释义 |
de·mise I. \də̇ˈmīz, dēˈ-\ verb (-ed/-ing/-s) Etymology: Middle English demisen, from Middle French demis, past participle transitive verb 1. : to convey (as an estate) by will or by lease < premises demised for a period of 10 years > 2. obsolete : release : let go 3. obsolete : convey, give 4. : to transmit (as a title or the sovereignty) by succession or inheritance < declare the crown voluntarily demised > intransitive verb 1. : to demise the sovereignty 2. : die, decease 3. : to pass by descent or bequest < the property demised to the king > II. \“ sometimes də̇ˈmēz\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle French, feminine of demis, past participle of demettre to put away, dismiss, from Latin demittere to send down, lower, from de- from, down, away + mittere to send — more at de-, smite 1. : the conveyance of an estate (as by lease for a number of years) 2. : transference of the sovereignty to a successor (as by death or abdication) — used usually in the phrase demise of the crown < the appointment of a regent at the unexpected demise of the crown > 3. a. : death < the lady's demise had been ascribed to apoplexy — Alan Hynd > b. : end of existence or being < when the Roman Empire perished, neither contemporaries nor posterity acknowledged its demise — A.J.Toynbee > : discontinuance or cessation of activity or operation < a paper … published daily until its recent unlamented journalistic demise — Victor Riesel > |