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单词 there's no love lost between them
释义

> as lemmas

there's no love lost between them (also us, etc.)

Phrases

P1. In prepositional phrases, chiefly with for.
a. In asseverations and imprecations.
(a) for the love of: for the sake of, on account of. Frequently in emphatic declarations and exclamations, as for the love of God (see also for (also †fore) God's love at god n. and int. Phrases 1b). †Also for my (our, etc.) love: for my (our, etc.) sake. In later use only when some sense of the literal meaning is implied (chiefly in exclamations); in early use often merely idiomatic, corresponding to classical Latin causā, gratiā for the sake of (used both with a noun in the genitive, e.g. honōris causā, honoris gratiā for the sake of honour, and with a pronominal adjective, e.g. meā causā, meā gratiā for my sake, tuā causā, tuā gratiā for your sake); cf. also classical Latin pro amōre, used with a possessive adjective, e.g. prō amōre nostro for our love, and in post-classical Latin also with a noun in the genitive, e.g. prō amōre studiorum for the love of studies (6th cent.). With for the love of God cf. post-classical Latin Dei causa (late 2nd cent. in Tertullian), pro Dei amore (6th cent.). In Old English the noun was often in plural.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > advantage > [phrase] > for the sake of
for my (our, etc.) loveeOE
for the love ofeOE
for (one's, a thing's) sakea1225
for sert ofa1400
for (also upon) a person's occasion1567
in favour of1605
for sake('s) sake1665
on occasion of (a person)1860
the mind > language > speech > request > [phrase] > earnest expressions
for (also fore) God's loveeOE
for the love of GodeOE
for God's sakec1386
for (also of) all lovesa1400
for love's sakea1400
in (also a, o', on) God's namea1400
of all lovea1400
for pity1484
for pity's sake1484
eOE King Ælfred tr. Boethius De Consol. Philos. (Otho) xxii. 51 Ic wille [þe oðewan] forlustlice for ðinum lufum [L. tui causa libenter].
OE Blickling Homilies 23 Eal þis he þrowode for ure lufan & hælo.
a1225 (c1200) Vices & Virtues (1888) 7 (MED) I bidde and warni, for ðe luue of gode and for ȝuer lieue saule, þat ȝie hatien..ðes awerȝhede senne.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 14683 (MED) For þin dedes gode..We wil noght stan þe..Bot for þine werkes gain þe lau And for þe luue o þi missau.
a1470 T. Malory Morte Darthur (Winch. Coll. 13) (1990) II. 891 We shall destroy all the knyghtes of kyng Arthurs..for the love of sir Galahad.
c1480 (a1400) St. Placidus 163 in W. M. Metcalfe Legends Saints Sc. Dial. (1896) II. 74 Sa hyme, for þe luf of me, þat in my nam he baptis þe.
1548 Hall's Vnion: Henry V f. lxii Required the Englishe lordes for the loue of God that the truce might continue.
1589 J. Jane in R. Hakluyt Princ. Navigations iii. 790 The Sauages came to the Island..and tore the two vpper strakes, and caried them away onely for the loue of the iron in the boords.
1598 W. Shakespeare Love's Labour's Lost v. ii. 826 Impose some seruice on me for thy Loue. View more context for this quotation
a1616 W. Shakespeare Twelfth Night (1623) ii. iii. 82 For the loue o'God peace. View more context for this quotation
1661 W. Ames Good Counsell & Advice 12 Let none have occasion to say, that for the love of your goods, your liberty or your lives, any of you have forsaken the way of truth.
1710 J. Swift Jrnl. to Stella 8 Dec. (1948) I. 115 I begged Mr. Harley for the love of God to take some care about it.
1786 S. Henley tr. W. Beckford Arabian Tale 96 For the love of Mahomet, my dear Fakreddin, have done!
1859 Ld. Tennyson Vivien in Idylls of King 115 A Table Round, That was to be, for love of God and man And noble deeds, the flower of all the world.
1882 Cent. Mag. Feb. 488/1 For the love of heaven do something for me or I'll die, so I will.
1913 J. London God of his Fathers 69 For the love of your mother, hold your say, man.
1941 E. Linklater Man on my Back iii. 41 Can you not see that bloody machine-gun there? And for the love of God put your sights up.
1960 G. Durrell Zoo in my Luggage (1965) viii. 173 Don't, for the love of Allah, let her get into the china department.
1999 D. Mitchell Ghostwritten 340 ‘Oh for the love of God you two,’ muttered John.
(b) colloquial. for the love of Mike [probably showing euphemistic substitution of the male forename Mike (compare Mike n.4) for God] : an exclamation of exasperation or surprise; ‘for goodness' sake!’
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > malediction > oaths > [interjection] > oaths other than religious or obscene
loOE
spi?c1225
how mischance——?c1330
with mischance!c1330
by my hoodc1374
by my sheath1532
by the mouse-foot1550
what the (also a) goodyear1570
bread and salt1575
by Jove1575
in (good) truly1576
by these hilts1598
by the Lord Harry1693
by the pody cody1693
by jingo!1694
splutter1707
by jing!1786
I snore1790
declare1811
by the hokey1825
shiver my timbers1834
by the (great) horn spoon1842
upon my Sam1879
for goodness' sake1885
yerra1892
for the love of Mike1896
by the hokey fiddle1922
knickers1971
1896 A. C. Ray Dick xii. 207 He sank back on the couch, remarking slowly to himself,— ‘Oh, for the love of Mike!’
1901 S. Crane in Home Mag. N.Y. Jan. 77/2 ‘For the love of Mike, madam, what ails you?’ he spluttered.
1909 Syracuse (N.Y.) Herald 21 Dec. For the love of Mike, man, haven't you got a heart?
1922 J. Joyce Ulysses iii. xviii. [Penelope] 727 O move over your big carcass out of that for the love of Mike listen to him.
1925 T. Dreiser Amer. Trag. I. i. ix. 57 For de love o' Mike, will you listen to dat, now.
1934 J. Brophy Waterfront i. 14 For the love of mike..shut those blasted windows.
1941 Penguin New Writing 8 91 Well, for the luvva Mike!
1942 R.A.F. Jrnl. 3 Oct. 11 Tired? Well for the love of mike! What about me?
1957 A. MacNab Bulls of Iberia xv. 181 For the love of Mike, let's hope he's brave.
1999 J. Burchill Married Alive xii. 181 ‘Why wasn't she wearing any fucking clothes!’ I scream at the top of my voice. ‘Because she was under a waterfall, for the love of Mike—’.
