单词 | sublime |
释义 | sublimeadj.n. A. adj. 1. a. Set or raised aloft; high up. Now rare (archaic in later use).Sometimes difficult to distinguish from sense A. 9. (a) In predicative use. Chiefly poetic.Earliest and frequently in figurative context. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > high position > [adjective] highOE high-seta1382 sovereigna1425 airy1565 sublime?1567 haughty1570 supernal1599 aerial1608 upward1622 high-top1653 superincumbent1659 supern1703 highish1778 high-up1831 high-level1842 altitudinous1868 ?1567 M. Parker Whole Psalter To Rdr. sig. Aii Both lyfe and grace: good reading breedth, flat verse it reysth sublime. 1600 E. Fairfax tr. T. Tasso Godfrey of Bulloigne xviii. liv. 326 Scale the bulwarke of this fortresse hie, Through sweat and labour gainst those rockes sublime Let vs ascend. 1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost vi. 771 Hee on the wings of Cherub rode sublime On the Crystallin Skie. View more context for this quotation 1697 J. Dryden tr. Virgil Georgics i, in tr. Virgil Wks. 59 Two Poles turn round the Globe... The first sublime in Heav'n, the last is whirl'd Below the Regions of the nether World. View more context for this quotation 1725 A. Pope tr. Homer Odyssey II. v. 212 Build the rising ship, Sublime to bear thee o'er the gloomy deep. 1786 R. Burns Poems 70 My fancy yerket up sublime Wi' hasty summon. 1842 Ld. Tennyson Vision of Sin in Poems (new ed.) II. 218 To fly sublime Thro' the courts, the camps, the schools. 1900 tr. A. Tassoni in J. Hawthorne et al. Lit. All Nations & All Ages VI. 127 Their captain..Caused it in form of trophy to advance Before the troops, sublime upon a lance. (b) attributive or as postmodifier.In quot. 1615: high (in a numerical sense). ΚΠ 1615 J. Stephens Satyrical Ess. 103 Shee prepares the way to mittigate her prises, either by exclayming vpon the hard times, or insinuating the sublime price of Mutton. 1638 T. Herbert Some Yeares Trav. (rev. ed.) 183 The sublime height did not disanimate us, as did the danger of descending. 1718 N. Rowe tr. Lucan Pharsalia vi. 223 On Hills sublime he breaths the purer Air. 1785 W. Cowper Task iii. 157 Travel nature up To the sharp peak of her sublimest height. 1873 R. Browning Red Cotton Night-cap Country iv. 239 A sublime spring from the balustrade About the tower. 1941 R. Lowell in G. W. Allen & H. H. Clark Lit. Crit. Pope to Croce (1962) 427 On those sublime heights the air is too thin for the lungs, and blinds the eyes. b. Chiefly poetic. Of a building, mountain, etc.: rising to a great height; lofty, towering. Now rare (archaic in later use). ΘΚΠ the world > space > extension in space > measurable spatial extent > vertical extent > [adjective] > great or considerable higheOE steepOE heaven-highOE highlyOE brentc1400 hightc1480 hichty1513 procere1542 tall1548 spiringa1552 towereda1552 tower-like1552 upstretched1563 airy1565 excelse1569 haughty1570 topless1589 lofty1590 procerous1599 kiss-sky1603 skyish1604 topful?1611 aspiringc1620 sky-high1622 hiddy1632 tiptoed1632 sublime1635 towering1638 soaring1687 mountain high1693 clamberinga1717 skied1730 towery1731 pyramidic1740 skyey1750 skyward1792 skyscraping1797 exulting1798 high-reaching1827 steepling1892 high-rise1964 hi1972 1635 T. Heywood Hierarchie Blessed Angells viii. 532 Thunders at the sublimest buildings aime. 1657 N. Billingsley Brachy-martyrologia xxviii. 102 He'd rost her quick, and after throw her down From the sublimest tower in the town. a1731 J. Hughes Misc. in Verse & Prose (1737) 200 Betwixt them both, a Tower its frightful Frame Erects sublime. 1799 Edinb. Mag. Aug. 144/1 Not frizz'd and fritter'd, pinn'd and roll'd, Sublime their artless locks they wear. 1817 T. Moore Lalla Rookh 209 Those towers sublime, That seem'd above the grasp of Time. 1897 L. Mifflin At Gates of Song (1901) 51 I stood on beetling cliffs that loomed sublime Above vast valleys. 1923 A. N. Wilder Battle-retrospect 61 As in their airiest temples, their sublimest towers There shall rest token of our humbler shafts. c. Of flight: soaring, ascending.Only in figurative contexts, with implication of senses A. 2, A. 4, A. 5a. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > progressive motion > moving with current of air or water > motion in the air > [adjective] > soaring soaring1683 sublime1684 upsoaring1818 1684 Bp. G. Burnet in tr. T. More Utopia Pref. sig. A4 We were beginning to fly into a sublime pitch, of a strong but false Rhetorick. 1751 W. Warburton in Wks. of Alexander Pope I. 156 The sublime flight of a Poet. a1758 A. Ramsay Wks. (1961) III. ii. 201 Madam, allow your Muse to fly—Sublime will be the flight. 1838 R. W. Emerson Addr. Divinity Coll. 9 In the sublimest flights of the soul, rectitude is never surmounted, love is never outgrown. 1905 W. O'Brien Recoll. xi. 262 The cry instantly cut short the Grand Old Man's sublime flight, and brought him down to the level of poor human frailty. 2009 J. Vigus Platonic Coleridge v. 158 The sublime flight of Milton above the reach of human sense. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > upward movement > raising > [adjective] > raised > specifically of part of the body > specifically of hands or arms upahevena1225 held?1611 erect1708 sublime1757 upholden1817 1757 T. Gray Ode I i. iii, in Odes 7 With arms sublime, that float upon the air. 1793 E. Walsh Bagatelles 3 The heart-enticing queen Half emerging rose serene; Her arms sublime. 1824 U.S. Lit. Gaz. 1 June 63/2 Where'er he turns, beaux, belles their homage pay; With arms sublime. ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > structural parts > muscle > types of muscles > [adjective] orbicular1615 biceps1634 bicipital1646 trigastric1676 adducent1694 biventral1706 attollent1713 penniform1713 antagonistic1725 monogastric1749 adductory1752 sublime1800 pennated1836–9 intrinsic1839 pennate1877 sphincteric1883 sphinctrate1887 sphincterial1889 agonistic1905 sphinctered1963 1800 Med. & Physical Jrnl. 4 74 What sense can be annexed to blind hole, ossa innominata, accessary [sic] muscle, sublime muscle, [etc.]? 1835 J. Swan Illustr. Compar. Anat. Nerv. Syst. 68 It..continues its course between the sublime perforated, and the deep perforating flexor muscles of the fingers. 1870 Med. Rec. 5 391/1 One [muscle] is deep or ‘profound’, the other superficial or ‘sublime’. 2. Of language, style, or a literary work: expressing noble ideas in a grand and elevated manner. Also of a writer: skilled in or noted for such a style (sometimes passing into sense A. 5a). ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > literature > style of language or writing > ornateness > [adjective] > lofty or grandiloquent magnificenta1460 statelya1525 magnifical1533 tragical1533 lofty1565 tragic1566 sublime1586 over-high1587 magnific1589 heroic1590 buskina1593 grandiloquous1593 full-mouthed1594 high-pitched1594 buskined1595 full-mouth1595 high-borne1596 altisonant1612 Roman1619 high-sounding1624 transcendent1631 magniloquent1640 loud1651 altiloquent1656 grandiloquent1656 largiloquent1656 altisonous1661 tall1670 elevate1673 grandisonous1674 sounding1683 exalted1684 grandisonant1684 grandific1727 magniloquous1727 orotund1799 superb1825 spread eagle1839 grandiose1840 magnisonanta1843 togated1868 elevated1875 mandarin1959 1586 A. Day Eng. Secretorie i. sig. B7 We doe finde three sortes [sc. of style]..to haue been generally commended. Sublime, the highest and statelyest maner, and loftiest deliueraunce of anye thing that maye be, expressing the heroicall and mighty actions of Kings [etc.]