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单词 something
释义

somethingn.adj.adv.

Brit. /ˈsʌmθɪŋ/, U.S. /ˈsəmˌθɪŋ/
Forms: Old English sum þing(c), ðing, Middle English sum ðinc, Middle English sumþing, Middle English–1500s sumthing; Middle English somþing ( zom-), somþyng, Middle English somthyng (1500s somthynge), 1600s somthing; 1500s– something, 1500s somethyng, 1800s dialect somethin', etc.
Etymology: < some pron. 2 + thing n.1 Originally, and frequently down to the end of the 16th cent., written as two words.
A. n. (and adj.)
1.
a. Some unspecified or indeterminate thing (material or immaterial).
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > existence > [noun] > entity, being, or thing > something
somethingc1000
thingOE
somewhatc1230
somewhat else, more, over1390
something1577
what1654
something or other1706
sumptin1767
sumthin1822
sumfin1823
summink1875
the world > relative properties > kind or sort > generality > [noun] > state of being non-specific > unspecified thing(s) > something or someone
somethingc1000
someonec1305
a thinga1382
somebodya1400
sumpin1850
c1000 West Saxon Gospels: Matt. (Corpus Cambr.) xx. 20 Ða com to him zebedeis bearna modor..sum þingc fram him biddende.
c1175 Ormulum (Burchfield transcript) l. 3363 Her icc wile shæwenn ȝuw Summ þing to witerr takenn.
1340 Ayenbite (1866) 33 Huanne..me him hat zomþing þet him þingþ hard, he him excuseþ.
c1384 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(2)) (1850) Luke vii. 40 Symound, I haue sum thing for to seye to thee.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 11928 Þar Iesus did in his barnhide Sum-thing þat es of to rede.
a1513 W. Dunbar Poems (1998) I. 163 In my honour sum thing thow go wryt.
1594 T. Bowes tr. P. de la Primaudaye French Acad. II. 592 To doe some thing without cause.
a1616 W. Shakespeare All's Well that ends Well (1623) i. iii. 240 There's something in't More then my Fathers skill. View more context for this quotation
1638 R. Baker tr. J. L. G. de Balzac New Epist. II. 91 You expect not that any thing should follow them; yet something must bee done for examples sake.
1681 J. Dryden Spanish Fryar iv. i. 52 Nay, if you will complain, you shall for some thing. (Beats him.)
1779 Mirror No. 27 A slip of paper, with something written on it.
1823 W. Scott Quentin Durward II. xii. 290 He read something in the looks of his soldiers, which even he was obliged to respect.
1863 A. Blomfield Mem. Bp. Blomfield I. v. 123 His speeches were those of one who had something to say, not of one who had to say something.
1895 B. M. Croker Village Tales (1896) 30 There, to the left, was something coming rapidly through the crops!
proverbial.1555 J. Heywood Two Hundred Epigrammes with Thyrde sig. A.vi Some thynge [1546 somewhat] is better then nothyng.1656 R. Sanderson 20 Serm. 141 Something, we say, hath some savour.attributive.1597 W. Shakespeare Richard II ii. ii. 36 For nothing hath begot my something griefe. View more context for this quotation
b. Used as a substitute for a name or part of one, or other particular, which is not remembered or is immaterial, etc. Also used as a substitute for a number unknown or unspecified.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > naming > anonymity or lack of a name > [noun] > thing or person whose name is forgotten or unknown
swilk and swilkc1175
thinga1325
what-call-ye-him1473
who knows what?1548
I don't know (also I know not, I wot not) what1568
God (also (the) Lord) knows (also wot) what1569
washical1575
what-d'ye-call-'em1593
so-and-so1596
whiblin1604
so-fortha1616
jiggumboba1625
know-not-whata1642
thingum1652
thingum-thangum1684
what's-his-name1697
something or other1706
thingummy1737
thingamabob1751
something1764
what's-her-name1816
conundrum1817
thingamerry1819
thingamajig1824
somebody1825
what's-its-name1839
whangdoodle1852
thingummytite1865
dingus1866
what-not1876
whatsita1882
gilguy1883
gadget1886
dingbat1894
doohickey1914
oojah1917
oojah capivvy1917
oojiboo1918
doodad1920
tiddlypush1923
whosis1923
thingy1927
doodah1928
doofer1937
hootenanny1940
whatchamacallit1942
gizmo1943
frammis1948
whosit1948
whifflow1961
oobyjiver1963
whatsisface1967
oojamaflip1970
what's-her-face1980
1764 G. Williams in J. H. Jesse G. Selwyn & his Contemp. (1843) I. 295 Lady Something Grey is here.
1779 Countess of Upper Ossory Let. 17 Apr. in J. H. Jesse G. Selwyn & his Contemp. (1844) IV. 75 Another man has sworn to shoot a Miss Something, n'importe, if she did not run away with him from the Opera.
1819 W. Scott Bride of Lammermoor ii*, in Tales of my Landlord 3rd Ser. II. 54 ‘His name is Craig—Craig—something, is it not?’ ‘Craigengelt is the fellow's name,’ said the Master.
1862 G. Borrow Wild Wales xxxix I passed by a place called Llan something.
1897 R. S. S. Baden-Powell Matabele Campaign i. 4 I..just caught the five something train.
1918 Aeroplane 2 Jan. 36/1 There are holes to drill, some ‘nth’ of an inch, and another row ‘something’ millimetres.
c. Some liquor, drink, or food; esp. in to take something.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > [noun] > food and drink
(a) bit (later bite) and (a) sup1546
stuff1600
ingesta1741
something1778
1778 F. Burney Evelina III. xxi. 236 Lady Louisa..desired to take something before we began our rambles.
1779 Mirror No. 25 Come in and have a glass of something after your ride.
1857 T. Hughes Tom Brown's School Days i. iv. 84 I'll give you a drop of something to keep the cold out.
d. Used (with between) to denote an intermediate stage or grade.
ΚΠ
1823 W. Scott Quentin Durward II. viii. 193 An officer, who, having taken Deacon's orders, held something between a secular and ecclesiastical character.
a1854 Ld. Cockburn Memorials (1856) ii. 119 He walked with a slow stealthy step—something between a walk and a hirple.
e. Used to denote an undefined or unknown occupation, or a person in respect of this.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > position or job > [noun] > undefined or unknown
something?1863
?1863 T. Taylor Ticket-of-leave Man ii. 32 If Mr. Gibson would only give you employment. He's something in the City.
1874 F. C. Burnand My Time xv. 130 May I be prompter, or call-boy, or something?
1886 C. E. Pascoe London of To-day (ed. 3) ii. 37 The restless gentlemen who are ‘something in the city’, but no one knows what.
