单词 | starved |
释义 | starvedadj. I. Deprived of food. 1. a. Deprived of food and the necessaries of life; suffering from hunger or lack of food, famished, starving; poverty-stricken. ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > poverty > [adjective] > poor havelessOE unrichOE waedlec1000 armOE nakedOE helplessc1175 wantsomec1175 poora1200 barec1220 needfula1225 misease?c1225 unwealya1300 needyc1325 feeblec1330 poorful1372 mischievousc1390 miseasedc1390 indigentc1400 meanc1400 naughtyc1400 succourless1412 unwealthyc1412 behove1413 misterousa1425 misterfulc1480 miserablec1485 beggarly1545 starved1563 threadbare1577 penurious1590 fortuneless1596 wealthless1605 wantful1607 necessitous1611 inopulent1613 titheless1615 egene1631 starveling1638 necessitated1646 inopious1656 parsimonious1782 unopulent1782 lacking1805 bushed1819 obolary1820 ill-to-do1853 down at heel1856 po'1866 needsome1870 down-at-heeled1884 rocky1921 the world > food and drink > food > consumption of food or drink > appetite > hunger > [adjective] > hungry > starving or starved hungryc950 ofhungeredOE hungeredc1425 famylousc1475 forhungered1481 hunger-starvena1533 starven1546 hunger-bit1549 hunger-bitten1549 affamished1554 starved1563 starving1581 gaunted1582 famishing1587 food-sick1587 hunger-starving1592 famined1622 gut-foundered1647 hunger-starved1647 starved-gut1653 half-starved1667 clemmed1674 nushed1691 pinch-gutted1704 starve-gutted1726 clemming1773 clung1807 1563 W. Baldwin et al. Myrrour for Magistrates (new ed.) Glendour f. xixv My body and fame she [sc. Fortune] hath made leane and slender For I poore wretch am sterued Owen Glendour. 1594 True Trag. Richard III sig. I He like to a starued Lionesse still called for blood, saying that I should die. 1600 W. Shakespeare Merchant of Venice v. i. 295 Faire Ladies, you drop Manna in the way of starued people. View more context for this quotation 1647 R. Stapleton tr. Juvenal Sixteen Satyrs xiv. 259 And thy sterv'd droves, thou sendst into his Corne. a1704 T. Brown Satyr upon French King in Wks. (1707) I. i. 92 When my starv'd Entrails croke. 1711 A. Pope Ess. Crit. 25 What woful stuff this Madrigal wou'd be, In some starv'd Hackny Sonneteer, or me? 1823 W. Scott Quentin Durward I. ii. 36 This youth will do as much honour to it as a starved mouse to a housewife's cheese. 1877 Morning Gaz. (Fort Wayne, Indiana) 21 Nov. When the spring came the starved natives were able to procure food for the settlement. 1927 J. B. S. Haldane & J. S. Huxley Animal Biol. viii. 160 The blood contains about one part in a thousand of sugar, and this does not fall much in a starved man or animal. 1984 N.Y. Times (Nexis) 11 Dec. a 30/4 With good health care and good food, starved children not only catch up but may even go beyond the previous base line. 2010 Winnipeg Free Press 5 Feb. d7/2 The starved Chaplin eats his own boiled boots as though they were a delectable gourmet meal. b. figurative and in extended use. That suffers from spiritual or mental want; (of a thing) deprived of necessary sustenance; lacking an essential resource or element. ΚΠ 1582 J. Prime Short Treat. Sacraments sig. Aiiiv A writing drawen in strange characters and letters..vnderstoode but of a fewe, and of them no further then it pleased..to expounde in miserable maner, to hungry, poore, and sterued soules. 1600 W. Shakespeare Merchant of Venice iv. i. 137 Thy desires are woluish, bloody, staru'd, and rauenous. View more context for this quotation 1648 Case for City-spectacles 6 He speaks like the hinges of a starv'd buttery doore that whines for grease. 1669 A. Browne Ars Pictoria 90 When your silver either with long keeping or moistness of the Air becomes starved and rusty; you must..before you lay the silver Cover over the place with a little Juice of Garlick, which will preserve it. 1826 C. Lamb in New Monthly Mag. 16 262 For a starved grate, and a scanty firing.., he finds [at the alehouse] in the depths of winter always a blazing hearth. 