. 1645 D. North Forest of Varieties iii. 181 Farre more sublime and better Authours have discovered as little order, and as much repetition; witnesse the Collections of Marcus Aurelius, St. Augustines Confessions, [etc.]. 1690 W. Temple Ess. Poetry in Miscellanea: 2nd Pt. (ed. 2) 297 It must be confessed, that Homer was..the vastest, the sublimest, and the most wonderful Genius. 1728 E. Chambers Cycl. (at cited word) The sublime Style necessarily requires big and magnificent Words. 1756 J. Warton Ess. on Pope I. i. 18 Every excellence, more peculiarly appropriated to the sublimer ode. 1779 V. Knox Ess. II. xxvi. 258 The Bible, the Iliad, and Shakspeare's works are allowed to be the sublimest books that the world can exhibit. 1839 T. De Quincey Milton in Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. Dec. 778/1 Whether he can cite any other book than the Paradise Lost, as continuously sublime, or sublime even by its prevailing character. 1884 Q. Rev. July 136 The voice of poet and prophet..blended in a sublime Dircaean strain. 1925 G. K. Chesterton Everlasting Man i. ii. 51 A sublime psalm of lamentation. 1988 G. Sayer Jack v. 63 Of all poets he thought Dante the most sublime. 2011 I. Balfour in C. Mahoney Compan. Romantic Poetry xxix. 504 I address examples of sublime poetry mainly as they are articulated in some established genres: hymn, epic and..the sonnet. 3. a. Frequently poetic. Noble, dignified, or stately in bearing, demeanour, or appearance; (depreciative) haughty, proud. Also figurative. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > pride > [adjective] highOE rankOE proudOE quaint?c1225 stoutc1315 proud-heartedc1400 gobbedc1440 pridyc1485 high-minded?1503 superb1561 proud-heart1591 tiptoe1593 sublime1596 high-headed1599 magnificent1603 side1673 vaunty1724 perked-up1754 spicy1768 jelly1828 Latin1914 1596 E. Spenser Second Pt. Faerie Queene v. viii. sig. T The proud Souldan with presumpteous cheare, And countenance sublime and insolent. View more context for this quotation a1639 H. Wotton Reliquiæ Wottonianæ (1651) 171 His Limbs rather sturdy then dainty: Sublime and almost Tumorous in His Looks and Gestures. 1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost iv. 300 His fair large Front and Eye sublime declar'd Absolute rule. View more context for this quotation 1759 S. Johnson Prince of Abissinia II. xxxix. 101 He was sublime without haughtiness, courteous without formality. 1768 H. Walpole Let. 16 Aug. in Private Corr. (1820) III. 259 He has the sublime strut of his grandfather, or of a cock-sparrow. 1844 E. B. Browning Vision of Poets c There, Shakespeare, on whose forehead climb The crowns o' the world. Oh, eyes sublime, With tears and laughters for all time! 1853 H. J. Byron Crackers & Bonbons 82 There he sat, sublime and serene, looking round the room. 1901 E. W. Wilcox Poems of Power 94 Even the haughty elements sublime And bold, yield him their secrets for all time. 1909 H. James Ital. Hours 202 A grand villa, whose tall porter, with his cockade and silver-topped staff, standing sublime behind his grating, seems a kind of mundane St. Peter. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > excitement > inspiration > [adjective] > inspired sublime1667 exalted1712 exalté1831 inspired1856 the mind > emotion > pleasure > joy, gladness, or delight > rapture or ecstasy > [adjective] ravished1549 rapt1555 rapted1567 enchanted1594 ecstatical1600 tranced1608 raptured1638 corrept1659 enravished1662 ecstatic1664 rapturous1664 sublime1667 exalted1712 enraptured1757 ecstasied1787 blissed out1973 1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost x. 536 Sublime with expectation. View more context for this quotation 1671 J. Milton Samson Agonistes 1669 While thir hearts were jocund and sublime, Drunk with Idolatry, drunk with Wine. View more context for this quotation 4. Belonging to or designating the highest sphere of thought, existence, or human activity; intellectually or spiritually elevated. ΘΚΠ the mind > goodness and badness > quality of being good > surpassing excellence > [adjective] > heavenly or sublime heavenlya1393 celestial1430 celestious1542 sublime1601 sublimed1602 uncondescendable1683 unworldly1711 1601 T. Lodge tr. Luis de Granada Flowers I. x. f. 62 Howe may I expresse a mistery so sublime & adorable? 1637 J. Milton Comus 27 Thou hast nor Eare, nor Soule to apprehend The sublime notion, and high mysterie. 1647 H. More Philos. Poems i. To Rdr. C 2 The contemplation of these things is very sublime and subtile. 1664 J. Playford Brief Introd. Skill Musick (ed. 4) Pref. sig. A2v This [art] of Musick is the most sublime and excellent, for its wonderful Effects and Inventions. 1724 A. Collins Disc. Grounds Christian Relig. 233 They despised the literal sense of the Old Testament, and employed their invention to find out sublime senses thereof. 1782 W. Cowper Conversation in Poems 239 What are ages and the lapse of time Matched against truths as lasting as sublime? a1821 J. Keats Hyperion (new ed.) 11 in Misc. Philobiblon Soc. (1856–7) III Whether his labours be sublime or low. a1853 F. W. Robertson Lect. (1858) 254 England's sublimer battle cry of ‘Duty’. 1877 R. B. Girdlestone Dies Iræ (ed. 2) ii. 9 He who inhabiteth eternity has put into our bosoms the germ of a more sublime existence. 1920 E. M. Maturin Rachel Comforted 103 The sublimest ideals and conceptions die, if denied expression. 1963 F. C. Crews Pooh Perplex (1979) 96 Marveling at the power..of the artist to inform the very void and chaos of his material with sublime order. 2002 N. Drury Dict. Esoteric 10/2 Believing that the love of a devotee for God was the most sublime truth of all. 5. a. Of a person, personal attribute, action, etc.: morally, intellectually, or spiritually superior; of great nobility or grandeur. Hence: perfect, consummate; supreme. ΘΚΠ the mind > goodness and badness > quality of being good > perfection > [adjective] > most or completely perfect consummatea1530 crowning1604 sublime1605 vertical1641 preterpluperfect1652 preterperfecta1784 pluterperfect1908 1605 F. Bacon Of Aduancem. Learning i. sig. G2 These Intellectualists..are notwithstanding commonly taken for the most sublime and diuine Philosophers. View more context for this quotation 1643 J. Burroughes Expos. Prophesie Hosea First Three Chapters 385 Others are of more sublime spirits naturally, as if they were borne for great things. 1665 S. Patrick Parable of Pilgrim xxi. 218 Nor is there any delight so noble and sublime, so pure and refined. a1715 Bp. G. Burnet Hist. Own Time (1724) I. 215 He..was a very perfect friend, and a most sublime Christian. 1794 A. Radcliffe Myst. of Udolpho II. ii. 36 Emily's eyes filled with tears of admiration and sublime devotion. 