1907 E. Gosse Father & Son ii. 21 My uncles..earned a comfortable living, E. by teaching, A. as ‘something in the City’.
1951 N. C. Hunter Waters of Moon iii. i. 69 Some really classy young man with heaps of money. A Guards officer, for instance, or something rather slinky on the Stock Exchange.
1962 Daily Tel. 19 Mar. 15/4 The people who are ‘something in the City’ to-day mostly commute to Sussex and Surrey.
1978 P. Fitzgerald Bookshop ii. 20 He was known to drive up to London to work, and to be something in TV.
1979 R. Barnard Posthumous Papers iv. 37 He was something in insurance.
f. or something (colloquial), used to express an indistinct or unknown alternative.
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > change > alternation > [noun] > instance of
alternation1633
vicissitude1648
or something1814
Box and Cox1867
1814 J. Austen Mansfield Park I. xi. 223 There were generally delays, a bad passage or something . View more context for this quotation
1899 R. Fry Let. Oct. (1972) I. 174 The Galleries shut at the absurd hour of 3..in order that the officials may have some absurd meal, a mittagsessen or something.
1913 ‘S. Rohmer’ Myst. Dr. Fu-Manchu i. 4 What, are you moved to London or something?
1926 I. Mackay Blencarrow v. 49 Yet undoubtedly this man was drunk or ill, or something.
1938 Chatelaine Oct. 25/3 Our things must have tattle-tale gray or somethin' 'cause they never shine like this.
1951 M. Kennedy Lucy Carmichael ii. iii. 100 ‘Aren't they engaged or something?’ ‘I don't know what you mean by or something... It's a vulgar, slipshod phrase.’
1958 N.Z. Listener 4 July 7/1 Jarden was off the field—had hurt his foot or something—and it seemed that we might be hard up against it.
1969 N. Freeling Tsing-Boum viii. 54 She might have a police record or something.
1978 P. Marsh et al. Rules of Disorder iii. 69 You have to fight or else people..think you're a bit soft or something.
g. Phrases something for everybody (or everyone), something for nothing. Also used attributively.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > charges > freedom from charge > [noun] > that which is free of charge
something for nothing1869
1869 P. T. Barnum Struggles & Triumphs viii. 132 When people expect to get ‘something for nothing’ they are sure to be cheated.
1924 G. B. Shaw St. Joan iv. 41 The Jews generally give value. They make you pay; but they deliver the goods. In my experience the men who want something for nothing are invariably Christians.
1938 E. Ambler Cause for Alarm vii. 115 A something-for-nothing proposition always has a string to it.
1955 R. Macaulay Let. 20 Aug. in Last Lett. to Friend (1962) 206 I personally think it all to the good, as giving something for every one, however different their minds, backgrounds, and religious temperaments.
1960 N.Y. Times Bk. Rev. 17 Jan. 1 There's something for everybody.
1971 Engineering Apr. 129/2 Something-for-everyone entertainment.
1976 Glasgow Herald 26 Nov. 6/2 But human nature dictates that most people..are liable to take advantage of an opportunity to get something for nothing.
2.
a. A certain part, portion, amount, or share (of some thing, quality, etc.); frequently, a small part or amount, a slight trace.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > quantity > smallness of quantity, amount, or degree > [noun] > a small quantity or amount
speckc725
littleOE
somethingc1200
lutewihtc1230
little whatc1384
ouncec1387
lap1393
smalla1400
modicumc1400
nekedc1400
spota1413
tinec1420
nieveful?a1425
handfulc1443
mouthful?c1450
smatchc1456
weec1480
quern1503
halfpennyworth1533
groatsworth1562
dram1566
shellful1578
trickle1580
snatch1592
sprinkling1594
fleck1598
snip1598
pittance1600
lick1603
fingerful1604
modicum1606
thimbleful1607
flash1614
dasha1616
pipa1616
pickle1629
drachm1635
cue1654
smack1693
starn1720
bit1753
kenning1787
minikin1787
tate1805
starnie1808
sprat1815
harl1821
skerrick1825
smallums1828
huckleberry1832
scrimp1840
thimble1841
smite1843
nattering1859
sensation1859
spurt1859
pauchlea1870
mention1891
sketch1894
sputterings1894
scrappet1901
titch1937
tad1940
skosh1959
smattering1973
the world > relative properties > wholeness > incompleteness > part of whole > [noun] > a or some part of something
somedeala900
somethingc1200
somewhat1297
portionc1390
sharea1450
sort1575
something1654
c1200 Trin. Coll. Hom. 157 Dele hit swo, þat ech nedi..haue sum þing þer-of.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 9530 To quam ilkan he gaf sum-thing Of his might.
a1425 (c1395) Bible (Wycliffite, L.V.) (Royal) (1850) Josh. vii. 1 Sum thing of the halewid thing.
1488 (c1478) Hary Actis & Deidis Schir William Wallace (Adv.) (1968–9) v. l. 482 Off Inglismen ȝeit sum thing spek I will.
1562 N. Winȝet Certain Tractates (1888) I. 4 Albeit the time be schort, sum~thing of ȝour prais man we speik.
1643 Sir T. Browne Religio Medici (authorized ed.) i. §12 A set of things that carry in their Front..something of Divinity. View more context for this quotation
1677 A. Yarranton England's Improvem. 55 I hope..I may see something of the Improvement..come to pass.
1710 Tatler No. 245. ⁋2 Her voice loud and shrill,..and something of a Welch accent.
1780 Mirror No. 81 There was something of bustle, as well as of sorrow, all over the house.
1815 W. Scott Guy Mannering III. iv. 72 Something of the tone, and manners, and feeling, of a gentleman.
1849 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. I. iii. 319 He has generally seen something of foreign countries.
1874 J. R. Green Short Hist. Eng. People viii. §5. 511 The two Fletchers,..in their unreadable allegories, still preserved something of their master's sweetness.
b. Const. of with adjective. Obsolete or archaic.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > quantity > smallness of quantity, amount, or degree > [noun] > a small quantity or amount > some but not much
fewOE
a little1540
something1654
curn1785
the world > relative properties > wholeness > incompleteness > part of whole > [noun] > a or some part of something
somedeala900
somethingc1200
somewhat1297
portionc1390
sharea1450
sort1575
something1654
1654 D. Osborne Lett. (1888) 257 Love, which, sure, has something of divine in it.
1656 Earl of Monmouth tr. T. Boccalini Ragguagli di Parnasso 293 As if something of unseemly, or misbecoming had been asked her.
c. something of a(n), to a certain extent or degree a (person or thing of the kind specified).
