单词 | source |
释义 | sourcen.ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > support > [noun] > that which supports staffc1000 hold1042 source1359 legc1380 shorer1393 stabilimenta1398 upholder1398 sustentationa1400 undersetterc1400 bearinga1425 undersettinga1425 suppowellc1430 triclinec1440 sustentaclec1451 supportera1475 sustainerc1475 sustenal1483 stayc1515 buttress1535 underpinning1538 firmament1554 countenance1565 support1570 appuia1573 comfort1577 hypostasis1577 underpropping1586 porter1591 supportation1593 supportance1597 understaya1603 bearer1607 rest1609 upsetter1628 mountinga1630 sustent1664 underlay1683 holdfast1706 abutment1727 suppeditor1728 mount1739 monture1746 bed1793 appoggiatura1833 bracing1849 bench1850 under-pinner1859 bolster-piece1860 sustainer1873 table mount1923 1359–60 in F. R. Chapman Sacrist Rolls Ely (1907) II. 194 In stipend. Roberti Burwelle facientis Garguyles et ymagines pro sources ad le blakrode. 1807 J. T. Smith Antiq. Westminster (modernized text) 209 [In the works of the said chapel for sources to the images under the tabernacles... The columns placed..under the aforesaid sources.] a. Hawking. The act of rising on the wing, on the part of a hawk or other bird. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > birds > flight > [noun] > rising from ground sourcec1384 at souse1486 mount1486 launch1835–6 dread1965 c1384 G. Chaucer Hous of Fame 544 Me fleynge in a swappe he hente, And with hys sours a-yene vp went. c1386 G. Chaucer Summoner's Tale 230 Right as an hauk upon a sours Upspringeth into thaer, right so prayeres..Maken her sours to Goddis eeres tuo. 1513 G. Douglas tr. Virgil Æneid v. v. 21 [Ganymede] Quham, with a surs, swiftlie Jovis squyer Caucht in his clukis, and bair up in the air. 1575 G. Turberville Bk. Faulconrie 127 The Sparowhawkes do vse to kill the fowle at the Sowrce or Souse, as the Goshawkes do. 1612 J. Selden in M. Drayton Poly-olbion v. Illustr. 85 But the Goshauke taken at the source by the Falcon, soone fell down at the Kings foot. ΘΚΠ the world > the universe > sun > solar movement > [noun] > rise sunrisingc1275 sun arisingc1350 source?a1400 sunrise1440 uprest1817 ?a1400 Morte Arth. 1978 In-to Sessoyne he soughte..And at the surs of the sonne disseuerez his knyghttez. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > attack > [noun] fiend-reseOE frumresec1275 assault1297 sault1297 inracea1300 sailing13.. venuea1330 checkc1330 braid1340 affrayc1380 outrunningc1384 resinga1387 wara1387 riota1393 assailc1400 assayc1400 onset1423 rake?a1425 pursuitc1425 assemblinga1450 brunta1450 oncominga1450 assembly1487 envaya1500 oncomea1500 shovea1500 front1523 scry1523 attemptate1524 assaulting1548 push1565 brash1573 attempt1584 affront?1587 pulse1587 affret1590 saliaunce1590 invasion1591 assailment1592 insultation1596 aggressa1611 onslaught1613 source1616 confronta1626 impulsion1631 tentative1632 essaya1641 infall1645 attack1655 stroke1698 insult1710 coup de main1759 onfall1837 hurrah1841 beat-up of quarters1870 offensive1887 strafe1915 grand slam1916 hop-over1918 run1941 strike1942 1616 J. Lane Contin. Squire's Tale ix. 179 He gallantlie receavinge bothe theire sourse, and theie as resolutelie quittinge force. 3. a. The fountainhead or origin of a river or stream; the spring or place from which a flow of water takes its beginning. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > water > rivers and streams > system > [noun] > head or source headeOE wellspringOE springOE uptaking1241 head wella1325 wellheadc1330 sourcec1386 headspringa1398 headstreama1398 risinga1398 surge1523 springhead?a1560 head fountain1563 water head1567 fountainhead1585 headwater1612 fill1622 water source1651 urn1726 vomica1838 sponge-swamp1901 c1386 G. Chaucer Clerk's Prol. 49 Wher as the Poo out of a welle smal Takith his firste springyng and his sours. 1426 J. Lydgate tr. G. de Guileville Pilgrimage Life Man 21838 Ryht as a welle hath hys sours Vpward, with water quyk and cler. 1579 E. Spenser Shepheardes Cal. Nov. f. 46 The flouds do gaspe, for dryed is theyr sourse. 1601 P. Holland tr. Pliny Hist. World II. xxxi. iii. 408 The head or source therof ariseth at the foot of the utmost mountains of the Pelignians. 1673 W. Temple Observ. United Provinces i. 2 He that would know the nature of the water,..must find out its source, and observe with what strength it rises. 