1838 H. W. Longfellow Lt. Stars ix Thou shalt know..how sublime a thing it is To suffer and be strong. 1852 Ld. Tennyson Ode Wellington 34 And, as the greatest only are, In his simplicity sublime. 1872 ‘G. Eliot’ in J. W. Cross George Eliot's Life (1886) III. 159 Mr. Lewes makes a martyr of himself in writing all my notes and business letters. Is not that being a sublime husband? 1924 Amer. Mercury Dec. 467/1 The intense emotion of those sublime souls, Mozart, Beethoven, Chopin, Schumann, Debussy. 1964 M. L. King Why we can't Wait v. 94 I wish you had commended the Negro sit-inners and demonstrators of Birmingham for their sublime courage. 2005 Church Times 11 Nov. 27/2 The clash between the possibilities of sublime goodness and evil's depraving effects runs through his work as a screenwriter. b. Chiefly colloquial. In ironic use, with reference to undesirable qualities: downright, utter, ‘out-and-out’. ΚΠ 1792 T. Holcroft Anna St. Ives V. lxxxviii. 137 Most sublime ass!—Oh for a bib and barley sugar, with the label Meacock pinned before and behind! 1823 J. Gillies New Transl. Aristotle's Rhetoric App. 473 The resistless temptations, and..the sublime wickedness of Lady Macbeth. 1885 J. A. Harrison Greece xxix. 462 This sublime piece of impertinence was perpetrated in the year of ‘heathennesse’, B.C. 412. 1906 Colliery Engineer Aug. 7/2 He who takes the helm in hand with an overweening estimate of his own ability, with a sublime sense of his own worth and consequence. 1947 M. Lowry Under Volcano ii. 66 You might have acquired..a way, at any rate, of throwing a look into your face..of sublime dishonest detachment. 1977 O. Manning Danger Tree vi. 136 He smiled with sublime self assurance. 2005 E. O. H. Marthen Otto 268 Only somebody pissed, or a sublime idiot,..would park up at a disco while everybody else was leaving the place. 6. a. Of rank, status, or office: very high, exalted. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > social class > nobility > rank > [adjective] > exalted in rank higheOE stern of slatec1300 greatc1325 differentc1384 excellentc1400 haught1470 upper1477 elevate?1504 of sort1606 sublime1606 eminenta1616 exalted1623 elevated1665 uppish1797 ranking1847 high-up1848 high-ranking1850 superimposed1861 salt1868 top-ranking1936 1606 A. Nixon Black Yeare sig. C3v Ingratitude shall forgette her best benafactors, and raysed by insinuation to sublime condition shall bee vnmindefull of the happinesse, that followes content, & is enemie to ambitions aspiring. 1642 Sir T. Browne Religio Medici (new ed.) 37 That doctrine of Epicurus, that denyed the providence of God, was no Atheisme, but a magnificent and high-strained conceit of his Majesty, which he deemed too sublime to mind the triviall actions of those inferior creatures. 1703 J. Evelyn Let. in S. Pepys Private Corr. (1926) II. 301 Persons of the sublimest rank and office. 1769 T. Gray Ode at Installation Duke of Grafton 25 Meek Newton's self bends from his state sublime. 1808 New & Compl. Amer. Encycl. IV. 430/1 They gave the name of precepts to those laws that were universally obligatory upon all orders of men; and that of counsels to those which related to Christians of a more sublime rank. 1854 W. Graham Jordan & Rhine 560 The sublime office of the critic, who requires, more than any man, the cautious tenacious principles of reflective reason. 1938 E. T. Hibbert Embroidered Gauze (1941) vi. 149 The sublime rank to which you wish to raise her would bring to the attention of everyone a fact which all which to ignore. 2001 J. Noggle Skeptical Sublime vi. 171 Women..similarly attain a sublime status..by their very mutability, which requires men to withdraw, protect, and frame them fetishistically as special objects. b. Frequently with capital initial. An honorific epithet given to a person of high rank or status; spec. an epithet of the Ottoman sultan. Also applied to the attributes, possessions, etc., of such a person. Cf. Sublime Porte at Porte n., sublimity n. 2b. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > social class > nobility > title > title or form of address for persons of rank > [adjective] > specific epithets for persons of rank > for the sultan or other potentates sublime1683 1683 tr. Acct. M. De Quesne's Late Exped. at Chio 17 Sending his humble request to the Capoudan Pacha, that he would Mediate at the Foot of the Sublime Throne. 1726 J. Swift Gulliver I. i. iii. 60 His most sublime Majesty proposeth to the Man-Mountain..the following Articles. 1783 tr. J. Sing in Hibernian Mag. Mar. 144/2 I, your well-wisher, have separated myself from your sublime presence. 1821 Ld. Byron Don Juan: Canto V cxliv. 207 Your slave brings tidings..Which your sublime attention may be worth. 1822 P. B. Shelley Hellas 9 Your Sublime Highness Is strangely moved. 1854 H. H. Milman Hist. Lat. Christianity III. vii. iii. 180 Gregory..assumed the lofty tone of arbiter, and commanded them to..await his sublime award. 1907 F. Sinclair Under North Star & Southern Cross 103 It found its way into the hands of the Sultan of Turkey..and is now worn in His Sublime Highness's turban. 1986 J. L. Kraemer Philos. in Renaissance of Islam ii. 121 There is a reference to Miskawayh 's service in the sublime court in Rayy. 2005 J. C. Grimwood Effendi x. 64 ‘Acting First Minister,’ said Raf firmly. ‘Married well. Trusted notary to His Sublime Majesty.’ ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > respiratory organs > breathing > [adjective] > of highest degree sublime1656 1656 J. Smith Compl. Pract. Physick 224 Difficulty of breath is greater then in a Pluresy, which Hippocrates calleth sublime. 1663 N. Culpeper & A. Cole tr. T. Bartholin Anat. (new ed.) ii. iii. 92/1 The former Respiration Galen terms gentle or small,..the other strong,..a third sublime, where the Diaphragma, intercostal or rib between muscles, and muscles of the Chest do act all together. 1746 R. James tr. P. Alpinus Presages Life & Death in Dis. I. iv. x. 362 We come now to consider the sublime or elevated, and apparent Respiration, which also is never observ'd but in dying Persons. 1820 J. Cooke Treat. Nerv. Dis. I. 278 Sauvages remarks, that in proportion as respiration is more sublime, and the pulse more depressed and unequal, death is to be considered near. 1835 T. Davies Lect. Dis. Lungs & Heart 32 We have also high and sublime respiration. This occurs in extreme cases, where the patient endeavours to encrease the diameters in every way. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > medicines or physic > [adjective] > of high quality frank1647 sublime1662 1662 T. Arundell Confession & Conversion 377 What is Earth to Heaven..but as pebbles to pearls, as drosse to gold, or as a shadow to the most glorious and most sublime substance. 1694 W. Salmon Pharmacopœia Bateana i. ix. 370/1 It..will do that..which other more esteemed sublime Medicines will not do. 1864 Jrnl. Soc. Arts 4 Mar. 251/2 The finest sublime olive oil was about 5s. 6d. per gallon. 1884 Internat. Health Exhib. Official Catal. 62/2 Jeyes' Sublime Disinfectant Toilet Soaps. 1897 Daily News 1 Oct. 7/7 A bottle upon which was a label ‘Sublime Salad Oil’. 