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单词 tinct
释义

tinctn.

/tɪŋkt/
Etymology: < Latin tinctus a dyeing, < tingĕre to dye, stain.
Now only poetic.
1.
a. Colour, hue, tint; colouring matter, dye: = tincture n. 1, 2.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > colour > [noun] > a colour
bleec888
hue971
colourc1300
lita1325
tincture1477
tainture1490
taint1567
distain1581
complexion1597
tinct1604
tint1716
tinto1739
hwe-
1604 W. Shakespeare Hamlet iii. iv. 81 There I see such blacke and greeued spots As will not leaue there their tin'ct.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Cymbeline (1623) ii. ii. 23 White and Azure lac'd With Blew of Heauens owne tinct.
1706 Phillips's New World of Words (new ed.) Tinct, or Teint (Lat.), a Colouring.
1748 J. Thomson Castle of Indolence i. xliv Raising a world of gayer tinct and grace.
a1855 M. R. Mitford Portrait in Poems Such brilliant white, such rosy tinct, The apple blossom shows.
1861 A. Wynter Our Social Bees 500 The difference of colour is entirely owing to the tinct of the fluid which fills the hollow tube in each hair.
1884 R. Browning Bean-stripe in Ferishtah's Fancies 347 There's no single tinct Would satisfy the eye's desire to taste The secret of the diamond.
b. figurative. A touch, trace, tinge (of something): = tincture n. 4.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > quantity > smallness of quantity, amount, or degree > [noun] > a small quantity or amount > a slight touch or trace
specec1330
taste1390
lisounc1400
savourc1400
smatcha1500
smell?a1505
spice1531
smack1539
shadow1586
surmise1586
relish1590
tang1593
touch1597
stain1609
tincture1612
dasha1616
soula1616
twanga1640
whiff1644
haut-goût1650
casta1661
stricturea1672
tinge1736
tinct1752
vestige1756
smattering1764
soupçon1766
smutch1776
shade1791
suspicion1809
lineament1811
trait1815
tint1817
trace1827
skiff1839
spicing1844
smudgea1871
ghost1887
1752 S. Foote Taste i. 5 If I do now and then add some Tincts of Antiquity to my Pictures.
1794 H. L. Piozzi Brit. Synonymy II. 195 That lovely season of life gives to every thing a tinct of its own greenness.
2. Alchemy. A transmuting elixir; = tincture n. 6. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > alchemy > alchemical processes > [noun] > chemical digestion > substances used in > elixir
elixirc1386
tinct1471
tincture1599
1471 G. Ripley Compound of Alchymy xii. i, in E. Ashmole Theatrum Chem. Britannicum (1652) 184 And Tynct in Projeccyon all Fyers to abyde.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Antony & Cleopatra (1623) i. v. 37 Yet comming from him, that great Med'cine hath With his Tinct gilded thee. View more context for this quotation
a1616 W. Shakespeare All's Well that ends Well (1623) v. iii. 103 Platus [sic] himselfe, That knowes the tinct and multiplying med'cine. View more context for this quotation
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1912; most recently modified version published online March 2019).

tinctadj.

Etymology: < Latin tinctus, past participle of tingĕre : see tinct v.
poetic.
Coloured, tinted; dyed, tinged; imbued. Construed as past participle.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > colour > state or mode of having colour > [adjective]
i-liteda1225
coloureda1325
colorate?a1425
tinct1579
primary colour1612
tincted1626
tinctured1626
tinto1686
tinted1756
unpaleda1820
pigmented1822
toned1864
hued1876
1579 E. Spenser Shepheardes Cal. Nov. 107 The blew in black, the greene in gray is tinct.
1615 R. Brathwait Loves Labyrinth 46 in Strappado Her sanguine colour tinct with Lyons iawes.
1820 J. Keats Eve of St. Agnes in Lamia & Other Poems 98 Lucent syrops, tinct with cinnamon.
1852 P. J. Bailey Festus (ed. 5) 530 In robes Of seagreen hue, engirdled with a zone All variously tinct.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1912; most recently modified version published online March 2019).

tinctv.