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > quantity > degree or relative amount of a quality, action, etc. > [noun] > a certain degree of
something of a1711
the world > relative properties > quantity > smallness of quantity, amount, or degree > small of quantity, amount, or degree [phrase] > to some (small) extent
in (also by, with) measurec1225
in mannerc1425
somewhat1542
in some sort1556
in some (also a) measure1600
by somewhat1653
something of a(n)1711
(a) sort of, o', a, sorter1790
the world > relative properties > quantity > degree or relative amount of a quality, action, etc. > [noun] > a certain degree of > that is such to a certain degree
something of a(n)1711
somewhat1841
1711 J. Addison Spectator No. 106. ¶6 Sir Roger, amidst all his good Qualities, is something of an Humourist.
1780 Mirror No. 70 As he was something of a sportsman, my guardians often permitted me to accompany him to the field.
1801 M. Edgeworth Prussian Vase in Moral Tales III. 46 I am something of a judge of china myself.
1826 B. Disraeli Vivian Grey I. ii. xiv. 195 Dormer, who was..something of an epicure, looked rather annoyed.
1931 R. Campbell Georgiad iii. 55 Even the devil dwindles to a duiker, Who prides himself as something of a spiker.
1939 R. G. Collingwood Autobiogr. iv. 27 I had become something of a specialist in Aristotle.
1959 Listener 17 Dec. 1083/3 It had been, I admit, something of a party.
1978 Lancashire Life Sept. 51/1 During the last war he became something of a legend, working incredible hours and doing general and orthopaedic surgery, as well as obstetrics.
3.
a. Followed by an adjective.
ΚΠ
c1384 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(2)) (1850) Deeds xxiii. 20 Thei ben to sekinge sum thing certeynere [L. aliquid certius].
a1616 W. Shakespeare Merry Wives of Windsor (1623) iii. iii. 64 Ther's something extraordinary in thee. View more context for this quotation
a1616 W. Shakespeare Tempest (1623) iii. iii. 94 I'th name of something holy, Sir, why stand you In this strange stare? View more context for this quotation
1665 S. Patrick Parable of Pilgrim xii. 81 The desire..of speaking something extraordinary on this occasion.
1737 Gentleman's Mag. Mar. 182/2 The Epigram..seems to have something Serious and Noble in the Turn.
1779 Mirror No. 61 The most eccentric of them all have something venerable about them.
1819 W. Scott Legend of Montrose iv, in Tales of my Landlord 3rd Ser. IV. 66 Something there was cold in his address and sinister in his look.
1888 Academy 14 Apr. 253/3 Within an ace or so of being something very good indeed.
b. something damp or short, a drink; spirits. slang or colloquial.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > drink > intoxicating liquor > distilled drink > [noun] > a drink of
dramc1590
sopie1687
short1823
something damp or shortc1831
hooker1833
jigger1836
snifter1844
short drink1883
snort1889
taggeen1899
shot1928
shorty1931
shooter1971
c1831 Hood in W. Jerdan Autobiogr. (1853) IV. 202 I shall never take ‘something short’ without dedicating it to the same toast.
1864 J. C. Hotten Slang Dict. (new ed.) Something damp, a dram, a drink.
1904 Eng. Dial. Dict. V. 615/1 She always had a drop of something short in her tea (Oxf.).
c. something (good or special), a useful racing tip.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > betting > [noun] > useful tip
something (good or special)1907
1907 Racing Expert 9 July 3 For the benefit of those who care to wait and act upon the best information. ‘The Expert’ will occasionally wire when he knows Something Special.
1908 Racing Judge 6 June 4 Owing to Bank Holiday this Letter will be sent out on Tuesday Evening... Something good at Manchester will be given.
1937 E. Partridge Dict. Slang 800/2 Something good, a good racing tip.
4.
a. In more emphatic use: A thing, fact, person, etc., of some value, consideration, or regard. something in the wind: see wind n.1 21c.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > importance > [noun] > that which is important
muchity1534
importance1570
something1582
significancy1656
thing1748
great1787
important1824
big stuff1883
big whoop1988
1582 Bible (Rheims) Gal. vi. 3 If any man esteeme him self to be something, whereas he is nothing.
1619 F. Beaumont & J. Fletcher King & No King iii. sig. F4 To set him..in my rowle the two hundred and thirteenth man, which is something.
1621 T. W. tr. S. Goulart Wise Vieillard 103 I have so spent my dayes, that I account of my selfe, as one that hath serued for some vse, and for something in the world.
1705 G. Stanhope Paraphr. Epist. & Gospels II. 274 So we may not..falsely imagine we are Something, when in Truth we are Nothing.
1740 P. Doddridge Family Expositor II. 435 Now you say something, signifies among us, You speak right.
1801 M. Edgeworth Forester in Moral Tales I. 123 If he could even recover five guineas of it, it would be something.
1865 W. Whewell in J. M. Douglas Life & Corr. W. Whewell (1881) 540 I shall have Kate's sweet dear face there; and that will be something.
1887 J. R. Lowell Democracy & Other Addr. 46 It is something that two great nations have looked at each other kindly through their tears.
b. In the phrase there's something in it, etc.
ΚΠ
1681 in Roxburghe Ballads (1884) V. 255 Their being in Print signifies something in't.
1713 G. Berkeley Three Dialogues Hylas & Philonous ii. 82 There is indeed something in what you say.
1719 D. Defoe Farther Adventures Robinson Crusoe 62 There is, something, in it, I am persuaded from my own Experience.
1818 T. L. Peacock Nightmare Abbey xiv. 206 True, Raven, there is something in that. I will take your advice.
1847 Ld. Tennyson Princess v. 104 She can talk; And there is something in it as you say.
a1902 S. Butler Way of All Flesh (1903) liv. 249 When Christina pointed out to him that it would be cheap he replied that there was something in that.
1977 B. Pym Quartet in Autumn i. 7 ‘Cheerful, aren't you,’ said Edwin, ‘but perhaps there's something in it. Four people on the verge of retirement, each one of us living alone.’
c. to make something of, to make important or useful; to improve or raise in some way; to succeed in utilizing to some extent.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > goodness and badness > quality of being good > improvement > [verb (transitive)]
beetc975
betterOE
goodOE
sharpa1100
amendc1300
enhance1526
meliorate1542
embetter1568
endeara1586
enrich1598
meliorize1598
mend1603
sweeten1607
improve1617
to work up1641
ameliorate1653
solace1667
fine1683
ragout1749
to make something of1778
richen1795
transcendentalize1846
to tone up1847
to do something (also things) for (also to)1880
rich1912
to step up1920
uprate1965
up1968
nice1993
1778 F. Burney Evelina I. xxvi. 214 She told them, that she had it in her head to make something of me.
1814 J. Austen Mansfield Park I. xiv. 281 If the part is trifling she will have more credit in making something of it. View more context for this quotation
1836 M. M. Sherwood Henry Milner iii. xvi. 310 His hopes of making something of the young man.
1870 J. E. T. Rogers Hist. Gleanings 2nd Ser. 246 Calumny made something of his relations with William Tooke.
d. something to see (or look at): an impressive sight.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > sight and vision > thing seen > [noun] > sight or spectacle
sightc950
showingOE
spectacle1434
inspectionc1460
show1536
object1588
eyemark1595
theatre1606
theorya1626
exhibit1676
exhibition1786
something to see (or look at)1808
eyeful1858
spectacular1890
1808 J. Mackintosh in Mem. Life Sir J. Mackintosh (1835) I. ix. 501 It was something to see children clinging round the necks of their fathers, and sons carrying their infirm parents in pursuit of health.