1687 A. Lovell tr. J. de Thévenot Trav. into Levant ii. 46 That River..takes its source about four days Journey from Mardin. a1771 T. Gray tr. T. Tasso in Wks. (1814) II. 92 Of many a flood they viewed the secret source. 1774 O. Goldsmith Hist. Earth I. 200 All rivers have their source either in mountains or elevated lakes. 1808 Z. M. Pike Acct. Exped. Sources Mississippi iii. App. 6 The river..may be about 1000 miles in length, from its sources to its discharges. 1837 J. R. McCulloch Statist. Acct. Brit. Empire I. i. i. 9 Near the sources of the South Tyne and the Tees. 1878 T. H. Huxley Physiography (ed. 2) 20 The streams and springs from which a river is popularly said to take its rise are..only its proximate sources. b. With a and plural. A spring; a fountain. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > water > spring > [noun] welleOE walma897 spring?1316 spring wellc1340 water springc1450 source1477 fountain1490 quick-spring1530 eye1535 fountainhead1585 fount1594 springlet1661 keld1697 urn1726 spout head1733 spout1778 seep1824 1477 W. Caxton tr. R. Le Fèvre Hist. Jason (1913) 138 Hit semed that hit had ben a sourse or a sprynge rennyng oute of hys body. ?1594 M. Drayton Peirs Gaueston sig. G3v Thus (all in vaine,) they seek to stop the source. 1632 W. Lithgow Totall Disc. Trav. vi. 292 A source or standing Well. 1632 W. Lithgow Totall Disc. Trav. viii. 373 Their Bestiall are watered with sources. 1662 J. Davies tr. A. Olearius Voy. & Trav. J. Albert de Mandelslo 199 in Voy. & Trav. Ambassadors There is, among others, a source of hot-water which hath the taste of Tin, and issues out of a Cave. 1735 W. Somervile Chace ii. 24 Where trickling Streams distil From some penurious Source. 1821 Ld. Byron Don Juan: Canto IV lvi. 99 Though sleeping like a lion near a source. 1855 Ld. Tennyson Lett. v Like torrents from a mountain source. 1856 C. Merivale Hist. Romans under Empire IV. xl. 479 In the time of Augustus seven aqueducts brought water from distant sources to Rome. c. In figurative contexts. ΚΠ 1581 T. Howell His Deuises sig. F.j Whose strayned hart in sowrce of sorrowe swymmes. 1607 M. Drayton Legend Cromwel 21 This was to me that ouerflowing sourse, From whence his bounties plentifully spring. 1702 Clarendon's Hist. Rebellion I. i. 5 No man can shew me a Source, from whence those waters of bitterness..have more probably flowed. 1757 T. Gray Ode I iii. i, in Odes 10 This can..ope the sacred source of sympathetic Tears. 1775 W. Mason Gray's Ode Vicissitude in Poems 80 Near the source whence Pleasure flows. 1835 T. Mitchell in tr. Aristophanes Acharnians 479 (note) The foundation of Megara was in itself a source of hostile feeling, which was never likely to be wholly dried up. 4. figurative. a. The chief or prime cause of something of a non-material or abstract character; the quarter whence something of this kind originates. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > causation > source or origin > [noun] welleOE mothereOE ordeOE wellspringeOE fathereOE headeOE oreOE wellspringOE rootc1175 morea1200 beginningc1200 head wella1325 sourcec1374 principlea1382 risinga1382 springinga1382 fountain14.. springerc1410 nativity?a1425 racinea1425 spring1435 headspring?a1439 seminaryc1440 originationc1443 spring wellc1450 sourdre1477 primordialc1487 naissance1490 wellhead?1492 offspringa1500 conduit-head1517 damc1540 springhead1547 principium1550 mint1555 principal1555 centre1557 head fountain1563 parentage1581 rise1589 spawna1591 fount1594 parent1597 taproot1601 origin1604 fountainhead1606 radix1607 springa1616 abundary1622 rist1622 primitive1628 primary1632 land-spring1642 extraction1655 upstart1669 progenerator1692 fontala1711 well-eye1826 first birth1838 ancestry1880 Quelle1893 c1374 G. Chaucer Troilus & Criseyde v. 1591 O swerd of knighthod, sours of gentilesse! 1390 J. Gower Confessio Amantis I. 46 Sche that is the Source and Welle Of wel or wo. 1412–20 J. Lydgate tr. Hist. Troy iii. 5469 Of knyȝthod grounde, of manhod sours & wel. 1613 J. Tapp Path-way to Knowl. 322 This Charracter √ signifieth the source, roote or beginning of any number or quantity whatsoeuer. 1690 J. Locke Ess. Humane Understanding ii. i. 38 This Source of Ideas, every Man has wholly in himself. 1762 O. Goldsmith Citizen of World I. 10 Pride seems the source not only of their national vices, but of their national virtues also. 1770 ‘Junius’ Stat Nominis Umbra (1772) II. xxxix. 