1856 E. K. Kane Arctic Explor. I. viii. 81 Scanty as this starved flora may seem to the botanists of more favored zones. 1899 T. C. Allbutt et al. Syst. Med. VIII. 816 Essentially the same formation as a small starved wart upon the horny finger of a workman. 1912 J. S. Black & G. Chrystal Life W. R. Smith xii. 505 Here and there were a few meagre patches of starved wheat or barley. 1979 New Castle (Pa.) News 5 May 14/2 When the starved tissue is heart muscle, the result is a heart attack. 2014 Sun (Nexis) 1 Mar. 51 Leaf spot is worse on starved plants. c. starved-out: forced out by starvation or poverty. ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > poverty > [adjective] > driven out by poverty starved-out1844 the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > going or coming out > letting or sending out > [adjective] > expelling > expelled > specific people from a place, position, or possession > in specific manners outshovena1400 burnt out1837 starved-out1844 bombed out1940 1844 Morning Chron. 20 July 2/4 They were able not only to provide for their own, but also to relieve the starved-out excess of their neighbours. 1878 J. Davidson Inverurie v. 155 Leslie..was occupied in 1600 by William Forbes, the starved-out minister of Kintore. 1929 Syracuse (N.Y.) Herald 20 Jan. (Mag.) 7/4 The project would save the remnant of the starved-out natives it is argued. 1979 Walla Walla (Washington) Union-Bull. 15 Oct. 11/2 A lot of farmers had bought machinery in the starved-out Dakotas and skipped out without paying. 2. a. Of soil: poor in quality; spec. lacking nutrients or minerals in quantities sufficient for substantial or sustained growth of vegetation. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > structure of the earth > constituent materials > earth or soil > soil qualities > [adjective] > infertile > lacking fertilizing elements hungry1577 starveda1591 meagre1794 wormless1837 a1591 H. Smith Jonahs Punishm. ii, in 6 Serm. (1594) 178 Say not I haue a stonie, or a starued, or a thornie ground. a1660 H. Hammond Serm. (1675) xviii. 281 'Tis observed in husbandry, that soil, laid on hard, barren, starved ground doth improve it, and at once deface and enrich it. 1763 Museum Rusticum (ed. 2) I. 93 We are obliged to dig deep for a poorer or more starved kind [of gravel]. 1856 3rd Ann. Rep. Mass. Board Agric. 68 I came to the conclusion that if I had treated my poor starved land more liberally with guano, I should have been amply repaid at harvest time. 1926 Times 27 Feb. 15/1 (advt.) Your seed will not stand a fair chance in starved soil. 2001 D. G. Hessayon Pocket Tree & Shrub Expert ii. 34 Cytisus will flourish in starved soil but there are several rules to follow. b. Of a person or animal: emaciated from, or as if from, lack of food; lean, thin. ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > bodily shape or physique > slim shape or physique > [adjective] > thin leanc1000 thinc1000 swonga1300 meagrea1398 empty?c1400 (as) thin (also lean, rank) as a rakec1405 macilent?a1425 rawc1425 gauntc1440 to be skin and bone (also bones)c1450 leany?a1475 swampc1480 scarrya1500 pinched1514 extenuate1528 lean-fleshed1535 carrion-lean1542 spare1548 lank1553 carrion1565 brawn-fallen1578 raw-bone1590 scraggeda1591 thin-bellied1591 rake-lean1593 bare-boned1594 forlorn1594 Lented1594 lean-looked1597 shotten herring1598 spiny1598 starved1598 thin-belly1598 raw-boned1600 larbar1603 meagry?1603 fleshless1605 scraggy1611 ballow1612 lank-leana1616 skinnya1616 hagged1616 scraggling1616 carrion-like1620 extenuated1620 thin-gutted1620 haggard1630 scrannel1638 leanisha1645 skeletontal1651 overlean1657 emaciated1665 slank1668 lathy1672 emaciate1676 nithered1691 emacerated1704 lean-looking1713 scranky1735 squinny-gut(s)1742 mauger1756 squinny1784 angular1789 etiolated1791 as thin (also lean) as a rail1795 wiry1808 slink1817 scranny1820 famine-hollowed1822 sharp featured1824 reedy1830 scrawny1833 stringy1833 lean-ribbeda1845 skeletony1852 famine-pinched1856 shelly1866 flesh-fallen1876 thinnish1884 all horn and hide1890 unfurnished1893 bone-thin1899 underweight1899 asthenic1925 skin-and-bony1935 skinny-malinky1940 skeletal1952 pencil-neck1960 1598 T. Bastard Chrestoleros v. xii. 112 Bardus eates..Steru'de mutton, beefe with foote bemartelled, And skinn and bones. 