faded frieze of nymphs and satyrs.
2002 D. H. Sterry Chicken (2003) xvii. 190 He was dressed as a satyr, the mythological half man half beast who embodies raw sexuality and is hung like a horse.
b. In the 16th and 17th centuries used as a personification or embodiment of censoriousness or fault-finding. Cf. satire n. 4. Obsolete.For the apparent origin of this sense, see note in etymology.
ΚΠ
1579 T. Lodge Protogenes 36 They presented the liues of Satyers, So that they might wiselye vnder the abuse of that name, discouer the follies of many theyr folish fellow citesens.
a1592 R. Greene Mamillia (1593) ii. To Rdrs. sig. A3v Let Momus mocke, and Zoilus enuie,..yea, let the sauage Satyre himselfe, whose cynicall censure is more seuere than need, frowne at his, pleasure.
1653 Duchess of Newcastle Poems & Fancies 159 Censuring Satyrs, they in corners lurke.
c. figurative. A man who has strong sexual desires; a lecherous or sexually rapacious man.
ΘΚΠ
society > morality > moral evil > licentiousness > unchastity > lasciviousness or lust > [noun] > lascivious or lustful person > lustful man
satyr1591
goat1601
capriped1727
ram1919
1591 R. W. Martine Mar-Sixtus sig. D For life and conuersation (I shame to tell it) what was he but a most impure and lecherous Satyr?
1674 Gallantry à la Mode iii. 137 May that old Satyr in desire, Through his glass Eyes thee still admire; When thou ly'st down in wanton play, To feast his sight seem'st Milky-way.
1782 W. Cowper Conversation in Poems 214 The heathen law-givers of antient days,..Would drive them forth from the resort of men, And shut up ev'ry satyr in his den.
1892 Frank Leslie's Pop. Monthly Oct. 420/2 At the slightest signal they would have fallen upon this worn-out satyr and rent him limb from limb.
1937 W. Lewis Revenge for Love (1972) v. i. 200 As a veteran satyr he always fell for the pouting mouth, and the blank rounded eye, of pseudo ten-year-olds.
2013 New Yorker 15 Apr. 47/3 Shaw turns up in ‘Light Years’, as a besotted satyr who courts Nedra in a Swiss hotel.
2. Originally: a chimpanzee or other large African primate. In later use: the orangutan, genus Pongo. Now historical.In early use occasionally conflated or confused with sense 1a: see e.g. quot. 1613.man satyr: see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > mammals > order Primates > suborder Anthropoidea (higher primates) > [noun] > group Catarrhinae (Old World monkey) > member of superfamily Hominoidea (apes and humans) > family Pongidae (ape) > unspecified type of
satyra1398
Sphinx1607
soko1870
the world > animals > mammals > order Primates > suborder Anthropoidea (higher primates) > [noun] > group Catarrhinae (Old World monkey) > member of superfamily Hominoidea (apes and humans) > family Pongidae (ape) > genus Pongo (orang-outang)
satyra1398
orangutan1699
man of the woods1755
pongo1775
orang1778
yahooc1790
wild man1791
mias1840
red orang1840
outang1869
lesser orang-utan1903
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add. 27944) (1975) II. xviii. xcvi. 1246 Of apes ben fyue maner kyndes... Som is satirus, plesyng in face, wiþ mery moeuynges and pleyinges.
1613 S. Purchas Pilgrimage vi. i. 466 Other Apes there are store, and as Solinus reporteth, Satyres with feet like Goates, and Sphynges, with breasts like women, and hairie.
1653 J. Bulwer Anthropometamorphosis (rev. ed.) 437 Of some such kind of extraction that Indian Satyr seems to have been described by Tulpius, that was brought from Angola in his time... He was called by the Indians Orang-Outang, or a wild man.
1780 W. Smellie tr. Comte de Buffon Nat. Hist. Gen. & Particular V. 120 The satyr, or man of the wood, whose figure differs less from that of a man than of an ape, is peculiar to Africa and the South of Asia, and exists not in America.
1861 J. G. Wood Illustr. Nat. Hist. (new ed.) I. 25 The ruddy colour of the hair of these Satyrs is especially noticed,..the Orang-outan is at once distinguishable..by the reddish, chestnut colour of its hair.
1924 W. T. Hornaday Tales Nature's Wonderlands xviii. 187 But Fortune was kind to me in a certain year of the Past, and gave me my chance to see orang-utans of all ages and sizes in their own Bornean home. It was an orgy of red satyr apes.
