| 单词 | very | 
| 释义 | † veryn. Obsolete. rare.   (Meaning obscure; occurring only as part of a charm.) ΚΠ c1386    G. Chaucer Miller's Tale 299  				Ihesu Crist and seint Benedight Blesse this hous from euery wikked wight For nyghtes uerye [v.rr. very(e, verie, verray] the white pater noster. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1917; most recently modified version published online June 2021). Veryn.2  Used attributively with reference to a coloured pyrotechnic flare projected from a special pistol for signalling or temporarily illuminating an area; as  Very light,  Very pistol, etc. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > military organization > signals > 			[noun]		 > light signal Very light1907 fairy light1916 pistol flare1916 pistol light1916 society > communication > indication > signalling > visual signalling > luminous signals > 			[noun]		 > pyrotechnic signals blue light1761 fire shell1765 Indian light1787 Bengal light1791 Indian fire1831 flare-up light1858 flare1883 Very1907 fairy light1916 Aldis lamp1917 Aldis1918 Bengal fire1941 flame float1942 Bengal flash1946 1907    Jrnl. Mil. Service Inst. U.S. 41 368  				In connection with night signaling it may be well here to mention the Very system,..found serviceable in sea-coast signaling. 1915    D. O. Barnett Let. 17 Mar. in  In Happy Memory 95  				When the ‘Very’ pistol came, I fired a rocket. 1917    R. Nichols in  E. B. Osborn Nurse in Arms 49  				Before he was aware The ‘Verey’ light had risen..on the air It hung glistering. 1920    Blackwood's Mag. June 747/2  				Very flares were continually being fired into the air to light up dark corners. 1928    E. Blunden Undertones of War ii. 16  				Another officer..showed me..how to fire a flare... He had with him a cumbrous brass gun, called a duck-gun; from this he fired a Vérey cartridge. 1930    C. R. Samson Fights & Flights 177  				My sole equipment consisted of an electric torch..and a Verey-light pistol. 1959    Chambers's Encycl. XI. 390/1  				The Very pistol, a short-barrelled smooth-bore weapon of 1-in. or 1½ in. calibre, firing a cartridge which is in effect a short roman candle throwing up a single star, is the most generally used pyrotechnic signal. 1976    ‘A. York’ Dark Passage xiii. 162  				He..found a Very pistol..and fired. The glowing orange ball arced over his head, and then hung, perhaps a hundred feet above the yacht. 1981    J. B. Hilton Playground of Death ii. 15  				What we were really playing at was War... A Roman candle..was a Very light. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1933; most recently modified version published online December 2021). veryadj.adv.n.1 A. adj.  I.  That is in truth or reality, and related uses; true, faithful.  1.  Really or truly entitled to the name or designation; possessing the true character of the person or thing named; properly so called or designated; = true adj. 7.Very common from c1300 to c1600; now rare except as an echo of Biblical usage.  a.  Of persons, or the Deity. ΘΚΠ the world > the supernatural > deity > Christian God > nature or attributes of God > 			[adjective]		 > truly entitled to the name soothc950 soothfasta1250 veryc1250 veryc1450 the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > foundation in fact, validity > 			[adjective]		 > accurately so named > of persons, the deity rightOE soothfasta1250 veryc1250 veryc1450 veritable1649 α., β. γ., δ.c1380    J. Wyclif Sel. Wks. III. 310  				Siþ Crist, verrest bischop of alle, cursede not for his tiþes.c1403    J. Lydgate Temple Glas 571  				Nou am I cauȝt vnder subieccioun, Forto bicome a verre homagere, To god of loue.c1460    Wisdom 15 in  Macro Plays 36  				Þe belowyde sone.., Spows of þe chyrche, & wery patrone.1526    Bible 		(Tyndale)	 Mark xi. f. lxij  				All men counted Ihon, that he was a veri prophett.1530    Myroure Oure Ladye 		(Fawkes)	 		(1873)	  iii. 323  				Thow arte the certayne hope of wretches, very mother of motherlesse.1548    Hall's Vnion: Henry VI f. clv  				She had one poynt of a very woman:..she was..mutable, and turnyng.1549    Bk. Common Prayer 		(STC 16267)	 Svpper of the Lorde f. cxxijv  				Very God of very God.1574    A. Golding tr.  A. Marlorat Catholike Expos. Reuelation 21  				In respect wherof he is called the sonne of man, that is too say, verie man.1615    W. Bedwell tr.  Mohammedis Imposturæ  ii. §53  				God is a very spirit.a1680    S. Butler Genuine Remains 		(1759)	 I. 102  				Th' are very Men, not Things That move by Puppet-work.1801    M. Edgeworth Mlle Panache  ii, in  Moral Tales III. 133  				‘I confess, I am a very woman,’ said lady Augusta, with a sigh.1854    R. C. Trench Synonyms New Test. 		(ed. 2)	 §8. 30  				But he is ἀληθινός,..very God, as distinguished from idols and all other false gods.1857    N. Hawthorne Jrnl. 9 July in  Eng. Notebks. 		(1997)	 II.  vi. 322  				Thence we went into Queen Mary's room, and saw that beautiful portrait—that very Queen and very woman.c1250    Kent. Serm. in  Old Eng. Misc. 27  				Be þet hi offrede gold..seawede þet he was sothfast kink, and be þet hi offrede Stor..seawede þet he was verray prest. a1300    Cursor Mundi 22729  				A clude..bar him vp, wonder bright; Warrai man and godd warrai. a1380    in  Horstm. Altengl. Leg. 		(1878)	 32/1  				A mayden, forsoþe, wente her in, But now forsoþe, as i seo con, Ȝonde sitteþ a verrei mon. a1400    Guy Warw. 3568  				Wele haþ Gij don þat day, As gode kniȝt & verray. a1400–50    Alexander 389  				A verra victor a-vansid with all þe vayne werde. c1400    Mandeville's Trav. (Roxb.) xv. 66  				He..es a haly prophete and a verray in worde and in dede. 1413    Pilgr. Sowle 		(1483)	  i. xv. 14  				Ihesu,..that were of Mary veray mayd bore in veray flesshe and bloode. 1508    Golagros & Gawane 		(Chepman & Myllar)	 sig. ciiiiv  				Grant me confort this day As thow art god verray. 1509    J. Fisher Mornynge Remembraunce Countesse of Rychemonde 		(de Worde)	 sig. Bii  				All the lerned men of Englonde to whome she was a veray patronesse. ?1521    J. Fisher Serm. agayn Luther sig. Aijv  				To be vnto her in all suche stormes a veray comforter. 1533    J. Gau tr.  C. Pedersen Richt Vay 37  				Be this word..he is veray God.  b.  Of abstract things, conditions, or qualities. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > foundation in fact, validity > 			[adjective]		 > accurately so named rightOE verya1300 verya1387 perfectc1387 propera1398 veritable1483 real?1505 dinkum1914 α.  β., δ.1303    R. Mannyng Handlyng Synne 1659  				Þere was verry matrymony, with oute fleshly dede of any.c1380    J. Wyclif Sel. Wks. I. 315  				Crist axiþ here mekenes and poverte, wiþ verri pees.1422    J. Yonge tr.  Secreta Secret. 146  				This goodis of Fortune or of kynde..be not werry goodys, for now thay byth, and now thay bythagone.1486    Bk. St. Albans a ij  				Therfore thys book fowlowyng in a dew forme shewys veri knawlege of suche plesure.a1500						 (?c1450)						    Merlin i. 13  				I haue very trust on god, that..ye shall not be deed ther-fore.a1500						 (?c1450)						    Merlin i. 11  				Thou..haste very repentaunce of herte.1526    W. Bonde Pylgrimage of Perfection  ii. sig. Hiiv  				A generall syght of the principles and processe of very religion.1541    T. Elyot Image of Gouernance Pref. sig. avv  				The most preciouse garment of very nobylitie.1572    J. Jones Benefit Bathes of Buckstones f. 5  				Which wee abusively call worldely wealth, when as very wealth, is health.?1637    T. Hobbes tr.  Aristotle Briefe Art Rhetorique  i. 59  				The written Law is but seeming Iustice; the Law of Nature very Iustice.1651    T. Hobbes Leviathan  ii. xxvi. 147  				Also, Unwritten Customes..by the tacite consent of the Emperour..are very Lawes.1868    W. Morris Earthly Paradise  i. 58  				Half dead with very death still drawing nigh.a1300    Cursor Mundi 26103  				And þan we sal þe pointes rede þat warrai scrifte al of has nede. c1380    J. Wyclif Sel. Wks. I. 15  				For riȝt-wisnesse generaly is fulfillinge of lawe, and so fulfillinge of Goddis lawe is verrei riȝt-wisnesse. c1400						 (?c1380)						    Pearl l. 1184  				So was hit me dere þat þou con deme, In þys veray avysyoun. c1412    T. Hoccleve De Regimine Principum 3313  				Mercy..Of herte is a verray compassioun Of othir menys harm. c1440    Pallad. on Husb.  ix. 91  				The fertilitee Of withi, reede, aller, yvy, or vyne That ther is water nygh is verrey signe. 1488						 (c1478)						    Hary Actis & Deidis Schir William Wallace 		(Adv.)	 		(1968–9)	  i. l. 3  				Our antecessowris..We lat ourslide throw werray sleuthfulnes. 1539    T. Cromwell in  R. B. Merriman Life & Lett. T. Cromwell 		(1902)	 II. 202  				Under the colour of a veray peax, whiche is neuertheles but a cloked and furred peax. 1562    N. Winȝet Certain Tractates 		(1888)	 I. 12  				Thre of the gretast ydolis,..verray ydolis in deid.  c.  Of material things. ΚΠ a1330    Roland & V. 129  				For to wite þe soþe þere, Ȝif þe relikes verray were. c1449    R. Pecock Repressor 		(1860)	 193  				Ech lyuyng man is verier..ymage of Crist..than is eny vnquyk stok. c1480						 (a1400)						    St. Martha 188 in  W. M. Metcalfe Legends Saints Sc. Dial. 		(1896)	 I. 290  				Scho..bad þame hyre in askis lay, & schaw til hyre a croice verra. 1495    Trevisa's Bartholomeus De Proprietatibus Rerum 		(de Worde)	  xvi. xlvii. 