(c) for the love of Pete: see pete n. 1.
b. for (also †of) all loves (also † upon all loves, † of all love): expressing a strong appeal or entreaty. Similarly (and now chiefly) for love's sake.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > speech > request > [phrase] > earnest expressions
for (also fore) God's loveeOE
for the love of GodeOE
for God's sakec1386
for (also of) all lovesa1400
for love's sakea1400
in (also a, o', on) God's namea1400
of all lovea1400
for pity1484
for pity's sake1484
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Trin. Cambr.) l. 20380 Whi wepestou, what is þe? For alle loues [a1400 Vesp. For felaured, a1400 Gött. For felauschip] telle now me.
c1450 (c1400) Sowdon of Babylon (1881) 1587 (MED) Sir, for alle loues, Lete me thy prisoneres seen!
1565 T. Cooper Thesaurus Amabo..Of felowshippe: of all loues: I pray the: as euer thou wilte doe me good turne.
1600 W. Shakespeare Midsummer Night's Dream ii. ii. 160 Speake, of all loues. I swoune almost with feare. View more context for this quotation
1618 J. Ussher Let. in R. Parr Life J. Usher (1686) Coll. xxxiii. 64 I do intreat you of all Love, to look over the first Edition.
1624 R. Montagu Immediate Addresse 185 She..intreateth him that was worshipped vpon the Altar, of all loves, mercies, and works of wonder, to restore her vnto her health.
a1627 T. Middleton Chast Mayd in Cheape-side (1630) iii. 31 O sweet Father, for Loues sake pittie me.
c1646 in 2nd Rep. Royal Comm. Hist. MSS (1874) 87/1 [10l.] which I desire you of all love to pay upon sight of this my letter.
1655 J. S. tr. B. della Rovere Phillis of Scyros iii. iv. 63 For loves sake, doe not press me to relate So long a story now.
1748 S. Richardson Clarissa IV. li. 257 For your own honour's sake, as well as for love's sake, join with me.
1793 C. Smith Old Manor House IV. viii. 196 Madam..begged him of all love to leave the country for fear of accidents.
1829 W. Whewell in J. M. Douglas Life & Corr. W. Whewell (1881) 133 Beg her of all love to establish herself in a more collegiate part of Cambridge.
1871 E. S. P. Ward Silent Partner iv. 86 Here a minute, for love's sake, Catty.
1906 B. Carman Pipes of Pan 51 Gentle spirit, grieve not so, for love's sake!
1925 A. Lowell Sword Blades & Poppy Seeds 132 Christine clung to him with sobbing cries, Pleading for love's sake that he leave her not.
1973 P. O'Brian H.M.S. Surprise iv. 62 Am I in childbed, for all love, that I should be plagued, smothered, destroyed with caudle?
1992 Ottawa Citizen (Nexis) 8 Sept. d8 Buckle up, for love's sake!
c. for love: by reason of love (often placed in opposition to pecuniary considerations). Frequently in to marry for love.
ΚΠ
?1529 R. Hyrde tr. J. L. Vives Instr. Christen Woman i. xvi. sig. T. ij They that marie for loue, shall leade their lyfe in sorowe.
1791 J. Boswell Life Johnson anno 1776 II. 45 [Johnson] It is commonly a weak man who marries for love.
1868 Sat. Rev. 14 Mar. 340/2 It is only the old-fashioned sort, not girls of the period pur sang, that marry for love.
1946 G. Hopkins tr. F. Mauriac Woman of Pharisees ix. 100 The dead woman was still in his eyes a heroine who might have died for love but would never have been false to her plighted word.
2005 N.Y. Rev. Bks. 6 Oct. 43/2 Lavransdatter′s..plot might be summarized as the story of a Daddy's girl who refuses Daddy's choice of a husband and marries for love.
d. for love or money: at any price, by any means. (Chiefly in negative contexts.)
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > belief > uncertainty, doubt, hesitation > impossibility > [adverb] > by no means
no waya1400
in no sauce1542
for love or money?1576
nil1581
nohow1775
not exactly1893
OE Blickling Homilies 43 Ne wandige na se mæssepreost..ne for feo, ne for nanes mannes lufon.
c1400 (c1378) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Laud 581) (1869) B. i. 101 And neuer leue hem for loue ne for lacchyng of syluer.
a1450 (?a1300) Richard Coer de Lyon (Caius) l. 1484 in K. Brunner Mittelengl. Vers-roman über Richard Löwenherz (1913) 159 Neyþer ffor loue, neyther ffor eye.]
?1576 A. Hall Let. touchyng Priuate Quarell sig. G.iii My Lords Balife wil haue carts for loue or money.
1590 C. S. Briefe Resol. Right Relig. 18 Then should not men eyther for loue or money haue pardons.
1609 T. Dekker Guls Horne-bk. sig. E3v If you can (either for loue or money) prouide your selfe a lodging by the water side.
1691 T. Shadwell Scowrers ii. i. 11 This lewd Cozen of ours..has had all the women in Town that are to be had for Love or Money.
1712 J. Swift Jrnl. to Stella 7 Aug. (1948) II. 553 No more Ghosts or Murders now for Love or Money.
1751 T. Smollett Peregrine Pickle II. lxxxvi. 251 I'll be revenged of you, if there be a man to be had for love or money.
1837 F. Palgrave Merchant & Friar (1844) i. 18 Any person who, for love or money, might be induced to take the letter in his charge.
1869 F. A. March Compar. Gram. Anglo-Saxon Lang. Pref. iv He let me..use..Anglo-Saxon texts not elsewhere to be had for love or money.
1928 Times 30 Aug. 8/4 It appears to be impossible to get a hold of a useful rabbit-chasing ferret, for love or money.
1966 H. Davies New London Spy (1967) 93 Gigolos are unobtainable in London for love or money, but unemployed actors and male models may be had by the desperate.
1997 C. B. Divakaruni Mistress of Spices 248 You couldn't buy them from a dealer, not for love or money.
e. for love: (a) without stakes being wagered, for nothing (applied to the practice of playing a competitive game for the pleasure of playing); (b) (in extended use) for pleasure rather than profit (colloquial).
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > entertainment > mere amusement > [adverb]
of or on the spleenc1460
for love1678
for fun1750
for the fun of the thing1751
for the fun of it1823
good for a laugh1835
for the ride1863
(just) for the hell of it1908
pour le sport1924
for (the) shits and giggles (also grins)1983
1678 S. Butler Hudibras: Third Pt. iii. i. 58 For these, at Beast, and L'hombre, [you] wooe, And play for Love, and Money too.
1813 Sporting Mag. 41 296 A match of..single-stick, was played..for what is technically termed Love and a Belly-full.
1823 C. Lamb New Year's Eve in Elia 63 I play over again for love, as the gamesters phrase it, games, for which I once paid so dear.
