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单词 temporary
释义

temporaryadj.n.

Brit. /ˈtɛmp(ə)r(ər)i/, U.S. /ˈtɛmpəˌrɛri/
Etymology: < Latin temporārius, < tempus , tempor- time: see -ary suffix1.
A. adj.
1.
a. Lasting for a limited time; existing or valid for a time (only); not permanent; transient; made to supply a passing need.
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > duration > shortness or brevity in time > [adjective] > temporary or provisional
whilwendlicc1000
whilenda1050
specialc1400
seasonable1549
temporary1567
provisional1597
provisionary1617
temporaneal1625
provisory1630
interimistical1643
pro tempore1649
temporaneous1656
non-permanent1782
jury-rigged1788
ad interim1806
interim1808
meantime1840
running1851
flying1857
pro tem1858
interimistic1859
temp1909
caretaker1945
1567 T. Palfreyman Baldwin's Treat. Morall Philos. (new ed.) iii. ii. f. 92v Thauthoritie of Princes & gouernours..is truely to be called Temporarie, that is, but for a time.
a1628 J. Preston New Covenant (1634) 45 The creature is temporary, whereas the soul is immortall.
1651 T. Hobbes Leviathan ii. xix. 99 For their perpetuall, and not temporary security.
1784 J. Douglas Cook's Voy. Pacific I. ii. vii. 292 A large space had been cleared, before the temporary hut of this Chief.
1817 J. Mill Hist. Brit. India II. iv. ix. 293 The adaptation of temporary expedients to temporary exigencies.
1858 J. H. Newman Hist. Sketches (1873) III. v. i. 434 Inconveniences which they felt to be only temporary.
b. temporary hardness, hardness of water that can be removed by boiling, because it is due to bicarbonates which are thereby precipitated; temporary star (Astronomy), a star which appears suddenly, shines for a time, and then almost or entirely disappears; temporary tooth, a deciduous tooth, milk-tooth.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > digestive or excretive organs > digestive organs > mouth > types or spec. teeth > [noun] > milk
calf's-teeth1599
fore-tooth1601
sucking-tooth1601
milk tooth1738
deciduous tooth1755
shedding tooth1799
temporary tooth1802
baby tooth1834
the world > the universe > star > kind of star > by light > [noun] > temporary
temporary star1833
the world > matter > liquid > water > [noun] > hardness or softness of
hardness1712
softness1712
permanent hardness1870
temporary hardness1895
1802 Med. & Physical Jrnl. 8 559 The first teeth, or those of childhood, the author calls temporary, the set which succeeds them he terms permanent.
1833 J. F. W. Herschel Astronomy xii. 383 The phænomena we allude to are those of temporary stars.
1842 E. Wilson Anatomist's Vade Mecum (ed. 2) 51 The Temporary teeth are 20 in number, 8 incisors, 4 canine, and 8 molars.
1895 H. Collet Water Softening & Purification i. 2 The temporary hardness is that due to the bicarbonates of lime and magnesia.
1969 H. T. Evans tr. G. Hägg Gen. & Inorg. Chem. xxvi. 666 Carbonate precipitation on boiling causes the water to lose its carbonate hardness or temporary hardness while a permanent hardness remains.
c. Belonging or relating to the particular time; of the period; hence, of passing interest, ephemeral. ? Obsolete (or merged in sense A. 1).
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > duration > shortness or brevity in time > swift movement of time > [adjective] > of passing interest
fugitive1766
temporary1777
1777 E. Burke Corr. (1844) II. 164 I send you a trifling temporary production, made for the occasion of the day, and to perish with it.