569  				It is harde..to knowe betwene the very precyous stones and fals. 1555    R. Eden tr.  Peter Martyr of Angleria Decades of Newe Worlde 326v  				Many bouwes and branches..muche like vnto verye trees that are in owlde woddes. 1581    G. Pettie tr.  S. Guazzo Ciuile Conuersat. 		(1586)	  i. 23  				The other parts which we call compound, or instrumentall, which are the verie members of the bodie. 1592    T. Tymme Plaine Discouerie Ten Eng. Lepers sig. Kv  				They which are out of their wittes do not see the verie things, but the fantasies of their passion. 1678    T. Hobbes Decameron Physiologicum ix. 106  				Such Iron were indeed a very and vigorous Loadstone. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > wholeness > completeness > 			[adjective]		 > complete or without qualification perfectc1350 very1446 1446    in  R. Willis  & J. W. Clark Archit. Hist. Univ. Cambr. 		(1886)	 I. 339  				The said maister..shal do his verray diligence to pourvey..a place as gode. 1496    Rolls of Parl. VI. 512/1  				The said Quene is of verrey will and mynde, that the same Erle shall be truly and fully contented. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > relationship > 			[adjective]		 > immediate or direct > in actual contact (of persons) very1528 immediate1548 1528–30    tr.  T. Littleton Tenures 		(new ed.)	 f. xxxviiiiv  				But yf it be very lorde & very tenaunte and the tenaunte maketh a feoffement in fee. [So Coke On Litt. (1628) 269.] 1607    J. Cowell Interpreter sig. Yyy2/1  				Very Lord, and very Tenent..are they that be immediate Lord & Tenent one to the other.  2.  With limitation (usually expressed by the or a possessive) to particular instances: The true or real; that is truly or properly entitled to the name. Now archaic.  a.  Of material things or places. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > foundation in fact, validity > 			[adjective]		 > accurately so named rightOE verya1300 verya1387 perfectc1387 propera1398 veritable1483 real?1505 dinkum1914 a1387    J. Trevisa tr.  R. Higden Polychron. 		(St. John's Cambr.)	 		(1865)	 I. 255  				Ysidre seiþ þat verray [L. proprie dicta] Germania haþ in þe est side þe mouth of þe ryuer Danubius. 1414    Lay Folks Mass Bk. App. ii. 120  				The materyall bred that was before is turnyd into Chrystys verray body. c1480						 (a1400)						    St. Christopher 61 in  W. M. Metcalfe Legends Saints Sc. Dial. 		(1896)	 I. 341  				Þe king can ma þe takine of þe croice verra on hyme. a1500						 (?c1450)						    Merlin xx. 329  				Than he made vpon hym the signe of the very crosse. 1526    W. Bonde Pylgrimage of Perfection  i. sig. Biiv  				Their iourney..signifieth the iourney to the very Ierusalem. 1535    Bible 		(Coverdale)	 John vi. 55  				For my flesh is ye very meate, and my bloude is ye very drynke. 1567    Compend. Bk. Godly Songs 		(1897)	 61  				He is the way, trothe, lyfe, and lycht, The varray [v.r. verray, verie] port, till heaven full rycht. 1651    T. Hobbes Leviathan  i. i. 4  				Though..the reall, and very object seem invested with the fancy it begets in us. 1849    J. M. Neale Hymns for Sick 		(1906)	 26  				Thy very Flesh and Blood.  b.  Of abstract things, conditions, etc. ΚΠ c1374    G. Chaucer tr.  Boethius De Consol. Philos. 		(1868)	  iii. pr. iii. 69  				And by a maner þouȝt..ȝe looken from a fer til þilk verray fyn of blisfulnesse. c1400    Mandeville's Trav. 		(1839)	 xii. 139  				Thei that scholden ben converted to Crist..ben thorghe oure Wykkednesse..fer fro us and straungeres fro the holy and verry Beleeve. c1449    R. Pecock Repressor 		(1860)	 65  				But the trewe and verry vndirstonding ther of is this. c1465    Pol., Rel., & L. Poems 		(1903)	 3  				Þe welfare of Edward Rex moste riall, That is þe verie purpos that we labure fore. 1508    Golagros & Gawane 		(Chepman & Myllar)	 sig. aiiii  				The verray cause of his come I knew noght the cace. 1526    W. Bonde Pylgrimage of Perfection Pref. sig. Aii  				Euery religiouse persone shulde intende the perfeccion of his soule, which is the very peas of the spirit. a1538    T. Starkey Dial. Pole & Lupset 		(1989)	 7  				Thys ys the veray true & cyvyle lyfe. 1574    St. Avstens Manuell in  Certaine Prayers S. Augustines Medit. sig. Svj  				The very wisedome of God shall shewe him selfe to them. 1647    J. Saltmarsh Sparkles of Glory 		(1847)	 80  				Pastors,..who cannot now minister as the oracles of God, nor according to the very gifts of the Holy Ghost then. 1859    T. P. Thompson Audi Alteram Partem II. lxxxvii. 57  				The vulgar animosity against a skin,—the stamp of lowly-mindedness, and very indication of cart blood.  c.  Of persons or the Deity. ΘΚΠ the world > the supernatural > deity > Christian God > nature or attributes of God > 			[adjective]		 > truly entitled to the name soothc950 soothfasta1250 veryc1250 veryc1450 the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > foundation in fact, validity > 			[adjective]		 > accurately so named > of persons, the deity rightOE soothfasta1250 veryc1250 veryc1450 veritable1649 c1450    Mirour Saluacioun 3  				Xrist, goddes verray son and wysdame. c1485						 (    G. Hay Bk. Law of Armys 		(2005)	 22  				The verray pape sanct jnnocent had bene put out [by a false pope]. 1534    W. Turner tr.  J. von Watt Of Olde God & Newe sig. Bj  				After yt ye eternall & the verye god had shewed hym selfe vnto Adam. 1549    Bk. Common Prayer 		(STC 16267)	 Celebr. Holye Communion f. cxxviv  				He is the very Pascall Lambe. 1567    Compend. Bk. Godly Songs 		(1897)	 184  				The Priestis..ar the verray Antichristis. 1613    S. Purchas Pilgrimage 21  				His minde was enlightened to know the onely very God. a1616    W. Shakespeare As you like It 		(1623)	  iv. i. 66  				What would you say to me now, and I were your verie, verie  Rosalind?       View more context for this quotation ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > agreement, harmony, or congruity > conformity to or with a pattern, etc. > 			[adjective]		 > conforming to a standard rule rightOE justc1384 verya1425 orderly1542 ruled1551 normatic1598 formal1635 solemn1639 regular1643 mathematical1776 reglementary1800 rule-right1877 a1425    Edward, Duke of York Master of Game 		(Digby)	 xv  				Þough þer be alauntes of alle hewese, þe verrey hewe of þe good alauntes..shuld be white with a blake spotte aboute þe eres.  3.  In emphatic use, denoting that the person or thing may be so named in the fullest sense of the term, or possesses all the essential qualities of the thing specified. Cf. veritable adj. 3.Common from c1550 to c1700; now chiefly in the superlative, frequently qualifying something bad, objectionable, or undesirable. Occasionally repeated in order to give additional emphasis.  a.  With a or the preceding (or rarely without article), or with plural noun. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > foundation in fact, validity > 			[adjective]		 > in emphatic use very1384 as or so very a1560 veritable1831 (a) (b)1593    R. Hooker Of Lawes Eccl. Politie  ii. vii. 119  				Which insolency must be represt, or it will be the verie bane of Christian religion.1649    Articles of Peace with Irish Rebels 38  				The intermedling of Governors and parties in this Kingdom, with sidings and parties in England, have been the very betraying of this kingdom to the Irish.1712    J. Addison Spectator No. 393. ¶2  				A Region, which is the very Reverse of Paradise.1729    W. Law Serious Call xiv. 234  				Mortification, of all kinds, is the very life and soul of piety.1779    J. Warner in  J. H. Jesse G. Selwyn & his Contemp. 		(1844)	 IV. 308  				And then for owls, it is their very kingdom.1872    J. Morley Voltaire i. 5  				Voltaire was the very eye of modern illumination.1883    Manch. Examiner 29 Nov. 5/4  				The atmosphere of most of the courts..is the very reverse of healthy.1384    G. Chaucer Legend Good Women Prol. 259  				Thow thynkist in thyn wit..That he nys but a verray propre fole. 1484    W. Caxton tr.  Subtyl Historyes & Fables Esope vi  				He..is a very fole. 1535    Bible 		(Coverdale)	 2 Kings xxii. 19  				They shall become a very desolacion and curse. ?1542    H. Brinkelow Complaynt Roderyck Mors xxv. sig. H7  				Euery one of them is become a very Nero. a1577    G. Gascoigne Princelie Pleasures Kenelworth sig. C.iijv, in  Whole Wks. 		(1587)	  				Heauen was not heauen, it was rather a verye Hell. 1609    P. Holland tr.  Ammianus Marcellinus Rom. Hist. F j b  				When he was dead, Valentinian his sonne a very childe, was by the army stiled Augustus. 1662    W. Petty Treat. Taxes 83  				Not to rate..wool until it be cloth, or rather until it be a very garment. 1693    J. Dryden tr.  Juvenal in  J. Dryden et al.  tr.  Juvenal Satires  vi. 112  				When Poor, she's scarce a tollerable Evil; But Rich, and Fine, a Wife's a very Devil. 1711    R. Steele Spectator No. 157. ⁋1  				Marius was then a very Boy. a1790    B. Franklin Autobiogr. 		(1981)	  i. 41  				The Attorney, was a very Knave. 1826    B. Disraeli Vivian Grey II.  iii. vi. 73  				Oh! it is madness; very, very madness. 1829    W. Scott Anne of Geierstein II. ix. 285  				Sigismund Biederman will aid him willingly, and he is a very horse at labour. 1888    J. Inglis Tent Life Tigerland 1  				North Bhangulpore..is admittedly even for India a very sportman's paradise.  b.  