1843 C. Dickens Martin Chuzzlewit (1844) xxxii. 383 Mrs. Todgers..proposed that..they should play for ‘love’.
1879 H. C. Merivale Lady of Lyons i. 4 Points be bothered, I plays for love.
1930 Daily Gleaner (Kingston, Jamaica) 22 Oct. 8/3 She would be surprised to know that those games [sc. poker and twenty-one] were played for love.
1958 G. Greene Our Man in Havana (1962) 154 He really does all this for love. You see, I saved his life once.
a1969 J. Kerouac Visions of Cody (1992) 12 Jack Kerouac didn't write this book for money, he wrote it for love, he gave it away to the world.
2007 Northern Miner (Austral.) (Nexis) 30 Jan. 7 They were disappointed they were only playing ‘for love’ because scores wouldn't be officially registered.
P2. In prepositional phrases with in, into, out of.
a. to fall (or †yfall, also †be taken, caught) in love: to become enamoured; (in extended use) to become passionately attached to, dote on. Frequently with with (in Old English with genitive of person). Also in early use †to yfall (also be brought) into love's dance.With on in quot. OE cf. on prep. 23. [Compare classical Latin in amorem incidere, Middle French tomber en amour (1538; French tomber amoureux (1696)).]
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > love > amorous love > be in love [verb (intransitive)] > fall in love
to fall (or yfall, also be taken, caught) in loveOE
to yfall (also be brought) into love's danceOE
assot1393
in by the week1534
to have got it badly1860
to take a fall1942
OE tr. Apollonius of Tyre (1958) i. 2 Þa ða se fæder þohte hwam he hi mihte healicost forgifan, þa gefeol his agen mod on hyre lufe mid unrihtre gewilnunge [L. pater..incidit in amorem filiae suae].
c1500 (?a1437) Kingis Quair (1939) xlv So ferr ifallyng into lufis dance.
?1515 Hyckescorner (de Worde) sig. A.v Than in to loues daunce we were brought.
c1515 Ld. Berners tr. Bk. Duke Huon of Burdeux (1882–7) xlviii. 162 He was taken in loue.
1530 J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 544/2 I shall fall in love with her.
1569 R. Grafton Chron. I. iv. 37 Locryne fell in great phancy and loue with a faire Damosell.
1580 J. Lyly Euphues & his Eng. (new ed.) f. 63v Of which water who so drinketh shall be caught in loue.
1596 E. Spenser Second Pt. Faerie Queene iv. vi. Argum. sig. E8v He sees her face; doth fall in loue, and soone from her depart.
1606 G. W. tr. Justinus Hist. xliii. 134 With the pleasantnesse of which, they were so taken in loue, that [etc.].
1675 J. Bunyan Light for Them that sit in Darkness 171 Can you behold a Crucified Christ and not Bleed, and not Mourn, and not fall in Love with him?
1724 M. Davys Reform'd Coquet 165 You are the first Woman under Thirty that ever fell in love with a grey Beard.
1768 F. Burney Early Jrnls. & Lett. (1988) I. 25 A young lady of fashion..has fallen in love with my cousin.
1785 E. Inchbald Appearance is against Them i. ii. 11 You are a fellow that falls in love with every face you see.
1833 T. S. Fay Crayon Sketches II. 7 The most wretchedly romantic youth that ever fell in love..and turned his face moonwards.
1887 H. R. Haggard Jess iv. 31 John Niel was no chicken, nor very likely to fall in love with the first pretty face he met.
1928 Daily Express 21 Feb. 9/2 There is a suggestion that he has fallen in love with a ‘shiksa’ (a Christian girl).
1969 E. Cleaver Post-prison Writings 23 I fell in love with the Black Panther Party immediately upon my first encounter with it.
1999 S. Orbach Impossibility of Sex (2000) 170 She feared that Charles and Maria would really hit if off; they would fall in love again, want to keep the baby, shut her out.
b. in love (with): enamoured (of), filled with love (for); (in extended use) very fond (of), much addicted (to). In quot. a1398: †in heat (obsolete). See also mad in love at mad adv. 2b and madly in love at madly adv. 2a. [With the spec. use in quot. a1398 perhaps compare Middle French en ameur, Middle French, French en amour (of an animal) in heat (15th cent.), which apparently originally showed the reflex of an unattested post-classical Latin variant of classical Latin hūmor arising by folk-etymological association with classical Latin amor.]
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > love > amorous love > [adjective]
amorousc1330
in love (with)a1398
in amours1523
passionate1534
browden1597
inamorate1606
enamoureda1631
épris1793
that way1865
kissy1873
pash1920
potty1923
keen1936
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 146v Whanne þe swan is in loue, sche secheþ the female and plesiþ hire wiþ byclippinge of þe necke.
?1507 W. Dunbar Tua Mariit Wemen (Rouen) in Poems (1998) I. 46 He is for ladyis in luf a right lusty schadow.
1577 B. Googe tr. C. Heresbach Foure Bks. Husbandry i. f. 5 He would talke..of the stories of the Scripture, so sweetely..as I was woonderfully in loue with him.
1581 G. Pettie tr. S. Guazzo Ciuile Conuersat. (1586) iii. 140 A woman cannot possibly doe any thing yt may make her husband more in love with her, then to play the good huswife.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Two Gentlemen of Verona (1623) ii. i. 76 I was in loue with my bed. View more context for this quotation
1664 S. Butler Hudibras: Second Pt. ii. i. 20 Quoth she, Y' have almost made m' in love With that, which did my pitty move.
1690 J. Locke Ess. Humane Understanding iv. xvii. 347 He that believes, without having any Reason for believing, may be in love with his own Fansies.
1728 J. Gay Beggar's Opera i. x. 15 What, is the fool in love in earnest then?
1797 M. Robinson Walsingham III. xlviii. 19 She is in love with you, my noble fellow.
1828 T. B. Macaulay Hallam's Constit. Hist. in Edinb. Rev. Sept. 113 Its conduct, we are told, made the excellent Falkland in love with the very name of parliament.
1881 L. B. Walford Dick Netherby xvii. 213 He was not himself in love.
1896 A. E. Housman Shropshire Lad xviii. 25 Oh, when I was in love with you, Then I was clean and brave.
1911 M. Beerbohm Zuleika Dobson iii. 28 Her soul was as a flower in its opetide. She was in love.
1941 P. Hamilton Hangover Square ii. i. 52 He was head over heels in love with her as soon as he had a moment to be near her.
1969 J. McPhee Levels of Game 10 He is in love with his work. He knows the exact height and tensile strength of the corporate ladder.