2002 J. Marks What it means to be 98% Chimpanzee i. 15 Tulp's ‘satyr’ looks more like an orangutan than like anything else, and he tells us that ‘it is called by the Indians orang-outang’, but he also says his specimen didn't come from the Indies, but from Angola, and it had black hair.
3. Criminals' slang. A livestock thief who operates from woodland, or in remote rural locations. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1714 A. Smith Hist. Lives High-way Men (ed. 2) II. 136 He left off picking Pockets, and got into a Gang of Satyrs who are Men living wild in the Fields, that keep their Holds and Dwellings in the Country and forsaken Places, stealing Horses, Kine, Sheep, and all other sort of Cattle.
1734 ‘C. Johnson’ Gen. Hist. Lives Highwaymen 186/2 There is in Ireland, a Sort of Men, whom we may properly enough call Satyrs, from their living in Woods, and desart Places... These People never came to any Towns, but continue in their private Holds, stealing Horses, Kine, Sheep, and all sorts of Cattle that came in their Way.
4. Heraldry. An imaginary creature represented as having the body of a lion, the face of an old man, and the horns of an antelope; = satyral n. rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > indication > insignia > heraldic devices collective > heraldic representations of creatures > [noun] > monsters
dragonc1330
griffina1400
yalec1425
mermaid1445
manticorec1470
cockatrice1513
mermaiden1538
opinicus1546
lituit1562
Pegasus1562
equicerve1572
harpy1572
lyciske1572
verme1572
wyver1599
merman1601
lion-dragon1610
lion-poisson1610
wyvern1610
Sagittarius1619
sagittary1632
man-fish1653
sea lion1661
satyral1724
man-tiger1780
sea-dog1780
Welsh dragon1799
camelopardel1830
satyr1845
serpivolant1866
sea monkey1909
1845 M. A. Lower Curiosities Heraldry iv. 101 The satyr or satyral exhibits a human face attached to the body of a lion, and has the horns and tail of an antelope.
1998 D. N. Johnson in C. Manning Dublin & beyond Pale 241/1 The male human-headed lion in heraldry is divided into two types.., the satyr or satyral, an older man with long, twin-spiral antelope horns on his forehead, and the younger, less bizarre and more common version known as a lympago.
5. Any butterfly of the nymphalid subfamily Satyrinae (formerly the family Satyridæ); = satyrid n. Frequently with distinguishing word.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > Rhopalocera (butterflies) > [noun] > family Satyridae > member of
brown1860
satyrid1865
satyr1870
1870 E. Newman Illustr. Nat. Hist. Brit. Butterflies (1871) v. 77 (heading) Satyrs (in science Satyridæ).
1917 C. C. Brown Gardens to Color & Individual Gardens ix. 36 The Georgian Satyr who lives in the oaks and pines.
1999 P. T. Sutton & C. Sutton How to spot Butterflies 130/2 Male satyrs patrol along woodland trails and shady wooded edges.

Compounds

C1.
a. General use as a modifier.
ΚΠ
1717 T. Parnell To Mr. Pope in A. Pope Wks. A Satyr-train, Peeps o'er their head, and laughs behind the Scene.
a1746 E. Holdsworth Remarks & Diss. Virgil (1768) 23 Virgil here speaks of a feast just like this; and of the Pan or Satyr-dance.
1850 Ld. Tennyson In Memoriam xxxv. 55 In his coarsest Satyr -shape. View more context for this quotation
1876 E. Dowden Poems 4 Where the green Margin-grass..Thirsting steer, nor goat-hoof rude Of the branch-sundering Satyr brood Has ever pashed.
1944 L. MacNeice Springboard 49 Not smut but satyr-talk, not clever but wise.
2002 Classical Antiq. 21 218 The most reliable evidence for the appearance of fifth-century theater-satyrs consists of those paintings that clearly depict men wearing satyr costumes.
b. In various other types of compound.
ΚΠ
1598 E. Guilpin Skialetheia i. sig. C3 Thys leaden-heeled passion is to dull, To keepe pace with this Satyre-footed gull.
1827 S. B. H. Judah Buccaneers II. iv. 310 Huge satyr legged tables, monstrous chairs, with damask cushions and feet of lions' claws, and other articles equally unwieldy and sumptuously ornamented.
1883 J. G. Whittier Bay of Seven Islands 31 Calm as the hour, methinks I feel A sense of worship o'er me steal; Not that of satyr-charming Pan.