Forms: Also 1500s tinkt.
Etymology: < Latin tinct-, participial stem of tingĕre to dye, colour. First used in past participle tincted : compare tinct adj.
Obsolete.
1. transitive. To colour; to dye; to tinge, tint.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > colour > colouring > colour [verb (transitive)]
dyea1000
huec1000
litc1230
coloura1325
paint?c1335
infecta1398
taint1471
recolour1566
becolour1567
tinct1594
colorate1599
colourize1611
tincture1616
tint1791
encolour1850
pigment1896
1594 H. Plat Diuers Chimicall Concl. Distillation 22 in Jewell House Water deepelie died, or tincted with..colour of the hearbe.
1605 M. Drayton Poems sig. Gg5 My face discouering, whose delitious cheeke Tinckted with crimson, fading soone agen, With such a sweetenes as made death euen meeke.
1625 B. Jonson Fortunate Isles 187 I will but touch your temples,..and tinct the tip, The very tip o' your nose.
1650 E. Ashmole tr. A. Dee Fasciculus Chemicus 127 A Dry earthy Body tincts not unlesse it be tincted.
1682 G. Hartman Digby's Choice Coll. Rare Secrets ii. 174 It will Tinct it self as red as blood.
1686 J. Goad Astro-meteorologica ii. xiii. 337 In dry Seasons the Solar Halo's are sometimes tincted with red.
2. transferred and figurative. To imbue or impregnate with some substance or quality, esp. in a slight degree; to tinge, tincture, taint.
a. with a physical substance or quality: = tincture v. 2a.
ΚΠ
a1626 F. Bacon New Atlantis (1650) 27 Artificiall Wells and Fountaines, made in Imitation of the Naturall Sources and Bathes; As tincted upon Vitrioll, Sulphur, Steele, Brasse, Lead, Nitre, and other Mineralls.
1626 F. Bacon Sylua Syluarum §882 So the strainer itself is tincted with salt.
1638 W. Rawley tr. F. Bacon Hist. Nat. & Exper. Life & Death 323 That towards the Morning, there be used some Annointing, or Shirt tincted with Oyle.
1644 K. Digby Two Treat. i. xxiv. 225 Although the hart should be tincted from its first origine with an vndew vertue from some part.
b. with a mental or moral quality, or with knowledge, etc.: = tincture v. 2b.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > belief > suggestion, proposal > suggest [verb (transitive)] > affect by suggestion, influence
toucha1400
tinct1616
season1617
tincture1636
the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > condition or state of being mixed or blended > mix or blend [verb (transitive)] > add as ingredient to a mixture > qualify by admixture > to a slight degree
hue1576
salt1576
season1604
taint1605
tinct1616
tincture1636
tinge1690
spike1956
1616 B. Jonson Every Man out of his Humor (rev. ed.) Ded., in Wks. I. 81 To take it in your hands, perhaps may make some Bencher, tincted with humanity, reade: and not repent him.
1666 W. Sancroft Lex Ignea 23 Conjectures..so tincted and debaucht with private prejudice.
a1734 R. North Examen (1740) i. iii. §15 132 To suppose his Reader..tincted beforehand with what was ordinarily understood by the Plot.
3. Alchemy. To subject to a transmuting elixir: see tincture n. 6.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > alchemy > alchemical processes > [verb (transitive)] > transmutation
multiplya1393
tinct1599
transmute1610
tinge1650
maturate1651
maturify1651
1599 [see tincting n. at Derivatives].
1601 R. Dolman tr. P. de la Primaudaye French Acad. III. 412 Iron too much concocted and high tincted, is easily changed into brasse.
1612 B. Jonson Alchemist ii. iii. sig. D4 I meane to tinct C. [sc. a retort] in sand-heate, to morrow, And giue him imbibition. View more context for this quotation
1654 F. W. Observ. in Fulke's Meteors (new ed.) 163 Cyprus Copper is made of Brasse and Iron..and high tincted is easily changed into Brass, and rechanged..into Copper.

Derivatives

ˈtincted adj.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > colour > state or mode of having colour > [adjective]
i-liteda1225
coloureda1325
colorate?a1425
tinct1579
primary colour1612
tincted1626
tinctured1626
tinto1686
tinted1756
unpaleda1820
pigmented1822
toned1864
hued1876
1626 F. Bacon Sylua Syluarum §960 Tincted Lanthorns, or Tincted Skreens of Glasse Coloured into Green, Blew, Carnation &c.
1672 R. Boyle in Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 7 5110 I applied a seal'd Weather glass, furnished with tincted spirit of wine.
ˈtincting n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > alchemy > alchemical processes > [noun] > transmutation
multiplyingc1395
maturing?a1425
transmutation1478
projectiona1550
curtation1584
longation1584
tincting1599
maturation1617
1599 F. Thynne Animaduersions (1875) 33 Fermentacione ys a peculier terme of Alchemye..whiche is before tinctinge, or gyvinge tincture or cooler.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1912; most recently modified version published online June 2021).
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n.1471adj.1579v.1594
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