108 The free election of our representatives..is..the source and security of every right and privilege. 1831 W. Scott Castle Dangerous ii, in Tales of my Landlord 4th Ser. IV. 64 It is my duty..to leave no stone unturned by which this business may be traced to the source. 1857 W. A. Miller Elements Chem. III. ii. §3. 77 Gases of an offensive odour, which are the source of annoyance to the neighbourhood. 1875 H. E. Manning Internal Mission of Holy Ghost xii. 223 This intellectual perversion is the source of a systematic immorality. b. With a, this, etc., or plural. ΚΠ 1642 H. More Ψυχωδια Platonica sig. C8v All strength and livelyhood is from this sourse. 1718 M. Prior Solomon on Vanity i, in Poems Several Occasions (new ed.) 412 She is oblig'd and forced to see A First, a Source, a Life, a Deity. 1759 W. Robertson Hist. Scotl. iii, in Hist. Wks. (1813) I. 197 The sixth article remained the only source of contest and difficulty. 1824 ‘R. Stuart’ Descr. Hist. Steam Engine 195 The many sources of consolation which were afforded by the circumstances. 1846 C. Dickens Dombey & Son (1848) vii. 62 Something or somebody had superseded him as a source of interest. 1861 H. T. Buckle Hist. Civilisation Eng. (1873) II. viii. 559 One source of danger to which they had long been exposed was considerably lessened. c. The origin, or original stock, of a person, family, etc. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > kinsman or relation > ancestor > [noun] > ancestral stock or root kinc1100 kindc1175 kindredc1200 rootc1330 stockc1393 stirp?1573 radix1651 source1670 1670 J. Dryden Tyrannick Love iv. i. 31 And, thy full term expir'd, without all pain, Dissolve into thy Astral source again. a1771 T. Gray Imit. Propertius in Wks. (1814) II. 88 [To] trace Back to its source divine the Julian race. a1771 T. Gray Ess. I in W. Mason Mem. Life & Writings (1775) 198 Conscious of the source from whence she springs. 1819 Ld. Byron Don Juan: Canto I ix. 7 He traced his source Through the most Gothic gentlemen of Spain. d. The originating cause or substance of some material thing or physical agency. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > causation > source or origin > [noun] > source of material thing source1803 1803 Med. & Physical Jrnl. 9 257 He enquires into the source of the liquor amnii, and he explains..why this water is accumulated. 1827 M. Faraday Chem. Manip. xii. 279 Some of the impure sources of potash and soda used in the arts. 1862 W. A. Miller Elements Chem. (ed. 2) III. ix. 639 It is largely used in lamps as a source of light. e. A work, etc., supplying information or evidence (esp. of an original or primary character) as to some fact, event, or series of these. Also, a person supplying information, an informant, a spokesman. ΘΚΠ society > communication > information > action of informing > [noun] > source of information intelligencera1586 hand1614 source1788 vein1838 reference work1839 reference source1888 the horse's mouth1928 help-line1980 the mind > attention and judgement > testing > attestation, witness, evidence > documentary evidence > [noun] > source of authority?c1225 datum1630 source1788 pièce justificative1789 proof-text1801 1788 W. Robertson Hist. Amer. Pref. The sources from which I have derived such intelligence. 1828 R. Burns Dissert. in Wodrow's Hist. Suff. I. p. ix The testimony of historians.., and other published sources of evidence. 1848 R. N. Wornum Lect. on Painting 114 (note) This celebrated work is said, though not upon very authentic sources, to have been carried to Constantinople. 1882 P. Schaff et al. Relig. Encycl. I. 501 The principal source to his life is Gregory of Tours. 1934 Webster's New Internat. Dict. Eng. Lang. Source, one who or that which supplies information. 1940 W. Faulkner Hamlet ii. i. 131 The Varners would know by now from the one incontrovertible source, the girl herself, that two of them were not guilty. 1961 Webster's 3rd New Internat. Dict. Eng. Lang. (at cited word) Sources close to the chief executive report he is planning to request the Legislature to approve state purchase. E. M. Mills. 1973 Atlanta (Georgia) Jrnl. 19 Apr. 17 a/1 Deputy White House press secretary Gerald Warren issued the following statement: ‘The White House is not prepared to react to a story based on sources.’ 1979 E. Newman Sunday Punch i. 3 He had pointed me in the direction of a couple of stories—he was a kindly man and, as a source, needed no special motivation. 