1924 E. Sitwell Sleeping Beauty xv. 53 From satyr-haunted caverns drip These lovely airs on brow and lip.
1928 E. Blunden Retreat 38 And almost catch the horned and rude Woodgod at gaze ere satyr-shrewd He dodges by.
2001 Anatolian Stud. 51 94/1 The majority..of the satyr-headed attachments have a wreath of ivy.
C2.
satyr drama n. (in ancient Greek drama) a burlesque or bawdily humorous drama featuring a chorus of satyr characters; = satyr play n.; (also) such plays as a genre.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > [noun] > other types or branches
satyric1693
legitimate1826
boulevard theatre1838
satyr drama1839
tragicomic1842
costume drama1847
Sardoodledom1895
slice of life1895
cape and sword (also cape and cloak)1898
total theatre1935
epic theatre1938
Theatre of Cruelty1954
music theatre1957
psychodramatics1957
reader's theatre1957
metatheatre1960
Theatre of the Absurd1961
nautanki1962
Theatre of Fact1966
1839 T. Mitchell in Aristophanes Frogs Introd. p. civ The Lycurgean Tetralogue of Æschylus consisted..of the Edoni, the Bassarides, the Neanisci, and Lycurgus; the last being consequently a satyr-drama.
1906 Amer. Jrnl. Philol. 27 321 The famous story of the ass and the dipsas..was also found in the Κωϕοὶ Σάτυροι, a lost Satyr-drama of Sophokles.
2013 Jrnl. Hellenic Stud. 133 219/2 He is a stock character in comedy and satyr drama.
satyr play n. (in ancient Greek drama) a burlesque or bawdily humorous drama featuring a chorus of satyr characters, esp. one written to be performed in succession to a trilogy of tragedies by the same author and burlesquing (generally with obscene language and action) some mythical story relating to the foregoing material.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > a play > [noun] > a comedy > other types of comedy
Old Comedy1529
New Comedy1542
comedy of errors?1595
romantic comedy1748
musical comedy1765
comédie larmoyante1773
sketch1789
serio-comedy1808
vaudeville1827
teacup-and-saucer comedy1842
satyr play1845
Restoration comedy1866
zarzuela1888
situation comedy1893
sex comedy1915
sitcom1956
1845 Classical Museum 2 361 Dancing was banished from tragedy, but was retained in comedy and the satyr-plays.
1915 Classical Jrnl. 10 155 When the comedies were restricted to three, they were naturally performed one on each of the last three days, after that day's tragedies and satyr-play.
2005 Daily Tel. 19 Aug. 21/7 The comic genre of kyogen..has its own laws, functioning like Ancient Greek satyr plays as light relief between the ‘serious’ dramas of the five-play all-day Noh cycle.
satyr-pug n. a British geometer moth, Eupithecia satyrata.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > Heterocera > [noun] > family Hydriomenidae > various members of
satin pug1809
Welsh wave1852
satyr-pug1869
1869 E. Newman Illustr. Nat. Hist. Brit. Moths 126 The Satyr Pug.
2006 R. Thompson & B. Nelson Butterflies & Moths N. Ireland iii. 143 All the recent records of Satyr Pug are from the southern half of Northern Ireland, in Armagh, Down and west Fermanagh.

Derivatives

ˈsatyr-like adv. and adj.
ΚΠ
1582 T. Watson Ἑκατομπαθία: Passionate Cent. Loue lxxv. sig. K2 Faire Antiopa, whose fruitefull loue He gayned Satyr like.
1584 W. Warner Pan his Syrinx sig. X4 After many Satirlike freakes, with nimble feet & swift flight, they skud awaye into the nearest woods, wildly boulting through the Thickets.
1645 J. Strong Joanereidos sig. A3 Their Monster-children, Satyre-like all hairy, distorted in their limbs, dwarfish in stature.
1783 European Mag. & London Rev. July 12/2 A long curl of rams-horn shape, continued from the ear almost to the top of the head. This gives the wearer a most ravishing and satyr-like semblance!
1882 ‘Ouida’ In Maremma I. viii. 187 The figure of a shepherd, satyr-like and clad in goatskin.
1914 America 4 July 279/1 In winter they seek the sands of Florida and dance thereon satyrlike.
2016 Guardian (Nexis) 13 Apr. Portraits of Charles II..made no attempt to hide his thick eyebrows, poor complexion and almost satyr-like ugliness.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2019; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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