1942 T. Bailey Pink Camellia i. 2 In khaki breeches, sitting her horse like a boy, her white shirt open at the throat, she was something to look at.
1957 E. B. White Let. June (1976) 440 Martha is really something to see now.
e. to have (got) something, to have an idea or attribute of value or worthy of consideration.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > importance > [verb] > have an idea or attribute of value
to have (got) something1938
the mind > mental capacity > perception or cognition > faculty of ideation > form conception [verb (intransitive)] > worth considering
to have (got) something1938
1938 ‘E. Queen’ Four of Hearts iv. 57 Say..the screwball's got something. Only I got a better idea.
1940 G. Greene Power & Glory i. ii. 25 ‘I would take..a hostage.’.. ‘You know,’ the chief said, ‘you've got something there.’
1948 Powys & Bolton Don't listen, Ladies! in Plays of Year (1949) 586 The Crusaders, gentlemen, they had something. The husband ordered his clothes from the blacksmith, and his wife's from the locksmith.
1960 Times 14 Sept. 12/6 Yet that girl ‘had something’, as any visitor to the United States will find out.
1973 L. Cooper Tea on Sunday i. 20 ‘I'm not at all the nice little wife she wanted for you.’ ‘She may have something there.’
f. Used in various phrases expressing admiration, as isn't (that, he, etc.) something?, to be really something; quite something: see quite adv., adj., and int. Phrases 4.
ΚΠ
1958 B. Nichols Sweet & Twenties ii. 42 The Ritz Bar, in those days, really was something.
1967 M. Kenyon Whole Hog vii. 81 Isn't that something? So if they [sc. pigs] don't know you they're like interested?
1969 J. D. A. Widdowson & H. Halpert in H. Halpert & G. M. Story Christmas Mumming in Newfoundland 161 Mummers were really something when I was a boy. If you wasn't afraid of them, you wasn't afraid of nothing when you was four or five.
1973 A. Christie Postern of Fate iii. x. 213 Perhaps it's something important... And so if they..tried to get whatever it was—that really would be something!
1977 ‘A. York’ Tallant for Trouble xi. 163 P. C. Abrahams presented arms..decked..out in full-dress white... ‘Oh, isn't he something,’ Jennie Kamm exclaimed.
g. to have something going (with someone), to have an ‘understanding’ or an affectionate relationship (with someone).
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > love > love affair > have affectionate or sexual relationship [verb (intransitive)]
to hook up1903
to get with ——1916
involve1936
to have a thing (with a person)1959
to have something going (with someone)1971
1971 V. Canning Firecrest iii. 32 It didn't need any semaphore signals to tell her that there was something going between Mrs. Pilch and Major Cranston.
1973 Philadelphia Inquirer 7 Oct. (Today Suppl.) 7/2 Is it true that Sammy Davis Jr. has something going with Linda Lovelace.
1977 E. Leonard Unknown Man No. 89 xx. 200 She smiled..like they had something going.
5. With article or demonstrative pronoun, or in plural (= sense A. 1):
a. With adjective preceding. Also in a little something: some food or drink; a snack; refreshments. Cf. sense A. 1c.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > meal > [noun] > light meal or snacks
nuncheonc1260
morsela1382
refection?a1439
mixtumc1490
bever1500
banquet1509
collation1525
snatch1570
beverage1577
a little something1577
anders-meat1598
four-hours1637
watering1637
refreshment1639
snap1642
luncheona1652
crib1652
prandicle1656
munchin1657
baita1661
unch1663
afternooning1678
whet1688
nacket1694
merenda1740
rinfresco1745
bagging?1746
snack1757
coffee1774
second breakfast1775
nummit1777
stay-stomach1800
damper1804
eleven o'clock1805
noonshine1808
by-bit1819
morning1819
four1823
four o'clock1825
lunch1829
stay-bit1833
picnic meal1839
elevens1849
Tommy1864
picnic tea1869
dinnerette1872
merienda1880
elevenses1887
light bite1887
soldier's supper1893
mug-up1902
tray1914
café complet1933
nosha1941
namkeen1942
snax1947
snackette1952
chaat1954
ploughman's lunch1957
munchie1959
playlunch1960
short-eat1962
lite bite1965
munchie1971
ploughman1975
aperitivo2002
the world > existence and causation > existence > [noun] > entity, being, or thing > something
somethingc1000
thingOE
somewhatc1230
somewhat else, more, over1390
something1577
what1654
something or other1706
sumptin1767
sumthin1822
sumfin1823
summink1875
singular.
1577 W. Harrison Descr. Eng. (1877) ii. vi. i. 163 A little something was allowed in the morning to young children.
1661 J. Glanvill Vanity of Dogmatizing 145 A very slender something in a Fable.
1682 T. Creech tr. Lucretius De natura rerum iii. 75 Then we must add a fourth to this frame, A fourth something, but without a name.
1778 F. Burney Jrnl. 18 June in Early Jrnls. & Lett. (1994) III. 31 An inward something which I cannot account for, prepares me to expect a reverse!
1800 E. Hervey Mourtray Family III. 165 An unaccountable something seemed always to prevent their getting further.
1856 J. A. Froude Hist. Eng. (1858) II. vi. 91 Every monastery..had..its special something, to attract the interest of the people.
1864 F. C. Bowen Treat. Logic iv. 64 It is only an indeterminate something.
1866 ‘G. Eliot’ Felix Holt I. xi. 237 Like the shrill biting talk of a vixenish wife, it..compelled you to ‘take a little something’ by way of dulling your sensibility.
1926 A. A. Milne Winnie-the-Pooh vi. 77 It was..as if somebody inside him were saying, ‘Now then, Pooh, time for a little something.’.. So he sat down and took the top off his jar of honey.
1950 J. Cannan Murder Included vii. 146 I wonder if a little something could be provided to pacify the inner man?
1958 P. G. Wodehouse Cocktail Time xix. 159 Butlers always like to keep their strength up with a little something in the middle of the morning.
