单词 | vitiosity |
释义 | vitiosityn.ΘΚΠ the mind > goodness and badness > inferiority or baseness > imperfection > [noun] > an imperfection > defect or fault or flaw faultc1320 breckc1369 villainyc1400 offencec1425 defectc1450 defection1526 vitiosity1538 faintness1543 gall1545 eelist1549 mar1551 hole1553 blemish1555 wart1603 flaw1604 mulct1632 wound1646 failurea1656 misfeature1818 bug1875 out1886 1538 T. Elyot Dict. Addicion Cacia, viciositie, or that whiche we commonly do calle, a faute in a thynge. 1563 Abp. M. Parker Corr. (1853) (modernized text) 199 With my natural viciosity of overmuch shamefastness, I am..babished in myself. 1589 G. Puttenham Arte Eng. Poesie iii. vii. 129 It may come to passe that what the Grammarian setteth downe for a viciositee in speach may become a vertue and no vice. 1655 Bp. J. Taylor Vnum Necessarium vi. §16 Any person that hath a fault or a legal impurity, a debt, a vitiosity, defect, or imperfection. 2. a. The state or character of being morally vicious. ΘΚΠ the mind > goodness and badness > wrongdoing > corruption > [noun] rusteOE vice1297 corrumpciona1340 infectiona1398 corruptiona1400 foulinga1400 viciousness1440 inquination1447 turpitude1490 intoxicationa1513 pravitya1513 bracery1540 insincerity1548 corruptness1561 sophistication1564 faultiness1571 depravation1577 base-mindedness1582 mangling1585 reprobacy1591 uninnocence1593 vitiosity1603 turkessing1612 reprobancea1616 debauchedness1618 tortuosity1621 depravedness1623 deboistness1628 debauchness1640 depravity1646 corruptedness1648 moral turpitude1660 unprincipledness1792 demoralization1797 erosion1804 miscreancy1804 trituration1832 unwholesomeness1881 ne'er-do-wellism1891 society > morality > moral evil > wrong conduct > [noun] > immoral conduct or habits vice1297 viciousness1440 puddlec1520 vitiosity1603 1603 P. Holland tr. Plutarch Morals 247 Reason by little and little doth illuminate, purge and cleanse the soule in abating and diminishing evermore the visiositie thereof. 1643 Sir T. Browne Religio Medici (authorized ed.) i. §42 My untamed affections and confirmed vitiosity makes mee dayly doe worse. View more context for this quotation 1678 R. Cudworth True Intellect. Syst. Universe i. iii. 104 It is not only Moral Vitiosity which inclines men to Atheize. 1782 J. Brown Compend. View Nat. & Revealed Relig. i. 13 An inconceivable vitiosity of nature absolutely inconsistent with godhead. 1836 J. Gilbert Christian Atonem. (Notes) 473 The vitiosity of sin and public injury are here correlative. ΘΚΠ the mind > goodness and badness > wrongdoing > corruption > instance of corruption > [noun] unthewc897 lastOE vicea1300 misthewa1325 fault1377 mistetch?c1450 depravity1641 vitiosity1643 cachexy1652 misteach1803 vileness1863 unvirtue1869 society > morality > moral evil > wrong conduct > [noun] > immoral conduct or habits > a vice or bad habit unthewc897 miswonea1200 unlawc1225 vicea1300 misthewa1325 mistetch?c1450 bestiality1594 vitiosity1643 misteach1803 unvirtue1869 1643 Sir T. Browne Religio Medici (authorized ed.) ii. §7 There are certaine tempers of body, which..doe hatch and produce viciosities, whose..monstrosity of nature admits no name. View more context for this quotation 1657 J. Gaule Sapientia Justificata 9 That, after Baptism, it is no real viciosity, but only a penalty. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > condition of matter > bad condition of matter > [noun] vice1398 undisposedness1600 unsoundness1605 vitiosity1647 craziness1664 viciousness1669 disintegrity1861 rattiness1898 spoilage1928 1647 A. Ross Mystagogvs Poeticvs i. 7 In this Gum [sc. myrrh] Venus is much delighted, as being a help to..the vitiosity of the matrix. 1651 N. Biggs Matæotechnia Medicinæ Praxeωs ⁋223 If the more waterish and yellow bloud doth denote its vitiosity. 4. Scots Law. The quality of being faulty or improper in a legal aspect. ΘΚΠ society > law > rule of law > illegality > [noun] > legal invalidity or faultiness nullity1543 invalidity?1553 irritancy1681 vitiosity1765 voidness1883 1765–8 J. Erskine Inst. Law Scotl. iii. ix. §52 Such confirmation..purges the vitiosity of his former intromissions. 1838 W. Bell Dict. Law Scotl. 529 It infers an intention on the part of the intromitter to account for his intromissions, which takes off the vitiosity, and renders him liable only to the extent of his intromissions. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1920; most recently modified version published online December 2020). < n.1538 |
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