1996 Rolling Stone 18 Apr. 80/1 They trudge dutifully through the tacky clichés of legal eagles in love.
c. out of love (with): not or no longer in love (with); (in extended use) disenchanted or disgusted (with).
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > hatred > loathing or detestation > [adjective]
irk1303
wlatfula1387
squeamous1398
irksome1435
fastidiousa1535
loathsome1577
out of love (with)1577
squeamish1581
loathingc1595
sick1600
distastive1611
distastefula1616
detestant1650
distasting1654
1577 A. Golding tr. J. Calvin Serm. Epist. Ephesians xli. f. 292 Thou bee so farre out of loue with thy sonne [Fr. tu es si desbordé contre ton fils], that thou art vnwylling too see him.
1581 G. Pettie tr. S. Guazzo Ciuile Conuersat. (1586) i. 10 Hee seemeth either too farre in loue with himselfe, or to farre out of loue with others.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Two Gentlemen of Verona (1623) iv. iv. 202 I should haue scratch'd out your vnseeing eyes, To make my Master out of loue with thee. View more context for this quotation
a1616 W. Shakespeare Measure for Measure (1623) iii. i. 173 I am so out of loue with life. View more context for this quotation
1680 E. Fowler Libertas Evangelica ii. vii. 80 Atonement is..a most effectual means, to this farther End, the making us out of love with Sin.
1722 D. Defoe Relig. Courtship i. i. 5 What's the matter, that you are so out of love with the World all on a sudden?
1753 S. Richardson Hist. Sir Charles Grandison III. xi. 83 Lord W.'s animosity to my father made him out of love with his name.
1796 S. Lee Almeyda iv. i. 52 I, like thee, Grow out of love with reason.
1814 M. Edgeworth Patronage I. ix. 278 Bellamy tells me the strangest story of her having been, since I left London, in love and out of love with John Falconer.
1867 A. Cary Bishop's Son x. 192 Perhaps every man who is out of love thinks pretty much after this fashion of his friend who is in love.
1890 J. Todhunter Sicilian Idyll i. 8 Hope shuns me: I am out of love with life.
1914 B. Carman Earth Deities 72 Whatever can have come his way To put him out of love to-day?
1955 R. Campbell in E. W. Tedlock D. Thomas (1960) i. 45 He was never out of love with his beautiful wife and muse, Caitlin.
1992 A. V. Roberts Morning's Gate xvi. 282 In and out of love with amazing regularity and unflagging enthusiasm, Polly was passionate about most things.
d. to fall out of love (with): to cease to be in love (with); (in extended use) to become disenchanted or disgusted (with).
ΚΠ
1596 J. Harington New Disc. Metamorph. Ajax sig. Ciiijv (I heard of a truth, that a great Lady that loued Parsnips very well, after she had heard how they grew, could neuer abide them) and I would be loath, to cause any to fall out of loue with so good a dish.
a1653 H. Binning Serm. in Wks. (1735) 284/2 God never begins to be pleasant and lovely to a Soul, til it begins to fall out of Love with itself, and grow lothsome in its own Eyes.
1701 R. Calder Schola Sepulchri 38 The belief of the Resurrection will teach us to fall out of Love with the World,..there is nothing in it but Vanity and Miserie.
1856 Littell's Living Age 5 July 34/2 No man falls out of love so safely as a man who falls in love with a beauty.
1877 Catholic World July 530/1 He was always falling in love with any pretty face that struck his fancy, and then just as easily falling out of love with an unwounded heart.
1915 Amer. Anthropologist 17 601 Despite our ingenuity, we do grow up, we grow old, we fall in love, we fall out of love.
2002 Times 11 Feb. i. 13/2 There are signs that voters have fallen out of love with the party.
e. in the love of: beloved by. Frequently in the love of God. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > love > loved one > [adjective]
lief and deara900
dearOE
sweetOE
lovedOE
dearlyOE
liefOE
dearworth?c1225
chere1297
lovered1340
beloveda1375
dearworthyc1374
chary?a1400
sugaredc1475
tender1485
chereful1486
affectionatea1513
dilect1521
chare1583
ingling1595
darling1596
affected1600
in the love of1631
jewel-darling1643
adorable1653
fonded1684
endeared1841
dotey1852
1631 J. Weever Anc. Funerall Monuments 417 He also departed this world, in the loue of all good men.
a1635 R. Sibbes Light from Heaven (1638) iii. 54 I know I am in the love of Christ: these are favours that hee bestowes onely upon his owne.
1647 S. Richardson Saints Desire Ep. Ded., sig. )(3 The people of God are in the love of God.
1664 W. Smith Briefe Answer unto Shetinah 28 We are in the love of God, and have fervent love to him, and one another.
P3. With to make.
a. to make love [after Old Occitan far amor (13th cent.), Middle French, French faire l'amour (16th cent.; 1622 with reference to sexual intercourse), or Italian far l'amore] .
(a) To pay amorous attention; to court, woo. Frequently with to. Also in extended use. Now somewhat archaic.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > love > courtship or wooing > court or engage in courtship [verb (intransitive)]
to make love1567
address1677
to keep company (with)1725
suitor1777
spark1807
pitch1903
to pitch (the) woo1935
1567 G. Fenton tr. M. Bandello Certaine Tragicall Disc. f. 155v The attire of a Cortisan, or woman makynge loue [Fr. femme qui fait l'Amour].
1580 J. Lyly Euphues & his Eng. (new ed.) f. 34v A Phrase nowe there is which belongeth to your Shoppe boorde, that is to make loue.
1600 W. Shakespeare Midsummer Night's Dream i. i. 107 Demetrius..Made loue to Nedars daughter. View more context for this quotation
a1616 W. Shakespeare Hamlet (1623) v. ii. 58 Why man, they did make loue to this imployment.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Macbeth (1623) iii. i. 125 Thence it is, That I to your assistance doe make loue. View more context for this quotation
1663 A. Cowley Hymn to Light ii Thou golden Shower of a true Jove! Who does in thee descend, and Heav'n to Earth make love!
1695 W. Congreve Love for Love iv. i. 70 Nay, Mr. Tattle, If you make Love to me, you spoil my design, for I intended to make you my Confident.
1712 J. Addison Spectator No. 517. ¶2 The Widow Lady whom he had made Love to.
1768 L. Sterne Sentimental Journey I. 79 You have been making love to me all this while.
1784 R. Bage Barham Downs II. 318 You..may make love, and play your pitty patties.
1829 W. Cobbett Advice to Young Men iv. §181 It is an old saying, ‘Praise the child, and you make love to the mother’.
a1845 T. Hood Poems (1846) I. 213 Oh there's nothing in life like making love.