1977 P. D. James Death of Expert Witness iv. iii. 192 I cook a little something for everyone in the evenings.
plural.1642 H. More Ψυχωδια Platonica sig. G5 Bringing hid Noughts into existencie, Or sleeping Somethings into wide day-light.1728 A. Pope Dunciad i. 44 Here she beholds the Chaos dark and deep, Where nameless somethings in their causes sleep.1894 Pall Mall Mag. Dec. 601 Whispering soft Somethings in Italian.1897 Atlantic Monthly 79 139 The title of a group of miniature essays..devoted to airy somethings.
b. Without preceding adjective. Also with genitive (cf. A. 2a).In the 16–17th cent. somethings is occasionally found in the sense of some things.
ΚΠ
singular.
1587 Sir P. Sidney & A. Golding tr. P. de Mornay Trewnesse Christian Relig. i. 4 Now betweene nothing and something, (how little so euer that something can bee) there is an infinite space.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Comedy of Errors (1623) ii. ii. 50 Marry sir, for this something that you gaue me for nothing. View more context for this quotation
1776 W. J. Mickle in tr. L. de Camoens Lusiad Dissert. 160/1 The opposition of it to the arch-angel Michael..carries in it a something which must displease.
1798 S. T. Coleridge Anc. Marinere iii, in W. Wordsworth & S. T. Coleridge Lyrical Ballads 15 I saw a something in the Sky No bigger than my fist.
1807 T. Thomson Syst. Chem. (ed. 3) II. 37 Experiments..to discover what that something is.
1848 W. M. Thackeray Vanity Fair lvi. 508 The young gentlemen..might learn a something of every known science.
1894 C. H. H. Parry Stud. Great Composers 224 They only wanted words at all as a something to excuse their using their voices.
plural.1656 T. Hobbes Six Lessons v. 43 in Elements Philos. You allow..your own nothings to be somethings.1737 Gentleman's Mag. Sept. 560/1 I know Hands, in which a Parcel of Nothings would make a finer Appearance than other Peoples Somethings.1789 C. Smith Ethelinde II. vii. 160 By having written certain somethings which he was assured by his friends were specimens of uncommon and original genius.
c. A certain amount of money.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > money > sum of money > [noun] > a certain or fixed sum
certain1330
sum1393
something1827
1827 W. Scott Chron. Canongate vi He..had enjoyed legacies, and laid by a something of his own, upon which he now enjoys ease with dignity.
6.
a. something or other, = sense A. 1a, A. 1b.
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > existence > [noun] > entity, being, or thing > something
somethingc1000
thingOE
somewhatc1230
somewhat else, more, over1390
something1577
what1654
something or other1706
sumptin1767
sumthin1822
sumfin1823
summink1875
the mind > language > naming > anonymity or lack of a name > [noun] > thing or person whose name is forgotten or unknown
swilk and swilkc1175
thinga1325
what-call-ye-him1473
who knows what?1548
I don't know (also I know not, I wot not) what1568
God (also (the) Lord) knows (also wot) what1569
washical1575
what-d'ye-call-'em1593
so-and-so1596
whiblin1604
so-fortha1616
jiggumboba1625
know-not-whata1642
thingum1652
thingum-thangum1684
what's-his-name1697
something or other1706
thingummy1737
thingamabob1751
something1764
what's-her-name1816
conundrum1817
thingamerry1819
thingamajig1824
somebody1825
what's-its-name1839
whangdoodle1852
thingummytite1865
dingus1866
what-not1876
whatsita1882
gilguy1883
gadget1886
dingbat1894
doohickey1914
oojah1917
oojah capivvy1917
oojiboo1918
doodad1920
tiddlypush1923
whosis1923
thingy1927
doodah1928
doofer1937
hootenanny1940
whatchamacallit1942
gizmo1943
frammis1948
whosit1948
whifflow1961
oobyjiver1963
whatsisface1967
oojamaflip1970
what's-her-face1980
(a)
1706 tr. J. B. Morvan de Bellegarde Refl. upon Ridicule 226 'Tis hard at long run not to drop something or other, that may notifie their Disposition of Mind.
1752 S. Foote Taste ii. 25 A sort of a Queen or Wife, or something or other to somebody.
1873 B. Harte Episode of Fiddletown 27 He was arrested on suspicion of being something or other.
1897 C. M. Flandrau Harvard Episodes 337 The piece was a Spanish something or other through which a tambourine shivered at intervals.
(b)1858 H. W. Longfellow Courtship Miles Standish ii The battle of something-or-other.1897 ‘H. S. Merriman’ In Kedar's Tents vi The guide, Antonio something-or-other.
b. something else pron. (a) In suggestive use. (b) slang (originally North American), a different matter; an exceptional or extraordinary (person, event, sight, etc.).
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > relationship > difference > [phrase] > a different matter or state of affairs
a horse of another (also the same, etc.) colour1530
a different (also another) story1688
something else1844
another pair of shoes1861
a different or another kettle of fish1937
a different cup of tea1940
the world > relative properties > kind or sort > individual character or quality > quality of being special or extraordinary > [noun] > a special thing > an) extraordinary thing(s)
singularity1576
extraordinary1589
remarkable1639
extraordinary1650
something else1844
cough drop1851
quite something1909
1844 C. Dickens Martin Chuzzlewit xliii. 504 More farewells, more something else's; a parting word from Martin.
1909 R. E. Knowles Attic Guest 87 But when a lover comes across a couple of states, leaving behind him a big city—and all the girls are sorry to see him go, that's the best of it—that is something else, as we used to say in the South.
1940 W. Faulkner Hamlet i. ii. 33 But when cash money starts changing hands, that's something else.
1949 R. Harvey Curtain Time 67 Getting the small performer dressed for a public appearance was something else again.
1957 E. Horne in N.Y. Times Mag. 18 Aug. 26/3 Something else—A phenomenon so special it defies description. Thus, when asked if the music is great..a cat may reply, ‘No, man, not that; it was something else.’
1960 Melody Maker 31 Dec. 5/5 Philly Joe Jones: Aside from being a fabulous drummer, he could be a great comedian. He has people lying on the floor, he's so funny. Philly's something else.
1968 Crescendo Jan. 27/1 The one I rave about more than any other is the band of 1947... That was something else. It was a dream.
1973 R. L. Simon Big Fix (1974) vii. 50 Dillworthy was something else again.
1977 O.D. No. 3. 12/1 (caption) Oh, wow, these guides are..something else man!
7. As adj. Used euphemistically for ‘damned’ or other expletive.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > malediction > oaths > [adjective] > euphemisms for stronger oaths
adjective1851
something1859
adjectived1869
qualified1886
epitheted1896
adj.1903
jiggering1903
adjectival1907
jeezly1908
blerry1920
bluggy1921
somethinged1922
socking1941
bleeping1957
naffing1959
1859 F. Francis Newton Dogvane (1888) 252 It's the somethingest robbery I ever saw in my life.
1888 J. A. Lees & W. J. Clutterbuck B.C. 1887: Ramble in Brit. Columbia xxxii This is the somethinger somethingest railway I ever struck.