With a inserted between the adjective and the noun qualified, esp.  as or so very a. Cf. so adv. and conj. 14e. Now rare or Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > high or intense degree > greatly or very much			[phrase]		 > utter to the hard ——c1400 as or so very a1560 a fool (also man, etc.) in print1600 of the first (also finest, best, etc.) water1824 dyed in the wool1830 the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > foundation in fact, validity > 			[adjective]		 > in emphatic use very1384 as or so very a1560 veritable1831 1560    J. Daus tr.  J. Sleidane Commentaries f. ccccv  				There can no man be imagined so very a coward or so barbarouse. 1565    T. Cooper Thesaurus  				Adæque miser, euen as very a wretch. 1570    T. Tusser Hundreth Good Pointes Husbandry 		(new ed.)	 f. 14  				For often times sene, no more very a knaue, than he that doth counterfet most to be graue. 1634    W. Tirwhyt tr.  J. L. G. de Balzac Lett. 352  				I will onely content myself to protest that you were never so very a poet, as when you spake of me. 1667    S. Pepys Diary 29 July 		(1974)	 VIII. 364  				He is as very a wencher as can be. 1704    J. Trapp Abra-Mule  iii. i. 1047  				Thou cam'st to find as very a Madman As ever rav'd in Chains. 1739    A. Hill in  S. Richardson Corr. 		(1804)	 I. 36  				I was so very a boy when I suffered that light piece of work to be published, that [etc.]. 1748    S. Richardson Corr. 		(1804)	 I. 182  				A thing..so very a nothing in itself. 1804    H. Martin Helen of Glenross IV. 118  				So very a soldier. 1828    W. Scott Tapestr. Chamb. ⁋47  				I sank back in a swoon, as very a victim to panic terror as ever was a village girl. 1844    C. MacFarlane Camp of Refuge 		(1897)	 v. 77  				Without knowing..how very a prisoner she is in her own manor-house.  c.  In the comparative  verier and (in later use more commonly) the superlative  veriest. ΚΠ (a) (b)1530    J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 327/2  				[The] Veryest foole, le plus fol.?a1560    L. Digges Geom. Pract.: Pantometria 		(1571)	  i. xxx. sig. K j v  				He hath erred euen in the principall, and as I might tearme them the veriest trifles.1581    G. Pettie tr.  S. Guazzo Ciuile Conuersat. 		(1586)	  iii. 126  				I know not which of these two sortes are the veriest fooles.1630    W. Prynne Anti-Arminianisme 155  				He is no more..for the Elect, then hee is for the veriest Reprobates.1695    W. Congreve Love for Love  iii. i. 42  				I swear, Mr. Benjamin is the verriest Wag in nature; an absolute Sea-wit.1709    R. Steele Tatler No. 11. ⁋5  				His Sons and his Sons Sons, have all of 'em been the veriest Rogues living.1743    R. Blair Grave 33  				The veryest Gluttons do not always cram.1780    Mirror No. 104  				From the same causes, the veriest trifle..had become to him an object of importance.1833    T. Chalmers On Power Wisdom & Goodness of God I. ii. 117  				There is no enjoyment whatever in the veriest hell of assembled outcasts.1859    C. Kingsley Misc. 		(1860)	 I. 227  				Poetry, which read by the veriest schoolboy makes music of itself.1878    T. H. Huxley Physiography 		(ed. 2)	 200  				Even the deep sinking at the Rosebridge Colliery is but the veriest dent in the earth's surface.1548    T. Cooper Bibliotheca Eliotæ 		(rev. ed.)	 at Certus  				There is no veryer knaue. 1579    L. Tomson tr.  J. Calvin Serm. Epist. S. Paule to Timothie & Titus 767/1  				The Lord will..suffer vs to come home verier fooles and doltes then wee went. 1648    Hunting of Fox 40  				Your selves, veryer beasts then the hogs you lost. 1681    J. Flavell Method of Grace vii. 145  				To represent it as a verier trifle, and needless thing than these his Agents have done. a1701    H. Maundrell Journey Aleppo to Jerusalem 		(1703)	 93  				Where the stump of the Tree stood..it meets with not a few visitants so much verier stocks than it self, as to fall down and Worship it. 1733    A. Pope Impertinent 6  				A verier Monster than on Africk's Shore The Sun e're got, or slimy Nilus bore. 1814    R. Southey Who counsels Peace? iv  				All too long in blood had he been nurst, And ne'er was earth with verier tyrant curst. 1856    W. E. Aytoun Bothwell 		(1857)	 8  				A verier knave ne'er stepped the earth. a1861    A. H. Clough Dipsychus  ii. iv, in  Lett. & Remains 		(1865)	 185  				A verier Mercury, express come down To do the world with swift arithmetic.  4.  ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > truthfulness, veracity > 			[adjective]		 > of statement: agreeing with reality soothlyc888 soothfastc950 truea1250 very1303 strait1340 honesta1400 soothfulc1400 precisec1443 veritable1474 just1490 perfect1523 faithful1529 sincere1555 unmangled1557 truthful?1567 neat1571 oraculous1612 punctual1620 oracular1631 unvamped1639 strict1645 unembroidered1649 ungarbled1721 unexaggerated1770 veracious1777 unfictitious1835 unexaggeratinga1854 uncooked1860 the mind > mental capacity > belief > uncertainty, doubt, hesitation > absence of doubt, confidence > assured fact, certainty > reliability > 			[adjective]		 sickerc1100 very1303 certainc1325 trustyc1390 soothfasta1400 surea1400 unfailingc1400 unfailablea1525 unfallible1529 infailable1561 reliable1569 cocksurea1575 faithful1611 infalliblea1616 well-proven1639 unfallida1641 indefailable1693 securea1729 pukka1776 1303    R. Mannyng Handlyng Synne 9965  				Þese wurdes are verry and clere; Dauyd hem seyth yn þe sautere. a1400						 (a1325)						    Cursor Mundi 		(Vesp.)	 l. 3473  				Oure lauerd..Had don hir in to sikernes, Thoru his werrai prophecie, Quat suld be þaa childer vie. c1450    Mirour Saluacioun 34  				Come lord yt thi prophets be fonden lele and verray. c1450    Harl. Contin. Higden (Rolls) VIII. 516  				A verey prove cowthe not be hade in that mater, wherefore the kynge grawntede to þeim bothe theire lyves. 1489						 (a1380)						    J. Barbour Bruce 		(Adv.)	  ii. 87  				Sekyrly I hop that Thomas prophecy Off Hersildoune sall weryfyd be In him. a1505    in  C. L. Kingsford Chron. London 		(1905)	 222  				This yere..came veray tydynges vnto the kyng.. that the frensh kyng was dede.  b.  Of truth: exact, simple, real, actual. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > 			[adjective]		 soothc825 soothlyc888 soothfastc950 rightOE lealc1330 verilya1340 veryc1386 truea1398 soothfulc1400 real1440 vray1460 trothlike1544 of verityc1550 verimenta1592 correct1705 truthful1781 truthy1848 unillusory1853 straight-up1910 the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > freedom from error, correctness > exactness, accuracy, precision > 			[adjective]		 > exactly as specified veryc1386 justc1400 c1386    G. Chaucer Squire's Tale 158  				This is a verray sooth with outen glose. c1400    Laud Troy Bk. 66  				Herkenes now, and ȝe may here The werre sothe alle plenere. c1425    J. Lydgate Assembly of Gods 1226  				And I shall yow tell the verrey sothe of all. 1484    W. Caxton tr.  G. de la Tour-Landry Bk. Knight of Tower 		(1971)	 lviii. 85  				And alle this is very trouth. a1535    T. More Dialoge of Comfort 		(1553)	  ii. xvi. sig. K.iiv  				If he..can by no meanes be shugged out of his dead slepe, but will nedes take his dreame for a very trueth. 1600    W. Shakespeare Henry IV, Pt. 2  iii. ii. 219  				In very truth sir,..I had as liue be hangd sir as  go.       View more context for this quotation 1611    J. Florio Queen Anna's New World of Words  				Verità, truth, veritie, verie-sooth. 1668    N. Culpeper  & A. Cole tr.  T. Bartholin Anat. 		(new ed.)	  i. v. 8  				To speak the very truth. 1850    N. Hawthorne Scarlet Let. xi. 173  				He had spoken the very truth, and transformed it into the veriest falsehood. 1882    Myers Teneriffe vii  				And is the World's in very truth An impercipient Soul? ΘΚΠ society > morality > rightness or justice > 			[adjective]		 righteOE rightfula1225 skilful1340 veryc1440 justc1450 fair-minded1645 dextera1734 just-minded1825 square dinkum1888 fair dinkum1912 c1440    Gesta Romanorum 		(Add. MS.)	  i. xlvii. 202  				Therfore we are turned agayn, to here a verrey dome, what is for to done of this thynge. 1483    W. Caxton tr.  J. de Voragine Golden Legende 86 b/1  				Alle they meruaylled and said that thys was a veray and ryght good answere of the question. ΘΚΠ society > morality > dueness or propriety > 			[phrase]		 on (also upon) righteOE by (good, etc.) rightc1330 to rightsc1330 well and truly1348 of very (due) right?a1366 to righta1382 at right1487 in one's way1691 the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > 			[adverb]		 mid or with (‥) soothc888 soothfastlya890 soothfastc950 rightOE yeaOE soothlyOE soothOE trulyc1225 soothrightc1275 purec1300 verament1303 verily1303 purelyc1325 verimentc1325 indeedc1330 veirec1330 soothfully1340 faithlyc1350 of very (due) right?a1366 leallya1375 amenc1384 in soothnessc1386 verya1387 in certaina1400 truea1400 without(en) wougha1400 in veirec1400 in deedc1405 without famec1430 in veramentc1450 utterlyc1460 veritably1481 veritable1490 voirably1501 seriously1644 quite1736 quite1881 ?a1366    Romaunt Rose 1627  				This welle is clepid, as welle is knowen, The welle of Love, of verray right. c1430    J. Lydgate Minor Poems 		(Percy Soc.)	 7  				Fortune gaff him eke prosperite, and richesse, Withe scripture appering in ther sighte, To him applyed of verray dew righte. c1440    J. Lydgate Horse, Goose & Sheep 57  				Eques, ab ‘equo’ is seid of verray riht And cheualere is saide of cheualrye. 