9. Of a feature of nature or art: that fills the mind with a sense of overwhelming grandeur or irresistible power; that inspires awe, great reverence, or other high emotion, by reason of its beauty, vastness, or grandeur. Cf. sense B. 1b. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > excitement > inspiration > [adjective] > sublimely exciting sublimea1743 subliming1796 a1743 J. Baillie Ess. Sublime (1747) 10 Heavens diversified by numberless Stars, than which I grant nothing can be more Sublime. 1762 Ld. Kames Elements Crit. I. iv. 266 Great and elevated objects considered with relation to the emotions produced by them, are termed grand and sublime. 1781 J. Moore View Soc. Italy (1790) I. i. 5 The regularity of the streets, the venerable aspect of the churches, the sublime site of the castle, and other things which we had heard extolled. 1803 Mr. Fraser in Gazetteer Scotl. at Kimalie This fall of water..is, indeed, awful and sublime, but has too much of the terrible in its appearance. 1848 U.S. Mag. & Democratic Rev. July 46 Awe-struck, he stood there..and continued fixedly gazing upon the sublime painting. 1878 S. Smiles Robert Dick vii. 78 After the cultivated fields, come the moors—quiet, solitary, and sublime. 1914 T. S. Eliot Let. 26 July (1988) I. 50 I don't care for ‘sublime’ scenery, do you? 1942 Pop. Sci. Oct. 129/1 Chartres Cathedral, in which Gothic architecture and its decorative handmaiden, stained glass, reached their sublime peak. 1996 D. Sandner Fantastic Sublime iii. x. 116 Such sublime landscapes appear often in Frankenstein. 10. In weakened use: excellent, superb; wonderful. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > expectation > feeling of wonder, astonishment > quality of inspiring wonder > [adjective] wonderlyc893 wonderfula1100 wondera1175 wondersa1300 marvellousc1330 marvela1400 marvelly?a1400 mirablec1429 admirablec1450 marvellablec1450 mirific1490 wondrous1509 extonious1548 portentious1549 miraculous1569 geason1572 mirificalc1572 astounding1590 amazing1593 wonderedc1595 admiring1598 prodigious1600 astonishable1603 fabulous1609 wondered-at?1611 necromantic1627 stupendous1640 nigromantic1645 mirandous1652 surprising1665 mirabundous1694 astonishinga1704 wondersome1774 sublime1813 nasty1834 kill-me-quite1842 breathtaking1843 breath-catching1865 miracle-working1867 mouth opening1867 stupefying1870 gee whiz1889 scorching1890 doozy1903 sensational1909 eye-popping1918 wunnerful1924 crashing1931 staggering1934 eyewatering1950 mind-boggling1955 Ozymandian1961 knock-out1966 mind-blowing1966 motherfucking1973 boggling1975 gobsmacking1981 tubular1982 1813 T. Moore Intercepted Lett. iii. 4 His pâtés superb—and his cutlets sublime! 1849 E. Bulwer-Lytton King Arthur (new ed.) I. vi. 260 It was sublime to see Such polished sheers [sic] go clippingly. 1880 ‘Ouida’ Moths III. xxi. 17 Vera would be a sublime wax doll..if she rouged. 1916 A. Pollitzer Let. 2 Oct. in G. O'Keeffe & A. Pollitzer Lovingly, Georgia (1990) 203 Yest aft I had a sublime automobile ride. 1940 F. Loesser in R. Kimball & S. Nelson Compl. Lyrics F. Loesser (2003) 63/1 Oh, isn't this sublime?.. The crowded floor Is perfect for A nice romantic time. 1986 A. Stoddard Living Beautiful Life (1988) iii. 73 The presentation is telling, transforming a simple dish into something mouthwatering, sublime. 2000 Elle Sept. 60/3 Showcasing some of the most sublime, honeydew vocals this side of Stevie Wonder. B. n. 1. With the. a. The grand and elevated style in discourse or writing, esp. when used to express noble ideas. Cf. sense A. 2.Particularly common in the 17th and 18th centuries. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > literature > style of language or writing > ornateness > [noun] > loftiness or grandiloquence > instance of sublimity1651 sublime1660 sublime1679 grandiloquacity1814 1660 T. Salusbury tr. D. Bartoli Learned Man defended & Reform'd ii. 374 They have..different characters, and forms, of which they make use, the Vulgar or Popular to Teach, the Mean to Delight, the Sublime [It. il Sublime] to Perswade. 1746 P. Francis tr. Horace Art of Poetry 561 Since I can write the true Sublime [L. ego mira poemata pango]. 1783 H. Blair Lect. Rhetoric I. iv. 61 Of all writings, antient or modern, the Sacred Scriptures afford us the highest instances of the Sublime. The descriptions of the Deity, in them, are wonderfully noble; both from the grandeur of the object, and the manner of representing it. 1785 W. Cowper Let. 10 Dec. (1981) II. 420 The Sublime of Homer, in the hands of Pope, becomes bloated and tumid, and his description tawdry. 1850 Ld. Tennyson Princess (ed. 3) iv. 100 Feigning pique at what she call'd The raillery, or grotesque, or false sublime. 1870 H. A. Giles tr. Longinus: Ess. Sublime 17 The beauties of eloquence, the Sublime and the Delightful, serve to adorn compositions. 1928 E. E. Kellett Reconsiderations i. 28 The Knight's Tale might easily have aimed at the sublime; it never really rises higher than the stately and the dignified. 2000 G. Binder & R. Weisberg Literary Crit. of Law 8 An awe-inspiring quality of dramatic contrast, the sublime was achievable in literature by virtue of the artist's qualities of soul. b. That quality in nature or art which inspires awe, reverence, or other high emotion; the great beauty of grandeur of an object, place, etc. Cf. sense A. 9.The sublime is an important concept in 18th- and 19th-cent. aesthetics, closely linked to the Romantic movement. It is often (following Burke's theory of aesthetic categories) contrasted with the beautiful (beautiful n. 2) and the picturesque (picturesque n. 1), in the fact that the emotion it evokes in the beholder encompasses an element of terror. ΘΚΠ the mind > goodness and badness > quality of being good > perfection > [noun] > most perfect form or manifestation quintessence1579 fifth-essence1584 sublimity1642 sublime1727 refinement1806 1727 A. Pope et al. Περι Βαθους: Art of Sinking 16 in J. Swift et al. Misc.: Last Vol. The Sublime of Nature is the Sky, the Sun, Moon, Stars, &c. 1757 E. Burke Philos. Enq. Sublime & Beautiful ii. §7. 51 Greatness of dimension, is a powerful cause of the sublime. 1784 R. Bage Barham Downs II. 320 The awful, the sublime of this reverend pile. 1802 C. Findlater Gen. View Agric. County of Peebles 18 The mountains,..too much upon the vast for beauty, are yet too tame for the sublime. 1840 H. B. Stowe in Godey's Lady's Bk. Aug. 61/1 Its doors with great wooden quirls over them, its belfry projecting out at the east end, its steeple and bell, all inspired as much sense of the sublime in me as Stratsburg Cathedral itself. 1871 Harper's Mag. May 914/2 This quiet Sydenham scene might well have had a charm even for the strongest nature and the most passionate lover of the sublime. 1905 G. T. Ladd Philos. Relig. I. xiv. 363 The æsthetical needs find satisfaction when he [sc. man] contemplates the admirable, the awful, the mysterious, the transcendently beautiful, the sublime. 1976 B. Nevius Cooper's Landscapes ii. 43 Salvator's landscapes became the archetypes alternately of the Sublime and the Picturesque; Claude's, of the Beautiful. 