B. adv. In some degree; to some extent; somewhat; rather, a little.Except as an archaism, this use chiefly survives in constructions which admit of the word being felt as a noun.
1.
a. Qualifying a verb.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > quantity > smallness of quantity, amount, or degree > [adverb] > somewhat
somedealc725
halfc1175
somewhatc1175
somethingc1275
little whatc1384
somedeallyc1400
measurablec1420
somewhatlyc1450
somewisec1450
somepartc1485
parta1500
something1548
rather1573
some1575
rathera1684
sunket1686
somethingisha1726
measurably1756
rather1770
rather1772
somec1780
sumthin1786
wee1816
sumfin1852
sumptin1852
measuredly1860
sumpin1889
part-way1954
ish1986
c1275 Wom. Samaria 7 in Old Eng. Misc. Al so he þiderward sumþing neyhleyhte, He sende his apostles by-voren.
1530 A. Baynton in J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement sig. A.vv Our Englyshe tong hath some thyng altred theyr..terminations.
1585 T. Washington tr. N. de Nicolay Nauigations Turkie i. xxii. 28 We something doubted the gallies of Genua.
1634 T. Herbert Relation Some Yeares Trauaile 12 Conies..greater then any in England, and something resemble a wilde Cat.
1655 T. Fuller Church-hist. Brit. i. 40 Many are unsetled about him,..though such may be something satisfied, if [etc.].
1785 T. Holcroft tr. Comtesse de Genlis Tales Castle I. 128 I shall be something relieved of a load of sorrow which oppressed me.
1802 W. Fowler Corr. (1907) 45 I think they may shrink something before they be put in use.
1856 J. A. Froude Hist. Eng. (1858) I. 463 The scarcely ambiguous answer was something softened the following day.
b. Qualifying a prepositional or adverbial expression of place, extent, distance, time, etc.
ΚΠ
1530 J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 7 Than shall the o be sounded almost lyke this diphthonge ou, and some thyng in the noose.
1576 in Reg. Mag. Sig. Scot. (1886) 753/2 Ane merche stane set and put sumthing bewest the end of the said dyke.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Macbeth (1623) iii. i. 133 For't must be done to Night, And something from the Pallace. View more context for this quotation
a1616 W. Shakespeare Winter's Tale (1623) ii. ii. 58 Please you come something neerer. View more context for this quotation
1677 A. Yarranton England's Improvem. 55 I have been something long upon this Theme.
1697 London Gaz. No. 3310/4 A brown Gelding something above 14 hands high,..and something thin footed before.
1719 D. Defoe Life Robinson Crusoe 346 Our Guide being something before us.
1760 L. Sterne Life Tristram Shandy II. xvii. 100 His left hand, raised something above his stomach.
1844 B. Disraeli Coningsby I. iii. iii. 275 He is a man something under thirty.
1849 J. Ruskin Seven Lamps Archit. v. 158 The whole reaching to something above a man's height.
1896 G. N. Boothby Dr. Nikola iv. 79 In something under a quarter of an hour we had reached the wharf.
2.
a. Qualifying an adjective Frequently in the 17th and 18th centuries. Now rare or dialect. Also in dialect and colloquial use as an intensive with such adjectives as cruel, frightful, etc.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > quantity > smallness of quantity, amount, or degree > [adverb] > somewhat
somedealc725
halfc1175
somewhatc1175
somethingc1275
little whatc1384
somedeallyc1400
measurablec1420
somewhatlyc1450
somewisec1450
somepartc1485
parta1500
something1548
rather1573
some1575
rathera1684
sunket1686
somethingisha1726
measurably1756
rather1770
rather1772
somec1780
sumthin1786
wee1816
sumfin1852
sumptin1852
measuredly1860
sumpin1889
part-way1954
ish1986
1548 W. Turner Names of Herbes sig. E.vj So hath a nauet a longe roote and somthynge yealowishe.
1617 F. Moryson Itinerary i. 181 Who was of stature something tall, and corpulent.
1666 A. Marvell Let. 20 Nov. in Poems & Lett. (1971) II. 45 There is one Bill orderd to be brought in..of something new nature.
1709 J. Swift Let. conc. Sacramental Test 8 I have the misfortune to be something singular in this Belief.
1791 E. Inchbald Next-door Neighbours iii. ii Sir George is something nervous.
1827 J. F. Cooper Prairie I. 30 They told us below, we should find settlers something thinnish hereaway.
1851 E. Ruskin Let. 25 Nov. in Effie in Venice (1965) ii. 218 Nani makes them a great dish of Fish seasoned strongly with Garlic and the smell is something too dreadful if one happens to pass by the door.
1856 J. A. Froude Hist. Eng. I. 170 Indifferent to the obligations of gratitude, and something careless of the truth.
1856 G. Meredith Let. 15 Dec. (1970) I. 38 The dulness is something frightful.
1918 C. Mackenzie Early Life Sylvia Scarlett I. vii. 208 ‘These paths are something dreadful, Emmie,’ said Mrs. Horne, as the three of them scrambled up through the garden.
1932 L. Golding Magnolia St. ii. ii. 299 The way the razor trembled..now and again was something cruel.
in combination.1604 W. Shakespeare Hamlet iii. i. 176 Haply the seas..shall expell This something setled matter in his hart. View more context for this quotation1608 G. Chapman Conspiracie Duke of Byron iii. ii Others that with much strictness imitate The something-stooping carriage of my neck.1842 Ld. Tennyson Will Waterproof's Monologue in Poems (new ed.) II. 188 In a court he saw A something-pottle-bodied boy.
b. With a or an inserted before the adjective. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1588 J. Read tr. F. Arcaeus Compend. Method f. 77v Incorporate it so that it may become something an hard Emplaister.
1600 W. Shakespeare Henry IV, Pt. 2 i. ii. 188 I was borne..with a white head, and something a round bellie. View more context for this quotation
1615 G. Sandys Relation of Journey 12 Having a secure hauen, yet with something a dangerous entrance.
1664 H. More Modest Enq. Myst. Iniquity xiv. 163 These seem to have something an over-near affinity with..Heresie.
1770 Bp. W. Warburton Lett. (1809) 455 I have now had something a longer intermission from my pain.
1784 R. Bage Barham Downs I. 26 Will you..increase your sister's fortune to make her something a more suitable match?
c. Qualifying an adverb of manner. Also with adj. used for adv. in dialect and colloquial usage.