1860 Sat. Rev. 9 306 How often..do we make love to the charms of cousins and avuncular expectations.
1887 W. Besant World Went xiv. 112 He would crack the crown of any man who ventured to make love to his girl.
1906 H. Green At Actors' Boarding House 209 I thought I'd die laughing at his making love..and me with a husband doing his bit back in Auburn.
1927 L. Mayer Just between us Girls vii. 43 Honestly those nobilities can make love divinely.
1948 W. S. Maugham Catalina (1958) ii. 18 Her lover Diego no longer came to the window at night to make love to her through the iron grille.
1972 B. Everitt Cold Front v. 38 ‘Are we conversing or making love?’.. ‘Let's go into the slow lane for a minute.’
1991 S. Cisneros Woman Hollering Creek 153 Ay! To make love in Spanish, in a manner as intricate and devout as la Alhambra.
(b) Originally U.S. To engage in sexual intercourse, esp. considered as an act of love. Frequently with to, with.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > sexual relations > sexual activity > engage in sexual activity [verb (intransitive)] > have sexual intercourse
playOE
to do (also work) one's kindc1225
bedc1315
couple1362
gendera1382
to go togetherc1390
to come togethera1398
meddlea1398
felterc1400
companya1425
swivec1440
japea1450
mellc1450
to have to do with (also mid, of, on)1474
engender1483
fuck?a1513
conversec1540
jostlec1540
confederate1557
coeate1576
jumble1582
mate1589
do1594
conjoin1597
grind1598
consortc1600
pair1603
to dance (a dance) between a pair of sheets1608
commix1610
cock1611
nibble1611
wap1611
bolstera1616
incorporate1622
truck1622
subagitate1623
occupya1626
minglec1630
copulate1632
fere1632
rut1637
joust1639
fanfreluche1653
carnalize1703
screw1725
pump1730
correspond1756
shag1770
hump1785
conjugate1790
diddle1879
to get some1889
fuckeec1890
jig-a-jig1896
perform1902
rabbit1919
jazz1920
sex1921
root1922
yentz1923
to make love1927
rock1931
mollock1932
to make (beautiful) music (together)1936
sleep1936
bang1937
lumber1938
to hop into bed (with)1951
to make out1951
ball1955
score1960
trick1965
to have it away1966
to roll in the hay1966
to get down1967
poontang1968
pork1968
shtup1969
shack1976
bonk1984
boink1985
the world > physical sensation > sexual relations > sexual activity > engage in sexual activity with [verb (transitive)] > have sexual intercourse with
mingeOE
haveOE
knowc1175
ofliec1275
to lie with (or by)a1300
knowledgec1300
meetc1330
beliea1350
yknowc1350
touchc1384
deala1387
dightc1386
usea1387
takec1390
commona1400
to meet witha1400
servea1400
occupy?a1475
engender1483
jangle1488
to be busy with1525
to come in1530
visitc1540
niggle1567
mow1568
to mix one's thigh with1593
do1594
grind1598
pepper1600
yark1600
tumble1603
to taste of1607
compressc1611
jumble1611
mix?1614
consort?1615
tastea1616
bumfiddle1630
ingressa1631
sheet1637
carnal1643
night-work1654
bump1669
bumble1680
frig?c1680
fuck1707
stick1707
screw1719
soil1722
to do over1730
shag1770
hump1785
subagitatec1830
diddle1879
to give (someone) onec1882
charver1889
fuckeec1890
plugc1890
dick1892
to make a baby1911
to know (a person) in the biblical sense1912
jazz1920
rock1922
yentz1924
roll1926
to make love1927
shtupa1934
to give (or get) a tumble1934
shack1935
bang1937
to have it off1937
rump1937
tom1949
to hop into bed (with)1951
ball1955
to make it1957
plank1958
score1960
naughty1961
pull1965
pleasurea1967
to have away1968
to have off1968
dork1970
shaft1970
bonk1975
knob1984
boink1985
fand-
1927 J. S. Bolan Deposition in L. Schlissel 3 Plays Mae West (1997) 218 Jimmy embraces Margie LaMont and goes through with her the business of making love to her by lying on top of her on a couch, each embracing the other.
1929 E. Hemingway Farewell to Arms xviii. 114 Besides all the big times we had many small ways of making love and we tried putting thoughts in the other one's head while we were in different rooms.
1934 ‘G. Orwell’ Burmese Days iv. 54 Why is master always so angry with me when he has made love to me?
1950 M. Peake Gormenghast xxix. 173 One of the Carvers made love to her and she had a baby.
1967 B. Wright tr. R. Queneau Between Blue & Blue xiv. 151 When you make love on a bunk,..the man has to bump his head.
1971 Daily Tel. 15 Jan. 17/1 Couples who make love frequently are more likely to have sons than those who do so less often.
1986 D. Johnson Stars at Noon (1987) i. 17 Making love with him was like passing through a patch of fog.
1999 T. Parsons Man & Boy (2000) ii. 19 We were making love on the floor—or the futon, as Gina called it.
b. make love, not war: used as a pacifist anti-war slogan or (more generally in other contexts) as an appeal for peace and compassion. Also in to make love, not war.Originally associated with protest in the mid 1960s (esp. amongst the hippie counterculture) against U.S. military intervention in Vietnam.
ΚΠ
1965 Oakland (Calif.) Tribune 12 Mar. 19/1 You've seen those bumper stickers... And the latest in Berkeley, protesting Viet Nam, simply say ‘Make Love—Not War.’
1966 Times 2 Sept. 12/2 They intend to distribute badges stating ‘Make Love, not War’—a slogan used by C.N.D.
1970 Washington Post 14 Aug. b1/1 People [at Woodstock] got together.., shared food, water and dope, enjoyed music and conversation and made love, not war.
1982 Times 27 Jan. 8/7 Dr Comfort..believes that it [sc. recreational sex] may drain away aggression, as in the hippy slogan ‘Make Love Not War’.
2005 M. O'Connor Bitch Posse xx. 158 All those big houses in the subdivisions are filled with former hippies who said Make Love Not War and Never Trust Anyone over Thirty.
2007 Daily Tel. (Nexis) 24 Mar. (Sport section) 10 Football is one of the few areas of national life where Arabs and Jews happily work and play together... ‘It shows people that we should make love and not war.’
P4. (give, †commend, †remember) my love to — (also (with) love to —): a formula requesting that the person addressed (in speech or writing) convey the expression of the speaker's or writer's affection to a third person (often used in the subscription to a letter). Similarly also to send one's love; (with) love from —, and love (—). Cf. give v. 6d.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > love > with love from [phrase]
(with) love from —1615
the world > action or operation > behaviour > good behaviour > courtesy > courteous act or expression > courteous formulae [phrase] > expressions of remembrance
(give, commend, remember) my love to —1615
salute me1700
1615 F. Beaumont & J. Fletcher Cupids Revenge iv. i. sig. I4 As you finde him setled, remember my loue and seruice to his Grace.