2004 Times Lit. Suppl. 10 Dec. 18/3 The sublime—with its connotations of the elemental, the raw, the primitive, the unfathomable and the disturbing—has driven all before it. c. That which is grand or noble in human nature or life; moral or spiritual excellence. ΚΠ 1757 E. Burke Philos. Enq. Sublime & Beautiful i. §7. 13 Whatever is fitted in any sort to excite the ideas of pain, and danger, that is to say, whatever is in any sort terrible,..is a source of the sublime. 1789 R. Burns Poems & Songs (1968) I. 491 To make a happy fireside clime To weans and wife, That's the true Pathos and Sublime Of Human life. 1805 A. Knox Let. 2 Jan. in Remains (1834) I. 15 Moral nature has..a much higher capacity of rising to the sublime, than any thing physical or material. 1840 E. A. Poe Fall House of Usher (new ed.) in Tales of Grotesque & Arabesque I. 76 An unredeemed dreariness of thought which no goading of the imagination could torture into aught of the sublime. 1863 Dublin Univ. Mag. Aug. 163/1 Instances of the sublime in character abound in Milton's portraiture and dialogues of the rebel angels. 1935 W. S. Churchill Let. 1 Jan. in W. S. Churchill & C. S. Churchill Speaking for Themselves (1999) xvi. 370 It is only on the field of battle and in his love for Sarah that he [sc. Marlborough] rises to the sublime. 2003 S. Ryan Objectivism & Corruption of Rationality xiii. 370 The object of her religion is, not ‘human nature’ as such, but the sublime in human nature. 2. An example of the sublime; a sublime feature, quality, or aspect of a person or thing; a sublimity. Now rare. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > literature > style of language or writing > ornateness > [noun] > loftiness or grandiloquence > instance of sublimity1651 sublime1660 sublime1679 grandiloquacity1814 1679 T. Shadwell True Widow i. 6 What is your opinion of the Play?.. There are a great many sublimes that are very Poetical. 1687 Bp. G. Burnet Def. Refl. Varillas's Hist. Heresies 51 It is to be reckoned among the Sublimes of Mr. Varillas, that he expresses the assurance of the Infallibility of the Church, [etc.]. 1727 W. Warburton Crit. & Philos. Enq. Causes Prodigies & Miracles ii. 78 What a fine Opportunity was here of introducing his Story... With what a Sublime might that Flash of Lightning have been brought in. 1754 Adventurer 22 Jan. 340 We have discourses..that may be admired for their perspicuity, purity and elegance; but can produce none that abound in a sublime which whirls away the auditor like a mighty torrent. 1819 W. Green Tourist's New Guide I. 349 The sublimes of Patterdale and Hartshope, and the best parts of Ulls Water are not far removed from Ambleside. a1845 S. Smith Elem. Sketches Moral Philos. (1850) 234 To harbour no mean thought in the midst of abject poverty, but..to found a spirit of modest independence upon the consciousness of having always acted well;—this is a sublime. 1905 Q. Rev. July 17 There is a sublime in French too, which does not wait for Victor Hugo. 3. Sublime quality; sublimity; (also) the emotional state evoked by the sublime.Common in 18th cent. ΚΠ 1685 W. Kennett Life Pliny in tr. Pliny Addr. Thanks to Good Prince p. xxxvii He so happily approv'd himself in the proper Genius of sublime..that he superviv'd his years. 1704 J. Swift Tale of Tub Pref. 22 Whatever Word or Sentence is printed in a different Character, shall be judged to contain something extraordinary either of Wit or Sublime. 1749 Bp. W. Warburton Let. to Hurd 13 June in R. Hurd Lett. from Eminent Prelate (1809) 5 His gravity and sublime of sentiment. 1790 J. Wolcot Advice to Future Laureat 14 Small grace of form, and no sublime of soul. 1827 Phrenol. Jrnl. 4 373 With as good reason may we join the feeling of Sublime and Beautiful, of Wonder, Benevolence, Veneration, Hope, or any other of the sentiments with Wit. 1851 Amer. Whig Rev. Oct. 320/2 The faculty of sublime is not always active in the reader. a1904 T. Stickney Poems (1905) 84 Whatsoever of sublime there be Reaches and deepens and at last is wrought. 1996 S. Morawski Troubles with Postmodernism iii. 51 This conscience is close to the feeling of sublime, filled up with both melancholy and enthusiasm. 4. With the: the highest degree of; the height of; the acme. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the mind > goodness and badness > quality of being good > perfection > [noun] > peak of perfection perfection1340 pointc1400 pinnaclec1450 firmament1526 tipe1548 vertical point1559 acmea1568 status1577 summity1588 sublimation1591 turret1593 topgallant1597 non ultra?1606 vertical1611 non plus ultra1647 ne ultraa1657 verticle1658 summit1661 ne plus ultra1664 ne plus1665 nonplus1670 tip-top1702 pink1720 sublime1748 eminencea1854 it1896 1748 J. Geddes Ess. Composition Antients xvi. 342 In how instructive and pleasant a manner is the sublime of virtue delivered in this story. 1773 D. Hume Let. 4 Feb. (1932) II. 271 This damnd Fellow..was bred to nothing but drawing of Bonds and Leases, or at best Settlements and Entails, which are the sublime of his former Profession. 1818 Ld. Byron Beppo lxx. 36 The sublime Of mediocrity, the furious tame. 1865 E. A. Pollard Second Year of War vi. 179 Unmasking the objects of the war, and exhibiting to the world the sublime of administrative madness. 1903 T. Fitzpatrick Bloody Bridge viii. 213 The author of Paradise Lost has..reached the sublime of vagueness in his description of Satan. Phrases from the sublime to the ridiculous: from one extreme (esp. one characterized by lofty thoughts or noble actions) to the other.In the fuller form from the sublime to the ridiculous is but one step and variants, popularized by the comment of Napoleon on his retreat from Moscow (see the note in the main etymology). ΚΠ 1795 T. Paine Age of Reason (ed. 2) ii. 22 The sublime and the ridiculous are often so nearly related, that it is difficult to class them separately. One step above the sublime, makes the ridiculous; and one step above the ridiculous, makes the sublime again.] 1815 tr. Napoleon in Daily National Intelligencer (Washington) 8 Nov. From the sublime to the ridiculous, there is only a step. 1833 Tait's Edinb. Mag. Sept. 749 From the sublime to the ridiculous—from the sepulchres of the dead to the booths of the Champs Elysees—it was but a step. 1866 Atlantic Monthly Apr. 410/2 From the life I had been leading at Cox's to a second-class passage to Paris was that step from the sublime to the ridiculous which I did not wish to be seen taking. 1918 A. Huxley Let. 30 Oct. (1969) 168 Fifty boys come in and demand to have their essays looked over and my mind is switched off from the sublime to the ridiculous. 1974 W. Foley Child in Forest 66 The audience was obviously highly impressed, but now we fell from the sublime to the ridiculous, for it was my turn! 2006 M. Leier Bakunin ix. 150 The Pre-Parliament quickly moved from the sublime to the ridiculous, ending up as little more than a talking society. Compounds sublime geometry n. Mathematics Obsolete the branch of geometry which makes use of calculus. ΚΠ 1717 J. Chamberlayne tr. B. Le B. de Fontenelle Lives French, Ital., & German Philosophers i. 30 The small Number of those who aspired to the Sublime Geometry [Fr. à la haute Geometrie], were struck with an unprofitable Admiration, but not enlighten'd by it. 1742 C. MacLaurin Treat. Fluxions I. 42 Principles that are proposed as of the most extensive use, and as the foundation of all the sublime geometry, ought to be clear and unexceptionable. 