ΚΠ
1588 R. Greene Pandosto sig. D She began to simper something sweetely.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Winter's Tale (1623) iv. iv. 795 Being something gently consider'd, Ile bring you where he is aboord. View more context for this quotation
1707 tr. P. Le Lorrain de Vallemont Curiosities in Husbandry & Gardening 21 What he calls a Courtier he uses something roughly.
1713 G. Berkeley Three Dialogues Hylas & Philonous i. 22 The Inferences you draw me unto, sound something odly.
1822 W. Scott Fortunes of Nigel II. vi. 132 ‘I said Grahame, sir, not Grime,’ said Nigel, something shortly.
1859 C. Dickens Haunted House: Mortals in House in All Year Round Extra Christmas No.,13 Dec. 2/1 ‘Oh!’ said I, something snappishly.
1898 G. B. Shaw You never can Tell in Plays Pleasant 211 Gentleman: Did you howl? The Young Lady: Oh, something awful.
1909 A. Woollcott Let. 24 Sept. (1944) 20 She gads around something fierce, as your friend Bert would say.
1915 J. Webster Dear Enemy 300 When he was drunk..he smashed the furniture something awful.
1932 R. Lehmann Invit. Waltz i. iii. 58 Her husband drinks something shocking.
1963 W. H. Missildine Your Inner Child of Past xv. 221 I was taken into the assembly hall. And beat up something terrible.
1978 D. Clark Liberties ii. 41 ‘I'll put a plaster on that cut for you.’.. ‘Thanks, doctor... It does sting something chronic.’
d. With a comparative adjective or adverb.
ΚΠ
?1592 Trag. Solyman & Perseda v. iv. 130 Yet some thing more contentedly I die For that [etc.].
1615 G. Sandys Relation of Journey 140 This place is something better then desert.
1669 S. Sturmy Mariners Mag. v. xii. 57 The Stick being something more than the diam. at the Base Ring.
1713 S. Sewall Diary 2 Nov. (1973) II. 732 Sam. is something better, yet full of pain.
1735 S. Johnson tr. J. Lobo Voy. Abyssinia 11 I found him in a Straw-Hut something larger than those of his Subjects.
1829 W. Scott Anne of Geierstein xv Because my thoughts came slower, may be, and something duller, than those of other folk.
1886 R. L. Stevenson Kidnapped x. 91 Now this song..is something less than just to me.
e. Followed by too and adjective or adverb. Now archaic.
ΚΠ
a1616 W. Shakespeare Tempest (1623) iii. i. 58 I prattle Something too wildely. View more context for this quotation
1668 H. More Divine Dialogues: Two Last Dial. 38 Something too copious a digression.
1671 T. Shadwell Humorists v It is something too sudden and temerarious.
1710 D. Manley Mem. Europe I. i. 44 Something too large a Head.
1720 D. Defoe Life Capt. Singleton 3 This fell out something too soon.
1821 W. Scott Kenilworth I. xii. 311 I got something too deep into his secrets.
1831 W. Scott Castle Dangerous vi, in Tales of my Landlord 4th Ser. III. 337 We have had something too much of this.
f. Followed by with and a superlative, = somewhat or rather (soon, often, etc.). Obsolete. rare.
ΚΠ
1632 P. Massinger Emperour of East ii. i. sig. Ev Shall I become a votarie to Hymen, Before my youth hath sacrific'd to Venus? 'Tis something with the soonest.
1698 R. South 12 Serm. III. 282 Even that perhaps may be something with the oftenest.
3. something like.
a. In some way like; in a way similar to; (more widely) almost, approximately; very nearly. In early use also †something like unto.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > goodness and badness > quality of being good > quality of being satisfactory > [adjective]
wellOE
sufferablea1340
worthy1340
sufficient1489
paregala1500
competent1535
something like?1556
right1567
sweet1577
fairish1611
all right1652
fair1656
comfortable1658
decent1711
respectable1750
unrepulsive1787
decentisha1814
fair-to-middling1822
fine1828
christena1838
OK1839
tidy1844
not (or none) so dusty?1856
sweet1898
oke1928
okey-doke1934
okey-dokey1936
tickety-boo1939
cool1951
aight1993
?1556 J. Cancellar Pathe of Obed. sig. B.iiii Yet Loth his wyfe being sumthynge lyke vnto Eue.
1560 T. Gresham in J. W. Burgon Life & Times Sir T. Gresham (1839) I. 310 Wherebye a maye meynteyne hymselfe somethinge like your eldest son.
1598 R. P. tr. M. Martínez Sixth Bk. Myrrour of Knighthood xx. sig. Mm3v Thou speakest something like a Knight said the Prisoner, but I hope to punish thee, for maintaining such false cowards as these are.
1666 J. Bunyan Grace Abounding §32 My great Conversion from prodigious Profaneness to something like a Moral Life.
1765 Treat. Domest. Pigeons 126 The feathers on the breast open, and reflect both ways, expanding itself something like a rose.
1798 T. Twining Let. 11 Dec. in Recreations & Stud. (1882) 231 Often have I heard you something like blamed for these voluntary labours.
1811 H. M. Brackenridge Jrnl. 17 June in Views Louisiana (1814) 251 The women..amuse themselves with a game something like jack-stones.
1883 Manch. Examiner 22 Nov. 5/4 The Parcel Post is being conducted at a loss of something like £10,000 a week.
1963 J. E. Keating Wreck of Deutschland 10 I noted something like fifty words or phrasings..which echo the Bible.
2005 Independent 27 Oct. 47/3 The sessions go something like this: first, apply mousse to damp hair. Then choose your rollers.
b. Chiefly colloquial. Used elliptically as an expression of satisfaction: something which is of an acceptable quality or suitable to serve one's purpose. Cf. like adj., adv., conj., and prep. Phrases 6c(a).
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > esteem > approval or sanction > quality of being approvable or acceptable > [noun] > something which is approvable
something like1580
recommendation1679
M.F.N.1942
1580 T. Lupton Siuqila 137 Yea marry this law is something like, if it be wel executed.
1594 W. Shakespeare Henry VI, Pt. 2 sig. B2v I marry this is something like.
a1652 R. Brome Weeding of Covent-Garden i. i. 1, in Five New Playes (1659) I Marry Sir! This is something like! These appear like Buildings! Here's Architecture exprest indeed! It is a most sightly scituation.
1702 S. Parker tr. Cicero Five Bks. De Finibus iv. 247 This is something-like!
1798 Geraldina I. 176 ‘This looks something like, Sir,’ said she.
1841 S. Warren Ten Thousand a-Year III. ii. 43That's something like’—said the man, rather more good-humouredly.
1869 C. Barnard Gardening for Money i. 17 Going to the tool-room I found one [sc.a hoe], and returned to my work. Now, this is something like. I can get on twice as fast.