5. a. Physics. A point or centre from which a fluid or current flows. More widely, any point where, or process by which, energy or some material component enters a physical system; opposed to sink n.1 9.Frequently without const., but otherwise not really distinct from sense 4d. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > physics > energy or power of doing work > [noun] > point where energy enters a system source1864 the world > matter > physics > electromagnetic radiation > electricity > electric current > flow of electricity > [noun] > origin of source1885 the world > matter > physics > electromagnetic radiation > heat > [noun] > emission or diffusion > energy produced by > directed flow > centre of source1956 1864 J. C. Maxwell in Trans. Cambr. Philos. Soc. 10 32 If the origin of the tube or its termination be within the space under consideration, then we must conceive the fluid to be supplied by a source within that space, capable of creating and emitting unity of fluid in unity of time, and to be afterwards swallowed up by a sink capable of receiving and destroying the same amount continually. 1878 W. K. Clifford Kinematic in Elem. Dynamic 214 The point ς is called a source of strength μ when the fluid streams out in all directions; when μ is negative, so that the fluid streams inwards, it is called a sink. 1882 G. M. Minchin Uniplanar Kinematics 258 If a source or a vortex exist at P′, there will be a source or a vortex of equal strength at P. 1885 H. W. Watson & S. H. Burbury Math. Theory Electr. & Magn. I. 216 The given equipotential regions are in such a case generally termed electrodes, and sometimes sources or sinks of electricity, according to the direction of the current flow from or towards them. 1926 H. Glauert Elem. Aerofoil & Airscrew Theory iii. 21 A sink is a negative source or a point at which fluid is disappearing. 1956 E. H. Hutten Lang. Mod. Physics iv. 139 The engine is in contact with two heat reservoirs (the boiler and condenser, or the source and sink of energy) at different temperatures. 1971 I. G. Gass et al. Understanding Earth xix. 263/1 Boundaries at which the net effect of motion is to generate surface area are here termed sources. b. Electronics. (The material forming) the part of a unipolar transistor which corresponds in function to the cathode of a thermionic valve. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > physics > solid state physics > semiconductivity > transistor > [noun] > electrode of base1948 collector1948 source1952 1952 W. Shockley in Proc. IRE 40 1368/1 The principles of operation of the unipolar transistor are substantially different from those of the bipolar types. For this reason, it seems appropriate to consider choosing a new set of names for the three terminals... The choice selected is ‘source’.., ‘drain’.., and ‘gate’ for the control electrodes that modulate the channel. One reason for selecting ‘gate’..is that the subscript ‘g’ is reminiscent of ‘grid’ and the analogy is close between the two. 1962 J. H. Simpson & R. S. Richards Physical Princ. Junction Transistors viii. 173 The source and drain..are ohmic electrodes attached to the n-type body of the device [sc. a field-effect transistor]. 1977 Sci. Amer. Sept. 74/3 The inversion creates a continuous n-type channel from source to drain and large currents can flow. Compounds C1. (In sense 4e.) a. General attributive. source book n. ΚΠ 1899 A. B. Hart (title) Source-book of American history. 1899 A. B. Hart Source-bk. Amer. Hist. p. xvii The Source Book is meant to supplement, not to supplant the text-book. 1900 Univ. Corresp. 10 Feb. 93/1 We are very deficient in accessible source-books on this side of the Atlantic. 1927 Sunday Times 13 Feb. 9 A new series of source-books for students of history and literature. 1928 Observer 4 Mar. 8/3 These volumes will be amongst the source-books for the history of our own time. 1948 L. MacNeice Holes in Sky 43 We rarely read their poems, Mere source-books now. 1961 J. D. Rosenberg Darkening Glass (1963) v. 101 ‘The Nature of Gothic’..is the source book for Unto This Last. 1974 Education & Community Relations Jan. 3 The researchers also included a question on what support teachers would welcome from external sources and seven ideas were suggested, i.e. in-service courses, teachers guides or source books, pupils books, films, TV lessons, radio lessons and visiting speakers. 