1470–85    T. Malory Morte d'Arthur  x. lxxxvi. 565  				I and ony knyght..oughte of veray ryght socoure and rescowe soo noble a knyghte as ye are. 1526    W. Bonde Pylgrimage of Perfection  iii. sig. MMvi  				He that of very right owed the cappe.  e.   in (also †of) very deed: see deed n. 5c.  a.  Exact or precise, as opposed to approximate; = true adj. 6. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > freedom from error, correctness > exactness, accuracy, precision > 			[adjective]		 rightOE namely?c1225 lealc1330 very1338 truec1400 justc1425 exquisite1541 precise?a1560 jump1581 accuratea1599 nice1600 refined1607 punctual1608 press?1611 square1632 exact1645 unerring1665 proper1694 correct1705 pointed1724 prig1776 precisivea1805 as right as a trivet1835 spot on1936 1338    R. Mannyng Chron. 		(1810)	 83  				How mykelle lond & rent holy kirke had to a prowe, Alle þei did extend to witte þe verrey valowe. 1382    Bible 		(Wycliffite, E.V.)	 Deut. xxv. 15  				Weiȝt thow shalt haue iust and verrey, and euen busshel and verrey shal be to thee. c1400						 (    G. Chaucer Treat. Astrolabe 		(Cambr. Dd.3.53)	 		(1872)	  i. §17. 9  				Euermo this cercle equinoxial turnyth Iustly fro verrey est to verrey west. 1463    in  S. Tymms Wills & Inventories Bury St. Edmunds 		(1850)	 40  				The seid places with the portenances [to] be soold to the verray valew. 1485–6    in  Hist. MSS Comm.: 10th Rep.: App. Pt. V: MSS Marquis of Ormonde &c. 		(1885)	 318 in  Parl. Papers (C. 4576-I) XLII. 1  				The veray value of the same. 1577    B. Googe tr.  C. Heresbach Foure Bks. Husbandry  ii. f. 53  				The very time as Theophrastus wryteth, is at the spring. 1594    W. West Symbolæogr.: 2nd Pt.  ii. Chancerie §95  				Gently requiring him..to deliver..such and so many of the said sheepe,..or the verie value thereof. 1652    M. Nedham tr.  J. Selden Of Dominion of Sea 33  				They are not well agreed about the very particular place. 1657    J. Trapp Comm. Job xxxix. 25  				Horses will perceive aforehand the very time of the fight.  b.  Of a copy, writing, etc. Obsolete. (Cf.  A. 10c.) ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > truthfulness, veracity > 			[adjective]		 > following original exactly > as copy very1470 1470–85    T. Malory Morte d'Arthur  xix. xiii. 796  				And by cause I haue lost the very mater of la cheualer du charyot I departe from the tale of sir Launcelot. 1548    Hall's Vnion: Henry VII f. xlixv  				His awne confession written with hys awne hande, the very copy wherof hereafter ensueth. ΘΚΠ society > morality > duty or obligation > recognition of duty > faithfulness or trustworthiness > 			[adjective]		 soothfastc825 truefastOE i-treowec1000 unfakenOE trueOE sickerc1100 trigc1175 strustya1250 steel to the (very) backa1300 true as steela1300 certainc1325 well-provedc1325 surec1330 traistc1330 tristc1330 trustya1350 faithfula1382 veryc1385 sada1387 discreet1387 trust1389 trothfulc1390 tristya1400 proveda1425 good-heartedc1425 well-trusted?a1439 tristfulc1440 authorizablea1475 faithworthy?1526 tentik1534 fidele1539 truthfulc1550 suresby1553 responsible1558 trestc1560 reliable1569 cocksurea1575 sound1581 trustful1582 truepenny1589 true (also good, sure) as touch1590 probable1596 confident1605 trustable1606 axiopistical1611 loyala1616 reposeful1627 confiding1645 fiducial1647 laudable1664 safe1667 accountable1683 serious1693 sponsible1721 dependable1730 unfailing1798 truthya1802 trustworthy1829 all right1841 stand-up1841 falsehood-free1850 right1856 proven1872 bankable1891 secure1954 c1385    G. Chaucer Legend Good Women Lucrece. 1686  				To..drawe to memorye The verry wif, the verry trewe Lucresse. c1386    G. Chaucer Wife of Bath's Tale 348  				Pouerte a spectakele is, as thynkyth me, Thorw whech he may his veray frend i-see. c1487–1500    in  R. Willis  & J. W. Clark Archit. Hist. Univ. Cambr. 		(1886)	 I. 474  				Your verrey bedeman the provost of the kynges College. a1500						 (a1475)						    G. Ashby Dicta Philosophorum l. 245 in  Poems 		(1899)	 53  				Who that cannat disseure wise from bad Shal haue no verrey freendes þat be sad. 1532    T. Cromwell in  R. B. Merriman Life & Lett. T. Cromwell 		(1902)	 I. 347  				My veraye Frend and Felow Mr. John Welsborne. 1584    B. R. in  tr.  Herodotus Famous Hyst. To Rdr.  				I ende. Your very friende. B. R. 1607    R. C. tr.  H. Estienne World of Wonders 283  				A gentlewoman of Lorraine, my very friend. 1608    S. Rowlands Humors Looking Glasse 14  				A Gentleman a verie friend of mine. 1676    W. Wycherley Plain-dealer  iii. i  				Sir, Sir, your very Servant; I was afraid you had forgotten me.  a.  Of persons: truly or rightfully standing in a certain position or relationship; rightful, lawful, legitimate. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ society > law > legal right > 			[adjective]		 righteOE kindc1300 rightfulc1330 truec1384 righteous1391 lawfula1400 just?1435 legitimec1450 legitimatea1460 verya1466 justc1540 reable1581 sib1701 competent1765 a1466    R. Taverham in  Paston Lett. & Papers 		(2004)	 II. 322  				I am very heyre, by the discease of my fader, to a place called Keswyk. 1495    Act 11 Hen. VII c. 56  				Preamble, Landes..to the whiche the vere owners be now restored by dyvers actes. 1513    in  J. Raine Testamenta Eboracensia 		(1884)	 V. 51  				I do give my full power..unto my saide suster Lucie, and I do charge hir, as she is very mother of my saide nece [etc.]. 1545    in  J. D. Marwick  & R. Renwick Charters rel. Glasgow 		(1906)	 II. 509  				His varray lawful cessionaris, donatouris and assignais. 1569    R. Grafton Chron. II. 789  				Neither King Edwarde himselfe, nor the Duke of Clarence were lawfully begotten, nor were they very children of the Duke of Yorke. 1606    Munim. Melros 		(Bannatyne Club)	 657  				We..constitutis..Oure verrie lauchfull vndoubtit and irreuocabill Procuratouris, actoris, factoris [etc.].  b.  Legally valid or established. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ society > law > rule of law > 			[adjective]		 > legally valid authentica1387 vailable1433 available1451 mightyc1460 stronga1475 very1475 authentical?1531 valid1571 validate1586 forcible1587 validous1603 1475    Bk. Noblesse (Roxb.) 24  				To be put in rememoraunce of youre auncien enheritaunce, verray right and title in youre duchies of Gascoigne and Guien. 1487    Munim. Melros 		(Bannatyne Club)	 618  				Þe Abbot..hes verray richt to þe erde siluer of þe quer of þe said Kirk.  II.  That is precisely or exactly, and related uses; exactly corresponding.  8.   a.  Used as an intensive, either to denote the inclusion of something regarded as extreme or exceptional, or to emphasize the exceptional prominence of some ordinary thing or feature.In very common use from the 16th cent. With slight change of syntax the sense may commonly be expressed by the adverbs ‘even’ or ‘actually’. Various types of context (with the, possessives, etc.) are illustrated in the several groups of quotations; the use in (d) is now obsolete, and that in (c) a rare archaism. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > statement > assertion or affirmation > 			[adjective]		 > used as an intensive veryc1386 the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > high or intense degree > 			[adjective]		 > that is such in a high degree > entitled to designation in high degree fullOE muchc1275 greata1398 very1712 veritable1862 (a) (b)1535    Bible 		(Coverdale)	 Hab. iii. A  				In thy very wrath thou thinkest vpon mercy.1563    2nd Tome Homelyes Rogation Week  iv. ⁋2  				To striue for our very rightes and dueties, with the breche of loue & charitie,..is vtterly forbydden.1595    W. S. Lamentable Trag. Locrine  i. i. 68  				A greater care torments my verie bones.1600    in  J. Morris Troubles Catholic Forefathers 		(1872)	 		(modernized text)	 1st Ser.  i. iv. 194  				Oftentimes their very beds they lie upon..are sold before their faces.1620    T. Granger Syntagma Logicum 100  				Yet in their verie mutuall relation there is also force of arguing to explicate a sentence.1681    J. Dryden Absalom & Achitophel To Rdr. p. ii  				The Chyrurgeon's work of an Ense rescindendum, which I wish not to my very Enemies.1705    tr.  W. Bosman New Descr. Coast of Guinea iii. 27  				You may imagine what Case we were in when one of them began to hack our very doors with an Ax.1768    O. Goldsmith Good Natur'd Man  i. 6  				His very mirth is an antidote to all gaiety.1807    G. Crabbe Parish Reg.  i, in  Poems 62  				His very soul was not his own.1834    T. Carlyle Sartor Resartus  i. i. 1/2  				That we do not..see what is passing under our very eyes.1836    J. H. Newman Parochial Serm. 		(1837)	 III. vi. 86  				The plain and solemn sense which they bear on their very front.1880    J. McCarthy Hist. our Own Times III. xlvii. 433  				His very defects were a main cause of his popularity.(c)1548    N. Udall et al.  tr.  Erasmus Paraphr. Newe Test. I. John 118 b  				So nowe they sawe certainly at very hande the thing to be true.?a1560    L. Digges Geom. Pract.: Pantometria 		(1571)	  i. xvii. sig. E iij v  				And yet in conueying of waters any great distance, very experience wil bewray an error.1561    T. Hoby tr.  