1791 J. Boswell Life Johnson anno 1778 II. 243 [S. Musgrave:] A temporary poem always entertains us.
1805 W. Cooke Mem. S. Foote I. 152 Though it [‘Devil upon Two Sticks’] admits of some temporary strokes, such as the ridicule on the college of physicians,..&c., [it] exhibits them worked up in so brilliant and general a manner, as to be always new.
d. Designating one who is commissioned for the duration of a war (esp. that of 1914–18), as temporary captain, temporary officer, etc. Also temporary gent(leman) (in colloquial or pejorative Services' use); abbreviated T.G. n. at T n. Initialisms 1a.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > warrior > soldier > leader or commander > officer or soldier of rank > [adjective] > other attributes
gallant1875
technical1915
temporary1918
war-substantivea1944
1918 J. M. Barrie Echoes of War 68 Socially he had fallen..; even..in his uniform the hasty might say something clever about ‘temporary gentlemen’.
1925 W. Deeping Sorrell & Son ii. 21 ‘My name is Sorrell, Captain Sorrell.’ ‘You will have to drop the ‘captain’. Temporary, I suppose?’
1938 S. Beckett Murphy x. 234 He withheld his hand, the little temporary gent and pure in heart.
1958 S. Raven in H. Thomas Establishment 72 Temporary Captain C.C. had been in the very first intake at Sandhurst.
1976 N.Y. Rev. Bks. 5 Feb. 20/3 The lower-middle-class officer..who in the First World War would have been called a ‘temporary gentleman’.
1983 T. Pocock 1945 v. 151 There were two officers' messes—‘A’ and ‘B’; the former primarily for staff officers..the latter, mostly made up of temporary officers.
2. Belonging to the present life or this world: = temporal adj.1 2. Obsolete.In quot. a1616, of a person: ‘not a meddler with temporal or secular affairs’.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > [adjective]
earthlyOE
netherOE
lowc1225
terrene13..
terrestre1340
temporalc1380
earthyc1429
terrestrialc1460
inferial?a1475
mundanec1475
mundial1499
earthish?1533
terrenala1555
terreal1598
terrestrene1599
sublunary1609
sublunar1610
mundal1614
temporarya1616
earth-born1626
terranean1653
circumterraneous1678
subcelestial1706
terraneousa1711
terrean1714
terrigenal1744
subastral1752
geotic1755
tellurian1786
worldly1812
telluric1813
transglobal1953
the world > existence and causation > existence > materiality > [adjective] > material or not spiritual
fleshlyc1175
bodilya1340
temporalc1380
worldyc1380
claylya1400
elementaryc1440
mondiala1500
gross1509
fleshly-wise1542
elemental1574
outward1574
natural1581
terrestrene1599
elementated1605
sublunary1609
temporarya1616
subluminary1625
sublunar1625
outwardlya1642
material1843
intramundane1845
unethereal1861
naturistic1886
the world > time > duration > shortness or brevity in time > swift movement of time > [adjective] > temporal or not spiritual
temporalc1380
secular1597
sublunary1609
temporarya1616
sublunarian1852
earthside1951
a1616 W. Shakespeare Measure for Measure (1623) v. i. 144 Duke. Know you that Frier Lodowick that she speakes of? Peter. I know him for a man diuine and holy, Not scuruy, nor a temporary medler As he's reported by this Gentleman. View more context for this quotation
1668 J. Howe Blessedness of Righteous Disc. (1825) 63 In our temporary state, while we are under the measure of time.
1674 J. Owen Disc. Holy Spirit (1693) 207 Spiritual and Eternal things are more excellent than things Carnal and Temporary.
1751 S. Johnson Rambler No. 153. ⁋13 The wise use of temporary riches.
3. metaphorical. Occurring or existing in time (not from eternity). Obsolete. (Cf. temporal adj.1 6.)
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > duration > [adjective] > occurring or existing in time or not eternal
dated1573
temporarya1676
a1676 M. Hale Primitive Originat. Mankind (1677) i. ii. 69 Collectively they make up a good moral evidence touching a temporary inception of the humane Nature.
1678 R. Cudworth True Intellect. Syst. Universe i. i. 39 They who conceived the World to have had a Temporary Beginning or Creation, held the Coevity of all Souls with it.
1701 J. Norris Ess. Ideal World I. 327 These truths are temporary, because those relations could not begin to exist before those created beings were produced.