1618 T. Sherwin Let. in S. Purchas Pilgrimes (1625) III. viii. 733 Remember my loue to all at Faire-hauen.
1630 J. Winthrop Hist. New Eng. (1825) (modernized text) I. 378 Commend me to all our friends. My love and blessing to your brother and sisters [etc.].
1635 in B. Cusack Everyday Eng. 1500–1700 (1998) 247 With Mr Gorges loue and myen to my daughter and your selfe.
1665 Earl of Marlborough Fair Warnings 3 I beseech you commend my love to all mine acquaintance.
1684 in B. Cusack Everyday Eng. 1500–1700 (1998) 220 May lowf to yow and Robert Goodien.
1742 Observ. Methodists 20 Give my dear Love to my dear Band Brethren.
1765 W. Cowper Let. 14 Aug. (1979) I. 111 My Love to all your Family.
1773 J. Wesley Let. 7 Oct. (1931) VI. 49 My wife sends her love; she has her old companion the gout.
1785 Lady Newdigate Let. May in A. E. Newdigate-Newdegate Cheverels (1898) iv. 67 Love from all here Adieu.
1793 W. Cowper Let. 24 Feb. (1984) IV. 298 With Mary's kind love.
1819 R. Southey Select. from Lett. (1856) III. 3 Love from all to all, and kisses as many as you please to give to the kissable part of the family.
1836 C. Dickens Pickwick Papers (1837) ix. 89 Love to Tuppy.
1854 W. Collins Hide & Seek (1861) 183 ‘I will write and comfort your mother this very afternoon ——’ ‘Give her my love’, interposed Zack.
1875 ‘M. Twain’ Let. 23 Nov. (1917) I. xv. 268 We-all send love to you-all.
1911 W. Owen Let. 20 Sept. (1967) 83 Love to Mary and me brethren twain.
1921 A. Huxley Let. 21 Nov. (1969) 205 I will telephone or write about both these dates. Love from Aldous.
1949 D. Smith I capture Castle (U.K. ed.) xi. 188 Dear Cassandra, it was nice of you to write... Love from Neil.
1970 T. Southern Blue Movie iii. iv. 151 ‘Hans sends his love,’ Angela was saying, across the candlelit dining table.
2004 Daily Mail (Nexis) 11 Aug. 31 Give my love to Daddy if you see him.
P5. to take (also nim) love to: to feel love or affection for. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
OE Ælfric Catholic Homilies: 1st Ser. (Royal) (1997) ix. 252 Ærest he him ondræt hellewite & bewepð his synna syððan he nimð eft lufe to gode: þonne onginð he to murcnienne & þincð him to lang hwænne he beo genumen of þyses lifes earfoðnyssum, & gebroht to ecere reste.
OE tr. Vitas Patrum in B. Assmann Angelsächsische Homilien u. Heiligenleben (1889) 197 Ða gelicode him sona ðurh deofles tihtince þæs hæþenan sacerdos dohtor. Began þa niman swyðe micle lufe to hyre and to hyre fæder gewænde and hy him to gemæccan gyrnde.
c1440 S. Scrope tr. C. de Pisan Epist. of Othea (St. John's Cambr.) (1970) 66 Meede..took so greete loue to Jason that be þe enchauntementis þat sche couthe..made charmes & lerned Jason to enchaunte.
1694 N. H. Ladies Dict. 48/1 Another Dolphin, in the same manner, took love to a Child upon the Sea coast near to Pusoll.
P6. Proverbial uses.
a.
(a) love is blind. [The conception of love as blind or as causing blindness is widespread, and is found in antiquity in both Greek and Latin literature.]
ΚΠ
c1405 (c1395) G. Chaucer Merchant's Tale (Hengwrt) (2003) l. 354 For loue is blynd alday and may nat see.
1600 W. Shakespeare Merchant of Venice ii. vi. 36 Loue is blinde . View more context for this quotation
1661 J. Glanvill Vanity of Dogmatizing xiii. 119 And, that Love is blind, is extensible beyond the object of Poetry.
1746 A. Arbuthnot Mem. Miss Jenny Cameron 110 No, no, said Jenny; though Love is blind, I never heard that he was deaf.
1848 E. Bennett Trapper's Bride xi. 94 Love is blind, says the old proverb.
1898 J. D. Brayshaw Slum Silhouettes 35 They say as luv is blind.
1965 J. M. Brewer Worser Days 166 I don't make love by the garden gate, For love is blind, but the neighbors ain't.
2000 J. J. Connolly Layer Cake (2004) 62 Aha, makes sense to you but love is blind, my friend.
(b) all's fair in love and war and variants.
ΚΠ
1578 J. Lyly Euphues f. 31v Anye impietie may lawfully be committed in loue, which is lawlesse.]
1620 T. Shelton tr. M. de Cervantes 2nd Pt. Don Quixote xxi. 138 Loue and warre are all one [Sp. el amor y la guerra son vna misma cosa]: and as in warre it is lawful to vse sleights and stratagems to ouercome the enemy: So in amorous strifes and competencies, Impostures and iuggling tricks are held for good, to attaine to the wished end.
1717 W. Taverner Artful Husband (new ed.) ii. 38 All advantages are fair in Love and War.
1789 Relapse I. xvi. 140 Tho' this was a confounded lie, my friend, ‘all is fair in love and war’.
1845 G. P. R. James Smuggler I. iv. 95 In love and war, every stratagem is fair, they say.
1850 F. E. Smedley Frank Fairlegh xlix. 434 All's fair in love and war, you know.
1905 Washington Post 9 June 2/5 New Yorker so busy wooing he forgot he had no funds. ‘All is fair in love and war,’ holds good in fiction, but not in the eyes of the police.
1979 ‘J. Gash’ Grail Tree v. 45 All's fair in love, war and antiques.
2005 Cosmopolitan Aug. 218/1 All's fair in love and war, so flick the trip switch in the fuse box. Without electricity, he's forced to surrender his console and get back to basics.
b. In various other proverbs and proverbial phrases.See also the love of money is the root of all evil at money n. Phrases 3a; to be off with the old love (before one is on with the new) at off adv. 4c; praise the child and you make love to the mother at praise v. 3b(b). [With love and a cough cannot be hid compare Middle French amour ne puet estre celee love cannot be hidden (14th cent.).]