1930 Oxf. Ann. Girls 103/2 Wouldn't it be a gorgeous way of welcoming a new pupil! Something like!
1954 Georgia Hist. Q. 38 325 He exclaimed ‘Ah, that's something like, Handy... That's what I call a good glass of Madeira.’
4. In various miscellaneous constructions.
ΚΠ
1691 A. Wood Athenæ Oxonienses II. 179 Say and Sele was..averse to the Court ways, something out of pertinaciousness.
1790 In Consistory Court London: A. Evans versus T. Evans: Sentence 52 Her deposition..is highly coloured and inflamed;..something in the style really of a French novel.
1843 G. Borrow Bible in Spain II. xviii. 377 It was..built something in the Moorish taste.
1897 Academy 9 Jan. 48/1 Something a bore to many, by reason of talking like a book in coat and breeches.

Compounds

something-nothing, etc.
ΚΠ
1817 S. T. Coleridge Biogr. Lit. (Bohn) 58 In all these cases the real agent is a something-nothing-everything.
1884 Ld. Tennyson Becket iii. i. 121 Henry. What did you ask her? Rosamund. Some daily something-nothing.

Derivatives

Hence (chiefly as nonce-words)
ˈsomething v. (transitive) used colloquially in past participle as a euphemism for ‘damned’ or other imprecation, esp. in the phrase to see (one) somethinged first.
ΚΠ
1859 F. Francis Newton Dogvane (1888) 108 As for paying for him, tell him I'll see him somethinged first.
1867 H. Kingsley Silcote xli He said that he would be somethinged if he gave way.
1882 M. E. Braddon Mt. Royal II. v. 92 ‘Self-will be —— somethinged’ growled Leonard.
ˈsomethinged adj.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > goodness and badness > state of being accursed > [adjective] > as everyday imprecation
stinking?c1225
misbegetc1325
banned1340
cursefula1382
wariablea1382
cursedc1386
biccheda1400
maledighta1400
vilea1400
accursedc1400
whoresona1450
remauldit?1473
execrable1490
infamous1490
unbicheda1500
jolly1534
bloodyc1540
mangy?1548
pagan1550
damned1563
misbegotten1571
putid1580
desperate1581
excremental1591
inexecrable?1594
sacred1594
putrid1628
sad1664
blasted1682
plagued1728
damnation1757
infernal1764
damn1775
pesky1775
deuced1782
shocking1798
blessed1806
darned1815
dinged1821
anointed1823
goldarn1830
darn1835
cussed1837
blamed1840
unholy1842
verdomde1850
bleeding1858
ghastly1860
goddam1861
blankety1872
blame1876
bastard1877
God-awful1877
dashed1881
sodding1881
bally1885
ungodly1887
blazing1888
dee1889
motherfucking1890
blistering1900
plurry1900
Christly1910
blinking1914
blethering1915
blighted1915
blighting1916
soddish1922
somethinged1922
effing1929
Jesus1929
dagnab1934
bastarding1944
Christless1947
mother-loving1948
mothering1951
pussyclaat1957
mother-grabbing1959
pigging1970
the mind > language > malediction > oaths > [adjective] > euphemisms for stronger oaths
adjective1851
something1859
adjectived1869
qualified1886
epitheted1896
adj.1903
jiggering1903
adjectival1907
jeezly1908
blerry1920
bluggy1921
somethinged1922
socking1941
bleeping1957
naffing1959
1922 E. Wallace Valley of Ghosts xiii. 120 You called me..a fool, and a somethinged fool, almost the first time we met.
somethingean adj. (cf. somethingth adj.).
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > naming > anonymity or lack of a name > [adjective] > supplying name which is unknown or not remembered
certain1785
somethingean1836
somethingth1854
1836 C. Dickens Pickwick Papers (1837) xv. 153 Four something-ean singers in the costume of their country.
ˈsomethingish adv. Obsolete somewhat.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > quantity > smallness of quantity, amount, or degree > [adverb] > somewhat
somedealc725
halfc1175
somewhatc1175
somethingc1275
little whatc1384
somedeallyc1400
measurablec1420
somewhatlyc1450
somewisec1450
somepartc1485
parta1500
something1548
rather1573
some1575
rathera1684
sunket1686
somethingisha1726
measurably1756
rather1770
rather1772
somec1780
sumthin1786
wee1816
sumfin1852
sumptin1852
measuredly1860
sumpin1889
part-way1954
ish1986
a1726 J. Vanbrugh Provok'd Wife (1743) iv. 55 Why, she really has the Air of a Sort of a Woman a little somethingish out of the common.
ˈsomethingth adj. used to supply the place of a number, name, etc., which is not distinctly remembered or is immaterial (cf. quots. and A. 1b).
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > naming > anonymity or lack of a name > [adjective] > supplying name which is unknown or not remembered
certain1785
somethingean1836
somethingth1854
the world > relative properties > kind or sort > generality > [adjective] > not specified > some kind of or some > some or other
somec888
some1615
somethingth1854
1854 E. C. Gaskell Lett. (1966) 302 I am very poor; which eases my cares wonderfully, see somethingth satire of Juvenal.
1871 G. Meredith Harry Richmond II. xx. 286 He killed Harry's friend, Seneca, in the eighty-somethingth year of his age.
1891 S. J. Duncan Amer. Girl in London 194 The wife of Colonel So-and-so, commanding the somethingth something.
1898 Academy 5 Feb. 149/1 There is a new novel from her pen—her fifty-somethingth, we believe.

Draft additions September 2019

North American colloquial. (a little) something-something: a special or additional item, activity, etc.; something pleasurable or indulgent. Frequently used euphemistically with reference to sexual activity, drugs, or alcohol.Cf. a little something at sense A. 5a, (a little) sumpin' sumpin' at sumpin n. and adv. Phrases.
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1995 Y & R: Sex Bowl in rec.arts.tv.soaps.cbs (Usenet newsgroup) 22 Jan. You know that Nikki wants a little somethin' somethin' from Victor.
1999 Jrnl. Amer. Soc. Information Sci. 50 211/2 She was a dealer for doctors, lawyers, and many professional and business people. ‘They all wanted a little “something-something”.’
2011 @LeftoverCake 2 July in twitter.com (O.E.D. Archive) I'm gonna drink a little something-something, smoke a little something-something first.
2019 @Killua_bocchan 30 May in twitter.com (O.E.D. Archive) I don't think I've thanked you for the extra clips you add at the end of your subbed vids. Thank you for the extra something-something!
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1913; most recently modified version published online June 2022).
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