B. Castiglione Courtyer  ii. sig. R.iii  				There needeth no art, bicause verye nature her self createth and shapeth menne apt to expresse pleasantly.1609    Bible 		(Douay)	 I. Num. xiv. comm.  				It is so absolutely necessarie in everie communitie to have one Superior of al, that verie mutiners themselves do ever choose such a one.1617    F. Moryson Itinerary  i. 233  				They keepe the Roman Lent, but more strictly, abstaining from Fish, and very Oyle (which they use for butter).1649    Earl of Monmouth tr.  J. F. Senault Use of Passions 81  				The noise of Trumpets puts them in good humor, and..very hurts do animate their courage.1657    Cromwell in  T. Burton Diary 		(1828)	 II. 329  				Their greatest persecution hath been of the people of God,..as I think very experiences will sufficiently demonstrate.1851    J. Keble Occas. Papers 		(1877)	 240  				By the way in which things are managed all Apostolic authority is denied in the Church, and very unbelievers may settle what we are to believe.(d)1616    in  J. Russell Haigs of Bemersyde 		(1881)	 vii. 158  				For fear that his very being my brother left..some impression of the truth of his accusations.1665    R. Boyle Occas. Refl.  v. x. sig. Mm4  				Those Beams, which derive a new Glory from their very being broken.c1386    G. Chaucer Nun's Priest's Tale 565  				Ran cow and calf, and eek the verray hogges Sore fered were for berkyng of dogges. 1526    Bible 		(Tyndale)	 Luke ii. f. lxxvv  				The swearde shall pearce the very hert off the. 1535    Bible 		(Coverdale)	 Psalms xcvi. 6  				The very heauens declare his rightuousnes, & all people se his glory. 1590    J. Smythe Certain Disc. Weapons Ded. 8 b  				All Coronells and Captaines of footmen, yea euen the verie Lieutenants generalls. 1632    J. Hayward tr.  G. F. Biondi Eromena 180  				Sore was she troubled with vomiting, so as having nothing in her stomack, she cast up the very pure bloud. 1655    T. Fuller Church-hist. Brit.  iv. 184  				The Provost..being provided for in all particulars, to the very points of his hose. 1712    R. Steele Spectator No. 306. ⁋1  				It goes to the very Soul of me to speak what I really think of my Face. 1729    A. Pope Dunciad 		(new ed.)	  iii. 326 		(note)	  				All tastes and degrees of men, from those of the highest Quality to the very Rabble. 1782    F. Burney Cecilia IV.  vii. ix. 120  				The very air was rent with cries. 1823    W. Scott Quentin Durward III. x. 267  				He flew like the very wind. 1832    S. Warren Passages from Diary of Late Physician II. iii. 122  				The room was crammed to the very door. 1874    J. R. Green Short Hist. Eng. People iii. §5. 140  				The very retainers of the royal household turned robbers. 1891    ‘J. S. Winter’ Lumley xv. 105  				It's absurd on the very face of it.  b.  Emphasizing nouns which denote extremity of degree or extent. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > high or intense degree > 			[adjective]		 > utter or absolute shirea1225 purec1300 properc1380 plainc1395 cleana1400 fine?a1400 entirec1400 veryc1400 starka1425 utterc1430 utterlyc1440 merec1443 absolute1531 outright1532 cleara1535 bloodyc1540 unproachable1544 flat1553 downright1577 sheer1583 right-down?1586 single1590 peremptory1601 perfecta1616 downa1625 implicit1625 every way1628 blank1637 out-and-outa1642 errant1644 inaccessional1651 thorough-paced1651 even down1654 dead1660 double-dyed1667 through stitch1681 through-stitched1682 total1702 thoroughgoing1719 thorough-sped1730 regular1740 plumb1748 hollow1751 unextenuated1765 unmitigated1783 stick, stock, stone dead1796 positive1802 rank1809 heart-whole1823 skire1825 solid1830 fair1835 teetotal1840 bodacious1845 raw1856 literal1857 resounding1873 roaring1884 all out1893 fucking1893 pink1896 twenty-four carat1900 grand slam1915 stone1928 diabolical1933 fricking1937 righteous1940 fecking1952 raving1954 c1400						 (    G. Chaucer Treat. Astrolabe 		(Cambr. Dd.3.53)	 		(1872)	  ii. §1. 14  				Ley thi reule vp that same day, & thanne wol the verray point of thy rewle sitten in the bordure, vp-on the degree of thy sonne. 1530    J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 806/1  				At the very dawnyng of the daye. 1530    J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 820/1  				In the very myddes..of a thyng. 1560    Bible 		(Geneva)	 John viii. 4  				The Scribes..said,..Master, this woman was taken in adulterie, in the verie act. 1565    W. Allen Def. & Declar. Doctr. Purgatory To Rdr. f. 4  				That matter, whiche..I perceiued, of all other causies in the world, most to touche the very sore of hæresye. 1590    H. Swinburne Briefe Treat. Test. & Willes  ii. f. 61  				He that is at the very pointe of death. 1605    W. Camden Remaines  i. 1  				It cannot be impertinent, at the verie enterance, to say somewhat of Britaine. 1609    P. Holland tr.  Ammianus Marcellinus Rom. Hist. 116  				From the very brims of Tigris banke, as farre as to Euphrates, there was no greene thing left. 1770    P. Luckombe Conc. Hist. Printing 401  				He..then draws the lower part of that noose close up to the very corner of it. 1851    ‘L. Mariotti’ Italy in 1848 359  				The Milan government, we are informed, was a bankrupt from the very outset. 1872    Routledge's Every Boy's Ann. 347/1  				Reduce this movement to the very minimum. 1878    R. Browning La Saisiaz 18  				Quiet slow sure money-making proves the matter's very root. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > statement > assertion or affirmation > 			[adjective]		 > qualifying pronouns to give emphasis very1542 1542    N. Udall tr.  Erasmus Apophthegmes f. 281  				I wys even veray I myself am ye manne. 1548    N. Udall et al.  tr.  Erasmus Paraphr. Newe Test. I. Luke i. f. 17  				And verai he shal be the expectacion of all nacions. 1561    T. Hoby tr.  B. Castiglione Courtyer  i. sig. F.iiii  				For very suche make the greatnes & gorgeousnes of an Oracion. 1624    F. Quarles Iob Militant xv. 26  				I'm turn'd a laughing-stock To boyes, & those, that su'd to tend my Flock,..these (euen very these) Flout at my sorrowes. 1632    P. Holland tr.  Xenophon Cyrupædia 200  				And this is even very she, whom you..were wont to sport with. a1701    C. Sedley Venus & Adonis in  Wks. 		(1776)	 56  				I am ty'd to very thee By ev'ry thought I have.  d.  Coupled with own. ΚΠ 1863    A. W. Kinglake Invasion of Crimea 		(1877)	 I. vi. 89  				A prince who wielded with his own very hand the power of All the Russias. 1884    J. H. Ewing Mary's Meadow 		(1886)	 72  				I had to have it, for my very own.  9.   a.  Neither more nor less than (that expressed by the noun qualified); exactly that specified without qualification; = sheer adj. 8.Qualifying abstract nouns, esp. those denoting emotions or conditions, and usually following a preposition, esp. for. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > statement > 			[adjective]		 > of persons, statements, or actions: not limited veryc1405 unqualified1658 c1405						 (c1395)						    G. Chaucer Franklin's Tale 		(Hengwrt)	 		(2003)	 l. 152  				For verray fere so wolde hir herte quake. a1440    Partonope 849  				She gynneth to wepe For verray joye. 1463    in  S. Tymms Wills & Inventories Bury St. Edmunds 		(1850)	 37  				I yeve..to my neve..my best purs..and xxli. to put ther inne,.. and wil he be servyd apart with the fyrst, of verray love. c1485						 (    G. Hay Bk. Law of Armys 		(2005)	 65  				[He] throu verray fors was the first lorde of that realme. 1535    Bible 		(Coverdale)	 Zech. viii. 4  				Soch as go with staues in their hondes for very age. 1569    R. Grafton Chron. II. 168  				The Sommer was so hote that men dyed with very heat. 1577    R. Holinshed Hist. Scotl. 157/1 in  Chron. I  				Through verie dipleasure of suche iniuries as shee daylye susteyned at the handes of his concubines, shee founde meanes to strangle him. 1671    J. Milton Paradise Regain'd  iv. 12  				As a man who..for very spight Still will be tempting him who foyls him  still.       View more context for this quotation  b.  With a limiting or restrictive force: That alone to the exclusion of any thing else; = mere adj.2 5. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > wholeness > state or quality of being simple, unmixed, or uncompounded > 			[adjective]		 > without addition or qualification > bare or mere mereeOE nakedOE barec1200 purec1325 singlec1421 very1548 nude1551 absolute?1570 blank1596 female1602 clear1606 1548    in  W. Page Certificates Chantries County of York 		(1895)	 II. 495  				Having no other promocions but theyre verye stipende or wages. 1574    W. Bourne Regim. for Sea 		(1577)	 xix. 50 b  				Then haue they no other helpe but onely the very account of the shippes way. a1616    W. Shakespeare Cymbeline 		(1623)	  ii. iv. 9  				Your very goodnesse, and your company, Ore-payes all I can  do.       View more context for this quotation 1618    in  J. Gutch Collectanea Curiosa 		(1781)	 II. 424  				There be..17,000 Sheets of paper in that Book, which, upon ordinary account, cometh to eight hundred and fifty pound, the very writing. 1657    O. Cromwell Speech 23 Jan. 		(Carlyle)	  				So give me leaue, in a very word or two, to congratulate with you. 1703    N. Rowe Fair Penitent  i. i  				At thy very Name My eager Heart springs up. 1703    N. Rowe Fair Penitent  i. i  				Sure 'tis the very Error of my Eyes. 1817    J. Mill Hist. Brit. India II.  v. vii. 595  				The Governor-General treated the very request as a high offence. 