1982 Notes & Queries Dec. 535/2 Le Menagier de Paris has long been known as an invaluable sourcebook for practical details of everyday life in a reasonably prosperous middle-class household in France in the 1390s. source data n. ΚΠ 1971 J. Howlett in B. de Ferranti Living with Computer ii. 17 The general principle is to..use it..as source data for a whole series of studies. source document n. ΚΠ 1920 A. J. Grieve in A. S. Peake Commentary on Bible 725 It has therefore been surmised that the writer has here incorporated an Aramaic (possibly Greek) source-document. 1977 New Yorker 29 Aug. 35/2 Source documents, once put into computer-readable form, tend to become relatively inaccessible, and in some computer systems are even eliminated. source material n. ΚΠ 1936 Time 21 Sept. 47/1 For most of their source material the editors relied on second-rate writers. 1955 W. Moore Bring Jubilee xix. 182 It is not easy to see behind source material, to visualise state papers, reports, letters, diaries as written by men. 1978 Early Music 6 597/3 The discussion of the music combines a flair for words with great attention to stylistic interactions and the lessons to be learned from study of the source material. source study n. ΚΠ 1964 Eng. Stud. 45 252 Even those readers least interested in source-study are likely to have their notions of Shakespear's work made altogether more accurate. 1979 Stud. Eng. Lit.: Eng. Number (Tokyo) 3 Source study—by this is meant here not a mere source-hunting but a comparative study between words and their sources—is certainly rewarding so far as Confessio Amantis is concerned. b. source-hunter n. ΚΠ 1964 D. Daiches Crit. Hist. Eng. Lit. iv. 82 An attempt to rescue literary study from the philologists and source-hunters. source-hunting n. ΚΠ 1956 Canad. Forum June 67/1 His treatment of sources and analogues lacks the rigorous testing which we require of source-hunting in literary studies after twenty years of sniping by new critics and old scholars alike. 1979Source-hunting [see source study n. at Compounds 1a]. C2. source-critical adj. ΘΚΠ society > faith > aspects of faith > Bible, Scripture > text > criticism, interpretation > [adjective] > source source-critical1977 1977 J. L. Houlden Patterns of Faith iii. 26 This is particularly true of the gospels of Matthew and Luke, where, according to the source-critical orthodoxy.., visible alterations of the Markan basis could be observed. source-criticism n. Theology analysis and study of the sources used by the authors of the biblical text. ΘΚΠ society > faith > aspects of faith > Bible, Scripture > text > criticism, interpretation > [noun] > of sources source-criticism1901 1901 J. Moffatt Hist. New Test. App. 677 No method which neglects source-criticism can satisfactorily explain the doublets [in the Apocalypse]. 1911 J. Moffatt Introd. Lit. New Test. 488 These features..show that source-criticism of some kind is necessary in order to account for the literary and psychological data. 1931 K. E. Kirk Vision of God 498 An elaborate source-criticism which must be adjudged..to be in the main based upon the theory, and therefore to involve a vicious circle. 1977 G. W. H. Lampe God as Spirit iv. 102 The Jesus whom historical research tries to reconstruct through the laborious processes of source criticism, form criticism, and redaction criticism. source program n. Computing a program written in a language other than machine code, usually a high-level language (cf. object program n. at object n. Compounds 2). ΘΚΠ society > computing and information technology > programming language > [noun] > high-level language pseudocode1953 source language1959 source program1959 p-code1974 1959 M. H. Wrubel Primer of Programming for Digital Computers vi. 129 The program can be corrected or modified at the source program stage and reassembled. 1970 O. Dopping Computers & Data Processing xix. 304 Instead of machine instructions, the source program contains statements or symbolic instructions, which the computer then translates to an object program by means of a special program. 1973 C. W. Gear Introd. Computer Sci. iv. 158 A language compiler accepts as input a set of statements called a source program. source rock n. Geology a rock formation in which a particular mineral material originates; spec. a deposit in which petroleum is formed. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > minerals > mineral sources > [noun] > source rock source rock1931 the world > the earth > structure of the earth > structural features > formations by contents > [noun] > containing minerals field1672 oil pool1863 oil sand1875 trap1920 source rock1931 trend1939 1931 Bull. Amer. Assoc. Petroleum Geologists 15 161 Source rocks of petroleum include carbonaceous or ‘bituminous’ sedimentary deposits, containing aquatic plant and animal remains..and the products of their biochemical and geochemical alterations. 1965 G. J. Williams Econ. Geol. N.Z. xix. 352/1 Early borings at Kotuku..left little doubt that the oil at Kotuku comes from the Oligocene Cobden Limestone—though this does not necessarily mean that the Limestone is the source rock. 1971 I. G. Gass et al. Understanding Earth xxii. 323/2 The concentration of diamond source-rocks in the older cratons. Draft additions March 2003 source code n. Computing a code written in a high-level or assembly language, which is converted into object code by a compiler, assembler, or interpreter; a program in a source language (cf. object code n. at object n. Compounds 2). ΘΚΠ society > computing and information technology > programming language > program or code > [noun] code1946 computer program1947 programme1947 main program1951 source code1965 1965 Communications ACM 8 665/2 The PUFFT source language listing provides a cross reference between the source code and the object code. 1975 Austral. Computing Jrnl. July 78/1 Another potential hazard occurs when the programmer writes structured source code and the compiler generates unstructured assembler code. 1988 New Yorker 7 Nov. 41/3 The original programs, which are centrally produced, are commonly called ‘source codes’; only a few local governments own and control the source codes that are used in their jurisdictions. 1996 Web Developer Spring 9/3 When source code is compiled by javac, the Java compiler, the resulting file has a .class extension and is named after the class defined in the source code. 2000 ‘Dr. K.’ Compl. Hacker's Handbk. ii. 25 Now everyone can run an operating system with open source, running GNU tools that are equally open-source, modifying and changing the source code as we see fit. Draft additions January 2010 source tree n. Computing the source code files of a piece of software when stored hierarchically within a file system. ΚΠ 1983 Compare.F in net.sources (Usenet newsgroup) 14 Aug. Most system programs may be rebuilt by using the collection of :mk command files located in the source tree. 1993 E. S. Raymond New Hacker's Dict. (ed. 2) 258 Link farms save space when one is maintaining several nearly identical copies of the same source tree. 2005 K. Kopper Linux Enterprise Cluster 59 The .config file placed into the top of the kernel source tree is hidden from the normal ls command. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1913; most recently modified version published online March 2022). sourcev.1 1. Of a bird of prey: to rise after seizing its quarry. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > birds > bird of prey > [verb (intransitive)] > seize quarry > rise after seizing quarry source1513 1513 G. Douglas tr. Virgil Æneid xi. xiv. 74 Evir the sarar this ern strenis his gryp,..Sammyn wyth hys wyngis soursand in the sky. 2. To rise, surge, or boil up. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > upward movement > rise or go up [verb (intransitive)] > well up bewell1387 source1594 to well up1835 upwell1885 1594 T. Nashe Terrors of Night in Wks. (Grosart) III. 257 Anie ouerboyling humour which sourseth hiest in our stomackes. 3. To spring or take rise from something. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > causation > source or origin > originate, derive, or arise [verb (intransitive)] arisec950 syeOE comeOE riselOE springc1175 buildc1340 derivec1386 sourdc1386 proceedc1390 becomea1400 to be descended (from, of)1399 bursta1400 to take roota1400 resolve?c1400 sourdre14.. springc1405 descenda1413 sprayc1425 well?a1475 depart1477 issue1481 provene1505 surmount1522 sprout1567 accrue?1576 source1599 dimane1610 move1615 drill1638 emane1656 emanate1756 originate1758 to hail from1841 deduce1866 inherita1890 stem1932 1599 T. Nashe Lenten Stuffe 33 They..neuer leaue roaring it out..of the freedomes and immunities soursing from him. 1611 R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues Sourcé, sourced, sprung or begun from. 1666 G. Harvey Morbus Anglicus viii. 70 [Consumption] sourceth from an Ulcer in the Lungs. II. transitive. Senses relating to source or origin. 