单词 | to talk to |
释义 | > as lemmasto talk to a. To exercise the faculty of speech; to speak, utter words, say things; often contemptuous: to speak trivially, utter empty words, prate. to talk to, to address words to; colloquial, to rebuke, scold, reprimand; (U.S.) dialect, to court or woo (a woman); also to talk up to. Of a woman: to accept a man's attentions. to talk at random n., adv., and adj., at rovers (rarely rover) at rover n.2 Phrases: see these words. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > speech > speak [verb (intransitive)] matheleOE speakc888 spellc888 yedc888 i-quethec900 reirdOE meldOE meleOE quidOE i-meleOE wordOE to open one's mouth (also lips)OE mootOE spellc1175 carpa1240 spilec1275 bespeakc1314 adda1382 mella1400 moutha1400 utter?a1400 lalec1400 nurnc1400 parlec1400 talkc1400 to say forthc1405 rekea1450 to say on1487 nevena1500 quinch1511 quetch1530 queckc1540 walk1550 cant1567 twang1602 articulate1615 tella1616 betalk1622 sermocinate1623 to give tongue1737 jaw1748 to break stillness1768 outspeaka1788 to give mouth1854 larum1877 to make noises1909 verbal1974 the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > disapproval > rebuke or reproof > rebuke or reprove [verb (transitive)] threac897 threapc897 begripea1000 threata1000 castea1200 chaste?c1225 takec1275 blame1297 chastya1300 sniba1300 withnima1315 undernima1325 rebukec1330 snuba1340 withtakea1340 reprovec1350 chastisea1375 arate1377 challenge1377 undertake1377 reprehenda1382 repreync1390 runta1398 snapea1400 underfoc1400 to call to account1434 to put downc1440 snebc1440 uptakec1440 correptc1449 reformc1450 reprise?c1450 to tell (a person) his (also her, etc.) own1450 control1451 redarguec1475 berisp1481 to hit (cross) one over (of, on) the thumbs1522 checkc1530 admonish1541 nip1548 twig?1550 impreve1552 lesson1555 to take down1562 to haul (a person) over the coals1565 increpate1570 touch1570 school1573 to gather up1577 task1580 redarguate?1590 expostulate1592 tutor1599 sauce1601 snip1601 sneap1611 to take in tax1635 to sharp up1647 round1653 threapen1671 reprimand1681 to take to task1682 document1690 chapter1693 repulse1746 twink1747 to speak to ——1753 haul1795 to pull up1799 carpet1840 rig1841 to talk to1860 to take (a person) to the woodshed1882 rawhide1895 to tell off1897 to tell (someone) where he or she gets off1900 to get on ——1904 to put (a person) in (also into) his, her place1908 strafe1915 tick1915 woodshed1935 to slap (a person) down1938 sort1941 bind1942 bottle1946 mat1948 ream1950 zap1961 elder1967 c1400 (?c1380) Cleanness l. 154 Þen þe lorde..talkez to his tormenttoures. ?1507 W. Dunbar Tua Mariit Wemen (Rouen) in Poems (1998) I. 47 Now tydis me for to talk, my taill it is nixt. c1540 (?a1400) Destr. Troy 6136 Than Troilus tomly talket agayne. a1586 Sir P. Sidney tr. Psalmes David (1823) iv. iv Talk with yor heart and yet be still. 1594 W. Shakespeare Venus & Adonis (new ed.) sig. Dij What canst thou talke (quoth she) hast thou a tong? 1670 C. Cotton tr. G. Girard Hist. Life Duke of Espernon iii. ix. 427 How comes it to pass you are not gone out to meet the Duke of Espernon? he'l talk with you for this when he comes. 1721 A. Ramsay Keitha 22 Wha 've heard her sing or tauk. 1726 Bp. J. Butler 15 Serm. iv. 62 A Disposition to be talking for its own sake. 1860 E. Cowell Diary 17 Feb. in M. W. Disher Cowells in Amer. (1934) 18 Arrived there, we were set upon by sleigh conductors, one of whom Sam had also to ‘talk to’ for using bad language. 1875 B. Jowett in tr. Plato Dialogues (ed. 2) V. 36 Be assured that I shall be glad to hear you talk as much as you please. 1878 W. S. Gilbert H.M.S. Pinafore ii. (1881) 295 I'll talk to Master Rackstraw in the morning. 1895 Dial. Notes 1 374 Judge Jackson's has been talkin' to my daughter nigh on a year. 1905 in Eng. Dial. Dict. VI. 22/2 Pat is talking to Kate this six months, they'll soon be married. 1906 Dial. Notes 3 160 Talk up to, v. phr., to court, to woo. ‘Bud's talkin' up to her.’ 1951 L. Craig Singing Hills xii. 110 The old man and me are powerful glad Ikey's made up his mind to talk up to a woman. We've been scared he'd be an old bachelor-man. 1951 H. Giles Harbin's Ridge xviii. 157 She mentioned that Faleecy John was talking to Jenny Clark a right smart. 1951 H. Giles Harbin's Ridge xviii. 159 I'd not heard of her talking to anybody but Faleecy John. < as lemmas |
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