4. = temporal adj.1 4. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > period > hour > [adjective] > of artificial hours
temporal1594
temporarya1656
a1656 J. Ussher Ann. World To Rdr. ⁋10 That from the evening ushering in the first day of the World, to that midnight which began the first day of the Christian æra, there was 4003 years, seventy dayes, and six temporarie howers.
B. n.
1. plural. Things belonging to this life, temporal goods. Cf. temporality n. 1b. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > possessions > [noun] > worldly or secular property
temporalty1377
temporalitiesc1475
world's wrack?a1513
temporala1525
wreck1562
temporaries1596
worldhood1841
society > faith > artefacts > property > [noun]
temporalty1396
spiritualtyc1400
spirituality1468
temporalitiesc1475
temporala1525
sanctimoniesa1547
Guardian of the Spiritualties (also Spiritualty)1562
temporaries1596
guaca1604
sanctities1815
sacra1819
spiritual1827
1596 H. Clapham Briefe of Bible ii. 218 Wee haue taken Bread and other temporaries without begging them at thy hands.
1665 T. Herbert Some Years Trav. (new ed.) 172 A large Castle, which now by age or war (the canker-worms of all temporaries) is moth-eaten.
2. A person whose religious life or devotion endures only for a time. (In allusion to Matthew xiii. 21, etc.) Obsolete. (In quot. 1903 used (? by misunderstanding) for: a time-server, temporizer.)
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > aspects of faith > piety > [noun] > person > temporary
temporary1619
1619 W. Sclater Expos. 1 Thess. (1630) 59 Our Temporaries, or rather Temporizers..are carried full saile to the profession of Faith; whom yet the least note of reproach..makes ready to deny and abiure the Truth.
1647 J. Trapp Comm. Epist. & Rev. (2 Cor. xiii. 8) A temporary may so fall away as to persecute the truth that he once professed.
1903 A. Smellie Men of Covenant (1904) xxiii. 253 A Temporary,—one who tries year in and year out to ‘carry his dish level’, and adjusts his sails to catch the changing winds.]
3. A contemporary. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > relative time > simultaneity or contemporaneousness > [noun] > contemporary
contemporany?a1475
contemporant1577
time-fellow1577
age mate1582
contemporana1600
coeval1605
coetane1610
collateral1614
contemporary1614
concurrent1622
coequal1631
contemporanean1633
coetanean1636
contemporista1641
temporary1649
synchronist1716
yealing1728
fellow1844
age-fellow1845
1649 tr. Alcoran 6 We left this punishment, as an advertisement to their temporaries and posteritie.
4. A person employed or holding a post temporarily; a ‘casual’; spec. a secretary or clerical worker supplied by an agency to cover absences or vacancies for a short period.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > worker > workers according to conditions > [noun] > casual or temporary worker
temporary1846
casual1851
occasional1867
migrant labourer1899
floater1909
guest worker1927
temp1932
gig worker2009
society > occupation and work > worker > workers according to conditions > [noun] > casual or temporary worker > secretarial
temp1932
temporary1956
1846 C. Dickens Dombey & Son (1848) iii. 23 Being only a permanency I couldn't be expected to show it like a temporary.
1892 Pall Mall Gaz. 7 Oct. 7/1 The ‘permanent temporaries’ are liable to dismissal at any time, but are practically fixed, some having been in the service from eight to ten years.
1907 Westm. Gaz. 1 July 7/2 Servants who are merely casuals (i.e., temporaries) in purely private families.
1956 ‘C. Blackstock’ Dewey Death vii. 159 Temporaries came, and temporaries went..and the work produced [was] shocking beyond belief.
1957 R. Hart-Davis Let. 7 July in Lyttelton–Hart-Davis Lett. (1979) II. 123 This might have been possible if my secretary hadn't been on holiday. Instead I was burdened with a pudding-faced ‘temporary’.
1970 New Yorker 17 Oct. 148/1 (caption) But Mr. Clark! I'm just a temporary.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1911; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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adj.n.1567
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