1795 C. Hutton Math. & Philos. Dict. I. 536/2 Higher or Sublime Geometry, is that which is employed in the consideration of curve lines, conic sections, and the bodies formed of them. 1842 Penny Cycl. XXIII. 186/1 The term sublime geometry was technical, meaning the higher parts of geometry, in which the infinitesimal calculus or something equivalent was employed. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2012; most recently modified version published online June 2022). sublimev. I. Senses relating to a physical process. 1. transitive. Chemistry. To subject (a substance) to the action of heat in a container so as to convert it into vapour, which is driven off and is deposited in a solid form on a cool surface; (more widely) to convert (a solid) directly to a vapour by gradual heating, without liquefaction or decomposition. Also intransitive. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > chemistry > chemical reactions or processes > subject to chemical reactions or processes [verb (transitive)] > subject to named chemical reaction or process > subject to sublimation sublimea1400 sublimate1559 elevate1607 subtilize1611 extol1657 sublevate1657 alcoholize1670 the world > matter > chemistry > chemical reactions or processes > undergo chemical reactions or processes [verb (intransitive)] > undergo chemical reactions or processes (named) > undergo sublimation sublimea1500 sublimate1559 a1400 tr. Lanfranc Sci. Cirurgie (Ashm.) (1894) 351 Þan drie it & putte it in alutel & sublime it. a1475 Bk. Quinte Essence (1889) 8 Take Mercurie þat is sublymed with vitriol, & comen salt, & sal armoniac .7. or .10. tymes sublymed. a1500 ( G. Ripley Compend of Alchemy (Ashm.) l. 1396 Whe sublyme note lyke as they doo. 1558 W. Ward tr. G. Ruscelli Secretes Alexis of Piemount f. 102v To sublime Quicke Syluer, that is to saye, to make common sublyme. 1612 B. Jonson Alchemist ii. v. sig. E4v Can you sublime, and dulcefie? View more context for this quotation 1682 N. Grew Exper. Luctation ii. ii. §35 in Anat. Plants 246 The saline Principle is altogether volatile, and sublimed away by the fire. 1721 J. Chamberlayne tr. B. Nieuwentyt Relig. Philosopher (new ed.) II. xviii. ix. 421 Even a Metal as heavy as Tin, may be sublimed and mix'd with the Air by the Heat of Fire. 1774 J. Hill tr. Theophrastus Hist. Stones (ed. 2) 235 Our factitious Cinnabar, made only by subliming Mercury and Sulphur together. 1827 M. Faraday Chem. Manip. x. 257 It is easy to sublime and crystallize such bodies as camphor, iodine, naphthaline. 1846 A. J. Cooley Cycl. Pract. Receipts 379/2 Digest iodine in excess on iron under water, gently evaporate, and sublime. 1871 H. E. Roscoe Lessons Elem. Chem. (new ed.) xix. 214 Ammonium Chloride..is obtained..by subliming a mixture of the commercial sulphate of ammonium with common salt. 1938 R. Hum Chem. for Engin. Students xxii. 587 Mercuric Chloride..is prepared by subliming a mixture of mercuric sulphate and sodium chloride. 1978 C. Hayes Compl. Guide Painting & Drawing Techniques ii. 23 The technique of subliming sulphur and mercury to produce a metal brighter than Vermilion..may have been brought west from China. 1986 G. Briggs & F. Taylor Cambr. Photogr. Atlas Planets 155 In summer the Sun sublimes away the ice on equator-facing slopes. 2005 P. Morgan Carbon Fibers xiv. 567 The silica aerogel was finally removed by subliming the silica at 2500°C. 2. transitive. Chemistry. To prepare, extract, or purify (a substance) by causing it to be given off as vapour when the solid is heated, the vapour then condensing on a cool surface as a solid.In many instances difficult to distinguish from sense 1. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > chemistry > chemical reactions or processes > subject to chemical reactions or processes [verb (transitive)] > subject to named chemical reaction or process > subject to sublimation > specific extract by sublimation sublimea1475 sublimate1614 a1475 Bk. Quinte Essence (1889) 5 Þe purete of þe quinte essencie schal be sublymed aboue. a1500 ( G. Ripley Compend of Alchemy (Ashm.) l. 1401 Sume done Mercury fro vitriall & salte sublyme. 1605 T. Tymme tr. J. Du Chesne Pract. Chymicall & Hermeticall Physicke i. xvi. 83 Glasse may be made of antimonie and of lead..by subliming flowers out of them. 1640 T. Carew Poems 202 No more then Chimists can sublime True Gold. 1794 R. Kirwan Elements Mineral. (ed. 2) I. 419 Sulphur has been sublimed from it. 1832 D. Brewster Lett. Nat. Magic xii. 299 We may yet study the lava which they have melted, and the products which they have sublimed. 1869 J. Phillips Vesuvius iv. 107 Chloride of lead was among the substances sublimed. 1922 T. M. Lowry Inorg. Chem. xxxvi. 706 The arsenic may be identified by subliming it from the copper in the form of the oxide. 1993 Nature 11 Nov. 123/2 Mass spectra of material sublimed from the recovered soot showed normal fullerenes. a. transitive. To raise up or on high; to cause to ascend. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > upward movement > raising > make to go up or cause to rise [verb (transitive)] overOE mountc1330 risec1384 raise?c1425 to get upa1500 to screw up?1614 sublime1616 altify1643 1616 R. Gostwick Anatomie Ananias 181 Like the mountaines, subliming their proiections into emptie eleuations. a1640 P. Massinger City-Madam (1658) iii. iii. 43 I am sublim'd! grosse earth Supports me not. I walk on ayr! 1669 J. Denham Cato Major iii. 34 Nor can thy head (not helpt) it self sublime. 1788 F. Burney Diary 29 Nov. (1842) IV. 344 With arms yet more sublimed, he..advanced, in silence and dumb heroics. 1845 P. J. Bailey Festus (ed. 2) 241 Thoughts rise from our souls, as from the sea The clouds sublimed in Heaven. b. transitive. Esp. of the sun: to cause (a vapour, liquid, etc.) to rise by the action of heat. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > gas > [verb (transitive)] > emit as fumes or vapour > cause to rise up as vapour > from or by the action of heat elevate1607 sublime1633 1633 J. Fosbroke Christian Race 10 in Six Serm. As clouds..being elevated and sublimed towards the upper region of the aire, are rarefied. 1655 T. Vaughan Evphrates 51 When the centrall Sun sublimes the Vapours. 1705 J. Philips Blenheim 8 As when two adverse Winds, Sublim'd from dewy Vapours, in mid Sky Engage with horrid Shock. 1871 C. Kingsley At Last I. vi. 181 The malarious fog hung motionless.., waiting for the first blaze of sunrise to sublime it and its invisible poisons into the upper air. c. transitive. To cause (the sap or juice of a plant) to rise. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > liquid > [verb (transitive)] > treat with liquid > in order to purify or rarify sublime1640 the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > upward movement > raising > make to go up or cause to rise [verb (transitive)] > cause juices of plant, etc., to rise sublime1640 1640 J. Parkinson Theatrum Botanicum xv. xviii. 1575 Camfire..being cast as it were or sublimed into broad round pannes or dishes. 1647 J. Howell New Vol. of Lett. 133 Wine it selfe is but water sublim'd, being nothing els but that moisture and sap which is caus'd..by rain..drawne up to the branches and berries by the vertuall attractive heat of the Sun. 1712 R. Blackmore Creation ii. 66 By warmer Rays to ripe Perfection come. Th' austere and ponderous Juices they sublime. 4. Chemistry. a. intransitive. Of a substance: to be converted directly from a solid to a gaseous state by gradual heating; (also more widely, esp. in later use) to undergo a change of state from solid to gas (or vice versa) without passing through the liquid phase. †Occasionally transitive (reflexive). ΘΚΠ the world > matter > chemistry > chemical reactions or processes > undergo chemical reactions or processes [verb (intransitive)] > undergo chemical reactions or processes (named) > undergo sublimation > be produced as a result of > specific become gaseous without liquefaction sublime1622 1622 G. de Malynes Consuetudo 274 There remaineth a Paste..called the Almond Paste, which by a limbecke receiuing fire, causeth the Quickesiluer to subleme [sic]. 1651 J. French Art Distillation vi. 192 It will presently sublime in a silver fume, into the recipient. 1683 J. Pettus tr. L. Ercker i. 42 in Fleta Minor i The Brimstone..doth roast away, and the Arsnick doth sublime it self with a strong heat. 1797 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 87 388 The acid will not sublime from it, but is decomposed by heat. 1823 M. Faraday Exper. Res. No. 18. 82 It will..sublime from one part of the bottle to the other in the manner of camphor. 1908 Athenæum 28 Mar. 390/1 All the ‘non~valent’ elements..should sublime, or pass from the solid into the gaseous state without liquefaction. 1950 Sci. News 15 66 These substances are volatile and under the conditions of the experiment sublime away as fast as they form. 1998 Nature 3 Sept. 20/1 As comets are heated by sunlight, their ices sublime. 2004 N. Saunders Nitrogen 42 Dry ice..sublimes to form a white vapor that is often used to give scary effects in movies. b. intransitive. Of a substance: to be deposited in a solid form directly from vapour; to be transformed into (a particular solid or crystalline form) by sublimation. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > chemistry > chemical reactions or processes > undergo chemical reactions or processes [verb (intransitive)] > undergo chemical reactions or processes (named) > undergo sublimation > be produced as a result of > specific be deposited in solid form sublime1682 1682 G. Hartman Digby's Choice Coll. Rare Secrets ii. 169 It will Sublime with it in very red flowers. 1740 G. Smith tr. Laboratory (rev. ed.) xii. 239 When the benjamin is heated the flowers will sublime. 1856 W. A. Miller Elements Chem. II. xvii. §1. 1016 Calomel sublimes in quadrilateral prisms. 1904 C. Arnold tr. J. A. Mandel Compend. Chem. 244 On heating the amorphous and crystalline salt it sublimes into red, needle-shaped crystals. 1994 M. Eagleson tr. H. D. Jakubke & H. Jeschkeit Conc. Encycl. Chem. 527/1 At higher temperatures, I[ndigo] sublimes into copper-colored prisms. II. Extended uses. 5. a. To raise (a person or immaterial thing) to an elevated sphere or exalted state; to elevate to a high degree of purity or excellence; to make (esp. morally or spiritually) sublime. Frequently in passive. (a) transitive. Without construction. ΘΚΠ society > morality > virtue > morally elevated quality > elevate morally [verb (transitive)] sublimec1484 reave1556 elevate1624 the mind > goodness and badness > quality of being good > perfection > [verb (transitive)] > to highest degree sublimec1484 quintessentialize1827 c1484 J. de Caritate tr. Secreta Secret. (Takamiya) (1977) 141 Þis prudens is to be preysid..For ho sublymyd þe kyngdam of Grekis as be fame? Ho wrote her deedys and perpetually be alle þe world dyfamyd hem? a1586 Sir P. Sidney Astrophel & Stella (1591) 32 Those words which doe sublime the quintessence of blisse. 1609 G. Benson Serm. 7 May 93 Let your thoughts be sublimed by the spirit of God. 1649 Bp. J. Taylor Great Exemplar ii. 8 [Jesus] hallowed marriage..having new sublim'd it by making it a Sacramentall representment of the union of Christ and..the Church. a1711 T. Ken Psyche iv, in Wks. (1721) IV. 253 As bless'd Elijah pray'd his Servants Eye Might be sublim'd the Angels to descry. 1762 O. Goldsmith in Brit. Mag. Apr. 185/2 A judicious use of metaphors wonderfully raises, sublime, and adorns oratory or elocution. 1814 R. Southey Roderick iii. 398 Call it not Revenge! thus sanctified and thus sublimed, 'Tis duty, 'tis devotion. 1861 M. Arnold Pop. Educ. France 146 Morality—but dignified, but sublimed by being taught in connection with religious sentiment. 1880 T. Hardy Trumpet-major III. xxxiii. 94 Bob's countenance was sublimed by his recent interview, like that of a priest just come from the penetralia of the temple. 2001 V. A. Silver Imperfect Sense 27 We feel obliged to construe the narrative as a metaphysical occurrence,..thus subliming the poem's imagery to offset its dramatic inertia and figural obtuseness. (b) transitive. With to or into (a state or degree of greater purity or excellence).In quot. with direct reference to sense 3b. ΘΚΠ the mind > goodness and badness > quality of being good > perfection > [verb (transitive)] > into a certain condition sublime1611 1611 J. Davies Scourge of Folly 262 From my Wits I draw the Quintessence, Subliming that too, to the highest height. 1643 J. Milton Soveraigne Salve 35 That confirmation in grace by which free will is transfigured and sublimed into a state divine. 1651 Bp. J. Taylor Clerus Domini iii. 17 An ordinary gift cannot sublime an ordinary person to a supernaturall imployment. 1774 T. Pennant Tour Scotl. 1772 5 Numbers of the discontented noblesse..resorted there,..sublimed the race into that degree of valour [etc.]. 1859 W. Anderson Discourses (1860) 55 The death of Matthew Henry's two children was designed to sublime his piety into that excellence which it attained. 1906 Poet Lore Spring 126 Isoult is sublimed by her own devotion into an almost supernatural being. 1995 T. Eagleton in S. Ledger & S. McCracken Cultural Polit. at Fin de Siècle i. 18 Language must be purged of its alienated social meanings by being..sublimed to a condition in which..it will permit us a glimpse of the self-enclosed cosmos. (c) transitive. With above, beyond, etc., (a certain state or standard). ΘΚΠ the mind > goodness and badness > quality of being good > perfection > [verb (transitive)] > above a certain state sublime1614 1614 T. Lodge tr. J. Lipsius Life Seneca vii, in tr. Seneca Wks. sig. d2 Oftentimes haue I..beleeued that hee [sc. Attalus] was sublimed and raised aboue humane reach. 1658 G. Starkey Natures Explic. 15 [The Philosopher's] employment being sublimed a degree higher than Art, is ranked among the Liberal Sciences. 