1600 W. Shakespeare Henry IV, Pt. 2 iii. ii. 299 This same staru'd iustice [Shallow] . View more context for this quotation a1637 B. Jonson Sad Shepherd i. vii. 7 in Wks. (1640) III A starv'd Muttons carkasse Would better fit their palates. View more context for this quotation 1638 F. Junius Painting of Ancients 35 They are puffed up, not stately; starved, not delicate. 1819 J. Keats La Belle Dame xi I saw their starved lips in the gloam, With horrid warning gaped wide. 1884 Standard Nat. Hist. V. 81 The American Pika, or ‘Little Chief’ Hare (L. princeps)... The miners and hunters in the West know these oddities as ‘conies’ and ‘starved rats’. 1904 J. Conrad Nostromo i. 3 Suffering in their starved and parched flesh. 1977 Salt Lake Tribune 10 July w 7/1 Luckily for most women, the starved look is out and the soft, curvy, feminine look is coming back in. 2014 Times (Nexis) 18 Apr. Looking at El Greco's starved figures makes us peckish. c. figurative and in extended use. Lacking in substance; meagre, deficient; poor, feeble; jejune. ΘΚΠ the mind > goodness and badness > inferiority or baseness > inferior thing > [adjective] salec1299 bastarda1348 sorry1372 slight1393 shrewd1426 singlec1449 backc1450 soberc1450 lesser1464 silly?a1500 starven1546 mockado1577 subaltern1578 bastardly1583 wooden1592 starved1604 perishing1605 starveling1611 minor1612 starvy1647 potsherd1655 low1727 la-la1800 waif1824 lathen1843 one-eyed1843 snide1859 bobbery1873 jerkwater1877 low-grade1878 shoddy1882 tinhorn1886 jerk1893 cheapie1898 shaganappi1900 buckeye1906 reach-me-down1907 pissy1922 crappy1928 cruddy1935 el cheapo1967 pound shop1989 society > leisure > the arts > literature > style of language or writing > weakness or feebleness > [adjective] > bald barrena1387 baldc1390 meagre1539 barec1540 starved1604 poor1842 poverty-stricken1865 1604 Abp. G. Abbot Reasons Dr. Hill Vnmasked iv. 147 But hee doth not tell vs at whose charges these [Colledges] were erected, or what was given to maintaine them, And certainly they were for the most part but poore & starved things, such as whereof they themselues do make small boast. a1637 B. Jonson Timber 2083 in Wks. (1640) III The Language is thinne, flagging, poore, starv'd. 1704 J. Swift Tale of Tub i. 40 Little starved Conceits, are gently wafted up by their own extreme Levity, to the middle Region. 1747 J. Wesley Char. Methodist 6 May the Lord God of my Fathers preserve me, from such a poor, starved Religion as This! 1795 H. L. Piozzi Diary 17 Apr. in Thraliana (1942) II. 920 The Blackbirds scarce begin a faint starved Note now. 1856 Examiner 8 Mar. 147/2 Such are the grave deficiencies to be noted in even the starved little attempt we make to provide judicial statistics. 1870 F. R. Wilson Archit. Surv. Churches Lindisfarne 34 A nave..with a small, stiff, starved tower. 1874 J. T. Micklethwaite Mod. Parish Churches 130 Logs [of wood] tortured into the forms of starved masonry. 1924 H. G. Wells Dream vii. 274 We successful and respectable ones went our dignified and satisfied ways, assuaging the thin protests of our starved possibilities with such unsubstantial refreshment. 1982 Guardian Weekly (Nexis) 6 June 21 The paint surface looked thin, overstretched, starved. d. Botany. Of a plant, plant variety, or plant part: stunted or imperfectly developed, as (or as if as) a result of lack of nutrients or water; = depauperate adj. b. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > by growth or development > defined by poor growth > [adjective] > stunted or underdeveloped wanthriven1508 scrubby1591 unthriven1680 nithered1691 strunty1756 stinted1759 starved1785 nirled1808 scrunty1811 scrawny1883 1785 J. Bolton Filices Britannicæ I. 35 Is it possible that Polipodium lonchitis should be a starved variety of Polipodium aculeatum? 1832 J. Lindley Introd. Bot. 419 Starved (depauperatus); when some part is less perfectly developed than is usual with plants of the same family. Thus, when the lower scales of a head of a Cyperaceous plant produce no flowers, these scales are said to be starved. 1874 Monthly Microsc. Jrnl. 12 12 Lindberg considers squarrosulum Lesq. to be rather a starved or undeveloped form than a distinct variety. 1921 N.Y. State Mus. Bull. Mar. 42 Purely a starved or depauperate form and perhaps not worth any systematic recognition. 1979 Kew Bull. 34 270 After some while in cultivation the leaves became much broader and this made him think that the plant might be just a starved form of the well known species from west Africa. e. Ceramics. Of a glaze: lacking the expected brilliance after firing. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > painting or coating materials > [adjective] > glazed > types of ceramic or pottery glaze stanniferous1823 raw1825 flambé1886 tea-dust1897 monastic1909 tin-enamelled1933 starved1964 1964 H. Hodges Artifacts ii. 52 Under-firing may result in starved glazes which have a dull appearance. 1968 H. Powell Pottery Handbk. Clay, Glaze & Colour ii. 56 A starved glaze is lacking in shine. 1977 Harrison Mayer Ltd. Catal. 18/2 Starved glaze. The glaze surface is dull in areas which have been adjacent to porous refractories during firing. As the term implies glaze volatiles are sucked away from the surface of the glaze by the porous refractory. 2012 M. Harbridge in A. Turner Surface, Glaze & Form 100 It's possible they'll get streaks or starved glaze areas where the smaller brush is used. II. Dead. 3. Of a branch or plant stem: dead, dry, withered, leafless. Now Heraldry. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > by growth or development > defined by poor growth > [adjective] > withered or dry withered1488 wizened1513 starven1546 faded1574 starved1578 flaccid1626 davereda1794 wilted1809 1578 J. Bell tr. J. Foxe Serm. Christening Certaine Iew sig. A.vi That heauenly gardiner..doeth many times prune this litle Oliue tree of his Church, but neuer plucketh it vp by the rootes..cutting of eftsoones wyndshaken bowes and starued branches [L. defractis ramentis], that new plantes may prosper the better. 1580 R. Parsons Brief Disc. f. 50v As dead..as a starued stake in the hedge, from bearing of flowers. 1610 J. Guillim Display of Heraldrie iii. vii. 106 He beareth Argent, three sterued branches, slipped Sable... This Example is of different nature..being mortified and vnuested of the verdour which sometimes it had. 1754 A. Boyer Great Theater Honour (ed. 2) 116 Starved, Adj. (or dead, speaking of Branches of Trees without Leaves), Mort, Sec. ?1828 W. Berry Encycl. Heraldica I. sig. Xxx2v/2 Starved, a term used by heralds to denote a branch of a tree when stripped of all its leaves. 1858 E. J. Millington Heraldry xvii. 250 Trunks of trees are generally raguly, (cut jaggedly,) or knobbed, and sometimes with starved, or withered, branches. 1962 H. Allcock Heraldic Design 95 Starved, said of a branch shown without leaves. III. Perished with cold. 4. Perished with cold, frozen, numbed. Now chiefly English regional (northern).Recorded earliest in winter-starved (see winter n.1 Compounds 1b). ΘΚΠ the world > matter > properties of materials > temperature > coldness > [adjective] > affected with or having sensation of cold > perishing with cold starveda1586 starveling1697 starven1887 a1586 Sir P. Sidney Apol. Poetrie (1595) sig. K4 So is that honny-flowing Matron Eloquence, apparelled..with figures and flowers, extreamelie winter-starued. 