1843    A. W. Pugin Apol. Revival Christian Archit. 40  				The very weight and massiveness of the work causing it frequently to settle and give. 1894    P. H. Hunter James Inwick xii. 153  				The verra mention o' Tod-Lowrie's name was eneuch.  10.  Used (after the, this, that, etc.) to denote or emphasize complete or exact identity:  a.  Of points of time. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > relationship > identity > 			[adjective]		 > of points of time very1582 1582    Bible 		(Rheims)	 Luke x. 20  				In that very houre he reioyced in spirit, and said [etc.]. 1615    J. Day Festivals 20  				Even in this nicke of time, this very, very instant. 1617    F. Moryson Itinerary  i. 193  				The bell of that Church was sounded upon the verie day of Saint Bartholmew. 1683    Britanniæ Speculum Pref. p. ii  				To which..this our Island has been so fortunate as to have been subjected from its very first being inhabited to this very Day. a1721    M. Prior Down-Hall 		(1723)	 xxviii  				Come this very instant. 1738    J. Swift Compl. Coll. Genteel Conversat. 141  				She died just this very Day Seven Years. 1796    J. G. Stedman Narr. Exped. Surinam I. i. 29  				On the very day of our debarkation. 1818    W. Cruise Digest Laws Eng. Real Prop. 		(ed. 2)	 II. 268  				It is a rule of law..that a remainder must vest, either during the continuance of the preceding estate, or at the very instant of its determination. 1820    J. Keats Eve of St. Agnes in  Lamia & Other Poems 90  				My lady fair the conjuror plays This very night. 1849    T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. I. v. 643  				Jeffreys gave directions that Alice Lisle should be burned alive that very afternoon.  b.  In general use.In quots. under (b) corresponding to a defining or restrictive clause which follows the noun. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > relationship > identity > 			[adjective]		 the ilkeOE selfeOE oneOE no nothera1325 that ilk (thilk) same1390 one self?a1425 selfsamec1425 the same self1503 proper1523 one (and the) selfsame1531 self-said1548 one and the same1551 identical1581 the same very1590 the very same1597 individuala1602 individually the same1604 a (also one) selfly1605 very1611 same1621 numerical1624 numeric1663 identic1664 synonymous1789 1611    Bible 		(King James)	 Psalms xxxv. 8  				Into that very destruction let him  fall.       View more context for this quotation a1616    W. Shakespeare Merry Wives of Windsor 		(1623)	  ii. i. 79  				Why this is..the very hand: the very  words.       View more context for this quotation a1616    W. Shakespeare Macbeth 		(1623)	  i. vii. 76  				When we haue mark'd with blood those sleepie two.., and vs'd their very  Daggers.       View more context for this quotation 1657    A. Sparrow Rationale Bk. Common Prayer 		(new ed.)	 22  				We are taught to pray, ‘And lead us not into temptation’,..which very method holy church here wisely imitates. 1661    Act 13 Chas. II c. 9 §6  				All the Papers..shall bee duely preserved and..the very Originals sent up intirely and without fraud to the Court of Admiralty. 1712    J. Arbuthnot App. to John Bull Still in Senses i. 6  				Timothy Trim whom they did in their Conscience believe to be the very Prisoner. 1770    P. Luckombe Conc. Hist. Printing 390  				We put neither folio nor any thing else over the very Dedication. 1818    W. Scott Heart of Mid-Lothian x, in  Tales of my Landlord 2nd Ser. III. 276  				‘Young woman,’ said he, ‘your sister's case must certainly be termed a hard one.’ ‘God bless you, sir, for that very word!’ said Jeanie. 1836    J. Gilbert Christian Atonem. vii. 279  				It must be made apparent, that what was demanded of human nature was the perfection of that very human nature. 1875    B. Jowett tr.  Plato Dialogues 		(ed. 2)	 I. 394  				First of all answer this very question.  c.  Of words: exactly corresponding to those of an original or previous statement. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > truthfulness, veracity > 			[adjective]		 > following original exactly line by line1487 perfect1523 verbal1598 sound1599 verya1616 literala1627 verbatim1651 undepraved1686 literatim1774 letter-perfect1867 line for line1876 a16161 [see sense  A. 10b].							 1778    T. Jefferson Autobiogr. App., in  Wks. 		(1859)	 I. 146  				Preserving, however, the very words of the established law. 1839    H. Hallam Introd. Lit. Europe II. i. 70  				He has..neglected to quote the very words of his authorities. 1866    C. Kingsley Hereward the Wake I. xv. 281  				I said it, I said it. Those were my very words!  d.   the very thing, the thing exactly suitable or requisite. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > agreement, harmony, or congruity > suitability or appropriateness > 			[noun]		 > that which is suitable or appropriate the very thing1768 ticket1838 to be a person's meat1875 glove-fit1910 1768    L. Sterne Sentimental Journey I. 90  				It occurred to me, that that was the very thing. 1802    J. West Infidel Father II. 123  				This behaviour was certainly the very thing. 1868    Newman Let. in  The Month July 		(1909)	 66  				I am both surprised and glad at your news... I think it is the very thing for you.  B. adv.  a.  Truly, really, genuinely; in or with truth or reality; truthfully. Obsolete. ΚΠ c1384    G. Chaucer Hous of Fame  ii. 571  				It..hath so very hys lykenes That spack the word. a1400						 (a1325)						    Cursor Mundi 		(Fairf. 14)	 l. 22973  				Bot mani man þat wele can rede vnderstandis noȝt al verray quat þe vale of Iosaphat is to say. c1400						 (?c1380)						    Patience l. 333  				I dewoutly awowe, þat verray bes halden, Soberly to do þe sacrafyse when I schal saue worþe. c1440    Bone Florence 1928  				The abbas, and odur nonnes by, Tolde hyt full openlye, That hyt was so verraye. c1485    Digby Myst. 		(1882)	  ii. 357  				The compyler here-of shuld translat veray so holy a story.  b.  Qualifying an adjective or past participle. Obsolete.Not always clearly distinguishable from  B. 2. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > 			[adverb]		 mid or with (‥) soothc888 soothfastlya890 soothfastc950 rightOE yeaOE soothlyOE soothOE trulyc1225 soothrightc1275 purec1300 verament1303 verily1303 purelyc1325 verimentc1325 indeedc1330 veirec1330 soothfully1340 faithlyc1350 of very (due) right?a1366 leallya1375 amenc1384 in soothnessc1386 verya1387 in certaina1400 truea1400 without(en) wougha1400 in veirec1400 in deedc1405 without famec1430 in veramentc1450 utterlyc1460 veritably1481 veritable1490 voirably1501 seriously1644 quite1736 quite1881 a1387    J. Trevisa tr.  R. Higden Polychron. 		(St. John's Cambr.)	 		(1874)	 V. 329  				But for he was verray repentaunt he was exciled for þe fey. 1423    Kingis Quair clxix  				O! verray sely wrech, I se wele by thy dedely coloure pale, Thou art to feble of thy-self to streche Vpon my quhele. ?c1450    in  G. J. Aungier Hist. & Antiq. Syon Monastery 		(1840)	 335  				None schal be ouer skypped in any wyse for any suche chaunge, withe oute a very resonable cause. 1490    W. Caxton tr.  Foure Sonnes of Aymon 		(1885)	 viii. 191  				Two thousand knyghtes.., & all yonge men of pryme berde, whiche were very frenshe. 1529    T. More Dialogue Heresyes  iii, in  Wks. 244/1  				Both those tonges [i.e. Greek and Latin] wer as verye vulgare as ours. c1593    in  Spalding Club Misc. I. 5  				Your Maiestie and the consell hes to Judg gif thay be lauchful, and uerray qualifiit.  2.  In a high degree or measure; to a great extent; exceedingly, extremely, greatly.Sometimes emphasized in speaking, and italicized in printing, to give additional force. (Cf.  A. 4.)  a.   (a) Qualifying positive adjectives (and participial adjectives) used predicatively, attributively, or absolutely.  very high and low frequency (Telecommunications): see VHF n., VLF n. at V n. Initialisms 2; frequently attributive. ΘΚΠ society > communication > telecommunication > radio communications > 			[noun]		 > radio wave > specific frequencies very high and low frequency1488 VHF1932 UHF1937 VLF1938 S.H.F.1948 VOR1955 α.  δ. a1500–34    Cov. Corp. Christi Pl.  ii. 513  				Those fowlys the ar full far fro me And werie yvill for me to fynde.1530    J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 327/2  				Very good, fort bon.1530    J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 828/1  				Very farre, very hye, very lowe, etc.a1578    R. Lindsay Hist. & Cron. Scotl. 		(1899)	 II. 317  				The said pest come in the towne of kirkcaldie that thair deit verrie mony.?1589    in  F. Collins Wills & Admin. Knaresborough Court Rolls 		(1902)	 I. 169  				My father..ys a verye old man.1600    J. Pory tr.  J. Leo Africanus Geogr. Hist. Afr. 56  				This isle is very scarce of oile and of corne.1600    J. Pory tr.  J. Leo Africanus Geogr. Hist. Afr.  iv. 224  				Batha, whereof now there remaine but very few ruines.1661    Prince Rupert in  11th Rep. Royal Comm. Hist. MSS 		(1887)	 App. V. 8  				Tell him that [I] am very glad to heere of his recouvry.1677    A. Marvell Let. 22 Mar. in  Poems & Let. 		