1753 T. Smollett Ferdinand Count Fathom II. lxii. 239 Monimia hears not my complaints; her soul, sublimed far, far above all sublunary cares. 1792 W. Roberts Looker-on No. 29. 226 Love is so unsensualised, and sublimed above passion, that it has forgotten its old retreats. 1820 W. Hazlitt Lect. Dramatic Lit. 57 A personification of the pride of will and eagerness of curiosity, sublimed beyond the reach of fear and remorse. 1870 H. Alabaster tr. Chaophraya Thiphakorawong Modern Buddhist 25 The existence of a God sublimed above all human qualities. 1998 D. Donohue Pract. Reading xii. 220 The monk becomes a pagan not because he has given up his faith but because he has sublimed it beyond the letter of its law. ΘΚΠ society > morality > virtue > purity > make pure [verb (transitive)] cleansec897 shire?c1225 clengea1300 purge1340 purec1350 purifya1393 whitena1400 sprinkle1526 refine1594 simplify1609 sublime1613 purgate1795 revirginize1852 bleach1868 1613 W. B. tr. S. Michaelis Admirable Hist. Penitent Woman 249 The experience of the soules working, may be sufficient to sublime mens thoughts from such earthie conceptions touching Spirits. 1630 H. Lord Display Two Forraigne Sects 52 The soule was impure..therefore it was needfull it should bee sublimed from this corruption. 1654 R. Whitlock Ζωοτομία 406 Would we could light on some nobler principles that might sublime us from these Rellolacean Principles. a1731 F. Atterbury Serm. (1743) I. xiii. 283 Let them sublime their Thoughts and Actions from the Dregs of this World. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > causation > [verb (transitive)] > bring (a person or thing) into a state or condition set971 haveOE wendOE to bring onc1230 teemc1275 putc1330 run1391 casta1400 laya1400 stead1488 constitute1490 render1490 takea1530 introduce1532 deduce1545 throw?1548 derive?c1550 turn1577 to work up1591 estate1605 arrive1607 state1607 enduea1616 assert1638 sublime1654 to run up1657 1654 Bp. J. Taylor Real Presence 98 It is made Sacramental and Eucharistical, and so it is sublimed to become the body of Christ. 1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost v. 483 Flours and thir fruit Mans nourishment, by gradual scale sublim'd To vital Spirits aspire. View more context for this quotation 1740 G. Cheyne Ess. Regimen 35 That spiritual Substance was analogous to Matter infinitely rarefied, refin'd or sublim'd. 1790 Coll. Voy. i. 1255 The vines here being highly sublimed by the warmth of the sun and the dryness of the soil. 1819 Ld. Byron Don Juan: Canto II clxxx. 209 The blest sherbet, sublimed with snow. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > esteem > reputation > majesty, glory, or grandeur > exaltation or glorification > exalt or glorify [verb (transitive)] heavec825 higheOE brightenOE clarifya1340 glorifya1340 enhancec1374 stellifyc1384 biga1400 exalt?a1400 raisea1400 shrinea1400 to bear up?a1425 enhighc1440 erect?a1475 assumec1503 amount1523 dignifya1530 to set up1535 extol1545 enthronize1547 augment1567 sublimate?1567 sublime1568 assumptc1571 begoda1576 royalize1589 suscitate1598 swell1601 consecrate1605 realize1611 reara1616 sphere1615 ingreata1620 superexalta1626 soara1627 ascend1628 rise1628 embroider1629 apotheose1632 grandize1640 engreaten1641 engrandizea1652 mount1651 intronificate1653 magnificent1656 superposit1661 grandify1665 heroify1677 apotheosize1695 enthrone1699 aggrandize1702 pantheonize1801 hoist1814 princify1847 queen1880 heroize1887 1568 T. North tr. A. de Guevara Dial Princes (rev. ed.) iv. xviii. f. 163v Nardocheus [was] placed in his roome, and greatly sublimed and exalted [Sp. en honra puesto]. 1587 T. Churchyard Worthines of Wales sig. B4v We willing him, with honors royally For to adorne, decke, and aduaunce, and to sublime on hye. 1612 B. Jonson Alchemist i. i. sig. B2 Haue I..Sublim'd thee, and exalted thee, and fix'd thee I'the third region, the high state of grace? 1663 J. Mayne tr. Lucian Part of Lucian sig. Ee2v Gloriously crown'd..and sublimed, like one drest for a triumph. 7. a. intransitive. To become elevated in character, nature, or rank; to be transformed into something higher, nobler, or more refined. ΘΚΠ the mind > goodness and badness > quality of being good > improvement > [verb (intransitive)] > become purified or refined sublime1624 polish1712 mellow1737 bleach1799 purify1805 sublimate1850 1624 ‘E. Orandus’ tr. Artephius in tr. N. Flamel Expos. Hieroglyphicall Figures St. Innocent's Church-yard 178 A certaine part and portion of our said first water ascendeth with the Bodies, ioyning it selfe to them, ascending and subliming into a middle substance. 1669 W. Simpson Hydrologia Chymica 76 The blood..begins to sublime or distil into more pure refined spirits. a1711 T. Ken Sion iii, in Wks. (1721) IV. 381 I feel my Faith subliming into Sight. 1744 J. Ralph Astrologer ii. i. 24 He has a promising Face, and will sublime into Gentry. 1874 E. H. Sears Fourth Gospel 172 This new faith subliming into knowledge. 1902 Gentleman's Mag. Nov. 461 The imagination sublimes into a condition in which we are able somewhat to realise the stage, the time, the life, of our Shakespeare. 1995 M. F. Fathalla in B. Hedon et al. Fertility & Sterility 9/1 The role of sex in our lives is going to continue to evolve. lt will sublime into an expression of love. b. transitive. To transform (a person or immaterial thing) into something higher, nobler, or more refined. Formerly also with †to. ΘΚΠ the mind > goodness and badness > quality of being good > improvement > [verb (transitive)] > purify or refine slick1340 filec1400 polishc1400 burnish1526 polite1535 extirpate1548 purify1548 soften1579 purgea1582 refine1592 mellow1593 civilize1596 rarefy1600 incivilize1603 sublimate1624 alembicate1627 chastise1627 sublime1631 calcine1635 gentilize1635 ennoble1636 subtilize1638 deconcoct1655 sublimizea1729 smooth1762 absterge1817 decrassify1855 sandpaper1890 1631 J. Shirley Schoole of Complement iii. i. 33 The Sun of honour shine vpon your hopes, till it sublime you to a Ladiship. 1695 J. Dryden tr. C. A. Du Fresnoy De Arte Graphica 7 Art being strengthned by the knowledge of things, may..be sublim'd into a pure Genius. 1790 E. Burke Refl. Revol. in France 273 He, the œconomist,..subliming himself into an airy metaphysician. View more context for this quotation 1851 H. Miller First Impr. Eng. xviii. 372 Those fictions of the classic mythology which the greater Greek and Roman writers have sublimed into poetry. 1855 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. III. xii. 193 His very selfishness therefore is sublimed into public spirit. 1919 Herald of Gospel Liberty 15 May 478/2 Why should he..find fault with us..who gather up the principles of Christianity and sublime them into the law of life for time and eternity? 2002 J. H. Miller On Lit. iv. 93 Bodily love, we learn in the Phaedrus, must be sublimed into spiritual love. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2012; most recently modified version published online June 2022). < adj.n.?1567v.a1400 |
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