ΚΠ
1474 W. Caxton tr. Game & Playe of Chesse (1883) iii. iii. 97 Herof men saye a comyn prouerbe in england, that loue lasteth as longe as the money endureth.
a1500 R. Henryson tr. Æsop Fables: Cock & Fox l. 512 in Poems (1981) 23 The prouerb sayis, ‘Als gude lufe cummis as gais.’
a1513 R. Fabyan New Cronycles Eng. & Fraunce (1516) I. cxv. f. liii Hote Loue is soone colde.
1573 J. Sanford tr. L. Guicciardini Garden of Pleasure f. 98v Foure things cannot be kept close, Loue, the cough, fyre, and sorrowe.
1584 R. Greene Morando sig. B.ivv Loue doth much but money doth all.
1611 R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues at Amour Loue, and the Cough cannot be hidden.
a1618 W. Raleigh Remains (1664) 35 Love needs no teaching.
1678 J. Ray Coll. Eng. Prov. (ed. 2) 55 Love ne're delights in a sorrowful man.
1732 T. Fuller Gnomologia 140 Love and Pride stock Bedlam.
1777 C. Dibdin Quaker i. viii. 16 According unto the proverb, love maketh a wit of the fool.
1863 ‘G. Eliot’ Romola I. i. i. 102 If there are two things not to be hidden—love and a cough—I say there is a third, and that is ignorance.
1881 Appanoose (Iowa) Times 14 Apr. 1/4 It is said that love conquers all things.
1941 A. Kreymborg Poetic Drama Introd. 4 ‘The path of true love never runs smooth’ in the drama.
1994 R. Davies Cunning Man 458 Love and a cough cannot be hid.
2007 EveningNews (Edinb.) (Nexis) 8 Mar. 1 Many people say ‘love conquers all’ but that's not always true.
P7. there's no love lost between them (also us, etc.).
a. In a positive sense: ‘their (our, etc.) affection is mutual’. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > love > with love from [phrase] > of mutual affection
there's no love lost between them (also us, etc.)1600
the mind > emotion > hatred > on account of enmity to [phrase] > they hate one another
there's no love lost between them (also us, etc.)1600
1600 B. Jonson Every Man out of his Humor ii. i. sig. E.ii Car... Hee loues you well Signior. Sog. There shall be no loue lost Sir. View more context for this quotation
c1640 R. Davenport Surv. Sci. in Wks. (1890) 327 Oh my sweete! Sure there is no loue lost when you two meete.
1696 W. Bates Acct. Life P. Henry (1699) 8 Dr. Busby..took a particular Kindness to him,..and there was no Love lost betwixt them.
1706 P. Motteux Don Quixote (1749) III. 266 I love him well, and there's no love lost between us.
1749 T. Smollett tr. A. R. Le Sage Gil Blas III. ix. vii. 229 I have a friendship for you..And I can assure thee, child, (said I), there is no love lost [Fr. que tu n'aimes pas un ingrat].
1773 O. Goldsmith She stoops to Conquer iv. 77 As for murmurs, mother, we grumble a little now and then, to be sure. But there's no love lost between us.
1824 N. Drake Noontide Leisure II. 54 Give me your hand..and let me tell you..there is no love lost between us.
1828 C. Lamb New Year's Coming of Age in Elia 2nd Ser. 8 There was no love lost for that matter.
1839 S. Lover Hall Porter ii. i. 17 I'm obleeged to you, Misther Bowlt; and in throth there's no love lost between us, for I respect you, and always did.
b. In a negative sense: ‘they (we, etc.) have no love for each other’.
ΚΠ
?1622 J. Taylor Trav. Twelve-pence in Wks. (1630) i. 71 They loue me not, which makes 'em quickly spend me. But there's no great loue lost 'twixt them and mee, We keepe asunder and so best agree.
1751 S. Richardson Clarissa (ed. 3) III. xxv. 134 He must needs say, there was no love lost between some of my family and him; but he had not deserved of them what they had of him.
1797 Posthumous Daughter I. xlii. 217 I do not like him at all, and I believe there is no love lost between us.
1858 W. M. Thackeray Virginians I. xvii. 134 There was not a great deal of love lost between Will and his half-sister.
1866 W. D. Howells Venetian Life 121 Americans do not like these people and I believe there is no love lost on the other side.
1889 T. A. Trollope What I Remember III. 91 Between Italian and French radicals there is really no love lost.
1916 J. Buchan Greenmantle xiii. 203 Once or twice he ran counter to Moellendorff, and I could see there was no love lost between these two.
1956 J. Lister Cent. of Conflict xvi. 273 There was no love lost between the seamen and soldiers of the mother country and the colonists, and the sooner the expedition moved on, the happier everyone would be.
1997 ‘Q’ Deadmeat 54 There was no love lost between the two of us. We'd never got on.
P8. love at first sight: the action or state of falling instantly in love with someone whom (or, by extension, something which) one has never previously seen.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > love > amorous love > [noun] > love at first sight
love at first sight1664
a1413 (c1385) G. Chaucer Troilus & Criseyde (Pierpont Morgan) (1881) ii. l. 668 How myght it be That she so lyghtly louede Troylus Right for þe firste syght.
a1593 C. Marlowe Hero & Leander (1598) i. 175 Where both deliberat, the loue is slight, Who euer lov'd, that lov'd not at first sight?]
1664 T. Killigrew Comedies & Trag. (title) The princesse: or, Love at first sight.
1753 S. Richardson Hist. Sir Charles Grandison IV. xviii. 144 Love at first sight, answered Sir Charles, must indicate a mind prepared for impression, and a sudden gust of passion.
1797 T. Holcroft Adventures Hugh Trevor V. vi. 70 Why this seems like love at first sight!
1822 W. Hazlitt Table-talk II. xvi. 354 I do not think that what is called Love at first sight is so great an absurdity as it is sometimes imagined to be.
1839 C. Brontë Let. 4 Aug. in E. C. Gaskell Life C. Brontë (1857) I. viii. 199 Well! thought I, I have heard of love at first sight, but this beats all!
1868 W. Collins Moonstone I. i. vii. 91 You have heard of beautiful young ladies falling in love at first sight, and have thought it natural enough.
1952 Scrutiny 18 273 We know that what we have here is no drama of romantic love-at-first-sight.
1961 C. McCullers Clock without Hands iv. 89 In early youth, love at first sight, that epitome of passion, turns you into a zombie.
1975 D. Bagley Snow Tiger xvi. 138 Don't you believe in love at first sight?
2005 Courier-Mail (Brisbane) 12 Feb. (Life section) 4/4 Phenylethylamine (PEA): A neurotransmitter which often causes the lover's ‘high’ many interpret as love at first sight.