(1971)	 II. 190  				A Bill for exporting Coals free or at very easy Custome.1709    R. Steele Tatler No. 44. ⁋6  				I have, I fear, huddled up my Discourse, having been very busy.1774    O. Goldsmith Hist. Earth V. 56  				They lay very large eggs, some of them being above five inches in diameter.1799    E. Dubois Piece Family Biogr. III. 175  				You say this to relieve me, and 'tis very kind of you.1803    Med. & Physical Jrnl. 10 304  				An intermittent tendency was also very observable in some instances.1838    T. Thomson Chem. Org. Bodies 580  				A soft mass,..very soluble in alcohol.1856    Ld. Granville in  Life 		(1905)	 I. 211  				Very few of our Embassy were invited [to the party].1880    B. Disraeli Endymion II. xxxi. 324  				Cards of invitation to banquets and balls and concerts, and ‘very earlies’.1920    Radio Rev. Sept. 579 		(heading)	  				Circuit for producing very high frequencies.1938    Admiralty Handbk. Wireless Telegr. 1938 I. Nomenclature of Waves  				On the basis of a recent C.C.I.R. recommendation, promulgated in French; a suitable nomenclature, likely soon to be accepted internationally, may be given in English as follows:—Below 30 kc/s... Very Low Frequencies (V.L./F.).1958    Economist 26 July 271  				With very high frequency radio broadcasting..providing almost perfect reception, the collector of classical music..can make high fidelity recordings..on a £2 tape.1967    Electronics 6 Mar. 68/2  				Navy project officers expect a go-ahead..on construction of a worldwide very-low-frequency Omega navigation system.1972    McGraw-Hill Yearbk. Sci. & Technol. 229/2  				Some of the techniques developed for determining the geodetic coordinates for land use..can be applied at sea... In addition, the very-long-baseline interferometry (VLBI) technique is potentially applicable.1974    Encycl. Brit. Macropædia XV. 425/1  				The variation of carrier frequency is known as the frequency deviation, and for very-high-frequency broadcasting it can reach ±75 kilohertz.1976    Time 24 May 64/3  				The Japanese government..has declared the development of Very Large Scale Integrations—the technical heart of the next generation of computers—a ‘national project’.1978    J. M. Pasachoff  & M. L. Kutner University Astron. xxvi. 667  				With this ability, astronomers can make up an interferometer of two or more dishes very far apart, even thousands of kilometers. This technique is called very-long-baseline interferometry.1982    Times 14 Jan. (Information Technol. Suppl.) p. v/4  				Very large-scale integration (VLSI)... VLSI puts as many as 100,000 components on a chip.1488						 (c1478)						    Hary Actis & Deidis Schir William Wallace 		(Adv.)	 		(1968–9)	  i. l. 86  				Erle Patrik than till Berweik couth persew, Ressawide he was and trastyt werray trew. 1542    N. Udall tr.  Erasmus Apophthegmes f. 328  				In the latine it hath a veray good grace. 1554–5    in  A. Feuillerat Documents Office of Revels Edward VI 		(1914)	 173  				Of verey fayer quaint & strange attier. 1560    J. Daus tr.  J. Sleidane Commentaries f. cclv  				Machlin (a veraye fayre Towne..in Brabant). a1578    R. Lindsay Hist. & Cron. Scotl. 		(1899)	 I. 4  				To pray me think it is verray necessarie.  (b) Mountaineering.  very difficult,  very severe: two of the categories used in classifying rock climbs; also absol. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > mountaineering or climbing > 			[adjective]		 > types of terrain holdless1922 wind-slab1936 very severe1951 thin1955 chossy1965 1951    E. Coxhead One Green Bottle iii. 86  				‘Ah yes, the Amphitheatre Buttress... An easy Difficult, isn't it?’ She..herself led Very Difficults, and occasionally..an easy Severe. 1969    ‘A. Garve’ Ascent of D. 13 ii. 35  				I've been climbing ever since I was a kid... I've done more Very Severes than I can remember.  b.  Qualifying another adverb. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > high or intense degree > 			[adverb]		 > very tooc888 swith971 wellOE wellOE fullOE rightc1175 muchc1225 wellac1275 gainlya1375 endlyc1440 hard?1440 very1448 odda1500 great1535 jolly1549 fellc1600 veryvery1649 gooda1655 vastly1664 strange1667 bloody1676 ever so1686 heartily1727 real1771 precious1775 quarely1805 murry1818 très1819 freely1820 powerfula1822 gurt1824 almighty1830 heap1832 all-fired1833 gradely1850 real1856 bonny1857 heavens1858 veddy1859 canny1867 some1867 oh-so1881 storming1883 spanking1886 socking1896 hefty1898 velly1898 fair dinkum1904 plurry1907 Pygmalion1914 dinkum1915 beaucoup1918 dirty1920 molto1923 snorting1924 honking1929 hellishing1931 thumpingly1948 way1965 mega1966 mondo1968 seriously1970 totally1972 mucho1978 stonking1990 1448    R. Hungerford in  Paston Lett. & Papers 		(2004)	 II. 520  				Vere hartely your, Molyns. 1530    J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 814/1  				Very erly in the mornyng, au plus matyn. 1530    J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 843/2  				Very gladly, moult voulentiers. Very hardly, a paynes... Very seldome, peu souuent. a1556    N. Udall Ralph Roister Doister 		(?1566)	  iv. vi. sig. G.ijv  				But very well I wist he here did all in scorne. a1578    R. Lindsay Hist. & Cron. Scotl. 		(1899)	 I. 22  				The gouernour hard thir vordis verrey plesandlie. 1631    B. Jonson New Inne Dram. Pers.  				Sir Glorious Tipto..talkes gloriously of any thing, but very seldome is in the right. 1664    Bp. J. Taylor Disswasive from Popery  ii. viii. 118  				For if it were [necessary], very extremely few would do their duty. 1691    A. Gavin Frauds Romish Monks 		(ed. 3)	 130  				The next day we set out very betimes in the Morning towards Mount Alverne. 1711    J. Addison Spectator No. 58. ¶4  				Several Pieces which have lived very near as long as the Iliad it self. 1795    Gentleman's Mag. 65 543/1  				Nonjuring clergymen and their families partook very largely of his benevolence. 1804    W. Cruise Digest Laws Eng. Real Prop. III. 567  				Courts of equity would do very ill by not adopting that rule. 1835    A. Ure Philos. Manuf. 158  				The spindles should revolve very quickly in the spinning frame. 1867    A. T. Drane Christian Schools II. iii. 129  				The school at Sempringham very soon became famous.  c.  Qualifying past participles used predicatively or attributively: = Very much. (See much adj. 1c.) Also exceptionally with like vb.The correctness of this usage, which has been prevalent from the middle of the 17th cent., depends on the extent to which the participle has acquired a purely adjectival sense. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > high or intense degree > 			[adverb]		 > by or to a great degree or extent mickleseOE mickleeOE sevensitheOE highOE muchc1225 wellc1300 fara1400 goodlya1450 long?a1475 farlya1500 largea1522 muchly1621 very1641 heartily1727 lot1839 lot1855 big time1957 batshit1993 1641    K. Digby Honour Maintained sig. A3  				At which the good Knight seemed very much discontent. 1664    in  Extracts State Papers 		(Friends' Hist. Soc.)	 		(1912)	 3rd Ser. 215  				Faber, A Jerman,..being a very suspected person, reather of crafty principalls. a1719    J. Addison Dialogues Medals in  Wks. 		(1721)	 I. ii. 451  				Many very valued pieces of French, Italian, and English appear in the same dress [i.e. dialogue]. 1782    R. Cumberland Anecd. Painters 		(1787)	 II. 90  				I was a very interested and anxious spectator. 1792    W. Roberts Looker-on No. 14. 106  				Betty..looked very pleased at several passages. 1804–6    S. Smith Elem. Sketches Moral Philos. 		(1850)	 54  				A very over-rated man. 1842    ‘G. Eliot’ Let. Mar. in  Lett. & Jrnls. 		(1885)	 I. 112  				I am becoming very hurried. 1874    G. W. Dasent Half a Life III. 60  				I should so very like to know who this Mr. Ball and his daughter are. 1874    G. W. Dasent Half a Life III. 177  				Her foot is very swollen. 1879    W. E. Gladstone Gleanings Past Years I.  iii. 79  				In this rather confused and very disappointed letter.  d.  With a negative, frequently denoting ‘only moderately’, ‘rather un——’. ΚΠ 1710    J. Swift Jrnl. to Stella 31 Oct. 		(1948)	 I. 77  				Then it went off, leaving me sickish, but not very. 1739    J. Sparrow tr.  H. F. Le Dran Observ. Surg. lxxxi. 282  				It was not very adherent to any other Place than the Coccyx. a1871    G. Grote Fragm. Ethical Subj. 		(1876)	 i. 24  				They leave them unnoticed, and are not very willing to admit them in their full extent at all.  e.  Qualifying a noun or proper name used adjectively (for emphasis). ΘΚΠ the mind > language > statement > assertion or affirmation > 			[adjective]		 > qualifying noun or proper name to give emphasis very1937 1937    A. H. Gardiner in  Mélanges de Linguistique et de Philologie offerts à J. van Ginneken 310  				Predicatival examples are not very frequent, e.g. She is very Boston, Surely that knock (i.e. at the front door) is John. 1968    Listener 21 Mar. 389/3  				The total effect is very Kirov: it has more in common with the Leningrad Cinderella..than with ours. 1978    Hot Car July 87/5  				Scallops, a very fifties paint idea, consisting of a long U-shaped design, the ends of which taper off to points.  3.  In purely intensive use.  a.  Emphasizing superlatives, esp. best, last, next.†Also with virtual superlatives, as principal. ΚΠ 1567    T. Drant tr.  Horace Pistles in  tr.  Horace Arte of Poetrie sig. Diijv  				He will see the..wyth the swallowe verye firste That cummes into that place. 1654    T. Gataker Disc. Apol. 17  				This fel out to be the verie next day after Qeen Elizabeths decease. 