4. a. In passive, to be sourced in, to originate in, to be based in; to mention as a source. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > causation > source or origin > originate or be a source of [verb (transitive)] > derive, come from, or originate in fet1393 to take one's spring from (also out of)c1440 to come out of ——1481 extract1490 deduct1530 fetch1552 desume1564 deduce1565 father1577 derive1600 traduce1615 raisea1631 originate1653 to be sourced in1941 society > occupation and work > business affairs > [verb (intransitive)] > obtain goods or work from outside source > be sourced from outside to be sourced in1972 1941 W. C. Handy Father of Blues xxii. 298 Affinities that may be sourced in a common ultimate Oriental origin. 1972 J. Godey Three Worlds ii. 23 Mitchell became aware of a rumbling sound vaguely sourced in the floor. 1978 Maledicta 1977 1 326 Over twenty of Mr. Tamony's scripts are sourced in H. L. Mencken's American Language, Supplements 1 and 2. 1982 Times Lit. Suppl. 17 Dec. 1394/1 I also drew on a scientific paper discussing Vittoz's work by the Chicago psychoanalyst, Dr Harry Trosman, which is sourced in my notes. b. To obtain from a specified source; spec. of components (for a vehicle). Chiefly in past participle. ΚΠ 1972 Wall St. Jrnl. 24 Feb. 1/5 Ford works on stripped~down cars, called ‘Asian Model Ts’ that could be sourced and assembled anywhere in Asia. 1980 Times 20 Mar. 27/5 One component manufacturer said last night: ‘Our indications are that less than 10 per cent of the Bounty [sc. a new car] will be sourced in the United Kingdom.’ 1981 Times 6 Feb. 18/2 Counterfeited goods, largely sourced from south east Asia..have mainly been finding their way into British export markets. 1981 Times 15 Aug. 15/4 British manufacturers..have stressed that Nissan should source at least 80 per cent of the contents of the cars it plans to make in the United Kingdom in Europe. DerivativesΘΚΠ the world > the earth > water > flow or flowing > wave > movement of waves > [adjective] > running high, surging, or rolling wallingOE waveringc1425 surging1566 trilling1567 wambling1581 grown1600 surgeful1612 sourcinga1660 washing1697 flashing1744 under-rolling1745 jawing1802 rolly1885 a1660 in J. T. Gilbert Contemp. Hist. Ireland (1880) II. 117 Like a bankroute or shipe lost on the continent by the furie of sourcinge waves. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > business affairs > [noun] > agreement for supply of goods, etc. > from specific source sourcing1960 insourcing1979 outsourcing1981 1960 Business Week 2 Jan. 67/3 Businessmen now refer to imports from foreign plants as ‘sourcing’—a term that until recently referred to company purchases from a domestic supplier. 1960 Wall St. Jrnl. 15 Mar. 14/5 There is a growing tendency toward foreign ‘sourcing’, the purchase or production of finished goods or components abroad. 1970 Daily Tel. 1 Oct. 2/2 Ford, British Leyland and other manufacturing companies has had to resort to ‘dual sourcing’ for some components because of this year's unprecedented run of major supplier strikes. 1972 Wall St. Jrnl. 24 Feb. 1/5 Experience under the U.S.-Canadian auto pact and in the Common Market has emboldened Detroit to expand multi-national sourcing of parts and components. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1913; most recently modified version published online December 2020). † sourcev.2 Obsolete. rare. transitive. To submerge, plunge, souse. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > downward motion > causing to come or go down > cause to come or go down [verb (transitive)] > dip or plunge into liquid > deeply or with force divec900 ayetOE souse1470 douse1566 implunge1590 overplunge1595 sourcec1616 plounce1631 c1616 R. C. Certaine Poems in Times' Whistle (1871) 113 Apollo..Taking his dayly..course, His fiery head in Thetis watry brest, Three hundred sixty & five times doth source. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1913; most recently modified version published online June 2021). < n.1359v.11513v.2c1616 |
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