P9. love's young dream: the idealized relationship of young lovers; the object of someone's love, a person regarded as the perfect lover; (also, sometimes depreciatively) the lovers themselves.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > love > love affair > [noun] > romantic attachment between boy and girl
puppy love1810
love's young dream1819
calf-love1823
1819 Times 24 Sept. 1/1 A concert, selected from the Scotch and Irish Melodies... Song, ‘Love's young Dream’.
1821 T. Moore Love's Young Dream in Irish Melodies i. 77 But there's nothing half so sweet in life, As love's young dream!
1898 J. K. Jerome Second Thoughts 155 The stout lady, now regarded as a would-be blighter of love's young dream, was hustled into the back seat.
1920 J. Galsworthy Skin Game i. 33 I don't mean any tosh about love's young dream; but I do like being friends.
1937 D. L. Sayers Busman's Honeymoon xv. 307 There now!.. If there ain't love's young dream a-comin' up the path.
1960 B. Kops Dream of Peter Mann 54 Look at them, love's young dream.
1974 P. G. Wodehouse Aunts aren't Gentlemen iii. 20 I was helping a pal to celebrate the happy conclusion of love's young dream, and it may be that I became a mite polluted.
2001 J. Paisley Not for Glory 54 Noo I hink we shouldnae make nae mair noise an disturb love's young dream up aheid.
P10. euphemistic love in a cottage: marriage with insufficient means.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > marriage or wedlock > a marriage > [noun] > viewed as more or less advantageous > marriage with insufficient means
love in a cottage1745
1745 C. Coffey Devil upon Two Sticks i. vi. 34 Love in a Cottage contentedly flows, And e'ery dear Minute is blest.
1763 G. Colman Deuce is in Him i. 9 To talk of living on bread and water, and the comforts of love in a cottage.
1812 M. Edgeworth Absentee iv, in Tales Fashionable Life V. 302 Lady Clonbrony had not..the slightest notion, how anybody..could prefer, to a good house..and a proper establishment, what is called love in a cottage.
1878 Scribner's Monthly Dec. 274/1 Young people tried love in a cottage, and dwelt in dove-cotes beside their prouder kinsfolk.
1894 H. H. Gardener Unofficial Patriot 239 Here's more love in a cottage business for you.
1938 W. Empson Eng. Pastoral Poetry i. 55 She had chosen love in a cottage and could stick to it.
1954 J. A. Banks Prosperity & Parenthood viii. 116 George Vavasor, Phineas Finn, and Frank Greystock were not faced with the dilemma of love in a cottage versus luxury in the hall.
2006 Times (Nexis) 1 July 18 A choice between a triumphant return to high finance and love in a cottage.
P11. love in disguise: a dish consisting of calf's heart (occasionally sheep's heart) boiled, stuffed with forcemeat, and then baked.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > dishes and prepared food > meat dishes > [noun] > veal dishes
murrey1381
boucon1706
brusole1706
fricandeau1706
blanquette1747
ris de veau1820
Sefton1845
Wiener schnitzel1857
love in disguise1877
osso buco1908
vitello tonnato1935
saltimbocca1937
scallopini1950
piccata1963
veal parmigiana1963
veal piccata1973
1705 J. S. City & Country Recreation x. 58 Love in Disguise, and how esteemed, and the Danger there is in it more than when it appears in its naked Form.]
1877 E. S. Dallas Kettner's Bk. of Table 282 Love in disguise is a calf's heart stuffed, then surrounded with forcemeat, next rolled in vermicelli, lastly deposited in a baking dish..and sent to the oven.
1937 Times 5 June 16/5Love in Disguise’ concealed within it a stuffed sheep's heart—an eighteenth-century culinary jest.
1958 W. Bickel tr. R. Hering Dict. Classical & Mod. Cookery 451 Love in disguise, calf's heart, soaked in water, larded, boiled until tender, dried, coated with veal forcemeat, rolled in crushed raw noodles, roasted in butter in oven and basted frequently.
1995 N.Y. Times (Nexis) 23 July vii. 14 British cuisine has always sounded entertaining. But, like love-in-disguise (which turns out to be baked, stuffed calf heart), what winds up on the plate can be harder to swallow.
P12. the love that dare not speak its name and variants.
a. Chiefly euphemistic. Homosexuality.In later use also occasionally applied to sexual preferences or practices having a status likened to that of homosexuality in the late 19th cent., as in being legally prohibited or socially unacceptable.
ΚΠ
1894 A. Douglas Two Loves in Chameleon Dec. 28 I am the love that dare not speak its name.
1895 O. Wilde in Oscar Wilde: Three Times Tried (1912) ii. xiii. 271 The ‘Love that dare not speak its name’ in this century is such a great affection of an elder for a younger man as there was between David and Jonathan... It is in this century..so much misunderstood that it may be described as the ‘Love that dare not speak its name’.
1895 M. Beerbohm Let. 3 May in Lett. to R. Turner (1964) 102 [Oscar's] speech about the Love that dares not tell his name was simply wonderful, and carried the whole court right away, quite a tremendous burst of applause.
1950 N.Y. Times Bk. Rev. 29 Jan. 6/1 Gide's second proposition, that civilization benefits by toleration of ‘the love that dares not speak its name.’
1976 Evening Capital (Annapolis, Maryland) 28 Oct. Their ‘loves’..were of the offbeat persuasion—you know, ‘the love that dare not speak its name’.
2001 Village Voice (N.Y.) (Nexis) 5 June 41 We know too little about plural marriage to say that it inevitably results in pain... What gives Utah the right to repress this love that dare not speak its name?
2002 H. M. Benshoff in M. Jancovich Horror ii. vii. 99 The ‘love that dare not speak its name’ remains a shadowy Other which conversely works to bolster the equally constructed idea of a normative heterosexuality.
b. In extended use (frequently humorous): any (trivial) enthusiasm or predilection regarded as embarrassing, shameful, or inappropriate.
ΚΠ
1977 Times 27 May 2/8 Government ministers were privately ‘terribly fond of the arts’. Could that..be the sort of love that dare not speak its name?
1989 Independent (Nexis) 13 Dec. (Sport section) 28 In an age of hooliganism..football enthusiasm became the love that dare not speak its name.
1994 Chicago Sun-Times (Nexis) 25 Sept. (Late Sports Final ed.) (Show section) 13 It's the love that dares not speak its name. No sane rocker would admit to loving the Carpenters.
2004 A. King London Jrnl. i. i. 11 ‘Slumming’, whereby a culturally respectable reader takes pleasure in mass-market reading, was in the nineteenth-century a love that dare not speak its name.
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