1664    in  Extracts State Papers 		(Friends' Hist. Soc.)	 		(1911)	 2nd Ser. 188  				A greater meeting..at her house then ever, the very next Sunday after the Sessions. 1684    Scanderbeg Redivivus vi. 142  				The City was now reduc'd to the very last Extremity. a1732    F. Atterbury Serm. Several Occas. 		(1734)	 I. 163  				How then should the very Best of us..expect..to be free from them? 1753    J. Collier Art Tormenting, Gen. Rules 		(1811)	 199  				If you know yourself to be of some consequence, although not the very principal person of the party. 1767    L. Sterne Life Tristram Shandy IX. xxx. 128  				In the very next page. 1849    T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. I. iii. 308  				Three of the very richest subjects in England. 1865    S. Baring-Gould Bk. Were-wolves v. 53  				Whenever they stray in the very least. 1892    E. Reeves Homeward Bound 143  				You have missed the very best thing in Kandy.  b.  Denoting and emphasizing absolute identity or difference, esp. with same or opposite. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > relationship > identity > 			[adverb]		 > very same or opposite very?a1500 the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > high or intense degree > 			[adverb]		 > utterly > denoting absolute identity very?a1500 the world > relative properties > relationship > contrariety or contrast > 			[adverb]		 > very (opposite) very1835 the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > high or intense degree > 			[adverb]		 > utterly > denoting absolute difference very1835 ?a1500    Chester Pl. 		(Shaks. Soc.)	 215  				It is the vereye same [blind man]. 1542    N. Udall tr.  Erasmus Apophthegmes  i. Socrates §86 e iij  				Plato,..whiche in rebukyng hym [Socrates] did committe the veraye selfe same faulte, that he rebuked. a1616    W. Shakespeare All's Well that ends Well 		(1623)	  ii. iii. 26  				That's it, I would haue said, the verie  same.       View more context for this quotation 1662    J. Davies tr.  A. Olearius Voy. & Trav. Ambassadors 182  				That which happen'd on the very same day the year before. 1711    J. Addison Spectator No. 44. ¶6  				Whose Murther he would revenge in the very same Place where it was committed. 1781    W. Cowper Table Talk 388  				He trod the very self-same ground you tread. 1833    I. Taylor Fanaticism i. 7  				The very same spirit of kindness which should rule us in the performance of a task such as the one now in hand. 1835    T. Mitchell in  tr.  Aristophanes Acharnians 690 		(note)	  				The very opposite word was of course expected. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > freedom from error, correctness > exactness, accuracy, precision > 			[adverb]		 rightlyeOE righteOE evenOE evenlya1225 redlyc1275 justicelya1375 justilya1375 justlya1375 redilya1375 trulya1375 properlya1382 precisec1392 preciselyc1392 truec1392 straitlya1395 leala1400 arightc1405 by linec1420 justlyc1425 featlya1450 rule-righta1450 to the letter?1495 exquisitely1526 evenliklya1530 very1530 absolutely1538 jump1539 just1568 accurately1581 punctually1581 jumplya1586 arights1596 just so1601 plumb1601 compassly1606 nicelya1616 squarely1626 justa1631 adequately1632 mathematicallya1638 critically1655 exquisitively1660 just1665 pointedly1667 faithfully1690 correctlya1704 jus1801 jest1815 jes1851 neat1875 cleanly1883 on the nose1883 smack-dab1892 spot on1920 forensically1974 the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > freedom from error, correctness > exactness, accuracy, precision > 			[adverb]		 > exactly so, just rightOE evenOE alrightOE allOE evenlya1375 preciselyc1443 very1530 meet1543 on the spot1884 (right) on the button1925 spot on2009 the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > freedom from error, correctness > exactness, accuracy, precision > 			[adverb]		 > exactly so, just > of place righteOE evenc1300 very1530 the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > freedom from error, correctness > exactness, accuracy, precision > 			[adverb]		 > exactly so, just > of time evenOE rightlOE very1530 (a) (b)1530    J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 823/2  				Very here, very ther, droit cy, droit la.a1625    W. Shakespeare  & J. Fletcher Two Noble Kinsmen 		(1634)	  v. vi. 99  				In this place first you fought: ev'n very here I sundred  you.       View more context for this quotation(c)a1592    R. Greene Comicall Hist. Alphonsus 		(1599)	  ii. sig. D1v  				What newes is this, and is it very so? Is our Alphonsus yet in humane state?1632    R. Sanderson 12 Serm. 98  				Very so ought we to conceiue the meaning of the vniversall particle ‘Every man’.1530    J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 808/1  				Evyn very now, tout fyn mayntenant. a1555    J. Philpot tr.  C. S. Curione Def. Authority Christ's Church in  R. Eden Exam. & Writings J. Philpot 		(1842)	 		(modernized text)	 334  				It is possible some part of the Church for a time to be deceived when..they have a zeal of the truth,..yea, very then when they err, and plunge into any vice or sin. a1556    N. Udall Ralph Roister Doister 		(?1566)	  iv. vi. sig. G.iij  				But when gost thou for him? M. M. That do I very nowe. a1644    F. Quarles Solomons Recantation 		(1645)	 Sol. viii. 41  				Did not that voice, that voted Wisdome vain But very now, now cry it up again? 1644    J. Maxwell Sacro-sancta Regum Majestas 74  				If we alleadge Ignatius, it is to be feared he'l fare no better, for a great Scholar..hath very now rejected all we have of him.  4.  Repeated in order to convey greater emphasis. Also  veryvery (as one word). ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > high or intense degree > 			[adverb]		 > very tooc888 swith971 wellOE wellOE fullOE rightc1175 muchc1225 wellac1275 gainlya1375 endlyc1440 hard?1440 very1448 odda1500 great1535 jolly1549 fellc1600 veryvery1649 gooda1655 vastly1664 strange1667 bloody1676 ever so1686 heartily1727 real1771 precious1775 quarely1805 murry1818 très1819 freely1820 powerfula1822 gurt1824 almighty1830 heap1832 all-fired1833 gradely1850 real1856 bonny1857 heavens1858 veddy1859 canny1867 some1867 oh-so1881 storming1883 spanking1886 socking1896 hefty1898 velly1898 fair dinkum1904 plurry1907 Pygmalion1914 dinkum1915 beaucoup1918 dirty1920 molto1923 snorting1924 honking1929 hellishing1931 thumpingly1948 way1965 mega1966 mondo1968 seriously1970 totally1972 mucho1978 stonking1990 1649    in  E. Nicholas Papers 		(1886)	 I. 128  				I have a verry verry great jealousy Lord Digby will be left in the lurch. 1653    I. Walton Compl. Angler 137  				He [the salmon] is very, very seldom observed to bite at a Minnow..and not oft at a  fly.       View more context for this quotation 1722    D. Defoe Jrnl. Plague Year 		(1896)	 46  				It was indeed very, very, very dreadful. 1807    R. Wilson Private Diary 13 July 		(1862)	 II. 317  				The retribution may be just but it is very very severe. 1825    T. Hook Sayings & Doings 2nd Ser. I. 306  				‘I think him pleasant, and handsome, and—.’ ‘Oh! very, very,’ said George. 1836    C. Dickens Pickwick Papers 		(1837)	 ii. 17  				Oh! I see..negus too strong here—liberal landlord—very foolish—very. 1969    A. Lurie Real People 16  				Croquet's become veryvery intense this year. 1977    Transatlantic Rev. No. 60. 68  				You have a very nice face... And were veryvery nice to me.  C. n.1 ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > 			[noun]		 soothc950 soothOE rightOE soothnessc1275 soothness1297 soothshipc1320 soothhead1340 very1382 trotha1387 trutha1391 verity1422 veriment1528 true?1531 trueness1559 veriness1574 reality1604 veracity1664 veridicalness1727 the fact of the matter1808 truthfulness1835 actualité1840 the straight1866 satya1879 straight goods1892 veridicalitya1901 truth value1903 dinky1941 1382    Bible 		(Wycliffite, E.V.)	 Rom. Prol.  				Thes reuokith the apostle to the verrey [a1425 L.V. treuthe] and the gospels bileue. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > 			[adverb]		 > assuredly, indeed soothlyc825 forsoothc888 wiselyc888 sooth to sayOE i-wislichec1000 to (‥) soothOE iwis?c1160 certesa1250 without missa1275 i-witterlic1275 trulyc1275 aplight1297 certc1300 in (good) fayc1300 verily1303 certain1330 in truthc1330 to tell (also speak, say) the truthc1330 certainlya1375 faithlya1375 in faitha1375 surelya1375 in sooth1390 in trothc1390 in good faitha1393 to witc1400 faithfullyc1405 soothly to sayc1405 all righta1413 sad?a1425 in certc1440 wella1470 truec1480 to say (the) truth1484 of a truth1494 of (a) trotha1500 for a truth?1532 in (of) verity1533 of verityc1550 really1561 for, in, or into very?1565 indeed1583 really and truly1600 indeed and indeed1673 right enough1761 deed1816 just1838 of a verity1850 sho1893 though1905 verdad1928 sholy1929 ja-nee1937 only1975 deffo1996 ?1565    Smyth that forged New Dame sig. a.ii  				I am mayster of all, That smyteth wyth hamer or mall And so may thou me call I tell the for veray. 1575    J. Rolland Treat. Court Venus  ii. f. 31  				Ane messinger said scho, into verray Thair erandis gais, baith nicht and als be day. 1575    J. Rolland Treat. Court Venus  ii. f. 19  				[Ter]psichore [the] fift is callit in verray. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1917; most recently modified version published online June 2022). <  | 
	
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