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单词 acuity
释义

acuityn.

Brit. /əˈkjuːᵻti/, U.S. /əˈkjuədi/, /æˈkjuədi/
Forms: Middle English acute, Middle English–1500s acuite, Middle English–1500s acuyte, 1500s acuitye, 1500s– acuity.
Origin: Of multiple origins. Partly a borrowing from French. Partly a borrowing from Latin. Etymons: French acuité; Latin acuitat-, acuitas.
Etymology: < Middle French acuité (French acuité ) sharpness, quality of being pointed or cutting (a1320 in Old French; 13th cent. in sense ‘sharp taste’), intensity of a sensation, or of a pain, etc., (of an intellectual faculty) sharpness, keenness, subtlety (15th cent.) and its etymon post-classical Latin acuitat-, acuitas sharpness of intellect (6th cent.), sharpness, pointedness (13th cent. in British and continental sources), acuteness of accent, sharpness of pitch (13th cent. in a British source; 15th cent. in a continental source), pungency (13th cent. in a British source) < classical Latin acuere to sharpen (see acute adj.) + -itās -ity suffix. Compare acuteness n.
1.
a. The capacity of a substance to cut, pierce, or corrode; acidity, caustic quality. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > healing > medicines or physic > [noun] > qualities of medicines
acuity1543
benignity1605
lenitude1657
incompatibility1825
alkalescency1826
specificity1876
compatibility1898
orgonity1945
addictiveness1955
the world > action or operation > advantage > efficacy > [noun] > sharpness or acuteness
acuity1543
a1400 tr. Lanfranc Sci. Cirurgie (Ashm.) (1894) 65 (MED) Þer ben manie enchesouns of cause antecedentis, as..to myche acute [L. acuitas] of blood.
?a1425 tr. Guy de Chauliac Grande Chirurgie (N.Y. Acad. Med.) f. 83v (MED) After forsoþ þat þe acuite i. sharpnez is eked..it [sc. vlcere] is said corrosyue.
a1500 (c1477) T. Norton Ordinal of Alchemy (BL Add.) (1975) l. 2230 Alle liquours..Whiche frost infectid, shuld not be vsid... Theire Acuyte is dullid with colde.
1543 B. Traheron tr. J. de Vigo Most Excellent Wks. Chirurg. i. ii. f. 62v/2 In thys case suppositories & clysters hauyng some acuite or sharpnes seme more conuenient, than medicynes receyued by ye mouth.
1660 J. Harding tr. Paracelsus Archidoxis i. 86 How acute or Calcineous soever it be..tis by that acuity alone that it Operates.
1678 R. Russel tr. Jabir ibn Haiyan Wks. Geber ii. i. iv. xiii. 116 Water admits not the Acuity of Ignition as Ashes doth.
1701 W. Salmon Polygraphice (ed. 8) II. vii. iii. 482 By the acuity of the Salts, Alum and Vinegar, its whole humidity, blackness, and filth is done away.
1714 Bibliotheca Anatomica III. 57 There is some Liquor prepared in the Body that..separates and cuts asunder the Several Particles of the Aliment by its Acuity.
b. Sharpness (of a knife, etc.). Also concrete: the point of something sharp. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > shape > sharpness of edge or point > [noun]
sharpnessc725
keenness1530
fineness?1537
acuity1598
acuteness1642
eagerness1831
1598 A. M. tr. J. Guillemeau Frenche Chirurg. f. 17/2 The acuitye or poyncte of the needle.
a1699 J. Fraser Treat. conc. Justifying or Saving Faith (1722) iv. 172 As the Sharpness or Acuity of the Knife doth to its better cutting of any material Substance.
2.
a. Sharpness or keenness of thought, understanding, or feeling; perceptiveness, shrewdness.In later use, probably extended from sense 2b.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > understanding > intelligence, cleverness > sharpness, shrewdness, insight > [noun]
sharpnessc897
yepshipc1000
insightc1175
yepleȝȝcc1175
yephedea1250
wit1297
fellnessa1382
policyc1440
discerningc1450
policec1450
inspectiona1527
perceivance1534
aptitude1548
sagacity1548
acuity?1549
nimbleness1561
acumen1579
seeing eye1579
esprit1591
acuteness1601
depth1605
penetration1605
knowingness1611
shrewdnessa1616
piercingnessa1628
discernment1646
sharpwittedness1647
nasuteness1660
arguteness1662
sagaciousness1678
perceptivity1700
keenness1707
cuteness1768
intuition1780
recollectedness1796
long-headedness1818
perceptiveness1823
kokum1848
incision1862
incisiveness1865
penetrativeness1873
flair1881
hard-boiledness1912
smart1964
spikiness1977
sus1979
?1549 J. Hooper Declar. 10 Commandm. i. p. ii There is no acuite nor excellencie of witt..that can comprehend or compasse the doctrine.