1594 W. Shakespeare Titus Andronicus iii. i. 252 Alas poore hart, that kisse is comfortlesse, As frozen water to a starued snake. View more context for this quotation a1616 W. Shakespeare Henry VI, Pt. 2 (1623) iii. i. 343 I feare me, you but warme the starued Snake. View more context for this quotation 1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost iv. 769 Serenate, which the starv'd Lover sings To his proud fair. View more context for this quotation 1847 C. Brontë Jane Eyre I. vii. 107 Behind them the younger children crouched in groups, wrapping their starved arms in their pinafores. 1878 R. Browning La Saisiaz in La Saisiaz: Two Poets of Croisic Prol. 1 Such a starved bank of moss Till that May-morn Blue ran the flash across: Violets were born! 1893 J. K. Snowden Tales Yorks. Wolds 158 Willie was rubbing his hands slowly before the roaring fire. ‘I'm fearful starved’, he said. 1894 R. Bridges Palm Willow i See, whirling snow sprinkles the starved fields. 1898 J. Hutchinson Archives Surg. IX. 302 When I get a cold I never shew it, but only feel chilly and starved. 1968 G. Butler Coffin Following vi. 123 You look proper starved... Cold, that's what starved means. Compounds C1. Parasynthetic. starved-looking adj. ΚΠ 1753 Patrick's Purgatory: Fragment shall be Saved 5 Jenny Minor, of late, was grown plump and sizeable, and was a starved-looking jade before. 1888 E. Gerard Land beyond Forest II. xlvii. 255 Starved-looking daisies, and spiritless, emaciated camomiles, are all the flowers to be seen. 1916 Soil 1 11 One very poor and starved-looking Tarahumare carried 226 2/5 pounds on his back. 2015 Malta Independent (Nexis) 29 Jan. Extra-uber-skinny retro pants stood out in a collection that featured starved-looking women as well as men. C2. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > consumption of food or drink > appetite > hunger > [adjective] > hungry > starving or starved hungryc950 ofhungeredOE hungeredc1425 famylousc1475 forhungered1481 hunger-starvena1533 starven1546 hunger-bit1549 hunger-bitten1549 affamished1554 starved1563 starving1581 gaunted1582 famishing1587 food-sick1587 hunger-starving1592 famined1622 gut-foundered1647 hunger-starved1647 starved-gut1653 half-starved1667 clemmed1674 nushed1691 pinch-gutted1704 starve-gutted1726 clemming1773 clung1807 1653 J. Ford Queen sig. B1v/2 You are a stinking starv'd-gut star gazer. Derivatives ˈstarvedly adv. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > insufficiency > [adverb] > scantily or meagrely feeblyc1290 scarcely1340 scantc1440 scantly1509 daintilya1513 barelya1535 thinly1537 leanly1580 meagrelya1586 starvedly1606 exile1654 scantily1774 skimpingly1853 skimpily1859 stintedly1863 barrenly1877 the world > food and drink > food > consumption of food or drink > appetite > hunger > [adverb] hungerlya1584 starvedly1606 starvingly1662 hungrily1693 yaply1768 esuriently1883 the world > life > biology > biological processes > development, growth, or degeneration > [adverb] > in an unthriving or atrophied manner unthrivinglya1387 starvedly1865 stuntedly1907 1606 Bp. J. Hall Medit. & Vowes III. §24 Like some boasting housekeeper, which keepeth open doors for one day with much cheer, & liues staruedly al the yeer after. 1865 Athenæum 28 Jan. 122/2 But our lively lady..is ‘driven wild’ by the sight of hepaticas in myriads, which only grow at home starvedly. 1908 Everybody's Mag. Dec. 792/1 The miniature artist smiled starvedly. 1992 D. Revell Erasures i. 6 The bare extremities of the Lorelei gesture starvedly in the copper bowls. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2016; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < adj.1563 |
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