释义 |
mis·sive I. \ˈmisiv, -sēv also -səv\ adjective Etymology: Middle English, from Middle French or Medieval Latin; Middle French missif, from Medieval Latin missivus, from Latin missus (past participle of mittere to send) + -ivus -ive — more at smite 1. : specially sent or prepared to be sent — see letter missive 2. : missile II. noun (-s) Etymology: Middle French (lettre) missive, from lettre letter + missive, feminine of missif 1. : a written communication : letter < many of their missives were illiterate, and the more violent of them were unsigned — R.B.Merriman > often : a formal or official letter < the driver delivered the missive at the embassy door — Upton Sinclair > 2. Scots law : a formal authenticated document in the style of a letter by which a party to a contract submits to the other contracting party his own offer or acceptance 3. obsolete : messenger < came missives from the king, who all-hail'd me thane of Cawdor — Shakespeare > 4. : something that is thrown or used as a weapon : missile < making use of any missive, even a proverb, that came ready to hand — Aldous Huxley > |