1610 J. Healey tr. St. Augustine Citie of God xxii. xxix. 914 They excell in acuity of vnderstanding [L. prouectu mentis excellant].
a1636 T. Westcote View Devonshire 1630 (1845) xi. 237 All his subtle evasions and acuity of wit could not palliate his offence from the understanding of the inquest.
1880 W. J. Mickle Gen. Paralysis Insane ii. 10 The patient is extolling the acuity and cleverness of his own dealings.
1889 Medical Rec. 20 July 69/2 Indeed, Dr. Brown-Séquard himself, with his increased mental acuity, was not slow to note the one-sidedness of his discovery.
1918 Ohio Public Health Jrnl. Dec. 527/2 The latter was an Irishman of no little wit and acuity.
1946 Life 14 Jan. 102/2 His dexterity and acuity in keeping mental track of 57 different things at once.
1970 R. Thorp & R. Blake Music of their Laughter 142/1 You maintain your emotional acuity.
1994 Nature 28 Apr. 821/2 Majorana was in fact the only one who could make the pope ill at ease, with the acuity of his remarks, sometimes bitingly harsh, but always right.
2005 C. Cleave Incendiary 127 I may not be blessed with Petra's fashion acuity but I know a plonker when I see one.
b. Sharpness or keenness of perception; esp. clearness of vision (spec. for the shape or detail of objects).
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > sight and vision > types of vision > [noun] > clear- or sharp-sightedness
quicknessa1398
clearness1535
eagle eye1567
perspicacity1606
quicksightedness1625
piercingnessa1628
sharpsightedness1647
edgea1682
clear-sightednessa1691
acuity1866
visual acuity1889
V.A.1932
stereo-acuity1942
1866 Atlanta Med. & Surg. Jrnl. Oct. 372 The true typical symptoms are a diminution in the acuity of vision.
1889 A. H. Buck Ref. Handbk. Med. Sci. VII. 665/2 Comparative researches upon the visual acuity of different parts of the retina.
1911 S. S. Colvin Learning Process vi. 94 Auditory acuity may also be determined..with elaborate instruments such as Seashore's audiometer or Lehmann's acoumeter.
1920 Arch. Ophthalmol. 49 64 When the facts are known it is quite possible that visual tests will not stop with measuring the acuity of each eye and the color sense.
1945 Electronic Engin. 17 451 Audiograms, i.e. plots of hearing acuity against frequency, taken from a large number of deaf people.
1967 Brit. Jrnl. Psychiatry 113 767/2 We may..hypothesize that there is a difference of sensory acuity for high-pitched sounds between the person and us.
1968 Brain 91 256 The point chosen for fixation by the right retina presumably has a better acuity than the macula which is about 5 degrees nasalwards.
2000 New Scientist 8 Jan. 27/2 To measure olfactory acuity, they ask people to sniff different combinations of phenylethyl alcohol (PEA), a substance that has the scent of roses.
2007 I. McDonald Brasyl 226 When his eyes had recovered their acuity Quinn saw two streams of people pouring over the top of the bank.
3. Medicine. The degree to which a disease or symptom is acute (acute adj. 1a); the property of being acute. Also: the acute stage or crisis (of a disease). Cf. acuteness n. 3.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > characteristics > [noun] > degree of intensity > violence or severity
malicea1382
vehemency?1541
malignity1543
acutenessa1644
virulency1651
malignancy1693
virulence1748
severity1808
acuity1839
fulminancy1887
1839 Med. Examiner 19 Oct. 670/2 The width of the vascular zone of the sclerotica, although it varies according to the acuity of the inflammation, rarely exceeds two or three lines; whereas the redness of the conjunctiva is..universal.
1872 T. G. Thomas Pract. Treat. Dis. Women (ed. 3) 145 The disease may at any time take on the characters of virulence and acuity.
1907 R. W. Wilcox Treatm. Dis. i. 88 During convalescence the patient should be kept in bed until all danger of heart failure is past, this complication being prone to occur for some time after the acuity of the disease [sc. diphtheria] is over.
1920 L. W. Fox Pract. Treat. Ophthalmol. (new ed.) vi. 163 The disease is usually chronic,..the acuity of certain attacks being probably due to a concomitant acute conjunctivitis.
1992 W. J. Keon & S. C. Menzies in P. J. Walter Quality Life after Open Heart Surg. x. 109 High risk patients are known to benefit most from surgery and because of their acuity of symptoms often have no alternative to surgical intervention.
2006 J. K. Briggs & V. G. A. Grossman Emergency Nursing Pref. p. viii/2 In addition to assigning acuity based on symptoms and resources needed, the nurse is prompted when appropriate to initiate certain nursing interventions.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2011; most recently modified version published online December 2021).
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